Skip to main content

News Category

Study examines good, bad sides of anti-cancer agents

Apr. 18, 2008—Compounds known as “HDAC inhibitors” exhibit cancer-killing activities in cultured cells. While they are currently being tested as anti-cancer agents in clinical trials, just how they execute their effects is unclear. In a pair of recent papers, Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center investigators provide a potential mechanism by which HDAC inhibitors specifically damage cancer cells and offer...

Read more


HIebert to lead VICC basic science efforts

Feb. 22, 2008—Scott Hiebert, Ph.D., has been named associate director for Basic Science Programs atVanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center. Hiebert, professor of Biochemistry and Leader of the Signal Transduction and Cellular Proliferation Program, succeeds Jennifer Pietenpol, Ph.D., who was recently named director of the Cancer Center. “Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center is winning international recognition for the strength of our basic...

Read more


Mechanism behind acute leukemia identified by VUMC researchers

Aug. 9, 2002—A fusion protein resulting from a faulty DNA exchange plays a key role in the development of acute leukemia in humans, Vanderbilt researchers reported recently. The protein, called AML1-ETO, disarms a tumor suppressor and allows circumvention of a powerful tumor checkpoint, freeing cells to experience uncontrolled growth and an extended lifespan. A reciprocal exchange, or...

Read more


Investigator digs for genetic clues to cause of acute leukemias

Oct. 29, 1999—Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Centerresearchers have uncovered another clue in the mystery of how chromosomal translocations cause acute leukemias. Their findings suggest new treatment possibilities for these cancers of the bone marrow and blood. In the October 26th issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Scott W. Hiebert, Ph.D., professor of Biochemistry and Medicine,...

Read more