Investigator

Anton Blencowe

Group Leader · Adelaide University, School of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences

About

ABAnton Blencowe
Papers(2)
Protease-Activated Re…Teaching an Old Dog N…
Collaborators(9)
Hugo AlbrechtDoug A. BrooksMarta KrasowskaNoor A. LokmanRiya KhetanSanjay GargZoe K. PriceCarmela RicciardelliAndrew J. Clulow
Institutions(3)
Flinders UniversityThe University of Ade…ANSTO Australian Sync…

Papers

Protease-Activated Receptor F2R Is a Potential Target for New Diagnostic/Prognostic and Treatment Applications for Patients with Ovarian Cancer

Effective treatment of ovarian cancer is limited by late-stage detection and chemotherapy resistance. There is a clinical need for the discovery of novel molecular targets to enable the development of innovative theranostic approaches. We investigated the coagulation factor II receptor/protease-activated receptor 1 (F2R/PAR1) as a potential diagnostic/prognostic biomarker and therapeutic target for ovarian cancer treatment. Public RNA sequence and DNA microarray data were used to analyze F2R gene expression in ovarian cancers, with protein expression confirmed in tumor samples by flow cytometry, immunofluorescence, and immunohistochemistry (IHC). Functional assays were conducted to study effects of F2R suppression on tumor progression. Our analysis confirmed elevated F2R mRNA and protein expression in ovarian cancers, notably in patients with metastatic and chemotherapy-resistant disease. Kaplan–Meier survival analysis demonstrated an association between high F2R protein detection and reduced progression-free survival. F2R suppression in ovarian cancer cell lines reduced tumor cell motility, invasion, spheroid formation, and metabolism and enhanced carboplatin sensitivity. F2R is a compelling diagnostic/prognostic and therapeutic target that could be used to treat chemotherapy-resistant and metastatic disease. The evaluation of novel F2R targeting strategies, using antibody-conjugated drugs or F2R ligand-decorated drug carriers, could lead to the development of effective therapeutics for patients with ovarian cancer.

172Works
2Papers
9Collaborators
Ovarian NeoplasmsCell Line, TumorPrognosisBiomarkers, TumorDrug Resistance, NeoplasmNeoplasms

Positions

2026–

Group Leader

Adelaide University · School of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences

2015–

Senior lecturer and Group Leader

University of South Australia · School of Pharmacy and Medical Sciences

2013–

Senior Research Fellow

University of South Australia · Mawson Institute

2012–

Research Fellow

University of Melbourne · Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

2009–

ARC Research Fellow

University of Melbourne · Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

2006–

Research Fellow

University of Melbourne · Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering

Education

2006

PhD, synthetic and polymer chemistry

University of Reading · chemistry

2002

MChem

University of Reading · chemistry

Country

AU

Links & IDs
0000-0002-7630-4874Adelaide University Home PageGoogle Scholar page

Scopus: 55991568900

Researcher Id: B-1214-2011