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Dr. Benencia awarded
NIH research grant
Fabian Benencia,
Ph.D., receives
$177,000 from the
National Institutes
of Health to study
how tumors recruit
white blood cells
By Anita Martin
Jan. 13, 2009
Fabian Benencia,
Ph.D.,
assistant professor
of biomedical
sciences, has won a
two-year, $177,000
National Institutes
of Health grant to
study how tumors
attract leukocytes,
or white blood
cells, and use them
for their own
designs.
Researchers have
observed leukocytes
helping tumors grow,
but the process of
white blood cell
recruitment—including
the origin of these
cells—is not well
understood. Benencia
has noticed changes
in the bone marrow
cell population
during the formation
of a tumor. He
suggests that
tumor-associated
leukocytes form out
of stem cells
produced in the bone
marrow.
His study,
“Recruitment of bone
marrow hematopoietic
stem cells to
tumors,” will
examine
hematopoietic (i.e.,
blood cell forming)
stem cells that
originate in bone
marrow and may end
up absorbed by
tumors. Benencia
points out that
these are not
embryonic stem
cells, but adult
stem cells that
tumors can attract.
He is using mouse
models to confirm
and study this
process in breast
and ovarian cancers.
“Bone-marrow stem
cells normally turn
into leukocytes that
help the body fight
infection,” Benencia
says. But once
recruited by the
tumor, “sometimes
they simply
(abandon) their
immune function,
becoming dormant.
Sometimes they
produce factors that
can actually help
the tumor to grow.”
Leukocytes can
contribute to tumor
growth by creating
proteins that
support the
development of blood
vessels, thereby
helping to nourish
the tumor.
“If we can confirm
that this population
helps the tumor grow
and better
understand how it
works, we may be
able to somehow
target those cells
or otherwise prevent
the process, helping
to slow the growth
of cancers,”
Benencia says.
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