skip to content

 

Department of Biochemistry

 
#GProteins18 conference logo

Focused Meeting, 9-12 July 2018, Clare College, Cambridge, UK.

 

Small G proteins regulate a plethora of cell signalling pathways, thus impacting on most biological processes. As a result of their broad-spread cellular influence, the deregulation of these proteins and their pathways often results in disease, especially cancer.

The interest, both academic and commercial, in these proteins has always been intense, but with the instigation of the Ras Initiative by the NCI in 2013, interest is newly invigorated. Hopes are high that new ways being developed will successfully target cancers driven by mutant Ras.

Sessions during this focused meeting will include:

  • Therapeutic targeting of small G proteins,
  • Localisation: spatiotemporal signalling,
  • Small G protein function in context,
  • Regulators and modulators,
  • Effector signalling pathways,
  • Small G proteins in disease: challenges and progress.

 

Programme coordinators

Darerca Owen

Helen Mott

Image

#GProteins18 conference logo.

Credit: Darerca Owen and Helen Mott, Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge.

Authors

Darerca Owen and Helen Mott

Publication date

13 February 2018