̽»¨¾«Ñ¡

Nucleotide metabolism and molecular therapeutics – Sean Rudd's Group

Our research centres upon understanding the molecular underpinnings of why some patients respond to therapies – in particular standard-of-care chemotherapeutics – whilst others do not, and using this knowledge as the basis for refining treatment strategies.

Our research

The ultimate goal of our research is to provide cancer patients with better treatment options. We believe one way this can be achieved in a timely manner is by focusing research efforts upon commonly used chemotherapeutic agents. These therapies, which form standard-of-care for many cancers, typically kill tumour cells by targeting pan-essential pathways, principally metabolism of the DNA molecule or its nucleotide building blocks (deoxynucleoside triphosphates, dNTPs). In our research program we aim to define the molecular underpinnings of why some cancers respond to these therapies whilst others do not. This information can provide the basis for rational therapy improvements through the identification of biomarkers and therapeutic targets together with the design of mechanism-based drug combinations. We employ a multidisciplinary approach in our research – centred upon biochemical, biophysical, and cell-based methods – and use both hypothesis-driven and hypothesis-free approaches in our efforts to define and exploit the molecular mechanisms underpinning clinical efficacy of chemotherapeutic agents.

In addition, these same pathways which are targeted by commonly used cancer drugs – metabolism of the DNA molecule and its dNTP building blocks – are also fundamental to cancer biology. Key aspects of oncogenesis derive from the interplay of these metabolic pathways, and thus we also investigate this interplay at the molecular level and seek to use knowledge gained in a translationally productive manner.

For more information, please see our external site:  

Publications

Selected publications

  • Preprint: BIORXIV. 2023
    Zhang SM; Paulin CBJ; Michel M; Marttila P; Yagüe-Capilla M; Bwanika HC; Shu H; Vekatram RP; Wiita E; Jemth A-S; Almlöf I; Loseva O; Ortis F; Dirks C; Koolmeister T; Linde E; Lee S; Llona-Minguez S; Haraldsson M; Strömberg K; Homan E; Scobie M; Lundbäck T; Helleday T; Rudd S
  • Review: MOLECULAR ONCOLOGY. 2022;16(21):3792-3810
    Helleday T; Rudd SG
  • Article: JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS. 2021;(170)
    Yague-Capilla M; Rudd SG
  • Article: BMC RESEARCH NOTES. 2021;14(1):27
    Makela P; Zhang SM; Rudd SG
  • Article: EMBO MOLECULAR MEDICINE. 2020;12(3):e10419
    Rudd SG; Tsesmetzis N; Sanjiv K; Paulin CBJ; Sandhow L; Kutzner J; Myrberg IH; Bunten SS; Axelsson H; Zhang SM; Rasti A; Makela P; Coggins SA; Tao S; Suman S; Branca RM; Mermelekas G; Wiita E; Lee S; Walfridsson J; Schinazi RF; Kim B; Lehtio J; Rassidakis GZ; Tamm KP; Warpman-Berglund U; Heyman M; Grander D; Lehmann S; Lundback T; Qian H; Henter J-I; Schaller T; Helleday T; Herold N
  • Review: CANCERS. 2018;10(7):E240-240
    Tsesmetzis N; Paulin CBJ; Rudd SG; Herold N
  • Article: NATURE MEDICINE. 2017;23(2):256-263
    Herold N; Rudd SG; Ljungblad L; Sanjiv K; Myrberg IH; Paulin CBJ; Heshmati Y; Hagenkort A; Kutzner J; Paget BDG; Calderon-Montano JM; Loseva O; Jemth A-S; Bulli L; Axelsson H; Tesi B; Valerie NCK; Hoglund A; Bladh J; Wiita E; Sundin M; Uhlin M; Rassidakis G; Heyman M; Tamm KP; Warpman-Berglund U; Walfridsson J; Lehmann S; Grander D; Lundback T; Kogner P; Henter J-I; Helleday T; Schaller T

Funding

Our research is generously funded by:

  • Swedish Research Council (starting grant in Medicine & Health)
  • Swedish Cancer Foundation (Junior Investigator Award & Project grant)
  • Swedish Childhood Cancer Fund (Project grant & Postdoc fellowship)
  • ̽»¨¾«Ñ¡ (Faculty-funded career position)
Keywords:
Cancer and Oncology Cell and Molecular Biology
Content reviewer:
06-03-2025