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PhD Public Seminar: RUTVI SHAH

When & Where

March 6
10:30 AM - 11:30 AM
UT MD Anderson Cancer Center, 4SCR1.1110 and via Zoom (View in Google Map)

Contact

Event Description

Elucidating the Processes Facilitating Tissue Recovery in Response to Acute Pancreatitis

Rutvi Amar Shah, MS (Advisor: Andrea Viale, MD)

          In response to injury or damage, pancreatic acinar cells transdifferentiate into ductal cells through a process known as acinar to ductal metaplasia (ADM). This process is usually transient and completely reversible. During the organ’s response to impermanent damage, various sub-populations of epithelial cells get activated and play distinct roles in the recovery process. There is an apparent re-establishment of normal histology upon damage repair. Specific cells in the tissue undergo some pervasive genomic changes during inflammation that make the organ more susceptible to transformation during that transient window. Although the link between inflammation and cancer has been long established, it is still correlative in the context of pancreatic cancer. This study has investigated ADM in the pancreas from the perspective of tissue repair and its genomic landscape and challenged some preconceived notions about pancreatic regeneration along with identifying novel transient vulnerabilities that can potentially lead to oncogenic transformation.  

Advisory Committee:

  • Andrea Viale, MD, Chair
  • Giulio Draetta, MD, PhD
  • Yejing Ge, PhD
  • Stephanie Watowich, PhD
  • Haoqiang Ying, PhD

Join via Zoom (Pls. contact Ms. Shah for her zoom meeting info)

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Elucidating the Processes Facilitating Tissue Recovery in Response to Acute Pancreatitis

Rutvi Amar Shah, MS (Advisor: Andrea Viale, MD)

          In response to injury or damage, pancreatic acinar cells transdifferentiate into ductal cells through a process known as acinar to ductal metaplasia (ADM). This process is usually transient and completely reversible. During the organ’s response to impermanent damage, various sub-populations of epithelial cells get activated and play distinct roles in the recovery process. There is an apparent re-establishment of normal histology upon damage repair. Specific cells in the tissue undergo some pervasive genomic changes during inflammation that make the organ more susceptible to transformation during that transient window. Although the link between inflammation and cancer has been long established, it is still correlative in the context of pancreatic cancer. This study has investigated ADM in the pancreas from the perspective of tissue repair and its genomic landscape and challenged some preconceived notions about pancreatic regeneration along with identifying novel transient vulnerabilities that can potentially lead to oncogenic transformation.  

Advisory Committee:

  • Andrea Viale, MD, Chair
  • Giulio Draetta, MD, PhD
  • Yejing Ge, PhD
  • Stephanie Watowich, PhD
  • Haoqiang Ying, PhD

Join via Zoom (Pls. contact Ms. Shah for her zoom meeting info)

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