Congratulations to Daniel for submitting his paper on macropinocytosis!

Hats off to Daniel, who submitted his first paper from the lab today. He found that inhibition of ATM induces nutrient uptake via macropinocytosis- a non-specific endocytic process. This discovery adds to growing evidence that ATM has tumor suppressive roles outside of the canonical DNA damage response pathway. You can read the preprint here.

Aird lab attends Midwest Metabolism Meeting

Kelly, Erika, Raquel, and Katherine attended the 2nd Annual Midwest Metabolism Meeting hosted by Rusty Jones at the Van Andel Institute in Grand Rapids. It was an excellent meeting, and everyone had the opportunity to present their work. See the schedule here: https://vari.vai.org/event/midwest-metabolism-meeting-2019/

Aird lab trainees Raquel, Kelly, and Erika present their work at the International Cellular Senescence Association meeting

The International Cellular Senescence Association meeting is underway in Athens. Raquel was chosen for a short talk, and both Kelly and Erika presented posters of their work.

Raquel giving a talk on her recently published work on how p16 loss increases nucleotide metabolism to bypass senescence.

Raquel giving a talk on her recently published work on how p16 loss increases nucleotide metabolism to bypass senescence.

Kelly presenting her work on how the methyltransferase DOT1L is critical for the SASP

Kelly presenting her work on how the methyltransferase DOT1L is critical for the SASP

Erika presenting her work on senescence in the omentum and how that potentially relates to ovarian cancer dissemination

Erika presenting her work on senescence in the omentum and how that potentially relates to ovarian cancer dissemination

Raquel's paper is published in Cell Reports!

Congratulations to Raquel and the lab for publishing this exciting story! She found that loss of p16 increases nucleotide metabolism via mTORC1-mediated translation of the pentose phosphate pathway enzyme RPIA. Excitingly, inhibition of this pathway may be a new therapeutic strategy for the ~50% of cancer patients with low p16 expression.

You can read the paper here.

Aird Lab receives research grant from the Sandy Rollman Ovarian Cancer Foundation!

We are excited and honored to be supported by the Sandy Rollman Ovarian Cancer Foundation! This work will investigate the role of metabolism in PARP inhibitor response and is a direct follow-up to Erika’s excellent work on wildtype IDH1 in ovarian cancer. For more information on the foundation, please visit their website: https://sandyovarian.org