The book discusses cancer and the potential use of phytochemicals as cancer therapeutics. It begins with the basics of cancer, including the definition, types, etiology and molecular mechanisms involved, before discussing the fundamentals of diagnosis, treatment and associated problems as well as remedial measures. Since cancer is not a single disease, and the mechanisms of carcinogenesis are different for different cancers, it examines the genes and proteins involved in carcinogenesis, and signal transduction pathways for each individual cancer type. Further, the book reviews the latest research on phytochemicals for cancer treatment, highlighting their anti-cancer properties, sources, structure, active biomolecules and probable mechanisms of action, and describing their biochemical properties in the context of cancer prevention and treatment.
Table of Content
Chapter 1: Cancer: Types and hallmarks.- Chapter 2: Cancer: genetics and important pathways.- Chapter 3: Fundamentals of phytochemicals.- Chapter 4: Drugs and phytochemicals.- Chapter 5: Molecular mechanisms of phytochemical actions in cancer.- Chapter 6: Improvement of cancer therapy using phytochemicals.- Chapter 7: Pharmacogenomics and phytochemicals.- Chapter 8: Phytochemicals as bioenhancers.- Appendix I.- Appendix II.- Index.
About the author
Dr. Madhumita Roy completed her MSc in Physics at Calcutta University. She pursued her Ph D studies at the Department of Crystallography and Molecular Biology, Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics, Kolkata and was awarded her Ph D by the University of Calcutta in 1994. She is currently the Assistant Director and Head of the Department of Environmental Carcinogenesis and Toxicology, Chittaranjan National Cancer Institute, Kolkata. Her research focuses on cancer biology, particularly radiation biology, cytogenetics, cell biology, tumour cell apoptosis, cancer chemoprevention and environmental toxicology, including the arsenic disaster in West Bengal, India, identification of important tumor bio-markers, and chemo-enhancing efficacy of tumor cells by plant-derived molecules towards apoptosis by conventional chemotherapeutic drugs. She has published over 74 research papers in respected international journals and has attended more than 100 conferences and workshops in India andabroad. She is a life member of several societies, such as the Environment Mutagen Society of India (EMSI), Indian Association for Cancer Research (IACR), Electron Microscope Society of India, Indian Science Congress Association, All India Congress of Cytology & Genetics, and the Society of Nutraceuticals & Chronic Diseases.
Dr. Amitava Datta completed his M.Tech and Ph D in Computer Science at the Indian Institute of Technology, Madras. He pursued postdoctoral research at the Max Planck Institute for Computer Science and University of Freiburg, both in Germany. He is currently a professor at the Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering at the University of Western Australia. He was a Visiting Professor at the University of Freiburg and is currently a Visiting Professor at the University of Life Sciences, Warsaw, Poland, and South West University, China. His scientific interests include computational molecular biology, data mining and parallel and distributed computing, and his computational molecular biology research focuses on RNA structural biology and mi RNA gene and target prediction, particularly in relation to cancer biology. He has jointly developed the Dot Knot software tool for predicting RNA tertiary structures, including pseudoknots, which is used by researchers worldwide. He has published over 150 research papers in respected international journals and in international conference proceedings.