Unearthing the bedROCK of Early-Onset Bowel Cancer? We are excited to announce a team led by Professor Michael Samuel will be receiving a three-year $600k Bowel Cancer Australia grant for their research on early-onset bowel cancer via the 2023 round of Cancer Australia’s Priority-driven Collaborative Cancer Research Scheme (PdCCRS). Professor Samuel of the Centre for Cancer Biology (an alliance between the University of South Australia and SA Pathology) and the Basil Hetzel Institute for Translational Health Research will investigate ROCK-induced early-onset bowel cancer progression. ROCK, Rho-associated kinase, is an enzyme (protein) found in all of us, that controls the shape and movement of cells within the body. ROCK goes into overdrive in people with bowel cancer, accelerating the growth and spread of the disease. The way in which cancer cells communicate with normal cells in their environment via ROCK has been discovered to drive disease progression (invasion, metastasis, and recurrence). “We have evidence that ROCK activity in bowel cancers drives this process by influencing how cancers communicate with their environment. Our project will investigate how this happens. We will also study whether certain effects of ROCK activation in early-onset bowel cancers can help us predict whose cancers will recur and whose will not,” says Professor Samuel. Bowel Cancer Australia remains grateful to our passionate fundraisers for their support and efforts in raising awareness and funds for early-onset bowel cancer, helping to make such research grants possible. |