Grant ID | RP101120 |
Awarded On | January 20, 2010 |
Title | Creation of Animal Models and Characterization of Nicotinic Receptor Cancer Risk Factors |
Program | Academic Research |
Award Mechanism | Individual Investigator |
Institution/Organization | Baylor College of Medicine |
Principal Investigator/Program Director | John A Dani |
Cancer Sites | Lung and Bronchus |
Contracted Amount | $741,765 |
Lay Summary |
Tobacco use is directly responsible for approximately 1/3 of all cancer deaths annually in the United States. Therefore, the genetic predispositions and causes for tobacco use are in fact predispositions and causes of cancer. Nicotine is the addictive component of tobacco that motivates and drives cigarette smoking despite the harmful effects. A genetic factor that is associated with cancer was found within a receptor of the human brain, and that receptor binds the addictive drug, nicotine. Results showed that this nicotine receptor is a vital link between normal human genetic differences and cancer, but the mechanism that underlies this cancer risk has never been analyzed. In this st... |