A Twist of Fate
More recently my lab started a new project in germ cell tumor biology. The reasons we gravitated in this new direction are two-fold. First, Memorial Sloan-Kettering has tremendous resources related to this cancer. Second, and more personally, in 2001 I was diagnosed with a germ cell tumor.
Dr. George Bosl, Chairman of the Department of Medicine at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, and Dr. Robert Motzer, a medical oncologist at the Center, were the clinical oncologists who were responsible for my treatment. I remember conversations with them in which they said that while much is known about the treatment and management of the disease, not a lot is known about its biology. George and I joked that once my treatment was done, we'd start collaborating. Then, about a year later, after my treatment was complete, we were actually able to come up with some research ideas, which I found quite satisfying.
It was almost as if I was fated to do this sort of research. My lab works on normal germ cell biology, so it was ironic that that's the kind of tumor I got. And the chemotherapy for germ cell tumors is all based on DNA damaging agents, which had long been of interest in my studies. In fact, during the course of treatment we actually were writing a paper that involved using one of the drugs I was taking.
Since my treatment concluded, I've been collaborating with George and Dr. Raju Chaganti, Head of the Cancer Genetics Laboratory at SKI. I'm still on the very steep part of the learning curve, but the resources here are helping me climb that curve.
Potential Implications
I'm a basic scientist, which means that I'm interested in how things work. There is the hope that once you learn how things work, you can use that information to aid diagnosis or treatment. But that's down the road. First we would like to know the biological mechanisms that underlie the sensitivity of these germ cell tumors to DNA damaging agents. Most of the tumors are susceptible to chemotherapy, though a small subset turn out to be resistant, so we'd like to understand the molecular mechanisms that underlie those differences between sensitivity and resistance. That might allow us to identify ahead of time patients that might be resistant to standard chemotherapy.
Boyer Award for Basic Research
It's quite an honor to receive this year's Boyer Award for Basic Science Research. You're always pleased when your work is recognized by your peers. Those kinds of pats on your back are special. It's one thing when your mom is proud of you for getting a PhD. It's something else entirely when people who have been through the same process appreciate your work.
All of the science that goes on in my lab is a collaborative effort. Everyone has a different role, but everyone brings in ideas. I've been fortunate in having some terrific people choose to join me in my lab. My job is to bounce crazy ideas off of them. And eventually things get done, either because my crazy idea was right, or it was wrong but challenged somebody else to come up with a better idea.