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The discovery suggests a potential new treatment approach for certain cancers.
Every year, the Gerstner Sloan Kettering Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (GSK) awards fellowships to students who show promise in their scientific endeavors at GSK.
New research from scientists at the Sloan Kettering Institute helps explain how growing tumors escape our immune defenses.
The work in our lab is focused on the DNA damage response (DDR), a network of functions comprising DNA damage signaling, DNA repair, and DNA damage dependent cell cycle regulation. With an overarching interest in chromosome biology, the laboratory employs yeast and mice to undertake genetic, molecular biological, and biochemical analyses of these pathways with a goal of understanding the DDR’s role in tissue homeostasis, development, and tumor suppression. Experience in these research areas is preferred, as are candidates interested in multi-disciplinary approaches