$1
million more for prostate research
Researchers
at the UC Davis Cancer Center this spring received three new grants
totaling more than $1 million to study the genetics of prostate
cancer.
Ralph
deVere White, director of the UC Davis Cancer Center, received a
three-year grant of $468,000 from the National Cancer Institute
to study the functions of different p53 mutations in prostate cancer.
P53 is a tumor suppresser gene that plays a key role in many cancers.
Christopher
Evans, an assistant professor in the Department of Urology, received
a two-year grant of $235,000 from the Department of Defense to study
p53 mutations in archival prostate cancer tissue.
Paul
Gumerlock, an assistant professor in the Division of Hematology/Oncology,
received a two-year $425,000 grant from the Department of Defense
to study protein interaction with the N-terminus of the androgen
receptor.
Prostate
cancer research at UC Davis receives $2.5 million of the more than
$9 million earmarked for cancer research.
"These
grants bolster the UC Davis Cancer Center's efforts to strengthen
its work in basic research," said deVere White, a professor
and chair of the Department of Urology. "They emphasize that
we are joining the national effort to find better ways to detect,
treat and ultimately cure cancer."
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Pathologist
Edward Larkin discusses how flow cytometry can be used to diagnose
hematologic malignancies. A professor in the medical school's pathology
department, Larkin was one of more than a dozen presenters and more
than 90 scientists who attended the program.
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