Professor Melissa Southey receives the 'Jass Memorial Lecture Microscope' from Professor John Hopper |
Monash University’s Chair of Precision Medicine,
Professor Melissa Southey was invited to deliver the highly prestigious Jass
Memorial Lecture at the Familial
Aspects of Cancer: Research and Practice scientific meeting in Kingscliff, NSW earlier
this month.
Professor Jeremy Jass was an outstanding and
influential gastrointestinal researcher and pathologist who lost his battle
against a malignant glioma of the brain ten years ago.
Professor Southey said it was a great honour being
invited to give the lecture, in remembrance of their very special colleague.
In her lecture, Professor Southey paid tribute to the
numerous professional attributes that made Professor Jass an outstanding
researcher, an in particular, his persistence to challenge dogma in his
thinking.
“Jeremy developed
the principles of the Vogelstein model and defined colorectal cancer as a
multipathway disease based on a correlation of clinical, morphological and
molecular features,” Professor Southey said.
“Insightfully, Jeremy included DNA methylation as
an important molecular feature of colorectal cancer and regarded it as a
measure that should impact both (colorectal) cancer prevention and treatment.”
Professor Southey said that since his death,
numerous initiatives have explored these ideas supported by high density
molecular platforms combined with advanced analytical capacity.
“Much has been learned – yet many studies remain
linear in both design and thinking.”
“Consistent with Jeremy’s vision for DNA
methylation⃰ to have a
role in cancer prevention there is accumulating evidence of DNA methylation as
a cancer risk factor – the most intriguing of these recent findings come from
integrated studies that incorporate Jass histopathology annotations,” Professor
Southey said.
Also at the scientific meeting, a large number of other
presentations illustrated how Professor Southey’s team are contributing to
advancing our understanding breast and prostate cancer, including the
presentations from Dr Tu
Nguyen-Dumont, Dr EE Ming Wong, Dr Rebecca Harris, Dr Elyse Dunn, Dr Mailie
Gall, Dr Eric Joo, Dr Robert MacInnis, Dr Fleur Hammet, Dr Mahnaz Hosseinpour
and Dr Medha Suman.
“The team were impressive!” Professor
Southey said.
⃰ DNA methylation is an epigenetic mechanism which
involves chemical modification of DNA that does not change the DNA sequence.
In some specific circumstances, epigenetic variation can mimic genetic
variation and predispose to disease.
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