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IMAGE: The scientists found elevated levels of cell drinking, or macropinocytosis (green) in the stromal cells exposed to a low-nutrient environment (right), compared to normal nutrient levels that surround healthy tissue. view more
Credit: Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute
Scientists at Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute demonstrated for the first time that blocking cell drinking, or macropinocytosis, in the thick tissue surrounding a pancreatic tumor slowed tumor growth providing more evidence that macropinocytosis is a driver of pancreatic cancer growth and is an important therapeutic target. The study was published in Now that we know that macropinocytosis is revved up in both pancreatic cancer cells and the surrounding fibrotic tissue, blocking the process might provide a double whammy to pancreatic tumors, says Cosimo Commisso, Ph.D., associate professor and co-director of the Cell and Molecular Biology of C
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WXRT/Chicago Veteran John Farneda Succumbs To Cancer
March 10, 2021 at 12:27 PM (PT)
Farneda
After a year-long battle with pancreatic and liver cancer, ENTERCOM Triple A WXRT/CHICAGO longtime MD JOHN FARNEDA died TUESDAY EVENING MARCH 9th. FARNEDA had also dealt with MS for many years. He died with his mother ROSE, brother LARRY and spouse FANIE by his side. He was 59 years old.
Morning host LIN BREHMER said, “Few people are blessed with the clarity JOHN FARNEDA had for his future. He loved music and he wanted to work in radio. More than that, he wanted to work at WXRT. At COLUMBIA COLLEGE, he told his favorite teacher, TERRI HEMMERT, that one way or another he had to work at WXRT. That was over 40 years ago.”
Three New Trustees; New Media Arts and Design Major | Newsletter for March 10 By
New York Times columnist David Brooks (A.B. ’83) has resigned
from his paid position as the chair of the Weave Project at the Aspen Institute, a D.C.–based think tank and nonprofit, according to
The Times’s announcement on Saturday.
Brooks has been receiving a secondary salary from the Weave Project, which has been funded by Facebook and other donors, since 2018.
The Times cited it as a conflict of interest that Brooks did not disclose this position to his readers in his columns, some of which promoted the Weave Project and its donors.