The Univeristy of Melbourne The Royal Melbourne Hopspital

A joint venture between The University of Melbourne and The Royal Melbourne Hospital

Dr Bang Tran

Dr Bang Tran

(03) 8344 5773 | manht@unimelb.edu.au

Position:
Research Fellow
Theme(s):
Viral Infectious Diseases, Bacterial and Parasitic Infections
Discipline(s):
Discovery Research, Clinical and health systems research
Unit(s):
The University of Melbourne
Lab Group(s):
Vincan Group

Dr Bang Tran is a junior postdoctoral research fellow in the Vincan-Tran research group co-headed by Professor Elizabeth Vincan and Dr Hoanh Tran. Bang has extensive research expertise with mouse and human models of liver cancer, with a focus on Wnt signalling, a molecular pathway that is critical for stem cell and cancer cell function. Bang completed his PhD in the Vincan group, studying the oncogenic interplay between hepatitis B viral infection and Wnt signalling in liver cancer. Bang developed novel in vitro 3D tumour organoid technologies to dissect the impact of viral proteins on oncogenic Wnt signalling. His discoveries impact all Wnt-addicted cancers.

Bang is also steering a translational research initiative, in collaboration with the first organoid Biobank established in the Netherlands by Professor Hans Clevers, on behalf of the Vincan lab. This initiative enables the lab to establish diverse organoid models of human infectious disease.

He is a co-investigator (CIC) on a successful NHMRC ideas grant awarded to Professor Vincan, to continue his research to understand how the Wnt signalling pathway can maintain normal tissue but also drive cancer in these tissues when incorrectly activated.”

  • Key Achievements
      • Established novel 3D liver organoid models to identify mechanisms that drive Wnt-addicted cancers.
      • Bang is also steering a translational research initiative, in collaboration with the first organoid Biobank established in the Netherlands by Professor Hans Clevers, on behalf of the Vincan lab. This initiative enables the lab to establish diverse organoid models of human infectious disease.
      • He is a co-investigator (CIC) on a successful NHMRC ideas grant awarded to Professor Vincan, to continue his research to understand how the Wnt signalling pathway can maintain normal tissue but also drive cancer in these tissues when incorrectly activated.”
    Research Groups
    • Vincan Group

      Elizabeth’s group investigates novel ways to block cancer growth with a focus on the gastrointestinal tract – stomach, bowel and liver. A cell-cell communication pathway called Wnt is hyperactive in these cancers. Their research shows inhibiting Wnt has potent anti-cancer effects.


      Lab Team

      Vincan Group