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Members of the Brain Tumor Program of Huntsman Cancer Institute
pursue a wide range of goals relevant to understanding nervous system
function and developing new treatments for neurological disease. For
example, we utilize well-defined systems of precursor cells to
understand how the processes of differentiation are regulated, with
research examining cell-extrinsic signaling molecules,
transcriptional control and biochemical control of these processes.
Our precursor cell discovery program has the goal of identifying the
precursor cell populations that are involved in the creation of the
central nervous system. Comparison of the properties of these normal
cells with tumors of the human brain also provides insights into the
origin of human brain tumors and the biological dysfunctions that
cause them to become neoplastic. Still other areas of discovery
carried out by members of the Brain Tumor Program include landmark
research on the ion channel mutations responsible for inherited forms
of neurological disease, much other research on channel function, a
wide range of efforts in developmental biology (in organisms ranging
from C. elegans to H. sapiens), a wide range of studies on glial and
neuronal function and interaction, one of the most advanced imaging
programs in the country and the pursuit of cybersurgical innovations
in the arena of neurosurgery. In addition, in collaboration with the
Keck Center for Tissue Engineering of the University of Utah, the
Brain Tumor Program is committed to the development of new strategies
for the repair of damage to the CNS and other tissues, through the
development of biohybrid devices that bring together biomaterials
sciences and stem cell biology.
Through the above efforts, and through other ongoing programs, the
Brain Tumor Program provides a continuity of research efforts ranging
from basic research to clinical application. The active involvement
of basic scientists and clinician scientists in this effort
facilitates the development of novel approaches with the potential of
being translated into clinical practice. By providing a program in
which fundamental and applied researchers from several different
university departments work in partnership, a training environment is
provided that enables our members to avail themselves of the
strengths of both of these approaches.
Participating Faculty
Rick Ash
- My laboratory is interested in the relationships between amino acid
transport and cellular physiology. We are discovering linkages between
glutamate transport and glutathione metabolism. We use somatic cell
genetics, biochemistry and molecular biology to study mammalian cell
culture models.
Michael Bastiani
- The lab studies the molecular regulation of neuronal growth cone behavior
during brain development and in particular the role of lipocalins.
"Unregulated" cancer cell motility is a key behavior leading to tumor
metastisies.
We study the dynamic behaviors of growth cones primarily in C. elegans
using state of the art confocal microscopic imaging techniques, but also make
extensive use of molecular and genetic techniques in Drosophila and mouse to
study molecular function.
Mario R. Capecchi
- Our laboratory's effort is directed toward the molecular genetic
analysis of mammalian development with emphasis on neurogenesis,
organogenesis and limb development. Mouse genetics.
Chi-Bin Chien
- My lab is studying axon guidance, using the retinotectal projection of
zebrafish as a model system.
How axons find their initial targets in vivo is a basic problem of
developmental neurobiology, which we are attempting to address at a cell
biological level.
We are using a combination of molecular biology, classical genetics,
positional cloning, and sophisticated imaging methods to define the
molecules involved in retinal axon guidance and how they control growth
cone dynamics.
Maureen
L. Condic - We are interested in the control of neuronal fate and axon
outgrowth during development of the nervous system. The control of cell fate and
cell migration are important topics both in developmental biology and in cell
biology. We work in embryonic animal models (chicks, rats and mice), both in vitro
and in vivo, using cell biological and molecular biological techniques.
Robert S. Fujinami
- We are interested in viral pathogenesis. My laboratory studies how
viruses interact with the central nervous system (CNS) including how the immune
system recognizes the virus infected cell resulting in either viral clearance or
persistence. We use both in vitro and in vivo approaches mutating the virus
and follow the CNS pathology.
Erik M. Jorgensen
- Our lab is interested in the proteins which regulate neurotransmission.
We have demonstrated that the steps in the synaptic vesicle cycling depend
on the phosphorylation state of lipids. We are using the nematode C.
elegans to identify mutants which are defective in these processes.
Suzanne L. Mansour
- The Mansour Lab is interested in understanding the genetic control
of inner ear development and function.
Inner ear development goes through classic steps of induction,
morphogenesis and differentiation, so the genetic pathways responsible
for this progression are likely to be conserved among many developing
organs.
We use gene trapping and gene targeting to generate mutant mice,
which are characterized using morphologic, behavioral, and molecular
techniques.
Andres Villu Maricq
- Nervous system development and plasticity.
Study of genes required for neuronal differentiation, pathfinding, and
synaptic organization.
Genetic and molecular analysis of neuronal function in Caenorhabditis
elegans and generation of transgenic models.
Baldomero M. Olivera
- Our lab is interested in Conus peptides and their
target ion channels. The latter are the key macromolecules underpinning
all electrical signals in nervous systems. We use a combination of
biochemistry, molecular biology and electrophysiology for our work.
H. Joseph Yost
- Our research group is interested in the developmental genetic pathways and
mechanisms that establish the vertebrate body plan. We use embryos of zebrafish
and the frog Xenopus laevis in complementary approaches, with a focus on how
left-right asymmetry is established in the embryo and transmitted to brain, heart
and viscera primordial cells. The projects in the lab encompass a broad range of
molecular and cell biological topics, including cell-matrix and cell-cell interactions,
cell fate and migration, cell signaling pathways from ligand/receptors interactions
to transcription co-factors and RNA translational control.
Yost Lab.
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