Esther Rheinbay, PhD

Uveal (ocular) melanoma (UM) is a rare type of eye cancer. When the cancer spreads to other sites in the body, outcomes are often poor. Unlike skin melanoma, UM does not respond well to new types of therapy focused on the immune system. Better treatments are urgently needed. Our lab has recently shown that UM tumors frequently lose a sex chromosome (Y in tumors from men, X in tumors from women). Loss of the male Y chromosome (LOY) in men and loss of one X chromosome (LOX) in women occurs in about half of tumors, thereby affecting many patients. We found that LOY is linked to worse survival, and that LOY and LOX can give clues whether a patient’s tumor will spread to other sites in the body. I now propose to study the exact role of LOY in UM with a combined approach.  Using genome analysis, gene knock-outs and drug screens in uveal melanoma models, our team hopes to find the weaknesses of UM tumors with LOY. These weaknesses could suggest new treatments for patients. LOY is not limited to UM but also occurs frequently in other tumor types. Therefore, the proposed work has far-reaching implications for finding better treatments for many people living with cancer.

Location: The General Hospital Corporation d/b/a Massachusetts General Hospital - Boston
Proposal: Defining the consequences of sex chromosome loss in uveal melanoma
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