IPLS/IHE Colloquium - Prof. Roger Kamm (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
30 January 2019, 5:00 pm–7:00 pm
Title: Microphysiological Models for Metastatic Cancer
Event Information
Open to
- All
Organiser
-
Georgina Cade
Location
-
Sir David Davies Lecture Theatre (G08)Roberts Engineering BuildingGower StreetLondonWC1E 6BT
Abstract: Circulating tumour cells form metastases by reaching a distant microcirculation, undergoing transendothelial migration, entering the remote tissue and proliferating. Microfluidic assays have been developed to visualize and quantify this process within vascular networks that recapitulate aspects of the in vivo microcirculation.
Tumour cells, with or without accompanying immune cells, are streamed into a vascular network grown in a 3D matrix, some fraction of which arrest and extravasate into the surrounding matrix. These studies provide detailed information on the ability of different tumour cell types to extravasate, the adhesion molecules they use, and the effects of various other cell types in the intravascular and extravascular spaces.
While these models are largely organ-independent, work has also begun to investigate the specificity of certain cancers to metastasize to organs such as the brain. For this purpose, a model of the blood-brain barrier has been produced, characterized in terms of its morphology and vascular permeability, and then used it to explore extravasation and tumour formation with the brain as the target organ.
About the Speaker
Prof. Roger Kamm
at Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Professor Kamm began his career at Northwestern University earning a degree in Mechaniacal Engineering. He subsequently earned both a Master’s and a PhD in Mechanical Enginering at MIT. Since 1978, he has been a professor of Mechanical Engineering at MIT. Professor Kamm was one of the founding members of the Biological Engineering department when it was created in 1998.
More about Prof. Roger Kamm