Skip to main content
menu
URMC / Labs / Land Lab / News

 

News

20192018201620152014

Searching For Cancer's Achilles' Heel

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

A new approach to finding genes important in the onset of cancer is described in Nature. The findings could help to identify new targets for tumor therapy.

Several genes, or oncogenes, cooperate with each other to transform normal cells into cancer cells. Hartmut Land and colleagues have now identified a list of other genes - termed cooperation response genes (CRGs) - that are regulated downstream of these oncogenes. By interfering with each CRG individually, the team were able to show that 14 out of 24 of them had a critical role in tumor formation. Restoring expression of these genes to the levels observed in normal cells prevented the formation of tumors. What's more, genetic perturbations of CRGs with relatively smaller effects when examined on their own show evidence of being essential when analyzed in combination.

The findings represent an important step in the search for the chink in the armor in human cancer - the elusive gene that cancer cells simply cannot live without.

Read More: Searching For Cancer's Achilles' Heel

Researchers Find Roadmap to Next-Generation Cancer Therapies

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Pinpointing new targets for cancer treatments is as difficult as finding a needle in a haystack, yet a University of Rochester team has discovered an entire novel class of genes they believe will lead to a greater understanding of cancer cell function and the next generation of effective and less harmful therapies for patients.

Read More: Researchers Find Roadmap to Next-Generation Cancer Therapies