Medical Xpress December 6, 2025
University of Miami Leonard M. Miller School of Medicine

Cancer isn’t just about broken genes—it’s about broken architecture. Imagine a city where roads suddenly vanish, cutting off neighborhoods from essential services. That’s what happens inside cells when the 3D structure of DNA collapses.

A new study presented at the 2025 American Society of Hematology (ASH) meeting, by Martin Rivas, Ph.D., a cancer researcher at Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center, part of the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, revealed that even subtle disruptions in genome architecture can predispose individuals to lymphoma. This finding offers a new perspective on understanding and eventually treating blood cancers.

The study, titled “SMC3 and CTCF Haploinsufficiency Drive Lymphoid Malignancy via 3D Genome Dysregulation and Disruption of Tumor Suppressor Enhancer-Promoter Loops,” introduced a new idea:...

Today's Sponsors

Venturous
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

Venturous

 
Topics: AI (Artificial Intelligence), Provider, Survey / Study, Technology, Trends
AI-enabled clinical data abstraction: a nurse’s perspective
Contextual AI launches Agent Composer to turn enterprise RAG into production-ready AI agents
OpenAI’s latest product lets you vibe code science
WISeR in 2026: Legal, Compliance, and AI Challenges That Could Reshape Prior Authorization for Skin Substitutes
Dario Amodei warns AI may cause ‘unusually painful’ disruption to jobs

Share Article