Male Reproductive Health Including Prostate Cancer
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$727,685.00
Summary
My previous contributions to Andrology and Endocrinology of the Testis provide me with a significant breadth of expertise and a sustained record of contribution to Men’s Reproductive Health. My recent research effort has focused on Urology and prostate cancer. Through my prostate cancer research program, my overall strategy is to understand the biology of the prostate gland to enable the development of new therapies for prostate cancer, as well as for BPH (enlargement of the prostate) and prosta ....My previous contributions to Andrology and Endocrinology of the Testis provide me with a significant breadth of expertise and a sustained record of contribution to Men’s Reproductive Health. My recent research effort has focused on Urology and prostate cancer. Through my prostate cancer research program, my overall strategy is to understand the biology of the prostate gland to enable the development of new therapies for prostate cancer, as well as for BPH (enlargement of the prostate) and prostatitis (inflammation of the prostate gland).Read moreRead less
Androgen-regulated Proteins: Predictors Of Prostate Cancer Development And Progression
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$391,073.00
Summary
Use of PSA (prostate specific antigen) levels in blood to screen for prostate cancer has resulted in a) earlier detection of tumours and b) increased diagnosis of a premalignant disease of the prostate called PIN (prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia). PIN is thought to progressively change into cancer, which can invade the rest of the body. Growth of the cells of the prostate is regulated by male hormones called androgens. Small cancers localised to the prostate grow in response to androgens, bu ....Use of PSA (prostate specific antigen) levels in blood to screen for prostate cancer has resulted in a) earlier detection of tumours and b) increased diagnosis of a premalignant disease of the prostate called PIN (prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia). PIN is thought to progressively change into cancer, which can invade the rest of the body. Growth of the cells of the prostate is regulated by male hormones called androgens. Small cancers localised to the prostate grow in response to androgens, but larger cancers which have spread from the prostate grow steadily even after the androgen supply is cut off by removal of the testicles. In this project we will examine changes in the level of various proteins in the prostate, which are known to be produced in response to androgen, to see whether they discriminate: 1) those patients with PIN who will go on to develop prostate cancer, 2) those patients with small cancers within the prostate who progress to widespread cancer. We also propose to use a laser-controlled dissecting microscope to obtain pure populations of cancer cells from prostate tissues and then to isolate their DNA in order to: a) examine the DNA sequence of the protein which controls cellular growth in response to androgen (ie the androgen receptor) to see whether undesirable changes (mutations) have occurred in its structure during the development of the cancer, and b) identify proteins which mediate the effects of the androgen regulated proteins and control cancer development or spread. This will be done using the revolutionary technique of gene microarrays, where partial DNA sequences of approximately 4,000 different prostate genes are spotted onto small membrane filters, and which enable identification of genes that change in level with the onset of cancer and cancer spread. These 2 objectives will, in the case of a) prevent inappropriate treatment for prostate cancer, and b) identify targets for new treatments and for chemoprevention.Read moreRead less