Event Start
     
Event Time
4 pm
1116 IPST Bldg.

Alexander Xu, UMD Bioengineering

Spatial Biology of Tumor Microenvironments

Spatial Biology of Tumor Microenvironments (plus T Cells and their T-Cell Receptor Sequences)

Abstract:

Human tissues are composed of complex organizations of cells with various functions and interactions, thrown out of balance in times of dysregulation and disease. In cancer, the over-proliferation of cancer cells to overtake normal cell composition is accompanied by a host of changes in the tumor microenvironment - the nearby stromal and immune cells surrounding the cancer. Over the last decade, single cell biology has allowed us to inventory cancer deeply, identifying differentially-expressed genes, pathways, and cell types with clinical significance. To understand how these single cells produce collective behaviors like cancer proliferation or the immune response, it is critical to understand their spatial organization. Here I will present my work on the spatial biology of several cancer systems using highly multiplexed, spatially resolved measurements of proteins and RNA. I will discuss efforts to quantify individual cells, their functions, and their concerted interactions, and how to translate spatial data into biomarkers and novel therapeutic strategies. I will also present work on T cell antigen-specificity and spatial distribution in cancer, and how these cells can be measured and engineered for immunotherapy. These data inform models that can be used to explain the physical biology and evolution of cancer.

 

Speaker: Alexander Xu, University of Maryland Fischell Department of Bioengineering

Dr. Xu is an Assistant Professor in the Bioengineering department. He received his PhD from Stanford University studying nanostructured drug delivery platforms for membrane penetration and intracellular delivery. Following postdoctoral training at Caltech and the Institute for Systems Biology where he developed microfluidic platforms for single cell analysis, he was an instructor at Cedars Sinai Medical Center studying the spatial biology of tumors. His lab uses highly multiplexed spatial methods to profile human tissue samples, with the goals of understanding how tissues organize in cancer, proposing novel biomarkers to predict patient outcomes, and developing new therapies by controlling cell-cell communication in cancer.

 

Host: Arpita Upadhyaya

 

Seminars start at 4:00 pm, and refreshments will be served at 3:45 pm. All seminars are held in the Conference Room (1116) of the Institute for Physical Science and Technology (IPST) Building (Bldg #085) unless otherwise noted.

Event Start
Fall 2024