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Professor Edna (Eti) Cukierman – Fox Chase Cancer Center

16/10/2024 12:00 pm - 16/10/2024 1:00 pm
Location
Davis Auditorium

WEHI Wednesday Seminar hosted by Associate Professor Tracy Putoczki
 

Professor Edna (Eti) Cukierman

Marvin and Concetta Greenberg Chair in Pancreatic Cancer Research

ACS Wilmott Family Professor of Pancreatic Cancer – Tumor Microenvironment Laboratory

Co-Leader - Cancer Signaling & Microenvironment Program

Co-Director - Marvin & Concetta Greenberg Pancreatic Cancer Institute

Director – Spatial Immuno-Proteomics Initiative

Fox Chase Cancer Center, USA
 

 

The CAF/ECM Unit Maestro: decoding pancreatic cancer’s melody via Harmonic Output of Stromal Traits (HOST)-Factor

 

Davis Auditorium

Join via SLIDO enter code #WEHIWednesday

Including Q&A session
 

 

 

Edna (Eti) Cukierman, originally from Mexico City, is a distinguished researcher at the Fox Chase Cancer Center. Leading the Cukierman Laboratory, she focuses on understanding how desmoplasia, the dense mesenchymal microenvironment surrounding solid epithelial tumors, impacts human tumor progression. Utilizing a unique 3D culturing system, her team mimics the in vivo mesenchymal stroma to unravel desmoplasia’s functional roles in tumorigenesis. They’ve pioneered Harmonic Output of Stromal Traits (HOST), a revolutionary tool for identifying and quantifying tumor microenvironment (TME) cells and their functional states. Through HOST-Factor, a numerical metric, they dissect the contributions of cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) and CAF-generated extracellular matrix (ECM) units to tumor behavior. Their research delves into the intricate interactions among TME cells and explores HOST-Factor’s potential as a prognostic indicator for patient outcomes and drug efficacy prediction.

 

As Co-Leader of the Cancer Signaling and Microenvironment Program, Co-Director of the Marvin & Concetta Greenberg Pancreatic Cancer Institute, full Tenured Professor, and M&C Greenberg Chair in Pancreatic Cancer Research, Cukierman’s work embodies a commitment to transformative cancer research and clinical impact. Recognized for her contributions, she was recently awarded the inaugural ACS Wilmott Family Professorship of Pancreatic Cancer aiming to empower the best minds to delve into the intricacies of pancreatic cancer biology, and was elected AACR’s TME Working Group Chair for 2024-2026.

 

 

All welcome!

 

 

 

 

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