Biomedical and Chemical Engineering Research Seminar Series

Tumor microenvironment engineering: Microfluidic and 3D culture approaches to study cancer progression and drug resistance

Presented by: Ioannis Zervantonakis is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Bioengineering, University of Pittsburgh and at the Hillman Cancer Center UPMC

Abstract: Human tumors are mosaics of heterogeneous cancer cell populations surrounded by a microenvironment that plays a key role in regulating growth, metastasis and drug resistance. Understanding cell behavior in native tumor microenvironments and developing new strategies to deliver therapeutics directly to tumor cells can lead to major improvements in patient outcomes. Integrating novel experimental tools, such as microfluidics and multiplexed imaging with systems biology offers a bioengineering framework to model, measure and manipulate the interactions of cancer cells with their environment and to provide new insights into underlying biological mechanisms and cancer therapies.

He will present an array of microfluidic and 3D culture platforms that can be used to study the effects of microenvironmental factors on tumor metastasis with a focus on mesothelial cells and macrophages. Using these systems, we show that mesothelial barrier function critically regulates ovarian cancer metastatic potential. Treatment with an adenylyl cyclase agonist decreased mesothelial permeability and slowed ovarian cancer invasion in a PKA-dependent manner. In addition to these studies of early metastatic spread, he will show how tumor-derived paracrine signals and extracellular matrix remodeling play a critical role in recruiting macrophages that in turn establish a pro-invasive and drug-resistant microenvironment.

Biography: Ioannis Zervantonakis is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Bioengineering, University of Pittsburgh and at the Hillman Cancer Center UPMC. From 2017-9, he was an Instructor of Cell Biology at Harvard Medical School and a postdoctoral fellow (2014-7) in the lab of Prof. J. Brugge. He received his Ph.D. (2012) from MIT in Mechanical Engineering under the direction of Prof. R. Kamm, his M.S. (2006) from the Technical University of Munich and his B.S. (2005) from the National Technical University in Athens. Ioannis is a recipient of a 2014 Department of Defense Breast Cancer Postdoctoral Fellowship and a 2017 NCI Pathway to Independence K99/R00 award. He serves as an Early-Career Associate Scientific Advisor to Science Translational Medicine, has received the 2020 Hillman Early-Career Fellow for Innovative Cancer Research Award and his laboratory is funded by an American Cancer Society Research Scholar Grant and a Department of Defense Ovarian Cancer Program grant.


Contact
Vinay Abhyankar, Ph.D.
Event Snapshot
When and Where
April 06, 2023
12:30 pm - 1:30 pm
Room/Location: 1140
Who

Open to the Public

CostFREE
Interpreter Requested?

No

Topics
research