Robert Lewis, Ph.D., honored as UNMC’s Scientist Laureate

Robert Lewis, Ph.D., has been honored as UNMC's Scientist Laureate, the medical center's highest research honor.

Robert Lewis, Ph.D., the Edward and Lida Robinson Professor of Cancer Research at the Eppley Institute for Research in Cancer and Allied Diseases, has been honored as the University of Nebraska Medical Center’s Scientist Laureate, the medical center's highest research honor.
 
Dr. Lewis sees the award as a challenge.
 
"I think it signals an expectation of what I should accomplish with the remainder of my time here," he said.
 
Dr. Lewis's research explores proteins that appear necessary for the viability, survival and growth of tumor cells but that are dispensable for the growth and survival of normal cells.
 
"The model is colon cancer, but theoretically it's applicable to other cancers in which the intracellular signaling pathways we're studying exist," Dr. Lewis said.
 
His research focus dates from 1996, when his team was studying a molecule called KSR1 in another project. Three research papers in a scholarly journal suggested a possible explanation for data that Dr. Lewis' team was seeing that they didn't understand.
 
"I actually got the cDNA, which is the gene coding sequence for this particular protein we were working on, from an author of one of the papers, and we started playing with it.
 
"When you remove this protein, KSR1, from the mice, the mice are normal but they're resistant to cancer."
 
The team also discovered that when a sister gene, KSR2, is removed from mice, the mice become obese and insulin-resistant. But, thanks to insight from colleague Keith Johnson, Ph.D., Dr. Lewis' team recently found that small cell lung carcinomas (SCLC) also strongly express the KSR2 protein.
 
"We have preliminary data, not yet published, that (KSR2) seems to be important for self-renewal of SCLC tumor propagating cells, the key cells within SCLC that are required for making the tumor.
 
"If you disrupt it from mice, the mice become obese, and if you disrupt it from the tumor cells, the tumor cells don't grow. So we're trying to find out whether SCLC tumors have specifically acquired the ability to make KSR2 to help them grow."
 
Dr. Lewis, who has been at UNMC since 1991, called the Scientist Laureate a great honor.
 
"It's a reflection of the work that the people in the lab have done, not just me," he said.
 
Dr. Lewis credited Ken Cowan, M.D., Ph.D., the current director of the Eppley Institute and the Fred & Pamela Buffett Cancer Center, and his predecessor, Ray Ruddon, M.D., Ph.D., for their support of his work.
 
"The Eppley Institute has been a phenomenal environment in which to work," Dr. Lewis said. "It's a great place to let junior faculty members grow, and I feel like even as a senior faculty member, I'm extremely well supported, both financially and emotionally."
 
Dr. Lewis was recognized at an awards ceremony earlier this month at UNMC. In addition, 23 other researchers and one organization were honored at the event.
 
The Research Leadership Award is intended to honor scientists previously recognized as Distinguished Scientists who have a longstanding research funding history and also serve as research leaders and mentors on campus. This award went to:

Research Leadership

The Distinguished Scientist Award – which is sponsored by the chancellor – recognizes researchers who have been among the most productive scientists at UNMC during the past five years. Ten researchers were recognized:

Distinguished Scientists

New Investigator Awards go to outstanding UNMC scientists who in the past two years have secured their first funding from the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Defense or other national sources. New Investigators also had to demonstrate scholarly activity such as publishing their research and/or presenting their findings at national conventions. Twelve researchers were recognized:

New Investigators

In addition, the Community Service to Research Award went to Live On Nebraska. A second news release will be sent on this award.
 
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