August 13, 2015

Macara lands award to explore cancer cell behavior

Vanderbilt’s Ian Macara, Ph.D., has won an Outstanding Investigator Award from the National Cancer Institute (NCI) — nearly $6.6 million over seven years — to support the “unusual potential” of his research, which seeks to understand and predict cancer cell “behavior.”

Vanderbilt’s Ian Macara, Ph.D., has won an Outstanding Investigator Award from the National Cancer Institute (NCI) — nearly $6.6 million over seven years — to support the “unusual potential” of his research, which seeks to understand and predict cancer cell “behavior.”

Ian Macara, Ph.D.

Macara, the Louise B. McGavock Professor and chair of the Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, is one of about 60 researchers recognized in the first year of this award, which is designed to provide longer-term support for innovative research.

“With seven years of uninterrupted funding, NCI is providing investigators the opportunity to fully develop exceptional and ambitious cancer research programs,” said Dinah Singer, Ph.D., director of NCI’s Division of Cancer Biology.

For Macara, who was recruited to Vanderbilt from the University of Virginia in 2012, cancer is not only the result of mutations in tumor promoter and suppressor genes. It is a disease of cell behavior and cell “context.”

If normal epithelial cells lining the internal and external surfaces of the body “suppress the proliferation of their neighbors,” he wrote in the award application, “transformed cells might be unable to express their oncogenic potential unless they escape from (that) environment.

“How cells escape the epithelium and proliferate (elsewhere) is central to understanding cancer initiation and metastasis,” he wrote.

Macara said the grant will enable his team “to push our research in new directions, to develop new tools and new models that will identify the types of cells from which breast cancers arise, and provide insights into how these cancer cells evade the suppressive influence of the normal tissue in which they are originally embedded.

“The seven-year period of the grant is particularly valuable, as it will enable us to try riskier approaches that can take a long time to develop,” he added.

“Cancer biology in particular can be very slow. It might take nine months or more for tumors to appear in a mouse model of breast cancer, for example, and we cannot move on to the next step in the study until we know the outcome of the first, so the years add up very quickly.”

Macara said he is “profoundly grateful” to Jennifer Pietenpol, Ph.D., director of the Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center, for persuading him to apply for the grant. “Without her enthusiastic support, I would never have submitted the application.

“Vanderbilt is inspirational,” he added. “I couldn’t wish for better colleagues and or a better intellectual environment.”

Macara, a senior editor of the Journal of Cell Biology and Council member of the American Society for Cell Biology, has authored more than 160 research publications. Last month he was awarded the 2015 Colin Thomson Memorial Medal by Worldwide Cancer Research for his contributions to cancer research.