Effects of Hypoxia on the Biology of Tumours and Normal Cells

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This webinar was presented on Wednesday, 20 October 2021. By completing the registration form below, you will be directed to view a recording of the event.

For full details of the programme and speakers, please see below.


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Full Program Details 

 Introduction  
Chair
 Speaker 1
Karen J Kirkby, University of Manchester
“Ultra high dose rate (Flash) Proton Therapy.”
 Speaker 2
Ernestina Schipani, University of Pennsylvania
“Choke to Start the Engine: How Impairment of Mitochondrial Function Can Improve Survival of Hypoxic Chondrocytes.”
 Break

 Speaker 3
Ester Hammond, University of Oxford 
“The response to cycling hypoxia and how this can lead to increased APOBEC activity.”
 Speaker 4
Mike Merchant and John Warmenhoven, University of Manchester, Evan Kitsell, Don Whitley Scientific
“A well-defined problem is half solved – insights gained from a successful project collaboration.”
 Questions
Chair/moderator
 Close


Meet The Speakers

Ester Hammond

Professor Ester Hammond completed her PhD at the School for Cancer Sciences, University of Birmingham then accepted a post as a postdoctoral fellow within the Molecular Oncology Group at the University of Cambridge School of Clinical Medicine before moving to the USA to join the Department of Radiation Oncology at Stanford University, first as a postdoctoral fellow then a research associate.

 She joined the Oxford Institute in 2007.

Karen Kirkby

Professor Karen Kirkby leads research in PBT and FLASH between University of Manchester and The Christie Hospital. This research aims to address the key scientific and technological challenges for proton therapy.  These involve developing models that enable the proton dose to be biologically optimised to the tumour and its microenvironment.  It also looks at options for proton range verification and determination of stopping powers. Her group numbers ~40 people. She also leads https://protoninspire.eu/

Karen has a research grant portfolio of over £28M from a range of funders, charities and industry. She has over 200 publications, including Nature. Karen writes for popular science magazines and is engaged in outreach.

Ernestina Schipani

Ernestina Schipani, M.D., Ph.D. is the William Wikoff Smith Professor of Orthopedic Surgery at University of Pennsylvania-Perelman School of Medicine. She earned her M.D. and Ph.D. at St. Anna School of Advanced Studies-University of Pisa, Italy. She did her postdoctoral studies at MGH-Harvard Medical School, where she subsequently rose through the ranks and became Associate Professor. She was then recruited to Indiana University-Medical School as a Full Professor of Internal Medicine, and next to University of Michigan Medical School as a Full Professor of Orthopedic Surgery, Medicine and Cell and Developmental Biology.

Early in her career, Dr. Schipani discovered that gain-of-function mutations of PTHR1 cause Jansen disease. Next, she pioneered the notion that hypoxia-driven pathways control skeletal development. Her laboratory has established novel principles in the broader fields of G-protein coupled receptors and hypoxia biology. NIH funds her research as an independent investigator since 1997. She is an ASBMR member since 1992 and an ASCI member since 2005. In 2019, she was the recipient of the ASBMR Paula Stern Achievement Award. Dr. Schipani has authored more than 150 publications.



Event hosted and organised by Don Whitley Scientific Limited

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