Basic science research at UNC Charlotte has begun to evolve into a sophisticated biomedical focus with the recruitment of faculty from such medical research institutions as Yale, Johns Hopkins, Princeton, UC-Berkeley,
Harvard, Stanford, Columbia, Memorial Sloan-Kettering and the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

The Department of Biology has invested nearly $2 million in tenured and tenure-track research faculty with federally funded research in areas including immunology, physiology, molecular and cellular biology, microbiology, genetics, cancer biology, liver biology and environmental toxicology. One strong area with immediate plans for expansion is cancer biology. Presently, the department has a professor, two associate professors and two assistant professors who are engaged directly in research projects including mechanisms of spread of breast and skin cancer, mechanisms of uncontrolled (cancerous) liver cell growth, the molecular genetics of cancer initiation and DNA damage and cancer induction. At any given time, some 12 additional tenured and tenure-track faculty are conducting research that is supportive and complementary to the cancer group. The department is also currently engaged in a national search for the Irwin Belk Distinguished Professor of Cancer Biology, and the individual hired will be a recognized leader in cancer research.

How do we kill cancer cells without killing normal cells? This is one of the areas that Dr. Iain McKillop is researching in liver cancer called signal transduction (how molecules activate and inhibit signals in cancer cells). Dr. McKillop is exploring different ways to kill cancer. Funded by an NIH grant, he is studying the mechanisms behind the enhanced cell growth characteristic of liver cancer. Another research angle involves studying blood flow through the liver (with and without cancer) and applying compounds that will change blood flow to see how this affects the rate of tumor growth.
Dr. Didier Dréau specializes in metastatic cancer research of the lung, breast, and skin. Dr. Dréau is working on a translational research project funded by the Brain Tumor Fund for the Carolinas that involves identifying specific genes and proteins key to cancer cells that travel to the brain. In another project funded by the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation, Dr. Dréau is developing an immunocompetent model of late phase breast cancer to figure out why the cancer cells go to the bone.
A single exchange between two of the forty-six packaging units of DNA in each chromosome is a hallmark of many blood cancers such as leukemia and lymphoma, and also some soft-tissue sarcomas. Dr. Christine Richardson is a geneticist in oncology/hematology trying to learn what causes these exchanges, termed chromosomal translocations that have the potential to lead to uncontrolled cell growth, genome instability, and cancer. With funding from the National Cancer Institutes and as an American Cancer Society Research Scholar, Dr. Richardson has developed a model to determine if certain drugs or environmental factors promote translocations, how we can predict them, and, ultimately, prevent them.
Dr. Julie Goodliffe’s research interests include molecular genetics and cancer genomics. Dr. Goodliffe is studying the complex biology of tumor formation by examining the molecular role of the Myc protein in cell growth and cancer initiation. Myc is required for growth through adulthood, but once adulthood is reached, excessive Myc protein induces tumor formation. By examining the genome-wide control of Myc activity, Dr. Goodliffe and her students hope to understand the normal developmental mechanisms that prevent tumor formation in the rapid growth stages of life.
Pinku Mukherjee, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Immunology and Director of the Cellular Immunology Laboratory at the Mayo Clinic in Scottsdale, Arizona, joined the cancer research faculty at UNC Charlotte in September 2008.
The laboratory is funded by the NIH to study the role of inflammation and MUC1 in pancreatic cancer progression and metastasis. Novel strategies to target these molecules within the tumor microenvironment are also being explored. This includes understanding the immune-tolerant and chemo resistant tumor microenvironment. The laboratory is also looking at the role of autoimmune inflammatory arthritis in the recruitment and homing of tumor cells to the bone to form bone metastasis during breast cancer development.
Dr. Mukherjee’s career experience includes ten years at the Mayo Clinic Scottsdale preceded by previous research tenures at Indiana University Medical Center and Pennsylvania State University. She received her Master’s and Ph.D. degrees in immunology from the University of London and her Bachelor’s degree in microbiology and biochemistry from Bombay University.

Recent advances in cancer research have enabled the development of successful treatments resulting in higher survival odds and extended lifespans for cancer patients. The next decade shows great promise for even greater success in this direction. But cancer has not yet been eliminated. For many, there is no cure once their cancer has spread.

UNC Charlotte, the Charlotte region’s research university, is an emerging force in basic science research. Over the last five years, UNC Charlotte has invested over $100 million in life science research in faculty research talent, lab space and new buildings. With strengths in cancer research, liver research, biomedical engineering, bioinformatics and health services, UNC Charlotte is positioned to play a strong role as the basic science research partner in helping raise the level of healthcare in the Charlotte community. UNC Charlotte has increased the size of its cancer research faculty over the last few years with plans for continued growth.

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