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Amato J. Giaccia

Academic Appointments

Contact Information

  • Academic Offices
    Personal Information
    Email Tel (650) 723-7366
    Alternate Contact
    Sharon Clarke Administrative Associate Tel Work 650.723.7311

Professional Overview

Honors and Awards

  • MERIT Award, NIH (2010)
  • Jack, Lulu and Sam Willson Endowed Professor of Cancer Biology, Stanford University (2006)
  • Virginia Logan Lecture, Thomas Jefferson University (2003)
  • John Yuhas Award (Excellence in Radiation Oncology, University of Pennsylvania), University of Pennsylvania (2000)
  • Michael Fry Research Awardee of the Radiation Research Society, Radiation Research Society (1997)
  • Howard Hughes Junior Faculty Award, Stanford University (1996)
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Industry Relationships

Stanford is committed to ethical and transparent interactions with our industrial and other commercial partners. It is our policy to disclose payments (exclusive of travel support) from, and/or equity in, companies or other commercial entities to Stanford faculty of $5,000 or more in total value, as well as any equity in a privately held company, when the faculty member also has institutional responsibilities related to his or her interactions with the company. View Full Information

Scientific Focus

Current Research Interests

During the last five years, we have identified several small molecules that acted to kill VHL deficient renal cancer cells through a synthetic lethal screening approach. We published on one of the molecules (Cancer Cell 14: 90, 2008) that killed VHL deficient tumor and are performing screens to identify new therapeutics against other targets. Another major interest of my laboratory is in identifying hypoxia-induced genes involved in invasion and metastases. We have identified and characterized several genes that are induced by hypoxia and promote metastases in breast, ovarian, renal and head and neck cancer (Nature 440:1222, 2006, Cancer Cell 15:35, 2009) and are developing therapeutics against them. My group is also investigating how hypoxia regulates gene expression epigenetically through the regulation of histone demethylases and microRNAs.

Publications

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