Bruce Nathan Ames - Paradigm shifts inside the cancer research revolution

•This article is a tribute to Bruce Nathan Ames by fourteen scholars who are particularly familiar with the work of Dr. Ames.•The article highlights the numerous accomplishments of Dr. Ames attained over his six decades of scientific work.•Much of Dr. Ames’ work represents paradigm shifts inside the...

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Published in:Mutation research. Reviews in mutation research Vol. 787; p. 108363
Main Authors: Smith, Carr J., Perfetti, Thomas A., Berry, Sir Colin, Brash, Douglas E., Bus, James, Calabrese, Edward, Clemens, Roger A., Fowle, John R. Jack, Greim, Helmut, MacGregor, James T., Maronpot, Robert, Pressman, Peter, Zeiger, Errol, Hayes, A. Wallace
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier B.V 01-01-2021
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Summary:•This article is a tribute to Bruce Nathan Ames by fourteen scholars who are particularly familiar with the work of Dr. Ames.•The article highlights the numerous accomplishments of Dr. Ames attained over his six decades of scientific work.•Much of Dr. Ames’ work represents paradigm shifts inside the cancer research revolution. Dr. Bruce Ames turned 92 on December 16, 2020. He considers his most recent work linking adequate consumption of 30 known vitamins and minerals with successful aging to be his most important contribution. With the passage of time, it is not uncommon for the accomplishments of a well-known scientist to undergo a parsimonious reductionism in the public mind - Pasteur’s vaccine, Mendel’s peas, Pavlov’s dogs, Ames’ test. Those of us in the research generation subsequent to Dr. Ames’ are undoubtedly affected by our own unconscious tendencies toward accepting the outstanding achievements of the past as commonplace. In doing so, seminal advances made by earlier investigators are often inadvertently subsumed into common knowledge. But having followed Ames’ work since the mid-1970s, we are cognizant that the eponymous Ames Test is but a single chapter in a long and rich narrative. That narrative begins with Ames' classic studies on the histidine operon of Salmonella, for which he was elected to the National Academy of Sciences. A summary of the historical progression of the understanding of chemical carcinogenesis to which Ames and his colleagues contributed is provided. Any summary of a topic as expansive and complex as the ongoing unraveling of the mechanisms underlying chemical carcinogenesis will only touch upon some of the major conceptual advances to which Ames and his colleagues contributed. We hope that scientists of all ages familiar with Ames only through the eponymous Ames Test will further investigate the historical progression of the conceptualization of cancer caused by chemical exposure. As the field of chemical carcinogenesis gradually moves away from primary reliance on animal testing to alternative protocols under the rubric of New Approach Methodologies (NAM) an understanding of where we have been might help to guide where we should go.
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ISSN:1383-5742
1388-2139
DOI:10.1016/j.mrrev.2020.108363