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Cancer Solutions

science + engineering = conquering cancer together

Volume 128: May 2024

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Speeding up cancer gene screening

The Sanchez-Rivera Lab devised a method to screen for the effects of cancer-associated genetic mutations much more easily and quickly than any existing approach. In a Nature Biotechnology study of lung cancer, researchers used a variant of CRISPR genome-editing called prime editing to screen cells with more than 1,000 different mutations of the tumor suppressor gene p53 observed in cancer patients. They found that some p53 mutations are more harmful than previously thought. The technique could one day be used to determine how an individual patient’s tumor will respond to a particular treatment.


This research was funded in part by the Koch Institute Frontier Research Program via the Casey and Family Foundation Cancer Research Fund, the Ludwig Center at MIT, and Upstage Lung Cancer.

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Events

Silhouette of the Boston city skyline and title "The Bridge Project: Koch Institute/MIT and Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center Collaborating Across Cancer Challenges"

Bridge to the future of cancer research

Researchers and clinicians from MIT and the Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center are invited to a symposium on Friday, May 10 celebrating successes from 10+ years of the Bridge Project and exploring new opportunities for translational cancer research advances. Talks from current and former Bridge teams set the stage for a networking and information event for potential new Bridge investigators; potential applicants to the 2024 Bridge Project RFA (opens in June) are strongly encouraged to attend.

This symposium is held in special recognition of the role of Art Gelb and the Gelb family in initiating and supporting the Bridge Project.

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More news

The KI at the AACR

At the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research last month, Yadira Soto-Feliciano delivered the 2024 Gertrude B. Elion Cancer Research Award lecture on “Mechanisms of Gene Regulation by Chromatin Adaptors in Development.” At the same meeting, her colleague Sangeeta Bhatia was formally inducted as a Fellow of the AACR Academy.

a group of pie content winners holding a tiny trophy; three judges sit a table behind laughing

On 3.14, the KI’s Pi Day celebrations included community kick off events for this year’s programs marking 50 years of cancer research at MIT—including an intensely competed pie contest and raising nearly $40K in support by beating our MIT 24 Hour Challenge goal. Thanks to all who took part!