Stuart A. Aaronson

Author and cancer biologist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stuart A. Aaronson (born February 28, 1942) is an American author and cancer biologist.[1][2] He was the Jane B. and Jack R. Aron Professor of Neoplastic Diseases and Chairman of Oncological Sciences at Mount Sinai Hospital, New York.[3]

Born (1942-02-28) February 28, 1942 (age 84)
Mount Clemens, Michigan, United States
EducationUC Berkeley, UC SF
OccupationBiologist
Quick facts Born, Education ...
Stuart A. Aaronson
Born (1942-02-28) February 28, 1942 (age 84)
Mount Clemens, Michigan, United States
EducationUC Berkeley, UC SF
OccupationBiologist
EmployerThe Mount Sinai Hospital
Known forCancer research
TitleJane B. and Jack R. Aron Professor of Neoplastic Diseases and Founding Chair Emeritus of Oncological Sciences
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Biography

Aaronson graduated summa cum laude from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1962, with a degree in chemistry. He earned his M.D. from the University of California, San Francisco Medical Center in 1966, and completed a fellowship at the University of Cambridge in England and an internship in medicine at Moffitt Hospital in San Francisco.[3]

In 1967, Aaronson joined the National Institutes of Health as a Senior Staff Fellow. He headed the Molecular Biology Section of the Viral Carcinogenesis Branch from 1970 until 1977, after which he became Chief of the Laboratory of Cellular and Molecular Biology at the National Cancer Institute, until 1993, when he was named Chairman of Oncological Sciences at The Mount Sinai Hospital.[citation needed]

Research

Aaronson's early research established the transformation-competent but replication-defective nature of mammalian sarcoma viruses and molecularly cloned many of their oncogenes.[3][4] His investigations of the v-sis oncogene established the first normal function of an oncogene and its role in growth factor signaling.[1][2] His discovery of erbB2 as a v-erbB-related gene amplified in a human breast carcinoma and the demonstration of its transforming properties paved the way for targeted therapies directed against its product,[4] and his successful isolation of KGF (FGF7), a growth factor present in the epithelialization-phase of wound healing, led to Amgen's successful phase III clinical trial and FDA approval of KGF for treatment of mucositis.[5][6] Current research includes investigations into the mechanisms by which tumor suppressor genes induce permanent growth arrest/senescence, the signaling pathways involved, and investigations of the autocrine and paracrine acting growth factors PDGF, KGF, HGF, and Wnt ligands.[3]

To date, three papers on which Aaronson is author have been retracted, and two papers which he authored have received expressions of concern.[7]

Publications

Partial list:

References

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