Department of Pathology, Genetics, and Biology, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-5324, USA
Cold Spring Harb Perspect Med. 2021 Mar 1;11(3):a035857. doi: 10.1101/cshperspect.a035857.
Observations of the incidence of tumors among chimney sweeps in the eighteenth century and later experiments with coal tars provided early evidence that carcinogens in the environment can promote cancer. Subsequent studies of individuals exposed to radiation, work on fly genetics, and the discovery that DNA was the genetic material led to the idea that these carcinogens act by inducing mutations in DNA that change the behavior of cells and ultimately cause cancer. In this excerpt from his forthcoming book, Joe Lipsick looks back at how the concepts of mutagenesis and carcinogenesis emerged, how these converged with development of the Ames test, and how biochemistry and crystallography ultimately revealed the underlying molecular basis.
观察 18 世纪的烟囱清洁工的肿瘤发病率和后来的煤炭焦油实验为环境中的致癌物质可以促进癌症提供了早期证据。随后对接触辐射的个体进行的研究、蝇类遗传学研究以及 DNA 是遗传物质的发现,使人们认识到这些致癌物质通过诱导 DNA 突变来改变细胞的行为,最终导致癌症。在即将出版的书中的这一节中,乔·利普森 (Joe Lipsick) 回顾了诱变和致癌作用的概念是如何出现的,它们如何与艾姆斯试验的发展相结合,以及生物化学和晶体学最终如何揭示潜在的分子基础。