Latest News – National Cancer Tissue BioBank http://newproject.wedella.in Fri, 04 May 2018 11:20:39 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.5 http://newproject.wedella.in/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/cropped-logo-sticky-32x32.png Latest News – National Cancer Tissue BioBank http://newproject.wedella.in 32 32 India-specific cancer genome database in the works http://newproject.wedella.in/india-specific-cancer-genome-database-in-the-works/ http://newproject.wedella.in/india-specific-cancer-genome-database-in-the-works/#respond Mon, 12 Mar 2018 08:07:20 +0000 http://newproject.wedella.in/?p=6615

India-specific cancer genome database in the works

IIT-Madras is in the process of creating an India-specific cancer genome database aimed at early detection and development of better treatment strategy for the disease.

The National Cancer Tissue BioBank (NCTB), a first-of-its-kind community-based initiative in the country, is collecting cancer tissues from Indian patients to generate a cancer genome database which has not been available so far.

Professor S Mahalingam faculty-in-charge of NCTB said different types of cancer tissues were being collected for this purpose. “This (collection of samples) is critical for identifying specific changes happening in our own population to develop the diagnostic kit for early detection (of cancer) and this will help us to design a better treatment strategy,” he said. He said that the creation of such a database would also help in developing a specific drug for India’s population.

While the medication had an 80%-90% success rate in treating cancer in Western countries, it was less than 50% in India, Mahalingam said.

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Dissecting CANCER http://newproject.wedella.in/dissecting-cancer/ http://newproject.wedella.in/dissecting-cancer/#respond Mon, 12 Mar 2018 07:53:46 +0000 http://newproject.wedella.in/?p=6613

Dissecting CANCER

How a clutch of scientists at different labs in the country are researching in different areas, from detection to methods of invasion of the deadly cells the molecular modelling lab of D Sundar in IITDelhi does not have fancy gadgets and apparatuses. His students work mostly on computer simulations, mapping the mech anism by which ashwagandha, an ayurve dic herb native to India, can be a potential candidate for treating cancer.

The findings of his lab are “transported“ to their collabo rators in Japan where test tube experi ments are done for further validation.Sundar and his team have been, for the past decade, trying to decode the mecha nism by which ashwagandha can kill ag gressive cancer cells. Their findings were recently published in the journal Cell Death and Disease of the Nature Publishing Group. The study recommended that bio actives from ashwagandha can be candidates for further research and develop ment of new drugs for cancer treatment. “Experiments have revealed that both alcoholic and water    extracts from the ashwagandha leaves possess considerable anticancer activity. We adopted bioinformatics approaches at IITDelhi to resolve the protein targets and their mechanism of action and are convinced that such an approach on other herbs has tremendous potential for drug discovery for cancer prevention and treatment,“ said Sundar, a  DuPont young professor in the department of biochemical engineering and biotechnology (DoBEB) at IITDelhi.

Welcome to the multidisciplinary research platform where scientists from different labs in the country are unfolding the enigma behind cell proliferation and demystifying the science behind cancer formation. The experimental canvas of these scientists is vast from fleshing out new therapeutic targets to identifying potential candidates for cancer drugs to improved methods for early detection. All these experiments have a common goal: to find ways to defeat the deadly army of cells.

Immune Landscape SV Chiplunkar, director of the Advanced Centre for Treatment, Research and Education in Cancer (ACTREC), the R&D epicenter of Tata Memorial Centre,maintains that cancer research is vital to understanding the basic biology of the disease. “We need to create a team of clinician scientists who are expected to play a vital role in translating research findings to clinical settings.“ According to Chiplunkar, ACTREC, located in Kharghar on Mumbai’s outskirts, has achieved a seamless integration of basic and clinical research and has evolved as a comprehensive cancer centre. On its 60acre campus are the Cancer Research Institute (CRI),Clinical Research Centre (CRC) and Centre for Cancer Epidemiology (CCE) that provide a multidisciplinary approach to cancer research and patient care.Chiplunkar’s lab mainly focuses on understanding immune dysfunctions in cancer patients and is working on developing immunotherapeutic treatment modalities.“We are investigating the `immune landscapes’ of oral cancer, breast cancer, cervical cancer, to understand which immune cell types infiltrate these tumours and how we can activate these cells to kill the cancer cells.

We are also working on gall bladder and pancreatic cancers which have emerged as cancers associated with infection and inflammation,“ she says.Her team is researching on identifying “immune signatures“ or biomarkers that will help in predicting the response to therapy.“We want to develop immune cellbased therapies for cancer patients. But we still do not have adequate infrastructure and regulatory policies developed to promote cancer research. We need to develop a strong network between research organisations engaged in cancer research and this has been initiated by the Tata Memorial Centre through National Cancer Grid (NCG),“ adds Chiplunkar. DNA and Cancer The research terrain of Partha P Majumder, founder of National Institute of Biomedical Genomics (NIBMG) at Kalyani in West Bengal, is looking for evidence of alterations in the DNA (genomic alterations) that cause various human diseases, including cancer. In 2008, the International Cancer Genome Consortium was formed to identify the DNA alterations that drive cells to become malignant as a result of exposure to various cancercausing agents. India became a founding member of this voluntary consortium. The NIBMG and ACTREC carry out the Indian study on oral cancer as a part of this consortium, with Majumder leading the biological aspects of this study.

“Even though heritable basis can be found in only about 10% of cancer patients, at the cellular level, cancer is completely a disease of the genome. If you take a cell from a malignant tumour a cancer tissue the cell will invariably have DNA alterations that are not present in normal cells,“ he says. Inherited variations are present in every cell of an individual cells of the cancer tissue and also normal cells. Such inherited variations are observed only in about 10% of cancer patients.

In the remaining patients, the DNA alterations found in their cancer cells are acquired during the course of their life. These DNA alterations mostly happen because of exposure to environmental agents, such as toxic chemicals and use of tobacco.There are two classes of genes that cause cancer. One is called the tumour suppressor gene. These express proteins that prevent tumours. Alterations in these genes abolish the production of these proteins and tumours form. The other class of genes are called oncogenes. These are usually dormant and do not express themselves,but when their DNA sequence is altered they express “rogue“ pro teins that cause cancer. It is easier to find drugs to act against “rogue“ proteins produced by oncogenes, but it is difficult to “wake up“ tumour suppressors that have “gone to sleep“ because of DNA alterations. “Unfortunately, we found that oral cancer is caused mainly by tumour suppressors. This is bad news as drugs to act against oral cancer may be difficult to find,“ reckons Majumder. Subrata Sinha, director, National Brain Research Centre (NBRC) in Manesar, Haryana, is researching around gliomas, tumours of the supporting cells of the brain. Gliomas can range from very highly malignant (median survival time less than 2 years) to those with less malignancy. “Our aim is to identify specific molecular pathways in gliomas, which predispose towards therapeutic resistance and also find ways to tackle the same.

We are studying surgically resected tissue or cell lines with the aim of identifying how some of these tumours that apparently look similar are different in molecular terms and would thus require different approaches for optimal treatment,“ explains Sinha. The NBRC team, which works in close collaboration with faculty from AIIMS, has come up with some interesting findings. Even within the seemingly most malignant gliomas, there is a difference in the oxygen available to the tumours. When oxygen levels fall, the cell tries to protect itself. This makes it become resistant to the drugs used to treat these tumours. Hence the survival rate of patients with tumour hypoxia is lower than those with tumours having more oxygenation.A gene signature of tumour hypoxia may be used to predict how patients will respond to treatment, and eventually suggest alternative drugs that affect hypoxiainduced chemotherapy resistance. “We have identified a new cellular signalling pathway that drives the response to low oxygen and thus is able to push the tumour to a more resistant type. The role of this gene in hypoxia and inflammation, leading to cell invasion and migration into surrounding tissues, has been shown,“ says Sinha. New Anticancer Therapies Sathees Raghavan is an associate professor researching on cancer at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), Bengaluru.

His laboratory is carrying out research in understanding oncogenesis (process causing the formation of tumour) and cancer treatment. His group has designed new anticancer therapies, including a drug that could stall DNA repair in cancer cells and improve the efficiency of radio and chemotherapy. In 2013, his group discovered SCR7 (a chemical), the first biochemical inhibitor of NHEJ pathway, one of the key DNA repair processes in cells. Continued research on this drug in collaboration with Jinu George and Franklin John (Sacred Heart College, Kochi) has created a better form of SCR7, now called ESCR7.Tests on cancer cells in culture show that ESCR7 is five times as efficient in destroying cancer cells than its predecessor. Recently a group of researchers, including those from Raghavan’s team, designed and synthesised a new potential drug. Called Disarib, it can kill cancer cells
overproducing a protein called BCL2. This molecule, the re searchers claim, works better than the current best BCL2 inhibitor in the market. Their finding was published in the journal Biochemical Pharmacology.

Though the initial findings of the studies seem promis ing, there is still a long way to go before we see Disarib on the shelves of a pharmacy, says Raghavan. A number of pre clinical trials have to be done before the drug even gets approved for clinical trials. Biobank for Cancer Established in 2015, the National Cancer Tissue Biobank (NCTB) at IITMadras is a unique, communitybased venture in India. Jointly funded by the Department of Science and Technology, Government of India and IITMadras, this is a step towards reflecting on cancer incidence, diagnostics and treatment outcomes. “The collection and preservation of human tissue is vital for medical research.This type of biobanking of samples from Indian patients is mandatory for advancement of cancer therapeutics for our community,“ says S Mahalingam, a professor in the department of biotechnology at IITMadras and incharge of the biobank.

The NCTB collects tissue samples from patients suffering from different types of cancer.“At present, we have samples from more than 1,200 patients, with 250350 new additions annually. Collected tissues are processed in 7 to 10 minutes to preserve the molecular and biological tumour profile as it is present in the human body,“ explains Mahalingam. Another cancer research team of IITMadras was in news recently for making a breakthrough in understanding how aspirin kills the cancer cell. Amal Kanti Bera, professor of biotechnology, and his team discovered that aspirin carries out a surgical strike on the mitochondria of cancer cells, destroying the unholy nexus between a mitochondrial protein called VDAC and an the enzyme hexokinase.

Dissociation of hexokinase from mitochondria limits the energy supply which is required for the survival of cancer cells. Aspirin also directly alters the structure of VDAC and increases the entry of calcium ions to mitochondria which triggers the release of toxic substances from it. Aspirin’s twopronged attack on mitochondria forces the cancer cells to commit suicide. As the excitement of their research being published in a prestigious journal wanes, Sundar and his team at IITDelhi brace themselves for yet another study on ashwa gandha and its anticancer role. Endless studies and research finding knock on the lab doors of the scientists. What is impor tant is that someday all these are translated into a remedial landscape for winning the battle against cancer.

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IIT-Madras setting up bank to store tumour tissue samples http://newproject.wedella.in/iit-madras-setting-up-bank-to-store-tumour-tissue-samples/ http://newproject.wedella.in/iit-madras-setting-up-bank-to-store-tumour-tissue-samples/#respond Mon, 12 Mar 2018 07:50:10 +0000 http://newproject.wedella.in/?p=6611

IIT-Madras setting up bank to store tumour tissue samples

Questions that shroud cancer are many, the answers few. A key to unlock some of the mysteries is in the making with IIT Madras setting up a bank to store cancer tissues for research purposes. 

Most tumours find their way out of hospital premises as biomedical waste, but a group of researchers have decided to bank them. Professor S Mahalingam of IIT-M’s biotechnology department said the tissues would be sourced from various hospitals in the city with patients’ consent. 

”As soon as the tumour is removed, a portion of it will be transported to our facility and stored in liquid nitrogen at -190 degrees Celsius,” said Mahalingam, who is spearheading the project. The facility can accommodate 25,000 cancer tissue samples in a 10,000 sq ft space.

Genome sequencing will be done to determine the DNA structure of the tissues. “This will be different from a biopsy done in a hospital. While a biopsy can only give skeletal details like what stage the cancer is at, genome sequencing can tell what changes have happened at the cellular level,” he said. While some hospitals have banking facilities on a smaller scale, doctors say this will be the first such initiative at the national level. The centre — a collaborative effort between IIT Madras and the department of science and technology — will help record cancer incidence, and improve diagnosis and treatment. 

”Why do some patients respond to a particular mode of treatment, while others don’t? How are cancer cells in India different from those in the West? What caused the tumour? All the answers to these questions can be found at the molecular level,” said Dr C S Mani of Cancer Research and Relief Trust, which will work with IIT. Research organisations can access the stored tissue samples. “The centre will target application oriented research and provide a crucial link between scientific data collated and how clinicians could use the inferences in their treatment of cancer,” said Dr Mani.

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IIT-M sets up cancer tissue biobank http://newproject.wedella.in/iit-m-sets-up-cancer-tissue-biobank/ http://newproject.wedella.in/iit-m-sets-up-cancer-tissue-biobank/#respond Fri, 09 Mar 2018 13:24:13 +0000 http://newproject.wedella.in/?p=6540

IIT-M sets up cancer tissue biobank

The facility will help in carrying out diagnostic tests, creating genetic markers as well as in early detection and prevention. In a move that will eventually lead to creation of targeted drugs for the treatment of cancer, IIT-Madras on Tuesday announced the setting up of a National Cancer Tissue Biobank. Addressing presspersons here on Tuesday, IIT-M director Bhaskar Ramamurthy said the biobank would also help in carrying out diagnostic tests, creating genetic markers, and early detection and prevention of cancer.

Oncologist C. S. Mani said after the cancer genome atlas, which identified mutated genes, there was a need to look at other modifying agents. “It is necessary to create community data,” he said. Oncologist S. G. Ramanan said the tissues were being collected after due consent was received from the patients. However, many patients were apprehensive about research being conducted on their tissues. “We have also obtained the clearance of the ethics committee and confidentiality of patients will be maintained,” he said. S. Mahalingam of the department of biotechnology said the biobank was already functioning.

“The institute will be involved in training, education and research of next-generation biobanking process and once the system and process are standardised, they will be duplicated at nodal stations in peripheral areas,” he said. The biobank will soon be housed in a new building. The department of science and technology has provided Rs 27.81 crore towards the biobank and IIT-M Rs. 3.9 crore, as complementary funding. The biobank will have infrastructure to accommodate 25,000 cancer tissue samples. A super-resolution imaging system, cell sorting facility and sequencing facilities will also be housed in the biobank. The tissues are stored in liquid nitrogen that is maintained at minus 190 degree centigrade. For this, IIT-M has its own liquid nitrogen plant.

www.thehindu.com/news/cities/chennai/

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The First National Cancer Tissue Biobank at Department of Biotechnology, IIT Madras http://newproject.wedella.in/the-first-national-cancer-tissue-biobank-department-of-biotechnology-iit-madras/ http://newproject.wedella.in/the-first-national-cancer-tissue-biobank-department-of-biotechnology-iit-madras/#respond Fri, 09 Mar 2018 13:08:38 +0000 http://newproject.wedella.in/?p=6530

Prof. Bhaskar Ramamurthi, Director, IIT Madras has announced in the press meet that there will be an establishment of the first National Cancer Tissue Biobank in the Department of Biotechnology of IIT Madras. The tissue biobank is a collaborative effort between the Department of Science and Technology, Government of India and IIT Madras. The DST had awarded Rs. 27.81 crores towards the establishment of this facility. This project will be headed by Prof. S. Mahalingam, Department of Biotechnology of IIT Madras.

The project aims to attract voluntary contribution of cancer tissues by individual patients and treating doctors/institutions. IIT Madras initiated the biobanking process with Cancer Research and Relief Trust (CRRT), Chennai and aims to collaborate with various institution/organizations and encourage voluntary donation of cancer tissues by patients. Measures will put in place for appropriate collection, transport and storage of such tissues in centralized tissue bank to be located within the premises of IIT Madras. Research institutions/organizations with appropriate regulatory approval may have an access to these stored tissue samples with an aim to identify suitable drug targets and biomarkers. This is aimed at discovering “personalized treatment” with less side effects, early detection and prevention of cancer.

IITM Newsletter – February 2014

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IIT Madras sets up National Cancer Tissue Biobank http://newproject.wedella.in/iit-madras-sets-up-national-cancer-tissue-biobank/ http://newproject.wedella.in/iit-madras-sets-up-national-cancer-tissue-biobank/#respond Fri, 09 Mar 2018 13:06:01 +0000 http://newproject.wedella.in/?p=6528

IIT Madras is setting up a National Cancer Tissue Biobank that will lead to creation of targeted drugs for the treatment of cancer. The biobank would help in carrying out diagnostic tests, creating genetic markers and early detection and prevention of cancer. The centre, a collaboration between IIT Madras and the department of science and technology, will help record cancer incidence, and improve diagnosis and treatment.
The tissues for research would be sourced from various hospitals with patients’ consent. The centre has obtained the clearance of the ethics committee and will ensure that the confidentiality of patients is maintained. As soon as the tumour is removed, a portion of it will be transported to the facility and stored in liquid nitrogen at minus 190 degrees Celsius. The facility can accommodate 25,000 cancer tissue samples in a 10,000 sq ft space. A super-resolution imaging system, cell sorting facility and sequencing facilities will also be housed in the biobank. The institute will be involved in training, education and research of next-generation biobanking process and once the system and process are standardised, they will be duplicated at nodal stations in peripheral areas.

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IIT-M to launch cancer tissue bio-bank http://newproject.wedella.in/iit-m-to-launch-cancer-tissue-bio-bank/ http://newproject.wedella.in/iit-m-to-launch-cancer-tissue-bio-bank/#respond Fri, 09 Mar 2018 13:03:01 +0000 http://newproject.wedella.in/?p=6521

The Indian Institute of Technology, (IIT) Madras,  is all set to launch the national cancer tissue biobank, a first-of-its-kind community-based tissue bank. This tissue biobank is a joint venture between the department of science and Technology, government of India and IIT-Madras. The initial focus of the bio-repository is to collect and store various cancer tissues.

“We will initially take samples from cancer patients in hospitals in and around Chennai with their consent. When the surgeon does the surgery, he will provide us with a tissue for the bank. We will use the sample for identification of biomarker and for generic sequencing for personalised drug delivery,” Professor S. Mahalingam, professor in the department of biotechnology at the IIT-Madras and who is involved in the project said.

He added that Union government’s department of science and technology and IIT-M had provided a joint funding of Rs 31 crore as five-year initial funding for establishment of the biobank.
The biobank will be launched as part of Cancercon 2014, a three-day cancer research conference, which starts on January 30. IIT-M’s Biotechnology department and Cancer Research and Relief Trust (CRRT) have jointly organised the conference. Professor K. Vijay Raghavan, secretary, union biotechnology department and IIT-M director Professor Bhaskar Ramamurthi would inaugurate the conference.

www.deccanchronicle.com/nation/current-affairs

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Cancer tissue bio bank to be established at IIT Madras http://newproject.wedella.in/cancer-tissue-bio-bank-to-be-established-at-iit-madras/ http://newproject.wedella.in/cancer-tissue-bio-bank-to-be-established-at-iit-madras/#respond Wed, 29 Jan 2014 13:30:28 +0000 http://newproject.wedella.in/?p=6100

A national cancer tissue bio bank will be established at the Indian Institute of Technology, Madras. This community-based venture will help reflect on cancer incidence, diagnostics and treatment outcomes. The venture is a collaborative effort between the Department of Science and Technology (DST) and IIT Madras. Leading oncologists from Chennai and the institute’s researchers will collaborate in this venture. The DST had awarded ₹27.81 crore to establish the facility. It will be headed by S. Mahalingam, Department of Biotechnology, IIT Madras.

C.S. Mani, Surgical Oncologist, Cancer Research and Relief Trust, told newspersons that the project aims to attract voluntary contribution of cancer tissues by individual patients and treating doctors/institutions. This effort has become important with the advent of genomic medicine. Such type of indigenous research is mandatory for progress in advancement of cancer therapeutics for the community.

IIT Madras, on its part, has provided a funding of ₹3.9 crore, in addition to support from DST. The institute will provide 10,000 sq ft space exclusively for bio bank with required storage and security facilities, and an infrastructure to accommodate around 25,000 cancer tissue samples initially over a period of five years. According to Mahalingam, the institute will be involved in training, education and research of bio banking process. Once this is standardised, the system and process with the central facility at Chennai can be duplicated at nodal stations in peripheral areas. This will propel cancer research for basic scientists and facilitate translational research in synergy with collaborating clinicians.

Bhaskar Ramamurthy, Director, IIT Madras, announced that Cancercon2014, a three-day international conference on cancer biology, molecular mechanisms and novel therapeutics, will be held at the institute from January 30 to February 1. Around 500 delegates from across the world are expected to participate in the conference.

(This article was published on January 29, 2014)

http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/news/cancer-tissue-bio-bank-to-be-established-at-iit-madras/article5631468.ece

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