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Cancer Pharmacology
Research efforts in cancer pharmacology include studies of the basic mechanisms of signal transduction associated with cell proliferation and apoptosis, the mechanisms of action of anti-neoplastic agents, the design and discovery of new drugs, basic mechanisms of DNA repair and DNA damage tolerance and the development of novel strategies for gene therapy

Emphasis is placed on the description and characterization of basic signaling mechanisms that constitute the targets of molecules used for cancer therapy and DNA damage and repair mechanisms that contribute to anti-neoplastic drug resistance. The regulation of tyrosine kinases, processing of proto-oncogenes, regulation of small GTPases and their effectors, cell-cycle-specific kinases and DNA repair gene products are being studied as potential targets or to enhance the efficacy of existing chemotherapeutic agents. The role of growth factors in the progression of solid and hematopoietic tumors is being studied; new receptors and signal transduction pathways are being identified in normal and malignant tissues.

Other areas of research include investigations on interleukin therapy, free radical generation, molecular mechanisms of antioxidant regulation and detoxification, aberrations in the mechanisms of programmed cell death (apoptosis) associated with tumoral growth and alterations in DNA repair and DNA damage response genes associated with tumor growth and chemotherapeutic resistance.

Faculty

kaa140@pitt.edu
412-623-7709
altschul@pitt.edu
412.648.9751
rbg19@pitt.edu
412-623-3241
feg5@pitt.edu
412-648-2047
gstacy@pitt.edu
412-648-1351
euh2@pitt.edu
412-623-3262
yuj5@pitt.edu
412-648-3390
arbelyy@upmc.edu
412-623-3228
can44@pitt.edu
412-641-7725
osullivanr@upmc.edu
412-623-4063
oesterreichs@upmc.edu
412-641-8555
svs2@pitt.edu
412-623-3262
stabilela@upmc.edu
412-623-2015
trebakm@pitt.edu
412-648-1381
qjw1@pitt.edu
412-383-7754