UNMC cancer researchers are closer to understanding how certain genes in lymphoma work, which may lead to new approaches for treating the disease.
In the June 14 online edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), Timothy McKeithan, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor, oncology/hematology, and six colleagues published an article detailing the BCL6 gene and how it regulates B-cell differentiation, which is required in the development of most forms of lymphoma. Little is known about how the BCL6 gene is activated.
Alyssa Bouska, Ph.D., Timothy McKeithan, M.D., Ph.D., and Himabindu Ramachandrareddy recently had their lymphoma research published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. |
Other authors on the article are:
- Himabindu Ramachandrareddy, graduate research assistant, pathology/microbiology;
- Alyssa Bouska, Ph.D., postdoctoral fellow, pathology/microbiology;
- Yulei Shen, M.D., instructor, pathology/microbiology;
- Ming Ji, Eppley Institute, a visiting research associate from Nanjing University, China;
- Angie Rizzino, Ph.D., professor and program director, Eppley Institute; and
- Wing (John) Chan, M.D., professor and A and A Vickery Jr. M.D. Professorship, pathology/microbiology.