found: Work cat.: Patel, B.B. Epigallocatechin gallate, a component of polyphenolic green tea extract, could be a possible chemopreventative agent in the prostate of TRAMP mice, 2005.
found: Cancer research, Sept. 15, 1996:p. 4096 (We have previously reported the development of a transgenic mouse model for prostate cancer derived from PB-Tag transgenic line 8247, henceforth designated the TRAMP (transgenic adenocarcinoma mouse prostate) model)
found: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Aug. 28, 2001:p. 10350 (Development of effective chemopreventive agents against prostate cancer (CaP) for humans requires conclusive evidence of their efficacy in animal models that closely emulates human disease. The autochthonous transgenic adenocarcinoma of the mouse prostate (TRAMP) model, which spontaneously develops metastatic CaP, is one such model that mimics progressive forms of human disease)
found: Clinical cancer research, Jan. 2005:p. 147 (For relevance to humans, prostate cancer studies should be conducted in animal models where the disease occurs in a manner similar to that in humans. The transgenic adenocarcinoma of the mouse prostate (TRAMP) is one such model for prostate cancer in which progressive forms of the disease occurs in a manner very similar to the human disease. In this model, expression of the SV40 early genes (T and t antigen, Tag) are driven by the prostate-specific promoter probasin that leads to cell transformation within the prostate. One hundred percent of male TRAMP mice develop prostate cancer without any chemical or hormonal treatment)
notfound: McGraw-Hill dictionary of scientific and technical terms, 2003;MESH (Online), Dec. 21, 2006;Wiley encyclopedia of biomedical engineering, 2006