Targeting longnNoncoding RNAs may offer gains compared to conventional approaches
Certain genes that code for proteins have long been known to contribute to cancer progression. But in a frame shift, researchers from ϳԹ School of Medicine recently found that non-coding genes also contribute to the development and spreading of the disease, one of the first known examples of researchers doing so. The lead author of the study reporting this finding, Ahmad Khalil, assistant professor of genetics and genome sciences at ϳԹ School of Medicine, has been awarded a five-year, $1.85 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to build on the discovery, with an eventual aim of pinpointing additional targets for cancer-fighting treatments.