by John Roboz
* Provides an overview on how mass spectrometers work and what type of information they provide
* Introduces applications with succinct summaries of biological, pharmacological, or medical background with references to recent reviews
* Covers literature through July 2001
* Includes approximately 1800 references, many selected for informational or educational value
* Offers approximately 240 figures and 30 tables
Cancer research is becoming multidisciplinary. The complex structural and therapeutic problems require synergistic approaches employing an assortment of biochemical manipulations, chromatographic or electrophoretic separations, sequencing strategies, and … more and more mass spectrometry.
Mass Spectrometry in Cancer Research provides a broad examination of current strategies and techniques and their application to the study of:
(i) occupational and environmental carcinogens;
(ii) antineoplastic and chemopreventive agents;
(iii) pertinent proteins, lipids, nucleic acids and glycoconjugates.
Also included are a chapter on instrumentation and methodologies for biologists and physicians and a brief review of the relevant concepts of cancer biology and medicine for mass spectrometrists.
This book is intended for: mass spectrometrists in research or those providing core services; researchers in biological, medical, pharmaceutical or environmental sciences; physicians in academic medicine; and academic/industrial research managers.
Hardback
Pages: 576
Published: 2002
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