Professor of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School.
Professor of Cell Biology, Harvard Medical School.
Lewis Cantley is a cell biologist and a professor in the Departments of Systems Biology and Medicine at Harvard Medical School. Among his research contributions are the discovery and study of the enzyme PI-3-kinase, now known to be important to understanding cancer and diabetes mellitus. He is also the Director of Cancer Research at the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, in Boston, Massachusetts.
Lewis Cantley: A panel discussion highlighting cutting-edge cancer research.
▸
47 min
—
with
The previous director of the National Cancer Institute wanted to banish suffering and death from cancer by 2015. Current director Harold Varmus says this claim was not based on reality, […]
▸
5 min
—
with
Seemingly every year there are new reports that something we consume or use on a daily basis is carcinogenic. But what exactly does that mean on a biological level?
▸
4 min
—
with
The Cancer Genome Atlas project, already several years underway, is transforming the way scientists think about and treat cancer.
▸
8 min
—
with
Lewis Cantley: Why do virtually all men over the age of 90 develop some amount of prostate cancer whereas heart cancer is practically unheard of?
▸
4 min
—
with
There are some dramatic cases in which cancers have regressed or gone away on their own, which raises the bigger question of why some early cancers progress and others don’t.
▸
8 min
—
with
One in three Americans are diagnosed in their lifetime with cancer, a derangement of normal cell growth in which cells grow in antisocial ways, crossing natural tissue boundaries.
▸
6 min
—
with