Pancreatic Cancer Archives - Sanford Burnham Prebys

Guy Salvesen earned his PhD in biochemistry from Cambridge University in 1980. He conducted postdoctoral research at Strangeways Laboratory and MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, followed by further post-doctoral training at the University of Georgia. In 1991 he was appointed Assistant Professor at Duke University. Dr. Salvesen was recruited to Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute in 1996, where he is professor and director of the Apoptosis and Cell Death Research Program and dean of the Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences. He also holds an adjunct position as professor in the Department of Pathology at the University of California, San Diego.

Education

1981: PhD, Cambridge University, England, Biology
1977: B. Sc., London University, London, England, Microbiology

Other Appointments

Adjunct Professor, Department of Pathology, University of California, San Diego

Honors and Recognition

2014: Organizer, Keystone Meeting on Cell Death, February
2013: IUBMB Gold Medal Recipient, October
2010: Keynote Speaker, European Cell Death Organization Conference,
2010: Keynote Speaker, Gordon Research Conference on Cell Death
2009: Lifetime Achievement Award of the International Proteolysis Society
2008: Keynote Speaker, Queenstown Molecular Biology Conference
2008: Chair, Gordon Research Conference on Cell Death
2005: Helmut Holzer Memorial Prize
1999: International Proteolysis Society, Elected Secretary
1999: Keynote Speaker, Gordon Research Conference on Matrix Metalloproteinases
1988: American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, State of the Art Lecture
1996: Chair, Gordon Research Conference on Proteolytic Enzymes and Their Inhibitors

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Education

University College Dublin
BSc and PhD, Pharmacology, cell and molecular biology, signal transduction and cancer, First Class Honors

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Pamela Itkin-Ansari earned her PhD in Biomedical Sciences from the University of California San Diego, in 1999. She received postdoctoral training focused on juvenile diabetes at that same organization. In 2003, Dr. Itkin-Ansari was appointed Assistant Professor in the Department of Pediatrics and maintains UCSD as her primary affiliation. Dr. Itkin-Ansari was appointed to Sanford Burnham Prebys as an Adjunct Assistant Professor in 2005 and her laboratory is at the Institute. 

Other Appointments

UC San Diego
Sanford School of Medicine, South Dakota 

Funding Awards and Collaborative Grants

Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF)
California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM)
The Hartwell Foundation
The Hirshberg Foundation 

Honors and Recognition

2012: Invited Speaker, (International) Islet Society, Stockholm, Sweden
2012-current: Editorial Board -Islets
2012-current: Diabetes, Islets, PlosOne, Molecular Therapy- manuscript review
2012-current: Wellcome Trust-grant review
2012: Invited Speaker, Hirshberg Symposium – Pancreatic Cancer
2011: Invited Speaker, American Society of Gene and Cell Therapy, Seattle, Washington
2011: Editorial Board – World Journal of Diabetes
2011: Invited Speaker, UCLA
2011-current: Diabetelogia – manuscript review
2011-current: Editorial Board – World Journal of Diabetes
2010: Invited Speaker, 3rd International Conference on Advanced Technologies & Treatments for Diabetes, Switzerland
2010: Editorial Board -Stem Cell Reviews and Reports [SCRR]
2010: Invited Speaker, American Society of Gene and Cell Therapy, Washington, D.C
2010-current: Hartwell Foundation Biomedical Research Awardee
2010: Invited Speaker, Pancreatic Cancer Research Group, UCLA
2010-current: Faculty Advisor, SDSU CIRM Bridges Program
2009: Invited Speaker, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee
2009: Invited Speaker, UK Consulate Stem Cell Meeting
2009: Finalist-NIH President’s New Innovator Award
2009-current: Advances in Experimental Biology and Medicine – manuscript review
2008: Health Hero Award, JDRF and Combined Health Agencies of San Diego
2008-current: Pancreas – manuscript reviewer
2008-current: JDRF – grant reviewer
2007-current: Stem Cells – manuscript reviewer 

Other Affiliations

2012-current: Islet Society
2010-current: ASGCT
2008-current: Board of Directors, JDRF San Diego chapter
2008-2013: JDRF board of directors, San Diego
2007-current: American Association for Cancer Research
2007-current: American Diabetes Association
2007-current: American Pediatric Society/Society for Pediatric Research
2006-current: AAAS

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Nicholas Cosford, PhD has served on the Sanford Burnham Prebys Board of Trustees since 2023. He is the first faculty member to do so.

Cosford joined the Sanford Burnham Prebys faculty in 2008 as an associate professor. In 2013, he became a full professor. His lab investigates the interactions of small molecule compounds with therapeutically important proteins and cellular signaling pathways. With a specific focus on the discovery and optimization of compounds that might treat cancer, central nervous system diseases and infectious diseases.

Prior to joining Sanford Burnham Prebys in 2005, Cosford worked in both the biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries.  At Sibia Neurosciences and at Merck Research Laboratories, he directed multidisciplinary research teams focused on small-molecule hit-to-lead optimization and was responsible for moving several lead compounds through to the clinical phase, including a nicotinic agonist (Altinicline) from research to Phase II clinical trials for treating Parkinson’s disease.

He is an author of more than 90 peer-reviewed, published scientific papers, and has been issued more than 40 issued patents, with an additional 40 patent applications pending.

Cosford has a Bachelor of Science degree in chemistry from the University of Bath in England and Doctor of Philosophy degree in organic chemistry from Emory University in Atlanta, GA.  

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Dr. Commisso’s doctoral studies were focused on various aspects of endocytosis pertaining to Notch signal transduction. Specifically, he analyzed the role of an endocytic protein known as Neuralized, which functions in the internalization of Notch ligands such as Delta and Jagged. As a doctoral trainee he gained extensive experience in cell biological and biochemical techniques pertaining to cellular trafficking. Subsequently, Dr. Commisso received postdoctoral training in pancreatic cancer at New York University School of Medicine. In that capacity he gained expertise in analyzing the complex signaling events mediated by oncogenic Ras during the initiation and progression of the disease. Additionally, he has expertise in the utilization of mouse models of pancreatic cancer including heterotopic/orthotopic xenografts, syngeneic heterotopic/orthotopic implantation and autochthonous models.

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