This is a request for continued funding of the predoctoral Carcinogenesis Training Program at Northwestern University, which is in its 14th year. The goal of this program is to provide comprehensive and rigorous research training in cancer biology. The program continues to serve as a focus for interdisciplinary interactions among students, postdocs and faculty in tumor biology. Candidates for funding from this program come from a robust pool of graduate students matriculating into integrated, rather than departmental, Ph.D. programs. The majority of candidates for training grant support enter graduate school through the Integrated Graduate Program in Life Sciences (IGP) which is organized into 9 curricular areas including Cancer Biology. A smaller number of students enter the Evanston campus Integrated Biological Sciences program (IbiS) and a smaller yet number derive from the MSTP program. The integration of Ph.D. recruitment and education has markedly increased the quality and number of students recruited into the area of Carcinogenesis, and graduates of the program are going on to outstanding postdoctoral positions in the area of cancer research. Interactions among Cancer Biology faculty including education enrichment activities and minority recruitment have been focused and coordinated. The program has evolved from its initial focus on Chemical Carcinogenesis to reflect the enhanced strength and diversity of the faculty in the area of cancer biology at the institution, with new strength in the areas of Signal Transduction, Adhesion, Motility and Angiogenesis, Viral Carcinogenesis and Tumor Therapy and Translational Studies. The core preceptor group, representing nine major NU departments, four Evanston Campus Departments and the Cancer Center, is well supported by a substantial NIH- funded research base. The training sites provide state-of-the-art resources a n d facilities within individual laboratories and in numerous shared resources. The program consists of 1.5 years of course work including core courses and advanced courses in tumor cell biology. This is followed by 3-4 years of thesis research coupled with an educational enrichment program providing training in critical thinking, presentation skills, the peer-review process and the responsible conduct of research. An expansion of the program to 10 slots from 9 is requested to reflect the growth in the student pool and faculty preceptor base. In addition, institutional commitment to expand Cancer Biology Research at NU includes plans for building a new R.H. Lurie Research Tower and for doubling the research faculty over next 5-10 years. Expanded support for the Carcinogenesis Program will be critical if we are to ensure that graduate training keeps pace with the expected growth of the research enterprise at NU.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Institutional National Research Service Award (T32)
Project #
2T32CA009560-16
Application #
6313698
Study Section
Subcommittee G - Education (NCI)
Program Officer
Gorelic, Lester S
Project Start
1986-08-01
Project End
2006-04-30
Budget Start
2001-07-12
Budget End
2002-04-30
Support Year
16
Fiscal Year
2001
Total Cost
$292,830
Indirect Cost
Name
Northwestern University at Chicago
Department
Pathology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
005436803
City
Chicago
State
IL
Country
United States
Zip Code
60611
Mehta, Manan M; Weinberg, Samuel E; Steinert, Elizabeth M et al. (2018) Hexokinase 2 is dispensable for T cell-dependent immunity. Cancer Metab 6:10
Swaroop, Alok; Oyer, Jon A; Will, Christine M et al. (2018) An activating mutation of the NSD2 histone methyltransferase drives oncogenic reprogramming in acute lymphocytic leukemia. Oncogene :
Kong, Hyewon; Chandel, Navdeep S (2018) Regulation of redox balance in cancer and T cells. J Biol Chem 293:7499-7507
Putzbach, Will; Haluck-Kangas, Ashley; Gao, Quan Q et al. (2018) CD95/Fas ligand mRNA is toxic to cells. Elife 7:
Gao, Quan Q; Putzbach, William E; Murmann, Andrea E et al. (2018) 6mer seed toxicity in tumor suppressive microRNAs. Nat Commun 9:4504
Murmann, Andrea E; Gao, Quan Q; Putzbach, William E et al. (2018) Small interfering RNAs based on huntingtin trinucleotide repeats are highly toxic to cancer cells. EMBO Rep 19:
Bell, Jonathan B; Rink, Jonathan S; Eckerdt, Frank et al. (2018) HDL nanoparticles targeting sonic hedgehog subtype medulloblastoma. Sci Rep 8:1211
Putzbach, William; Gao, Quan Q; Patel, Monal et al. (2018) DISE: A Seed-Dependent RNAi Off-Target Effect That Kills Cancer Cells. Trends Cancer 4:10-19
Spriggs, Chelsey C; Laimins, Laimonis A (2017) FANCD2 Binds Human Papillomavirus Genomes and Associates with a Distinct Set of DNA Repair Proteins to Regulate Viral Replication. MBio 8:
Putzbach, William; Gao, Quan Q; Patel, Monal et al. (2017) Many si/shRNAs can kill cancer cells by targeting multiple survival genes through an off-target mechanism. Elife 6:

Showing the most recent 10 out of 229 publications