91探花 receives $1.7 million grant to study potential prevention and treatment for non-melanoma skin cancers
The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences has awarded 91探花 scientists Shiyong Wu and Lingying Tong a five-year $1.7 million grant to advance research on a potential prevention and treatment for non-melanoma skin cancers.
鈥淣on-melanoma skin cancers are by far the most common type of cancer among all types of cancers鈥攊t鈥檚 a huge burden for society,鈥 Wu said.
Wu, a professor of chemistry and biochemistry and director of the university鈥檚 Edison Biotechnology Institute (EBI) and Tong, an assistant investigator at EBI, will study how solar ultraviolet B radiation (UVB) exposure triggers skin cancer and how it can be stopped.
Previous research has shown that UVB can impact multiple biological processes鈥攚hat scientists call 鈥渟ignaling pathways鈥濃攊n the body.
鈥淭he problem with UVB is it affects so many different pathways,鈥 complicating scientists鈥 efforts to block it from activating cancer growth, Wu explained.
Previous studies by Wu鈥檚 lab have found a possible target, constitutive nitric oxide synthase (cNOS), which plays an important role in how the body regulates its response to UVB exposure.
The problem with cNOS, Wu found, is that it controls a signaling pathway that triggers cell damage, but also a second pathway that helps the cell survive the attack. Some of the surviving damaged cells eventually could become cancer cells, Wu explained.
The new five-year study will provide a more detailed analysis of the molecular mechanisms behind this cNOS activity. Understanding the biochemical process will allow Wu鈥檚 team to explore candidates for skin cancer prevention and treatment. The scientists could test the efficacy of existing drugs on the market, as well as various natural products.
Natural products could be safer for personal health and the environment than sunscreens made from synthetic compounds, Wu said, noting that some conventional sun block products have come under scrutiny in recent years.
Collaborators on the project are Dawn Sammons, Department of Specialty Medicine/Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine; Wei Lin, Department of Mathematics/College of Arts and Sciences; and Hao Chen, New Jersey Institute of Technology.