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National Stem Cell Foundation of Australia

November 14th, 2018 3:43 am

Why do some cancer cells get away? Heather Lee, NewcastleNewborn babies offer clues for healing hearts Enzo Porrello, MelbourneWinners of the National Stem Cell Foundation of Australias 2018 Metcalf Prizes announcedDr Heather Lee is analysing individual cancer cells to understand how some survive therapy. Her research ultimately aims to prevent relapse and lift survival rates for leukaemia. Associate Professor Enzo Porrello is exploring newborn heart development to develop heart attack drugs and engineer artificial pumps from patient stem cells.Heather Lee of the University of Newcastle and Enzo Porrello of the University of Melbourne have both received $50,000 Metcalf Prizes from the National Stem Cell Foundation of Australia in recognition of their early-career leadership in stem cell research.Heather invented a way to study the genetics of individual cells more closely that will help her find out why some cancer cells are treatable, and others go rogue. With her new technique, she can see the chemical flags that tell the cell how to interpret its genetic code. At the same time, she can watch how those instructions areor arentcarried out.Heather and other scientists use the technique to study what makes rogue cancer cells different at a genetic level.Heather is now studying cells from patients with acute myeloid leukaemia to see how just a few cells can resist treatment and go on to cause a fatal relapse. She hopes this will lead to new, more effective drug treatments for this devastating disease.Dr Heather Lee is a Cancer Institute NSW Fellow at Hunter Medical Research Institute and the University of Newcastle.Read Heather's full profile.For a few short days after birth, the heart can regenerate damaged tissue. Enzo wants to understand why this ability turns off, so that he and colleagues can switch it back on to heal broken hearts. Understanding regeneration could lead to new treatments for different types of heart disease, the worlds biggest killer, from birth defects to heart attacks late in life.I recently showed that the hearts of newborn mice can regenerate after a heart attack, Enzo says. But this self-healing ability rapidly diminishes in the days after birth.Enzo thinks there is a similar capacity in humans. He is using stem cells to recreate the development of the heart in the lab to study the processes and the genes involved in turning self-healing on and off.He wants to develop drugs that can stimulate heart muscle cells to rebuild after a heart attack.He is also part of a new consortium that aims to engineer new working heart tissue to treat children with heart disease, made from their own stem cells.Associate Professor Enzo Porrello is Group Leader of Cardiac Regeneration at the Murdoch Childrens Research Institute (MCRI) and a Senior Research Fellow at the University of Melbourne.Read Enzo's full profile.We hope that supporting Heather Lees work will help her share a valuable new technique for cancer researchers, and that Enzo Porrellos work will help us tackle Australias biggest killer, says Dr Graeme Blackman, AO, the chairman of the Foundation.Once again, weve been stunned by the quality of the applications. Heather and Enzo stood out from a very competitive field of young research leaders.The awards are named for the late Professor Donald Metcalf AC. Over his 50-year career, Don helped transform cancer treatment and transplantation medicine, and paved the way for potential stem cell therapy in the treatment of many other conditions.Professor Richard Larkins AO will formally present the 2018 Metcalf Prizes for Stem Cell Research at a special event in Melbourne on Friday 30 November 2018.Click here for full media kit and photographs.About the National Stem Cell Foundation of AustraliaThe NSCFA is an ATO-registered, tax-deductible health promotion charity dedicated to promoting the study and responsible use of stem cells to reduce the burden of disease.The Foundations activities include:supporting research that pursues cures for as-yet-untreatable diseasesbuilding a community of people with a shared interest in stem cell scienceproviding the Australian public with objective, reliable information on both the potential and risks of stem cell medicine.The Foundation is led by an expert volunteer Board, with a diversity of scientific, medical and governance experience. The Chairman is Dr Graeme Blackman, AO, FTSE, FAICD.The Board consults with leading stem cell scientists before committing funds to research and education initiatives.

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National Stem Cell Foundation of Australia

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