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Cohen Innovation Fund Supporting Two High-Risk, High-Reward Projects

Posted by on Friday, November 5, 2021 in featured.

By Aaron Conley

Houra Merrikh, professor of biochemistry, and聽Teru Nakagawa, associate professor of molecular physiology and biophysics, have both been selected to receive one-year research awards from the聽. The awards will support groundbreaking and paradigm-shifting research, including Merrikh鈥檚 study of the molecular drivers of evolution that enables cancer to develop resistance to drugs and Nakagawa鈥檚 study of the biological significance of lipids associated with membrane proteins.

Established through philanthropy in 2019 and named after the late Nobel laureate聽Stanley Cohen, emeritus professor of biochemistry, the Cohen fund annually supports innovative early-phase research projects that are high risk yet potentially high reward. These awards honor Cohen鈥檚 curiosity-driven seminal discoveries in growth factor signaling, which laid the groundwork for our understanding of embryonic and cancer development and led to the invention of聽numerous anticancer drugs that are still used today. 鈥淲e鈥檝e arrived at a moment of celebration,鈥 said聽Larry Marnett, dean of the School of Medicine Basic Sciences. 鈥淭he Cohen fund has reached our initial goal thanks to contributions from donors and matching institutional investment. This model of co-investment鈥攚here donors and departments come together鈥攊s propelling some very exciting work here.鈥

鈥淒rug resistance is among the greatest challenges facing modern medicine,鈥 said Merrikh. 鈥淭o date, scientific innovation has not succeeded in outpacing evolution. Even with the advent of novel targeted therapeutics and chemotherapies, multidrug resistant cancers are still responsible for over 90% of cancer-related deaths worldwide.鈥 For her project, Merrikh proposes 鈥渁 fundamental shift in the scientific community鈥檚 approach to drug resistance in cancer targeting the molecular mechanisms that promote tumor evolution.鈥