Dr. Poul Sorensen is a board certified anatomic pathologist, specializing in the molecular pathology of pediatric cancers. He undertook his undergraduate, medical, and PhD degrees at the University of British Columbia (UBC) and McGill University, Montreal. He completed postdoctoral training at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis and Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, University of Southern California, after his Pathology training.  He then returned to Vancouver to start his own laboratory at Children’s and Women’s Hospital in Vancouver. Dr. Sorensen holds the Asa and Kashmir Johal Endowed Chair in Childhood Cancer Research, and he is Professor of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine at UBC. Dr. Sorensen’s research laboratory is located in the Department of Molecular Oncology at the BC Cancer Research Centre, where he is a distinguished scientist. His research focuses on targeting aberrant signaling pathways that are activated in childhood cancers and breast carcinoma.

Dr. Sorensen’s laboratory uses a combination of genetic and biochemical approaches to identify proteins that are specifically altered in human tumours. His laboratory has discovered many novel genetic alterations in childhood cancer and breast tumours, and these discoveries have been translated into new diagnostic tests for specific tumours, and have advanced our understanding of how the involved proteins transmit signals that cause cells to become cancerous. Such information then allows for the rapid implementation of strategies to target these proteins therapeutically. Dr. Sorensen is also the Chair of the Translational Research Committee of the Children’s Oncology Group (COG), the largest pediatric oncology clinical trials network in the world.

Full list of publications may be found here.

Credentials

Senior Research Scientist (Honorary), Vancouver Prostate Cancer

Professor, University of British Columbia

Asa and Kashmir Johal Endowed Chair in Childhood Cancer Research, University of British Columbia, Department of Pediatrics

Projects

Discovery and Development of Optimal Immunotherapeutic Strategies for Childhood Cancers

High-risk pediatric cancers remain the leading cause of mortality in childhood, and current standard approaches to treat pediatric cancers frequently induce unacceptable life-long morbidity. This multi-center collaborative effort focuses on identifying and understanding the fundamental mechanisms leading to high-risk childhood cancers, including how these malignancies evolve to evade the immune system and resist modern therapies.

Selected Publications

Proteomic Screens for Suppressors of Anoikis Identify IL1RAP as a Promising Surface Target in Ewing Sarcoma.

Cancer discovery, 2021
Zhang, Hai-Feng, Hughes, Christopher S, Li, Wei, He, Jian-Zhong, Surdez, Didier, El-Naggar, Amal M, Cheng, Hongwei, Prudova, Anna, Delaidelli, Alberto, Negri, Gian Luca, Li, Xiaojun, Ørum-Madsen, Maj Sofie, Lizardo, Michael M, Oo, Htoo Zarni, Colborne, Shane, Shyp, Taras, Scopim-Ribeiro, Renata, Hammond, Colin A, Dhez, Anne-Chloe, Langman, Sofya, Lim, Jonathan K M, Kung, Sonia H Y, Li, Amy, Steino, Anne, Daugaard, Mads, Parker, Seth J, Geltink, Ramon I Klein, Orentas, Rimas J, Xu, Li-Yan, Morin, Gregg B, Delattre, Olivier, Dimitrov, Dimiter S, Sorensen, Poul H

Class I HDAC inhibitors enhance YB-1 acetylation and oxidative stress to block sarcoma metastasis.

EMBO reports, 2019
El-Naggar, Amal M, Somasekharan, Syam Prakash, Wang, Yemin, Cheng, Hongwei, Negri, Gian Luca, Pan, Melvin, Wang, Xue Qi, Delaidelli, Alberto, Rafn, Bo, Cran, Jordan, Zhang, Fan, Zhang, Haifeng, Colborne, Shane, Gleave, Martin, Mandinova, Anna, Kedersha, Nancy, Hughes, Christopher S, Surdez, Didier, Delattre, Olivier, Wang, Yuzhuo, Huntsman, David G, Morin, Gregg B, Sorensen, Poul H

Targeting Human Cancer by a Glycosaminoglycan Binding Malaria Protein.

Cancer cell, 2015
Salanti, Ali, Clausen, Thomas M, Agerbæk, Mette Ø, Al Nakouzi, Nader, Dahlbäck, Madeleine, Oo, Htoo Zarni, Lee, Sherry, Gustavsson, Tobias, Rich, Jamie R, Hedberg, Bradley J, Mao, Yang, Barington, Line, Pereira, Marina A, LoBello, Janine, Endo, Makoto, Fazli, Ladan, Soden, Jo, Wang, Chris K, Sander, Adam F, Dagil, Robert, Thrane, Susan, Holst, Peter J, Meng, Le, Favero, Francesco, Weiss, Glen J, Nielsen, Morten A, Freeth, Jim, Nielsen, Torsten O, Zaia, Joseph, Tran, Nhan L, Trent, Jeff, Babcook, John S, Theander, Thor G, Sorensen, Poul H, Daugaard, Mads

Translational Activation of HIF1α by YB-1 Promotes Sarcoma Metastasis.

Cancer cell, 2015
El-Naggar, Amal M, Veinotte, Chansey J, Cheng, Hongwei, Grunewald, Thomas G P, Negri, Gian Luca, Somasekharan, Syam Prakash, Corkery, Dale P, Tirode, Franck, Mathers, Joan, Khan, Debjit, Kyle, Alastair H, Baker, Jennifer H, LePard, Nancy E, McKinney, Steven, Hajee, Shamil, Bosiljcic, Momir, Leprivier, Gabriel, Tognon, Cristina E, Minchinton, Andrew I, Bennewith, Kevin L, Delattre, Olivier, Wang, Yuzhuo, Dellaire, Graham, Berman, Jason N, Sorensen, Poul H

The eEF2 kinase confers resistance to nutrient deprivation by blocking translation elongation.

Cell, 2013
Leprivier, Gabriel, Remke, Marc, Rotblat, Barak, Dubuc, Adrian, Mateo, Abigail-Rachele F, Kool, Marcel, Agnihotri, Sameer, El-Naggar, Amal, Yu, Bin, Somasekharan, Syam Prakash, Faubert, Brandon, Bridon, Gaëlle, Tognon, Cristina E, Mathers, Joan, Thomas, Ryan, Li, Amy, Barokas, Adi, Kwok, Brian, Bowden, Mary, Smith, Stephanie, Wu, Xiaochong, Korshunov, Andrey, Hielscher, Thomas, Northcott, Paul A, Galpin, Jason D, Ahern, Christopher A, Wang, Ye, McCabe, Martin G, Collins, V Peter, Jones, Russell G, Pollak, Michael, Delattre, Olivier, Gleave, Martin E, Jan, Eric, Pfister, Stefan M, Proud, Christopher G, Derry, W Brent, Taylor, Michael D, Sorensen, Poul H
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