Christina Ferrer, PhD

Funded by the Stuart Scott Memorial Cancer Research Fund

Pancreatic cancer is an extremely deadly disease, due to its ability to spread to other organs early and easily, a process known as metastasis. Molecules called purines are often used to build DNA and have been shown to be used by cancer cells to grow and survive. Pancreatic cancer usually spreads to the liver, an organ rich in purines. We find that pancreatic cancer cells, which contain mutations in certain genes involved in cell growth, prefer to use purines to uncontrollably grow and survive. Our study will identify how metastatic pancreatic cancer cells use purines to spread and survive in organs such as the liver. We will also test FDA-approved drugs used to treat other purine-dependent diseases such as gout and metastatic breast cancer to treat pancreatic cancer addiction to purines.

Location: University of Maryland Marlene and Stewart Greenebaum Comprehensive Cancer Center - Baltimore
Proposal: Investigating Purine Salvage Dependencies in CDKN2A-deleted Pancreatic Metastases
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