UNMC receives almost $9.9 million to study cell signaling, cancer

The University of Nebraska Medical Center has received a five-year grant

totaling almost $9.9 million from the National Institutes of Health (NIH)

to further the understanding of cell signaling — the biochemical response

of cells to their environment in relation to study a variety of cancers.

The grant establishes an NIH-designated Nebraska Center for Cellular Signaling

at UNMC, and is the second largest new grant in history received by UNMC.

Funded by the Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence (CoBRE) program,

an NIH-supported program, it also is the second CoBRE grant received in

a week at UNMC. Last week, a grant for $10.6 million was received at UNMC

for the NIH-designated Nebraska Center for Molecular Biology of Neurosensory

Systems.

Margaret Wheelock, Ph.D., professor of oral biology, UNMC College of

Dentistry, is principal investigator of the latest grant and director of

the new Nebraska Center for Cellular Signaling. The center will focus on

the study of cell signaling, and will expand cellular signaling research

of talented junior researchers to foster new research initiatives that

ultimately will improve the health of Nebraskans and people around the

world. Research projects will focus on relation to head and neck, prostate,

colon, skin cancer and cancer in general.

Im delighted that Dr. Wheelock and her associates have received this

large grant award which in essence recognizes the excellence and importance

of the science involved in the project and its potential for developing

new, innovative scientists, said UNMC Chancellor Harold M. Maurer, M.D.

These new scientists themselves will become independent researchers. What

is equally impressive and unique is that this award is the second large

COBRE grant from the NIH to UNMC in one month. I find our scientists truly

amazing.

Five research projects within the grant will be led by researchers from

UNMC, the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Creighton University. Each

project involves the study of cellular signaling with a focus on its role

in producing tumors. Cell signaling — the biochemical response of cells

to their environment  — is a rapidly growing area of national research

due to scientific and technological advances made in the last 10 years.

This grant will allow us to bring together outstanding junior and senior

faculty with similar interests, which will greatly enhance the science

knowledge and opportunities for more collaboration. said Dr. Wheelock.

It will increase the research profile of Nebraskas dental schools and

develop junior researchers. We also will be working toward attracting more

grants and researchers long after the COBRE grant concludes.

Dr. Wheelock said the significant level of common themes among the five

research projects strengthens the work, with the goal to further the understanding

of the biological process of cancer.

Normally, cells in the body signal to one another. During the cancer

process, cell signaling goes awry. Were studying whats gone wrong in

the signaling pathways when cells grow more rapidly and divide. If we can

modify the information pathway in the cells, perhaps we can decrease the

potential of the cancerous cell to spread, Dr. Wheelock said. Our clinicians

have a lot of burning questions. If we could say this cell does this or

that, the patient could be saved a lot of trauma. Getting this grant has

been one of our goals. We have the right people. Thats exciting for the

future.

Dr. Wheelock has a long history of grant support from the National

Institutes of Health, significant peer review experience and is committed

to training and promoting junior investigators, said Tom Rosenquist, Ph.D.,

UNMC vice-chancellor for research. She has identified highly qualified

junior faculty members whose research focuses on cellular signaling and

has also gathered an experienced group of mentors whose expertise covers

a number of areas of cell signaling.

Cell signaling is a burgeoning area of national research, Dr. Rosenquist

said. This grant is extraordinarily valuable. This is where all the thinking

outside the box pays off.

This grant is representative of NIH’s confidence in the innovative

work conducted by UNMC and its partners in science,” said U.S. Sen. Ben

Nelson. “It is no surprise that UNMC has again been recognized as a preeminent

institution by its peers.

U.S. Sen. Chuck Hagel said the second NIH grant shows the outstanding

work being done in UNMC research. The cutting edge work happening at UNMC

will benefit greatly Nebraskans and the rest of our country.

U.S. Rep. Lee Terry, said the state can be proud of the milestone. UNMC

has established a national reputation as a leader in cutting-edge medical

research,” Rep. Terry said. “This grant is further proof of that. The entire

state of Nebraska can be proud. The fact that other local institutions

— such as Creighton University — will take part in the research spurred

by this grant spotlights the outstanding medical expertise in Nebraska.

This is by far the single largest research grant the UNMC College of

Dentistry has ever received, and is a major step in our research advancement,

said John Reinhardt, D.D.S., dean of the UNMC College of Dentistry. With

this financial support and the collaboration of senior and junior scientists

and clinicians, we will establish a strong program of excellence for the

study of oral cancer.

The goal is to develop researchers and produce research that may lead

to earlier diagnosis or new treatments for oral and other cancers. Dentists

are often on the front line of diagnosis for cancers of the head, mouth, 

neck, and throat. Nearly 8,000 people in the U.S. die of oral and pharyngeal

cancers each year.  Oral cancers are particularly aggressive; the

overall 5-year survival rate is only 52 percent, worse than cancers of

the breast, uterus, colon, and prostate, Dr. Reinhardt said.

Project leaders of the centers first five grants are: James Wahl, Ph.D.

and Sreenivas Koka, D.D.S., Ph.D., UNMC College of Dentistry Department

of Oral Biology; Melanie Simpson, Ph.D., University of Nebraska-Lincoln;

and Laura Hansen, Ph.D. and Bhakta Dey, Ph.D., Creighton School of Medicine

Department of Biomedical Sciences.