Institute for Cancer Research

 

Institute for Cancer Research has since its foundation in 1954 played a central role within the field of cancer research both in Norway and internationally. The Institute has seven research departments and more than 320 employees, master students included. About 70% of the employees and projects are externally funded.

The Institute has internationally strong research groups within biochemistry, cell and tumor biology, genetics, radiation biology, immunology and cancer prevention. For more than 30 years there has been a close interaction between researchers at the Institute and cancer surgeons, oncologists and pathologists. This emphasis on translational science has resulted in numerous clinical protocols based on in-house research, and the Institute is a key partner in the Comprehensive Cancer Center, organizationally under the Division of Surgery and Cancer Treatment at Oslo University Hospital.

Erik Boye<br>Scientific director
Erik Boye
Scientific director

Scientific production - Institute for Cancer Research

 PublicationsDoctoral theses
2013so far 
2012 19218
201118322
201019811
200916721
200814411

Department overview

 

Latest news

A newly identified protein regulates cell division

 
Anja Nilen
Anja Nilen

Anja Nilsen (photo) from Arne Klungland's group at the Department of Microbiology, Oslo University Hospital, is shared first-author on a collaborative work entitled "ALKBH4-dependent demethylation of actin regulates actomyosin dynamics", recently published in Nature communications.

 
 

Publication in Nature Genetics on testicular cancer susceptibility

 
R.I. Skotheim
R.I. Skotheim
Researchers from Department of Cancer Prevention, Institute for Cancer Research and Centre for Cancer Biomedicine are involved in an international consortium on genetics of testicular germ cell tumours. The testicular cancer consortium, which is directed from National Cancer Institute and University of Pennsylvania, recently published two articles in Nature Genetics (Chung et al., May 2013) and Human Molecular Genetics (Schumacher et al., March 2013) respectively.
Rolf Skotheim (photo) is the site responsible in Oslo, and says that across all types of cancer, testicular cancer is now the type for which known susceptibility genes explain the largest fraction the genetic risk.
 
 

The story of PCI popularized and presented in national media

 
Monica Bostad and Pål Selbo from Kristian Berg\'s PCI group
Monica Bostad and Pål Selbo from Kristian Berg's PCI group

Kristian Berg at the Department of Radiation Biology at the Institute for Cancer Research played a key role in when the technique of "photochemical internalization" (PCI) was developed. This method was introduced in 1995.
The story behind PCI is widely presented in a popularized form on the web page of the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation (NRK) as well as on the much visited Norwegian popular science web site "forskning.no".

 
 

Llorente and coworkers publish detailed lipidomic analyses of exosomes released from prostate cancer cells

 
A. Llorente
A. Llorente

Project group leader Alicia Llorente, working in the group of Kirsten Sandvig, has recently published the lipid composition of a prostate cancer cell line and of the exosomes released from these cells.
The work was performed in collaboration with two Finnish research groups and published in Biochim. Biophys. Acta (Mol. Cell Biol. Lip.; journal impact factor 5.3). The study, based on the quantification of 280 molecular lipid species, provides the most extensive lipid analysis of cells and their released exosomes to date.

 
 

Annetine Staff appointed "Scientist of the Month" by "Helse Sør-Øst" for April 2013

 
Annetine Staff
Annetine Staff

The South-Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority (Helse Sør-Øst) aims to profile ongoing excellent research in the region by calling special attention to a "Scientist of the Month".

For the month of April 2013, this honor goes to Annetine Staff from the Department of Gynaecology at the Women and Childrens Division at Oslo University Hospital.

 
 

Awards from Oslo University Hospital to outstanding research

 
Five of the award winners
Five of the award winners

On Friday April 26th nine research awards were distributed to scientists from Oslo University Hospital. The prizes were given out by Bjørn Erikstein, managing director at the hosptital during a ceremony taking place at Rikshospitalet, Gaustad.

Awards went to six excellent research articles. For the first time, prizes also were given to three individual researchers. The "Excellent Researcher Award" was won by Harald Stenmark. The two "Early Career Awards" went to Guro Elisabeth Lind and Tom Hemming Karlsen.