葫芦影

Biology Grad Students Seek Answers to Breast Cancer Tumor Growth

Bahnassy and Asghari Receive Robert Hazelwood Graduate Fellowships for Cancer Research

Shaymaa Bahnassy and Arvand Asghari, Ph.D. students at the 葫芦影业鈥檚 College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, know breast cancer cells can be incredibly tricky to research. But their pursuit of knowledge is not only academic 鈥 it鈥檚 personal.

The two are studying cell and molecular biology and received Robert Hazelwood Graduate Fellowships for Cancer Research.

The $5,000 fellowship is awarded each year to outstanding Ph.D. students in UH鈥檚 Department of Biology and Biochemistry who are engaged in cancer research.

Shaymaa Bahnassy

Bahnassy鈥檚 research focuses on hormone-receptor positive breast cancer 鈥 the most frequently diagnosed subtype. She said the majority of patients with this subtype stop responding to conventional, hormonal therapies and develop a recurrent, more aggressive cancer that spreads.

Shaymaa Bahnassy

Recent studies identified the androgen receptor as a driver for the cancer鈥檚 resistance against the therapies. Normally, the receptor needs to bind to its hormone to become active. Bahnassy鈥檚 studies show breast cancer cells play it smart.

鈥淭hey always try to change the cellular environment so they are able to survive and spread,鈥 she said. 鈥淥ne way they do that is by increasing the expression of a small protein. This protein goes and continuously binds to the androgen receptor, in the resistant breast cancer.鈥

She adds that the protein can turn the androgen receptor on, causing it to become hyperactive. This action sets off a series of events in the cell, ultimately allowing the transcription and expression of the genes that make it possible for the tumor to spread.

Tasneem Bawa-Khlafe, an assistant professor and Bahnassy鈥檚 advisor, said Bahnassy has taken initiative in the lab, 鈥渕aking her discoveries even more impressive.鈥

Arvand Asghari

Asghari is also researching breast cancer resistance to hormonal therapy. His lab is deploying bioinformatic analysis to find genes responsible for hormonal therapy resistance, and then blocking these genes in resistant cells to see if resistance is stopped or encouraged.

Arvand Asghari

鈥淚f we find those underlying genes, then we can potentially target and block them,鈥 he said, 鈥渙r design drugs that can work against them.鈥

Asghari is also researching the cholesterol-derived molecule, 27-hydroxycholesterol, and its effects on fat tissue, obesity and breast cancer.

His research shows that this molecule increases the fat percentage in the body, regardless of diet, and it increases inflammation in fat tissue. Asghari said because breast tissue is surrounded by fat tissue, he thinks there is cross-talk between the two. He adds that the molecule could potentially be an underlying reason for breast cancer progression.

His advisor, assistant professor Michihisa Umetani, said Asghari has been obtaining remarkable data since joining the lab.

鈥淗e has a background in bioinformatics, but he can still perform wet lab experiments, which puts him in a very unique position,鈥 Umetani said.

Personal Connection

Asghari and Bahnassy have lost close family members to cancer.

Both Asghari鈥檚 grandfathers died of prostate cancer, and Bahnassy鈥檚 grandmother had breast cancer. The two students said the losses contribute to their motivation behind cancer research.

鈥淲e have a high chance of getting cancer in my family,鈥 Asghari said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know why, but many of my relatives have breast cancer right now. So, it pushed me to start working on cancer research.鈥

Bahnassy believes her research can ultimately help save lives.

鈥淐ancer research is the keystone for the clinicians to directly help the patients,鈥 she said. 鈥淗aving the knowledge from the research we do helps to achieve that.鈥

Bahnassy plans to pursue a postdoctoral position after she graduates in May. Asghari, who will graduate in a year and a half, wants to stay in academia.

- Rebeca Trejo, College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics

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