Professor Mark Meuth

Professor M Meuth
Director of the Institute for Cancer Studies

Telephone: +44 (0)114 271 3288
Facsimile: +44 (0)114 271 3515
Email: m.meuth@sheffield.ac.uk

Education

1967-70
Purdue University, Lafayette, IN. BSc (with distinction) Biochemistry

1970-74
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA. PhD Cell Biology

1974-77
Karolinska Institute, Stockholm SWEDEN. Biochemistry

1977
University of Toronto, Toronto CANADA. Medical Genetics

Positions and Employment

1974-77
American Cancer Society Postdoctoral fellow, with Dr. Peter Reichard, Department of Biochemistry, Medical Nobel Institute, Karolinska Institute.

1977
Postdoctoral fellow with Dr. Louis Siminovitch, Department of Medical Genetics, University of Toronto.

1977-84
Research Assistant Professor/Laboratory Head, Institute de Recherches Cliniques de Montreal, and Department of Medicine, University of Montreal.

1982-83
Visiting Fellow, Imperial Cancer Research Fund, Mill Hill Laboratories, London, U.K.

1983-87
Research Scientist, Imperial Cancer Research Fund, Clare Hall Laboratories, South Mimms, U.K.

1987-92
Senior Scientist, Imperial Cancer Research Fund, Clare Hall Laboratories.

1992-99
Professor and Division Head, Department of Radiation Oncology, Division of Experimental Oncology, University of Utah, School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT.

1993-99
Adjunct Professor of Biochemistry, University of Utah

1997-99
Professor of Oncological Sciences, University of Utah

1999-present
Professor of Cellular Genetics, University of Sheffield, School of Medicine

1999-present
Head, Institute for Cancer Studies, University of Sheffield, School of Medicine

2000-2003
Head, Section of Oncology and Pathology, University of Sheffield, School of Medicine

Honours

1970-1973 National Science Foundation Predoctoral Fellow

1987 Fellow of the Foundation for the Promotion of Cancer Research, SaitamaCancer Center, Research Institute, Saitama-ken, Japan

Research Group

Maria Gagkou - Post-doctural Researcher
Anil Ganesh - Research Staff
Sandra Klein - Post-graduate Student
Doug Kenmore - Post-graduate Student
Gerry Phear - Research Staff
Gary Rodgers - Research Staff
Ruth Thompson - Post-graduate Student
Pedro Zuazua-Villar - Post Doctural Researcher


Research Interests

Overview

Our major research goal over the past several years has been to understand the molecular mechanisms underlying the genomic instability apparent in tumor cells. Cells have elaborate mechanisms that repair DNA damage and prevent mutations, however it has become increasingly clear that DNA repair is closely linked with other types of DNA damage responses such as cell cycle checkpoints and the induction of cell death (apoptosis). Therefore current work is directed at understanding interactions between DNA repair pathways (in particular mismatch and homologous recombination repair) and cell cycle checkpoints and apoptosis. We are also investigating how these interactions become disrupted in tumor cells and the consequences of this disruption for the development and treatment of the disease. In collaboration with Angie Cox we are attempting to understand how inherited polymorphisms of key genes in these pathways may subtly affect function and contribute to increased risk of cancer or response to therapy. The overall goal of this effort is to identify individuals at risk and deliver the most appropriate therapy to cancer patients.



Recent Patent

T. Helleday and M. Meuth, Products useful in the treatment of MMR deficient tumours, Application submitted, June 2002.