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Cancer
Cancer
We are rapidly demystifying cancers, exposing the molecular mechanisms underlying tumors and leading the search for the next generation of targeted cancer therapies. We see a future where every cancer and every patient has a cure.

Cancer

Nature
09/2023

Reducing stress on T cells makes them better cancer fighters

Even for killer T cells—specialized immune cells—seeking and destroying cancer cells around the clock can be exhausting. In a new study, Professor Susan Kaech, first author Anna-Maria Globig, and colleagues discovered that the body’s sympathetic stress response (“fight-or-flight”) hormones can exhaust killer T cells in varying cancer types in mouse and human tissue samples—and that exhaustion can be inhibited with beta-blockers. Their discovery demonstrates the potential benefit of pairing beta-blockers with existing immunotherapies to improve cancer treatment by bolstering killer T cell function.

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Science
09/2023

Rewiring tumor mitochondria enhances the immune system’s ability to recognize and fight cancer

Immunotherapy, which uses the body’s own immune system to fight cancer, is an effective treatment option, yet many patients do not respond to it. Thus, cancer researchers are seeking new ways to optimize immunotherapy so that it is more effective for more people. Now, Professors Susan Kaech and Gerald Shadel, co-first authors Kailash Chandra Mangalhara and Karthik Varanasi, and colleagues have found that manipulating an early step in energy production in mitochondria—the cell’s powerhouses—reduces melanoma tumor growth and enhances the immune response in mice. In the future, this manipulation of mitochondrial energy production may be leveraged to create new cancer therapeutics that are less harmful for mitochondria and cells.

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Nature Communications
12/2023

How drugs can target the thick “scar tissue” of pancreatic cancer

Pancreatic cancer is one of the deadliest cancers—only about one in eight patients survives five years after diagnosis. Those dismal statistics are in part due to the thick, nearly impenetrable wall of fibrosis, or scar tissue, that surrounds most pancreatic tumors and makes it hard for drugs to access and destroy the cancer cells. Professor Ronald Evans, Senior Staff Scientists Michael Downes and Annette Atkins, first author Gaoyang Liang, and colleagues have now discovered how a class of anti-cancer drugs called HDAC inhibitors can help treat pancreatic cancer by modulating the activation of fibroblasts—the cells that make up that wall of scar tissue.

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