Original title: Proteiny tepelného šoku: terapeutický přístup v onkologii
Translated title: Heat Shock Proteins - Focus on Therapeutic Approaches in Oncology
Authors: Rutkowski, Radoslaw ; Hromadníková, Ilona (advisor)
Document type: Master’s theses
Year: 2010
Language: eng
Abstract: Since the discovery of heat shock proteins in 1960s and their immunogenic properties 20 years later in 1980s they have been under rigorous investigation with great hopes for advent of immunotherapy in oncology as well as other pathologies. So are the HSPs a breakthrough in therapy of cancers or will they be just another form of palliative treatment of these notorious and deadly diseases? HSPs is a family of proteins expressed virtually by all living organisms. These proteins have a number of functions that are crucial to organism's intracellular and extracellular homeostasis. Due to the significance of HSPs, over the eons of the evolution, they have been highly conserved in our genetic code. The human HSPs shares almost 50 percent homology with simple unicellular prokaryotes to well over 95 percent homology with higher species of living organisms. Despite of the fact that HSPs have been knows for approximately 50 years and despite of the intensive resears in the field, currently Russia is the only place where HSP immunotherapy has been approved as of 2008 for treatment in renal cell carcinoma. The HSPs immunotherapy has proven benefitial as an adjuvant treatment in some stages of a selected cancers. The advantage of HPSs immunotherapy is that it has less side effects compared to standart chemotherapy...

Institution: Charles University Faculties (theses) (web)
Document availability information: Available in the Charles University Digital Repository.
Original record: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/29763

Permalink: http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-285153


The record appears in these collections:
Universities and colleges > Public universities > Charles University > Charles University Faculties (theses)
Academic theses (ETDs) > Master’s theses
 Record created 2017-04-25, last modified 2022-03-04


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