Grant ID | RP110005 |
Awarded On | October 29, 2010 |
Title | The miR-200 family and metastatic prostate cancer |
Program | Academic Research |
Award Mechanism | Individual Investigator |
Institution/Organization | Baylor College of Medicine |
Principal Investigator/Program Director | Li Xin |
Cancer Sites | Prostate |
Contracted Amount | $524,044 |
Lay Summary |
Though metastatic cancer is the major cause of prostate cancer-related morbidity and mortality, the underlying molecular mechanisms have not been well characterized. There is also a lack of mouse models that develop high-penetrance metastatic prostate cancer. Cancer stem cells have been shown recently to play active roles in initiating metastatic tumor. Recent cell biological studies revealed that the miR-200 family negatively regulates self-renewal and epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), two basic properties of cancer stem cells. We hypothesize that decreased miR-200 activity induces prostate cancer to metastasize. A prostate regeneration assay will be utilized as a genetic approac... |