Awards and Grants ×

News

Cancer researcher Cory Abate-Shen has been elected to the National Academy of Sciences. Abate-Shen is professor of molecular pharmacology and therapeutics and the Robert Sonneborn Professor of Medicine, with additional appointments in the Departments of Urology and Systems Biology at the Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons. She is also a member of the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center and the Institute for Cancer Genetics at Columbia. She is among 120 newly elected members announced(link is external and opens in a new window) by the academy on April 29, 2025.

Abate-Shen is an internationally recognized leader in genitourinary malignancies. Her innovative studies of genetically engineered mouse models for these cancers have led to the discovery of new biomarkers for early detection, as well as advances in cancer prevention and treatment. Her studies of castration-resistant prostate cancer led to the identification of lineage plasticity as a key mechanism of drug resistance, and her investigations of prostate cancer metastasis have elucidated new mechanisms of metastasis as well as potential new targets for treating bone metastasis.

In recognition of her achievements, Abate-Shen has been the recipient of numerous awards, including a Sinsheimer Scholar Award, a National Science Foundation Young Investigator Award, and an American Cancer Society Research Professorship. She is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the Hedwig van Ameringen Executive Leadership in Academic Medicine Program, and most recently a recipient of the American Association for Cancer Research-Women in Cancer Research Charlotte Friend Award.

Abate-Shen has served in various leadership roles in the American Association for Cancer Research, including as a member of its board of directors. She has also participated extensively in national grant review sections, including as chair of the NIH Molecular Oncology Study Section. She has served on the Board of Scientific Counselors of the National Cancer Institute, as well as its Blue Ribbon Panel Working Group for the Cancer Moonshot Initiative.

The ISCB Fellows program recognizes excellence in computational biology, honoring individuals who have made outstanding contributions through leadership, research, and service. ISCB Fellows have played a pivotal role in advancing bioinformatics and computational biology, shaping the field through innovation and collaboration. This prestigious distinction reflects a career of significant impact and a dedication to the scientific community.

Itsik Pe'er is a leading computational geneticist whose work has reshaped our understanding of human genetics and microbial dynamics. He pioneered identity-by-descent (IBD) analysis, enabling researchers to trace population history, detect genetic associations, and refine disease risk predictions. His contributions extend to microbiome research, where his FEAST tool and modeling approaches have advanced studies of microbial evolution and health. A dedicated mentor and educator, Pe'er has trained the next generation of leaders in genomics and computational biology while fostering interdisciplinary collaboration across genetics, machine learning, and mathematical modeling.

Visit the ISCB website to see the full list of 2025 ISCB Fellows

Jointly awarded by the Columbia Precision Medicine Initiative (CPMI), the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center (HICCC), and the Irving Institute for Clinical and Translational Research, the Precision Medicine Pilot Grants underscore Columbia University’s commitment to supporting diverse, cross-disciplinary research targeting the promise of precision medicine. Four teams will receive a one-year $100,000 grant to support their research. One of the projects is being led by DSB principal investigator Chaolin Zhang, PhD along with Harris Wang, PhD.

Read full article on the Precision Medicine news page.

Xuebing Wu, PhD receives Schaefer Research Scholar award for project: “Noncoding translation surveillance in tumor immunogenicity and immunotherapy”.

Wu’s Schaefer study could lead to the development of new cancer vaccines or therapies that improve the effectiveness of immunotherapies.

Immunotherapies are transforming cancer treatment but are ineffective for pancreatic cancer and many other tumors that are adept at hiding from the immune system.

The immune system can easily spot cancers covered with antigens that contain tumor-specific mutations. Tumors with fewer mutations, like pancreatic cancer, can more easily evade detection.

Recent studies have found that tumors can also be covered with “dark” antigens, which do not contain tumor-specific mutations but are generated by aberrant translation of noncoding sequences in cancer cells. Dark antigens, when present in large quantities, can trigger an attack from the immune system. Wu has found clues that cancers that evade the immune system might be suppressing the production of these dark antigens.

Wu will test the hypothesis that pancreatic cancer cells suppress the production of dark antigens by downregulating the BAG6 pathway, a process recently discovered in Wu’s lab, that partially degrades noncoding products and processes them into antigens. If so, he will then determine if increasing BAG6 expression will sensitize tumor cells to immunotherapies.

Read full article on the Irving Medical Center news page. 

New York, NY (Business Wire), March 26, 2024 - The Pershing Square Foundation today announced the seven winners of the “MIND” Prize (Maximizing Innovation in Neuroscience Discovery). Through the Prize, the Foundation strives to change the paradigm of neuroscience research by creating a community of next-frontier thinkers who can uncover a deeper understanding of the brain and cognition. Breakthroughs in basic scientific and translational research will yield critical tools for and knowledge of neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer’s Disease and Dementia, which affect millions of people worldwide.

The MIND Prize will catalyze novel interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary work by facilitating collaborations across academic departments and institutions and amongst the academic, biomedical industry, philanthropic, and business communities. The 2024 Prize winners will each receive $750,000, distributed $250,000 per year for three years.

“Cognitive Disease Disorders are holisms—wholes bigger than the sum of their parts—requiring us to apply systems-based thinking across cellular, organismic and behavioral scales,” said Pershing Square Foundation Co-Trustee Neri Oxman, PhD. "The winners of the 2024 MIND Prize embody such system-based thinking in their work, ranging from autoinflammatory early event detection to impacted lipid synthesis mechanisms all the way to ribosome programming and next generation DNA sequencing–based ‘biochemical microscopes.’ We look forward to honoring these contributions.”