Matthew Vander Heiden, MD, PhD

Matthew Vander Heiden, MD, PhD

Medical Oncology

Contact Information

Office Phone Number

617-632-6534

Fax

617-632-2165

Appointments

877-332-4294 (new)

Researcher

Physician

Instructor in Medicine, Harvard Medical School

Centers/Programs

Clinical Interests

Cancer cell metabolism, Cancer research

Diseases Treated

Board Certification

  • Internal Medicine, 2005
  • Medical Oncology, 2007

Fellowship

  • Dana-Farber/Partners CancerCare, Medical Oncology

Residency

  • Brigham and Women's Hospital, Internal Medicine

Medical School

  • University of Chicago

Recent Awards

  • Mel Karmazin Fellowship, Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation 2006
  • Burroughs Wellcome Fund Career Award for Medical Scientists 2009

Research

    Basic science, cancer cell metabolism, target metabolism in cancer

    Recently, there has been a resurgent interest among the scientific community to understand cancer cell metabolism. My research has focused on understanding how cancer cells convert nutrients into the cellular components needed to proliferate. We have made inroads into this basic science question by studying the form of a protein involved in glucose metabolism that is present at high levels in all cancer cells. This protein contributes to the form of metabolism carried out by tumor cells and is different from the enzyme found in many normal tissues because it can communicate with cell growth signal. These growth signals turn off activity of the enzyme. This finding demonstrated a heretofore unappreciated biochemical link between cell growth signals and regulation of a metabolic pathway. My laboratory's current efforts have been to test the hypothesis that cell growth signals reprogram metabolism to support the distinct energetic needs of proliferating cells. Unlike normal cells, which rely heavily on ATP to support housekeeping functions, proliferating cells have the additional requirement of duplicating mass. This large synthesis requirement for lipids, amino acids, and nucleotides requires an excess of carbon and reducing equivalents. Metabolic processes in proliferating cells must be reprogrammed to balance ATP production with the production of building blocks required for growth. Efforts to understand how metabolism is reprogrammed to facilitate accumulation of biomass have furthered our understanding of glucose metabolism in proliferating cells. In addition, we are using this knowledge to explore novel therapeutic approaches to target tumor cell metabolism for therapy.

    Locations

    Location Avtar

    Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

    450 Brookline Avenue D1230 Boston, MA 02215
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    Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

    Location Avtar

    Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

    450 Brookline Avenue D1230 Boston, MA 02215
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    42.3374, -71.1082

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