Due to the demographic change, the number of cancer cases will significantly
increase in the next decades in the aging Western population. Cancer is currently
one of the main threats for a population, which aims for healthy aging.
Therefore, it is of utmost importance to develop strategies to enhance treatment
outcome and to understand the mechanisms of therapy resistance, to improve
the quality of life of cancer patients. In the last decade, a central role of the
receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) AXL has been described in the escape from
therapy responses. In this context, the TOPICO faculty, which consists of
scientists from the Medical University of Vienna and the University of Applied
Sciences Krems, aims to investigate the importance of the AXL protein for
therapy resistance. To elucidate the role of AXL, the TOPICO faculty will perform
a systematic approach by creating pharmacological inhibitors, developing
innovative patient-derived cell culture models (organoids), modulating relevant
pathological pathways and finally validating the findings in patient samples. The
knowledge gained from the project will lead to a better understanding of therapy
resistance and consequently development of new drugs and biomarkers that
decisively will improve the quality of life of cancer patients.
The TOPICO project is a novel PhD program, which is embedded in the Malignant
Disease Program of the Medical University Vienna but also synergistically
extends important contents of the Master Program "Medical and
Pharmaceutical Biotechnology" of IMC University of Applied Sciences Krems.
This creates a unique environment for Ph.D. students to develop their individual
PhD projects in a well-founded network of students and faculty, thereby
promoting their later careers in international cancer research in industrial or
academic settings.
Research Outputs (10)
publications (10)
Title
Year(s)
DOI / Link
The atypical KRASQ22K mutation directs TGF-ß response towards partial epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition in patient-derived colorectal cancer tumoroidsMolecular Oncology