The Veterinary Resources Support Facility is operated out of the Department of Veterinary Sciences, a component of the M.D. Anderson Science Park. This CCSG-support CORE facility provides a cost-effective, Cancer Center-wide Rodent Serology Program that supports the health of rodent research colonies and the operation of SPF facilities throughout the institution, where utilization approaches 100,000 rodents per year. At the Science Park campus, serology and other forms of health and genetic assessment comprise the Rodent Health and Genetic Quality Assurance Program, integral to maintenance of 14,500 SPF rodents and the numerous inbred and transgenic breeding production colonies maintained at that campus. These programs provide animal health information that is vital to the utilization of defined animal models that are free of intercurrent disease or silent infections. These goals are particularly critical for complex cancer models in areas such as carcinogenesis, chemoprevention, and gene-, immuno-, biological-, and radio-therapy. The Veterinary Resources Support Facility also provides a clinical veterinarian (65%) that oversees the rodent facilities at both Science Park campuses, provides specialized research services, managed breeding production colonies, and assists MDACC investigators with custom polyclonal antisera production (cost recovered). We are requesting new funds to provide investigators with assistance in transgenic breeding management and PCR sample collection as part of the services of producing transgenic animals. An electronic communique for institutional transgenic users and mechanisms for re-deriving imported transgenics harboring pathogens will also be established.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
3P30CA016672-25S2
Application #
6352705
Study Section
Project Start
2000-07-18
Project End
2001-06-30
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
25
Fiscal Year
2000
Total Cost
$254,104
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center
Department
Type
DUNS #
001910777
City
Houston
State
TX
Country
United States
Zip Code
77030
Dutcher, Giselle M A; Bilen, Mehmet Asim (2018) Therapeutic Vaccines for Genitourinary Malignancies. Vaccines (Basel) 6:
Kurnit, Katherine C; Dumbrava, Ecaterina E Ileana; Litzenburger, Beate et al. (2018) Precision Oncology Decision Support: Current Approaches and Strategies for the Future. Clin Cancer Res 24:2719-2731
Duplisea, Jonathan J; Mokkapati, Sharada; Plote, Devin et al. (2018) The development of interferon-based gene therapy for BCG unresponsive bladder cancer: from bench to bedside. World J Urol :
Jordan, V Craig (2018) Tamoxifen Resistance Trumped and Oral Selective Estrogen Receptor Degraders Arrive. Clin Cancer Res 24:3480-3482
Pantano, Naitielle; Hunt, Brady; Schwarz, Richard A et al. (2018) Is Proflavine Exposure Associated with Disease Progression in Women with Cervical Dysplasia? A Brief Report. Photochem Photobiol 94:1308-1313
Mehrvarz Sarshekeh, Amir; Xiong, Henry Q; Iizuka, Kenzo et al. (2018) Phase II study of DFP-10917, a deoxycytidine analog, given by 14-day continuous intravenous infusion for chemotherapy-refractory advanced colorectal cancer. Invest New Drugs 36:895-902
Lang, Frederick F; Conrad, Charles; Gomez-Manzano, Candelaria et al. (2018) Phase I Study of DNX-2401 (Delta-24-RGD) Oncolytic Adenovirus: Replication and Immunotherapeutic Effects in Recurrent Malignant Glioma. J Clin Oncol 36:1419-1427
Ishizawa, Jo; Nakamaru, Kenji; Seki, Takahiko et al. (2018) Predictive Gene Signatures Determine Tumor Sensitivity to MDM2 Inhibition. Cancer Res 78:2721-2731
Talluri, Rajesh; Shete, Sanjay (2018) An approach to estimate bidirectional mediation effects with application to body mass index and fasting glucose. Ann Hum Genet 82:396-406
Bhadra, Anindya; Rao, Arvind; Baladandayuthapani, Veerabhadran (2018) Inferring network structure in non-normal and mixed discrete-continuous genomic data. Biometrics 74:185-195

Showing the most recent 10 out of 12418 publications