In Vivo Role Of LMO4 And Isolation Of An LMO4-containing Proteosome In Breast Cancer
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$455,250.00
Summary
Breast cancer is the most common cancer to affect women, with one in 10 developing the disease. Although treatment of breast cancer has substantially improved over the last few years, 25% of women diagnosed with this cancer will die from the disease. A major objective of cancer research is the identification of genes involved in tumour development and definition of their precise role in both normal and cancer cells. The design of effective therapeutic inhibitors of cancer requires an understandi ....Breast cancer is the most common cancer to affect women, with one in 10 developing the disease. Although treatment of breast cancer has substantially improved over the last few years, 25% of women diagnosed with this cancer will die from the disease. A major objective of cancer research is the identification of genes involved in tumour development and definition of their precise role in both normal and cancer cells. The design of effective therapeutic inhibitors of cancer requires an understanding of the basic molecular and cellular biology behind the genetic changes thought to contribute to cancer. The focus of our research is to understand normal cellular mechanisms that drive growth and differentiation of breast tissue, and those changes that lead to breast cancer. Nuclear regulatory proteins have been implicated in many different types of cancers and leukaemias. We aim to identify the key regulators in breast tissue, characterising both their structural properties and biological roles, with the ultimate view of understanding how they divert a normal cell to a cancerous cell. This proposal centres on the characterisation of a specific regulatory molecule which we recently demonstrated to be overexpressed in 56% of human primary breast cancers and in 38% of pre-invasive ductal carcinoma in situ. These studies will include defining its normal biologic function and identification of the proteins that this regulator associates with in breast cancer cells.Read moreRead less
This project seeks to evaluate the role of new cell growth regulating pathway in the development of moles and melanoma. In particular, we will determine at which stage during tumour progression disruption of this pathway occurs, and whether its loss is associated with melanoma patient survival. Identification of the cancer-related changes that occur when this pathway is aberrant may ultimately lead to the development of novel therapies to treat melanoma.
TRF2 Protein And T-loop Replication In Alternative Lengthening Of Telomeres
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$398,156.00
Summary
Telomere loss acts as a clock telling cells when to stop proliferating. Cancer cells ignore this clock and grow indefinitely by preventing the normal loss of telomeres. Little is known about one of the methods cancers use to preserve telomeres, called ALT, which is employed by some brain tumours and other cancers. We will determine if the TRF2 protein is involved in controlling ALT. This will lay the basis for future anti-cancer treatments targeted at ALT.
Stage II In The Development Of Eph/ephrin Based Tumor Targeting Reagents: Optimisation Of Drug Efficacy And Delivery
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$204,125.00
Summary
In the final stage of cancer, including melanoma, tumor cells gain the ability to spread, a process called metastasis. Altered communication between cancer and normal cells is one of the causes of this invasive characteristic. We have started the development of novel agents that target and modulate proteins on the cell surface that control these properties and are found in metastatic tumors. We propose to refine the targeting and killing properties of these agents for early clinical testing.
The MYB gene as a model for global transcriptional regulation: stopping, starting and looping. This project will study how transcriptional elongation controls the MYB gene, a key regulator of normal and cancerous growth and regulation. There are three major benefits that are likely to flow from the proposed research It will strengthen research in new and important areas of transcriptional regulation, by building research capacity in Australia in the area of gene expression, particularly with res ....The MYB gene as a model for global transcriptional regulation: stopping, starting and looping. This project will study how transcriptional elongation controls the MYB gene, a key regulator of normal and cancerous growth and regulation. There are three major benefits that are likely to flow from the proposed research It will strengthen research in new and important areas of transcriptional regulation, by building research capacity in Australia in the area of gene expression, particularly with respect to transcriptional elongation and long-range regulation. It will highlight a new approach to the therapeutic targeting of MYB in cancer: data generated from this research may enable us to target MYB expression in a range of cancers including breast cancer by inhibiting transcriptional elongation. And it will provide training in advanced molecular biology to postdoctoral scientists and students.Read moreRead less
An understanding of the way cells control their complex internal circuitry is relevant to diseases like cancer and leukemia. The main focus of this project is a cellular regulator we identified several years ago called BORIS. Normally dormant in all cells outside the male reproductive organs, BORIS is reactivated in many cancers. We will study the network of factors perturbed when BORIS becomes inappropriately active in cancer cells. Ultimately this project may lead to new treatments for cancer.
The Role Of MC1R Polymorphism In Skin Cancer Risk Phenotypes
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$480,750.00
Summary
Sunsmart campaigns are a unifying element in the lives of many Australians who wish to ensure protection against the damaging effects of ultraviolet rays in sunlight. Indeed, Australians have the highest incidence of UV-induced melanoma in the world. Although it is evident that lighter skin colours are more susceptible to sun damage, the relationship between sun exposure, skin type and melanoma formation is less clear. An essential first step in understanding the complex interactions that give r ....Sunsmart campaigns are a unifying element in the lives of many Australians who wish to ensure protection against the damaging effects of ultraviolet rays in sunlight. Indeed, Australians have the highest incidence of UV-induced melanoma in the world. Although it is evident that lighter skin colours are more susceptible to sun damage, the relationship between sun exposure, skin type and melanoma formation is less clear. An essential first step in understanding the complex interactions that give rise to melanoma, and in identifying individuals that have a high susceptibility, is to reduce phenotypic analyses to genotypic classifications. As pigmentation phenotype is a factor of central importance in determining an individuals risk for melanoma, characterisation of the genes underlying the physical qualities of human eye, hair and skin colour will give a more direct and accurate genotypic assessment of risk. Results from an epidemiology study of melanoma patients in Queensland have identified a number of genetic changes within the melanocyte stimulating hormone receptor (MC1R) gene that associate with skin, hair and eye colour as well as with incidence of melanoma. Further investigation of MC1R gene alleles which segregate with skin and hair colours will provide the beginning for a whole new genotype-based classification of skin colour and melanoma risk, and will significantly contribute to our understanding of what makes some individuals highly susceptible to melanoma while others are not. Indeed, MC1R polymorphisms may numerically be the most important melanoma predisposition gene yet identified, exerting its effects as one of those common genes of small effect which may account for much more of the case load in melanoma than rarer genes of large effect. Studies such as this will enable powerful genotyping methods to be employed in identification of those individuals at highest risk for melanoma and other skin cancers.Read moreRead less