We did it! Yay! Congratulations to us!
We are pleased to see that our recent germline CPTAC Cell paper is getting noticed across the globe! Here are some of the news and reports on our paper.
Mount Sinai press release: https://www.mountsinai.org/about/newsroom/2025/study-reveals-how-inherited-genes-help-shape-the-course-of-cancer
Siteman: https://siteman.wustl.edu/how-do-inherited-cancer-mutations-drive-tumor-growth/
Eduard and Kathleen's press release (Spain): https://www.carrerasresearch.org/en/news/new-proteogenomic-research-links-germline-variants-to-cancer-progression
ASCO post: https://ascopost.com/news/april-2025/germline-variants-may-impact-unique-nature-of-patients-cancer/
Others :
https://scitechdaily.com/born-with-it-how-your-dna-shapes-cancer-before-it-even-starts/
https://www.newswise.com/articles/study-reveals-how-inherited-genes-help-shape-the-course-of-cancer
https://www.bioworld.com/articles/719433-germline-variants-impact-on-pan-cancer-proteome?v=preview
Our group published a proteogenomic germline study in Cell in collaboration with CPTAC consortium. Congratulations to Fernanda Martins Rodrigues and other co-authors for this tremendous effort! WashU has also published a report about this publication. Read it here.
Read it here.
Our Nature paper “Tumour evolution and microenvironment interactions in 2D and 3D space” published last week was featured in a Nature research briefing by W. Kimryn Rathmell, M.D., Ph.D., director of NIH’s National Cancer Institute (NCI), and Dinah Singer, Ph.D., NCI deputy director for scientific strategy and development. Enjoy it here.