March
23, 2004
National Foundation For Cancer Research Names UCSD’s Webster
Cavenee NFCR Fellow
Awards $250,000 Grant for Research of Cancer Tumors
Webster
Cavenee, Ph.D. The National Foundation For Cancer Research,
based in Bethesda, MD, has awarded a $250,000 grant to Webster
Cavenee, Ph.D., director of the San Diego branch of the Ludwig
Institute for Cancer Research, and named him NFCR Fellow.
The distinguished honor allows Cavenee unique and creative
flexibility to conduct scientific research over the next five
years that may lead to more effective therapies in the battle
to eliminate cancer.
“After working with Dr. Cavenee for two years, we feel his
research is unequivocal in the understanding of tumors and
how they react under a variety of conditions,” said Franklin
C. Salisbury, Jr., president of NFCR. “His discoveries are
truly at the forefront of cancer research.”
Cavenee’s research is directed at defining the genetic lesions
in human cancer, determining their physiological significance
and using such information for therapeutic approaches. His
current directions include the molecular dissection of the
basis of malignant progression of astrocytic tumors, the differentiation
pathways of astrocytes, the role of DNA methylation in cancers
of the prostate, and the role of fusion transcription factors
in normal development and pediatric neoplasms.
Since 1991 Cavenee has been the director of the San Diego
branch of the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research and professor
of medicine at the University of California, San Diego School
of Medicine, where he is also a member of the Rebecca and
John Moores UCSD Cancer Center. He is a past-president of
the American Association for Cancer Research, a member of
the National Academy of Sciences, a fellow of the American
Academy of Microbiology, and a fellow of the International
Union Against Cancer. He is on the editorial boards of several
journals and has served on the Board of Scientific Counselors
of the National Cancer Institute and the National Institute
of Environmental Health Sciences. His work on the genetic
basis of cancer predisposition and progression has been recognized
with many honors and awards, most notably the Rhoads Award,
and the Charles S. Mott Prize of the General Motors Cancer
Research Foundation.
Cavenee notes, “It is my honor and pleasure to be associated
with the National Foundation for Cancer Research and its unique
approach to cancer research. This opportunity will allow us
to follow scientific leads wherever they might go, and to
participate in the NFCR network of outstanding investigators.
I am grateful for the confidence that the NFCR has placed
in me and I look forward to a vibrant and productive association.”
About Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research and UCSD
The Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research (LICR) is the largest
international academic institute dedicated to understanding
and controlling cancer. With 10 branches in seven countries,
and numerous affiliates and clinical trial centers in many
others, the scientific network that is LICR quite literally
covers the globe. The uniqueness of LICR lies not only in
its size and scale, but also in its philosophy and ability
to drive its results from the laboratory into the clinic.
The San Diego branch of LICR was established under the leadership
of Cavenee in 1991 in affiliation with the University of California-San
Diego, one of the world’s foremost research universities.
It comprises seven laboratories, more than 100 staff, and
focuses on the fundamental understanding of processes like
DNA repair, signal transduction, transcriptional regulation,
protein modification and cell division that are often integral
components of the cancer process.
About NFCR
Since its founding in 1973, the National Foundation for Cancer
Research has spent more than $200 million funding basic science
cancer research and education focused on understanding how
and why cells become cancerous. This worldwide "laboratory
without walls" assembles the intellectual power to achieve
one of medicine's greatest goals: a cure for cancer—all types
of cancer. Prevention, new treatments, and a cure depend on
understanding cancer’s genetic origins; NFCR is dedicated
to funding scientists who are discovering cancer’s molecular
mysteries and translating these discoveries into therapies
that hold the only real hope for curing cancer. NFCR is Research
for a Cure. For more information, please visit NFCR’s website
at www.NFCR.org or call (800) 321-CURE.