Grant ID | RP130515 |
Awarded On | December 05, 2012 |
Title | Using microbial pathogens to probe weaknesses in human lung cancer |
Program | Academic Research |
Award Mechanism | High Impact/High Risk |
Institution/Organization | The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center |
Principal Investigator/Program Director | Neal Alto |
Cancer Sites | All Sites, Lung and Bronchus |
Contracted Amount | $199,472 |
Lay Summary |
Lung cancer is the most frequent cause of cancer deaths worldwide. Because most chemotherapeutic agents are non-specific and operate throughout the patient, it is critical to develop strategies that reduce overall toxicity and are highly specific at inhibiting cancer-causing pathways. To address this unmet need, I propose a new paradigm: cancer growth and proliferation can be selectively inhibited through cellular expression of bacterial toxins. It is now clear that bacteria have evolved over millions of years to potently and specifically inhibits human cell survival pathways of infected cells, but spare unintended targets. Therefore to unlock the potential of pathogenic bacteria to be us... |