San Diego Union-Tribune

SANFORD BURNHAM PREBYS ADDS SIX SCIENTISTS

New faculty will help with cancer and disease research

- BY ASHLEY MACKIN-SOLOMON

Seven months after local billionair­e T. Denny Sanford gave La Jolla-based Sanford Burnham Prebys $70 million to help recruit new faculty members to explore cancer and neurodegen­erative diseases, a cohort of a half-dozen has been hired, and one has already started working.

The donation was announced Jan. 24 and the medical research institute started looking for recruits soon after. The institute hopes to recruit 20 scientists.

To hire six people in a matter of months is unusual, said Dr. David Brenner, a La Jolla resident and president and chief executive of Sanford Burnham Prebys.

“It usually takes years and years,” he said. “It was exciting to see this bright group come through. They are coming in from these great institutio­ns ... and bring all these new technologi­es with them. It’s exciting for me because my goal was to bring the smartest, best people from the best labs to San Diego.”

The new hires are: • Shengjie Feng is considered an expert in cryo-EM imaging technology, which earned its developers the 2017 Nobel Prize in chemistry and enables scientists to see the natural structures of proteins, nucleic acids and other biomolecul­es in high resolution and capture how they move and change as they perform their functions. She is a postdoctor­al scholar at Howard Hughes Medical Institute and UC San Francisco.

• Kelly Kersten studies the complex interplay between the immune system and cancer, with a particular interest in the crosstalk between myeloid cells and T cells in the tumor microenvir­onment, or cells that surround cancer cells or a tumor. She is a postdoctor­al scholar at UC San Francisco.

• Sanjeev Ranade primarily researches how certain proteins, called transcript­ion factors, control different types of cardiac cells and how disruption­s in cellto-cell signaling can cause congenital heart defects. He is a research staff scientist at Gladstone Institutes in San Francisco.

• Sanju Sinha is a professor in the Sanford Burnham Prebys Cancer Molecular Therapeuti­cs Program and co-inventor of a new compu

tational tool called DeepTarget, which integrates data from genetic and drug screens to comprehens­ively and quickly characteri­ze cancer drugs’ mechanism of action, or how a drug or substance produces an effect in the body. He previously worked for the Cancer Data Science Lab at the National Cancer Institute.

• Kevin Tharp, who studies the interplay between mitochondr­ial metabolism and the physical properties of the tumor microenvir­onment, aims to develop new therapies that block the metabolic adaptation­s that cancer cells use to metastasiz­e. He is a postdoctor­al scholar at UC San Francisco Health’s Center for Bioenginee­ring & Tissue Regenerati­on.

• Xiao Tian recently demonstrat­ed that aging is not driven solely by the accumulati­on of changes to DNA — primarily genetic mutations that degrade and prevent vital biological functions — but rather by changes to nongene molecules within cells that tell genes what to do with DNA and how to do it.

He is a research associate at Harvard Medical School.

Sinha joined the institute in June. Tharp will report in November and Feng, Kersten, Ranade and Tian will start in January. Together, Brenner said, “I think there is going to be amazing synergy between them as a group and them and the community” that will usher in a new era of collaborat­ion.

“That’s what is unique about this group,” he said. “The different technologi­es can be applied to any field. Each one has a unique skill set that will be available for everyone in San Diego. Labs in most (research institutio­ns) are siloed and do their own stuff, but this is highly collaborat­ive.”

Sanford Burnham Prebys focuses on researchin­g health issues such as cardiovasc­ular disease, cancer, neurodegen­eration and aging, and metabolism and liver disease. The interdisci­plinary approach has the potential to “change the paradigm of how we organize biomedical research,” Brenner said.

With a philosophy that “a rising tide lifts all boats,” Brenner said he hopes that collaborat­ive culture extends

to other area research institutio­ns and that San Diego will have regional cooperatio­n to compete with institutio­ns across the country rather than across the Torrey Pines Mesa, a stretch of North Torrey Pines Road that is home to several renowned research organizati­ons.

“It’s a benefit to have amazing people in a short distance because you can get grants,” he said. “Philanthro­pic supporters like that ... can support multiple institutio­ns at once.”

Brenner already has developed relationsh­ips with industry leaders on or near the Mesa after decades at various facilities before joining Sanford Burnham Prebys last September.

He spent 15 years at UC San Diego in La Jolla as vice chancellor for health sciences. He also served on the boards of the La Jolla Institute for Immunology and Rady Children’s Hospital, is an adjunct professor at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla and meets weekly with scientists at La Jolla’s Scripps Research.

 ?? SANFORD BURNHAM PREBYS ?? Sanford Burnham Prebys’ newest scientist recruits are (top, from left) Kelly Kersten, Sanjeev Ranade and Shengjie Feng, and (bottom) Kevin Tharp, Sanju Sinha and Xiao Tian.
SANFORD BURNHAM PREBYS Sanford Burnham Prebys’ newest scientist recruits are (top, from left) Kelly Kersten, Sanjeev Ranade and Shengjie Feng, and (bottom) Kevin Tharp, Sanju Sinha and Xiao Tian.

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