Gen-Sheng Feng is Professor of Pathology and Molecular Biology at the University of California, San Diego. His research program aims at understanding cross-talks and regulation of signaling pathways in different cell types in health and disease, which was initiated by his discovery of an SH2-containing tyrosine phosphatase Shp2 (originally called Syp) in his postdoc studies with the late Tony Pawson. In the past three decades, his lab is in the driver’s position to decipher how Shp2 promotes signaling through the RTK-Ras-Erk pathway. This work has led to his most recent discovery of a new type of vesicle, intercellsome, in cell-cell communication to offset intracellular proliferative
signal deficit.
One current focus of the lab is on elucidating the paradoxical anti-oncogenic effects of classical oncoproteins in hepatocellular cancer. These findings provide fresh views on liver cancer initiation and progression, in the dynamic interactions between tumor cells and the microenvironment. By deciphering multi-faceted roles of the immune ecosystem, his lab is developing new strategies for combinatorial liver cancer immunotherapy through coordinated activation of innate and adaptive immune cells.
Dr. Feng got BSc degree in Biology from Hangzhou University, MSc degree in
Immunology, from 2nd Medical University of Army, Shanghai, and PhD from Indiana University Bloomington. He received postdoctoral training at the University of Toronto, Canada. Dr. Feng has published 193 peer-reviewed research papers, reviews and book chapters. Dr. Feng has served on the editorial boards of MCB, JBC, Hepatology, and Journal of Hepatology. In 2016, Dr. Feng was elected as Fellow of American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). Currently, Dr. Feng is the president for the Association of Chinese Americans in Cancer Research (ACACR) and the president-elect for the Society of Chinese Bioscientists in America (SCBA).