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Cancer and Stem Cell Biology

$155,262P30FY2021CANIH

University Of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles CA

Investigators

Linked publications, trials & patents

Trial NCT07339085Trial NCT07276438Trial NCT07242365Trial NCT06650163Trial NCT06568016Trial NCT06113016Trial NCT05595499Trial NCT04205838Trial NCT04201873Trial NCT04185311Trial NCT04119024Trial NCT04106362Trial NCT04069923Trial NCT04069910Trial NCT04050215Trial NCT04007029Trial NCT03996850Trial NCT03970252Trial NCT03953157Trial NCT03904251Trial NCT03902951Trial NCT03892720Trial NCT03830918Trial NCT03825796Trial NCT03745690Trial NCT03732950Trial NCT03732352Trial NCT03672773Trial NCT03623854Trial NCT03618134Trial NCT03603223Trial NCT03601455Trial NCT03596710Trial NCT03582774Trial NCT03582475Trial NCT03541850Trial NCT03515577Trial NCT03506802Trial NCT03425461Trial NCT03411070Trial NCT03368547Trial NCT03319342Trial NCT03240861Trial NCT03202472Trial NCT03128619Trial NCT03025139Trial NCT03014804Trial NCT02940262Trial NCT02928510Trial NCT02925351Trial NCT02919332Trial NCT02902757Trial NCT02888301Trial NCT02881242Trial NCT02880020Trial NCT02879994Trial NCT02830165Trial NCT02816879Trial NCT02775292Trial NCT02756130Trial NCT02701153Trial NCT02688348Trial NCT02683200Trial NCT02672033Trial NCT02597894Trial NCT02575027Trial NCT02451865Trial NCT02336763Trial NCT02310594Trial NCT02296229Trial NCT02280161Trial NCT02263898Trial NCT02176902Trial NCT02070406Trial NCT02049593Trial NCT02048020Trial NCT02015559Trial NCT01912820Trial NCT01013285Trial NCT01005472Trial NCT00999557Trial NCT00998010Trial NCT00985192Trial NCT00955591Trial NCT00882765Trial NCT00880542Trial NCT00769470Trial NCT00706615Trial NCT00685516Trial NCT00616642Trial NCT00612066Trial NCT00601289Trial NCT00601094Trial NCT00521209Trial NCT00509431Trial NCT00471887Trial NCT00450567Trial NCT00444223Trial NCT00352001Trial NCT00349167

Abstract

CANCER AND STEM CELL BIOLOGY RESEARCH PROGRAM (CSCB) ABSTRACT The Cancer and Stem Cell Biology Research Program (CSCB) is led by Director Gay Crooks, MBBS, who specializes in hematopoietic stem/progenitor cell transplantation and Co-Director Brigitte Gomperts, MD, who studies lung carcinogenesis and the role of the microenvironment. CSCB links basic and translational investigators studying biological processes shared between stem cells and malignancy. Program members expect that a detailed understanding of the mechanisms of normal and aberrant cell self-renewal and differentiation will reveal novel biological insights into cancer initiation, progression, and recurrence, thereby enabling exploration of novel therapeutic targets and biomarkers. CSCB basic, translational, and clinical researchers study normal stem cells and their malignant counterparts originating from two biological sources, hematopoiesis and epithelia. Scientific interactions between the two tissue platforms integrate by sharing common conceptual frameworks and experimental tools. The Program objective is to understand the intrinsic and extrinsic mechanisms that control homeostasis in healthy tissues that go awry in malignancy, and to harness these mechanisms for cancer treatment. Three specific aims guide achieving the Program objective. Aim 1- To understand how the biology of epithelial stem cells is regulated during malignant transformation and normal development. Aim 2- To define the mechanisms that regulate growth and differentiation of hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells during malignant transformation, normal development, and after transplantation. Aim 3- To determine the role of the microenvironment in tumor formation and stem cell regulation. The CSCB program has 36 faculty from 16 departments spanning four UCLA schools and affiliated institution Caltech, that together provide the breadth and depth of expertise needed to achieve scientific and programmatic goals. Program members are highly productive and collaborative with 633 cancer publications during the prior project period, 31% of which are inter-programmatic, 6% of which are intra-programmatic, and 44% of which are in high-impact (IF ?10, or field leading) journals. Members have support from $11,389,786 in cancer funding, of which $2.7M (23%) is from the NCI and $8.1M (71%) is peer-reviewed. Program science is highly dependent on the JCCC, with significant member use of all six Shared Resources, the Seed and Impact grant programs, space allocations, and recruitment and retention of key investigators. Each CSCB investigator has a dominant interest in either hematopoietic or epithelial stem cells, although the shared biology of stem cells and cancer in all tissue types has led to an immensely fertile and interactive Program environment across platforms. These interactions benefit from a close collaboration between the JCCC and the UCLA Broad Stem Cell Research Center (BSCRC) over the past 12 years. Almost every investigator in CSCB works on at least two of the three specific aims, using combinations of animal model systems, human pluripotent stem cells, and primary human tissues to uncover basic biologic processes and reveal new opportunities for cancer treatment.

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Cancer and Stem Cell Biology · GrantIndex