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Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences

Cancer Biology Research

Cancer Biology Research

Íø±¬³Ô¹Ï has a long history of excellence in cancer research with successful programs in DNA repair, genomics, cell signaling and receptor biology, structural biology, drug discovery, chemoprevention, experimental therapeutics and clinical trials.

Most Cancer Biology graduate students conduct their research at facilities on the Health Science Center’s main campus, the , the South Texas Research Facility, or the NCI-designated Mays Cancer Center on the Greehey Campus. These facilites house research scientists and clinical-care physicians who collaborate to move laboratory discoveries into cutting-edge therapies for patients and their families and provide a comprehensive training environment for the next generation of cancer researchers.

State-of-the-art core facilities in , , , , Next-Generation Sequencing & Bioinformatics, , Mass Spectrometry, , , and are available to our students. Multiple computing clusters, centralized storage and access to the are available for data analysis and computational modeling.

Research Areas:

  • Genomics/proteomics
  • Cell signaling and receptor biology 
  • Tumor immunology 
  • DNA damage & repair 
  • RNA biology 
  • Structural biology 
  • Drug discovery 
  • Chemoprevention 
  • Experimental therapeutics 
  • Clinical trials 

 

ut health san antonio

Íø±¬³Ô¹Ï Institutes and Centers

Íø±¬³Ô¹Ï operates centers and institutes within nine organized research units, as well as institutes and centers such as our NCI-designated Mays Cancer Center.

Student working in core facility

Core Facilities

The core facilities provide researchers with access to state-of-the-art instrumentation and consultation, including access to advanced research technologies.