Lung cancer is multimodal pathology with high rates of incidence and mortality, but a substantial lack of effective treatment strategies. At the scientific level, RoNDBioCan contributed significantly to european excellence and society in that it has strengthen the knowledge of lung tumorigenesis. Today, the action of current therapies relies mainly on the induction of highly cytotoxic DNA lesions. For this purpose, RoNDBioCan focused on understanding how our cells (healthy and cancer cells) respond to those treatments and especially how NLRP3, an inflammatory protein can modulate the response to DNA damage. The technical difficulties encountered during this MSCA fellowship only highlighted the importance to investigate the molecular mechanisms that direct the emergence and progression of the disease, along with the application of these findings for clinical treatment.
By improving the current knowledge on NLRP3 biology and especially understanding its role in the DNA Damage Response, this project brought to light new connections between two major hallmarks of cancer: inflammation and genomic instability. Through the fellow’s research on NLRP3 function in cancer development, new understandings are emerging on how cells orchestrate the dual function of NLRP3 in immunity and in protecting genome integrity. While this project consists primarily of fundamental research, it carries a beneficial impact regarding lung cancer biology. RoNDBioCan could open avenues for the development of new therapeutic strategies and, in that way, could contribute indirectly to relieve the economic burden of Lung cancer treatment. During the MSCA, the fellow assembled a strong and interesting network of international scientists both in the cancer field and the innate immunity field that are now collaborating on a new research project led by the fellow on NRLP3 regulation and based on the data obtained from RoNDBioCan.
Impact anticipated from the MSCA are increased and improved for the career development of the fellow. She developed competences with many different research technics but also improved her communicating skills by sharing the results from the RoNDBioCan research program to a broad public. The fellow created many workshops and organized main events for hospitalized children and their family at the Pediatric Hematology and Oncology Institute to get them to understand the current research conducted on cancer biology but also to teach them that science can be just fun.