Research News

ZBTB48: A New On-Switch for the Immune Response

CIITA is the master regulator of MHC class-II immune genes that are important for defense mechanism against infections and cancer development. CIITA is controlled by three specific switches used in a cell-type specific manner and can be turned on by a signal called IFN-γ. In recent work, research fellow Dr Grishma Rane and colleagues from the lab of N2CR member Dr Dennis Kappei found that a protein called ZBTB48 binds to the B-cell switch and activates CIITA in this type of white blood cells. When ZBTB48 is missing, CIITA and MHC-II gene activity are reduced and cannot be turned on even after signaling by IFN-γ. The team will next apply this fundamental science discovery to B-cell malignancies. Watch this space!

Click here to read more.

Share this story:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

Related Research News

Research News

Spatially Resolved, Tumour Ecosystems in Gastric Cancer Progression

Gastric cancer (GC) has significant global mortality with high heterogeneity. A study of 226 GC samples from 121 patients integrated …

Read More →
Research News

Harnessing TME: Breaking Down EMT Barriers in Cancer Treatment

The tumour microenvironment (TME) plays a pivotal role in cancer progression, metastasis, and therapeutic resistance. Comprised of diverse cells, extracellular …

Read More →
Research News

Unveiling p53’s Role in DNA Protection: New Cancer Insights

Research led by N2CR member Dr. Cheok Chit Fang found that the tumour suppressor protein p53 protects DNA during replication …

Read More →