Department of Dermatology and Charles C. Gates Center for Regenerative Medicine, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
Affiliated withUniversity of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
Research Area
Dr. Enrique Torchia is an Assistant Professor of Dermatology at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, Colorado. He received his undergraduate and PhD degrees from the University of Alberta in Edmonton, AB, Canada.
During his PhD training, Dr. Torchia was grounded in the fundamentals of biochemistry, molecular and cell biology by studying lipid transporters in the intestine and liver. As a postdoctoral researcher at St. Jude’s Children hospital in Memphis, TN, he learned how to engineer animal cancer models and demonstrated the oncogenicity of Ewing Sarcoma translocation proteins. To further his training, Dr. Torchia moved to the University of Colorado where he studied how mitotic oncogenes promote genomic instability and metastasis prone Squamous Cell Carcinoma.
He started his laboratory after receiving a career development award from the Dermatology Foundation and has continued to focus on the regulation of mitosis in both normal, epithelial cancers, and in the hyperplasia that precede cancer formation.
Article Total : 1 | Year |
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![]() Publication title Cited by 2 | 2019 |
Article | Year |
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Interactions between ultraviolet light and MC1R and OCA2 variants are determinants of childhood nevus and freckle phenotypes. Cancer epidemiology, biomarkers & prevention : a publication of the American Association for Cancer Research, cosponsored by the American Society of Preventive Oncology| PubMed ID: 25410285 | 2014 |
| 2016 | |
Activation of S6 signaling is associated with cell survival and multinucleation in hyperplastic skin after epidermal loss of AURORA-A Kinase. Cell death and differentiation| PubMed ID: 30050055 | 2019 |