Current Search: Honors Student Theses (x) » Cancer (x) » Cell cycle (x)
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Title
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Alternate applications of anticancer drugs on COS-7 normal cells.
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Creator
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Morris, Deborah., Harriet L. Wilkes Honors College
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Abstract/Description
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Anticancer drugs, including nocodazole and vinblastine, work by disrupting the dynamics of microtubules. Unfortunately, these drugs often produce numerous side effects, including nausea, vomiting, loss of appetite, loss of hair, increased chance of infection, and fatigue. My thesis research evaluated the efficacy of using repeated low doses of microtubule drugs instead of a single high dose, in an attempt to minimize side effects. Using nocodazole and vinblastine, I first established the...
Show moreAnticancer drugs, including nocodazole and vinblastine, work by disrupting the dynamics of microtubules. Unfortunately, these drugs often produce numerous side effects, including nausea, vomiting, loss of appetite, loss of hair, increased chance of infection, and fatigue. My thesis research evaluated the efficacy of using repeated low doses of microtubule drugs instead of a single high dose, in an attempt to minimize side effects. Using nocodazole and vinblastine, I first established the minimum effective concentration that disrupts the microtubules in normal human cells grown in vitro and treated cells with those concentrations over a period of several days. I found that microtubules were increasingly depolymerized as the days progressed. Next, I tested a combination of nocodazole and vinblastine at low concentrations.
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Date Issued
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2009
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PURL
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http://purl.flvc.org/FAU/209996
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Subject Headings
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Cancer cells, Growth, Regulation, Antineoplastic agents, Physiological effect, Cell cycle, Effect of drugs on, Cancer, Chemotherapy
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Format
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Document (PDF)