While it is well known that the majority of cancer deaths are caused by metastasis鈥攁nd not by the primary tumor鈥攖he mechanisms behind metastasis are still not well understood. Now, a team of researchers at 嘿嘿视频 Health鈥檚 Perlmutter Cancer Center, led by , professor in the , and , the Rudolf L. Baer Professor of Dermatology in the and professor in the Departments of and at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, has been awarded a U54 grant (1U54CA263001-01A1) by the National Cancer Institute (NCI) to build an in-depth transcriptional and cellular map of tumor microenvironment interactions that regulate early dissemination of metastatic cells in melanoma.
鈥淭he National Cancer Institute recognizes that understanding metastasis is the next frontier in developing new therapies for cancer,鈥 says Dr. Osman, also director of the Interdisciplinary Melanoma Cooperative Group at Perlmutter Cancer Center. 鈥淢elanoma is a perfect model to study early dissemination because disease recurrence happens even when tumors of a few millimeters in thickness are resected.鈥
With this award, the Perlmutter Cancer Center team joins four other multidisciplinary teams in U54-supported Specialized Centers around the country as part of the NCI鈥檚 collaborative initiative.
Early dissemination of metastatic tumor cells is a relatively new concept in cancer biology, Dr. Hernando-Monge says. Previously, it was thought that primary cancer cells had to undergo a number of alterations before they gained the ability to leave their primary tumor site and disseminate to colonize distant tissues and organs. With the help of single-cell genomics and the ability to capture small amounts of tumor cells circulating in the blood, evidence now shows that tumors already contain cells that are able to disseminate and metastasize to other organs during the earliest stages of tumor development.
The Perlmutter Cancer Center MetNet includes three projects. Aims of the projects include mapping the cellular and molecular evolution of primary melanomas and their local and regional microenvironments to identify critical 鈥渟witches鈥 that drive nonlinear tumor progression; mechanistically dissecting the emergence and functional relevance of transcriptionally defined cell state heterogeneity of malignant and nonmalignant cell populations; and identifying novel therapeutic vulnerabilities to intercept early dissemination, mobilize systemic immune surveillance, and improve patient outcomes. The researchers expect that information gained through these projects should define new biomarkers of melanoma metastasis and therapeutic strategies to manage early disease.
Research done through the MetNet initiative relies on novel mouse models as well as tissue samples from nearly 5,000 patients鈥攐ne of the nation鈥檚 oldest and largest biobanks of melanoma specimens鈥攃ollected by the .
鈥淚n all of these, we will examine early-stage patient samples and identify candidates for functional studies which will be conducted in clinically relevant mouse models, and vice versa, findings in mouse models will inform the analyses of patient tissues,鈥 Dr. Hernando-Monge says.
Other members of the Perlmutter Cancer Center MetNet are , professor in the Ronald O. Perelman Department of Dermatology and ; , associate professor in the Ronald O. Perelman Department of Dermatology and Department of Cell Biology; , associate professor in the Ronald O. Perelman Department of Dermatology and Department of Pathology; , professor in the ; and , associate professor in the Department of Medicine at NYU Grossman School of Medicine.
鈥淭hrough the projects supported by the NCI-MetNet initiative, we can begin to develop a comprehensive picture of the earliest events leading to melanoma dissemination, and we may identify processes that drive metastatic dissemination in other cancer types as well,鈥 Dr. Osman says.