DORMATRIX | Engineering cancer dormancy as a collective emergent phenomenon: from matrix-enabled dormancy to collective dormancy-on-a-chip

Summary
Cancer dormancy and the trigger to transition to active metastatic growth is a big open question. Current in vivo models focus on niche-specific cell and molecular mechanisms, ignoring biophysical aspects. Dormancy evolves with complex spatio-temporal dynamics; yet, there is a knowledge gap in the understanding of the heterogeneity of the units, and the dynamics of their interaction and evolution. Emergence occurs when a critical mass of units synergistically communicates giving rise to a new macro-level organization, with properties greater than the sum of the units. Engineering emergent phenomena in biological systems is a big research challenge as they originate from multiscale communication.
In DORMATRIX, I propose a radically new view. I hypothesize that the balance between cancer dormancy and “awakening” is a collective emergent phenomenon, whereby a critical mass of micro-units communicates with each other and the environment in order to transition to metastatic growth. The main objective of DORMATRIX is to engineer breast cancer (BC) dormancy as a collective emergent phenomenon using biomaterials-based dormancy-on-a-chip devices.
My previous data shows that we can (i) apply biophysical cues to control BC proliferation and (ii) visualize in vivo early BC bone metastasis. I will now address this outstanding challenge with a multidisciplinary approach and 1) apply biophysical principles with novel biomaterials to model in vitro cancer micro-units, 2) develop advanced 3D imaging to visualize collective cancer dormancy and bone microdamage, 3) develop in silico models based on evolutionary game theory to predict the dynamics, and 4) prove my hypothesis with dormancy-on-a-chip devices. Understanding the critical mass and multiscale communication required for emergent phenomena will enable the development of novel therapies to delay or prevent metastasis. The resulting technology for engineering emergent phenomena will spark research on other biological systems.
Unfold all
/
Fold all
More information & hyperlinks
Web resources: https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101123883
Start date: 01-10-2024
End date: 30-09-2029
Total budget - Public funding: 2 349 943,00 Euro - 2 349 943,00 Euro
Cordis data

Original description

Cancer dormancy and the trigger to transition to active metastatic growth is a big open question. Current in vivo models focus on niche-specific cell and molecular mechanisms, ignoring biophysical aspects. Dormancy evolves with complex spatio-temporal dynamics; yet, there is a knowledge gap in the understanding of the heterogeneity of the units, and the dynamics of their interaction and evolution. Emergence occurs when a critical mass of units synergistically communicates giving rise to a new macro-level organization, with properties greater than the sum of the units. Engineering emergent phenomena in biological systems is a big research challenge as they originate from multiscale communication.
In DORMATRIX, I propose a radically new view. I hypothesize that the balance between cancer dormancy and “awakening” is a collective emergent phenomenon, whereby a critical mass of micro-units communicates with each other and the environment in order to transition to metastatic growth. The main objective of DORMATRIX is to engineer breast cancer (BC) dormancy as a collective emergent phenomenon using biomaterials-based dormancy-on-a-chip devices.
My previous data shows that we can (i) apply biophysical cues to control BC proliferation and (ii) visualize in vivo early BC bone metastasis. I will now address this outstanding challenge with a multidisciplinary approach and 1) apply biophysical principles with novel biomaterials to model in vitro cancer micro-units, 2) develop advanced 3D imaging to visualize collective cancer dormancy and bone microdamage, 3) develop in silico models based on evolutionary game theory to predict the dynamics, and 4) prove my hypothesis with dormancy-on-a-chip devices. Understanding the critical mass and multiscale communication required for emergent phenomena will enable the development of novel therapies to delay or prevent metastasis. The resulting technology for engineering emergent phenomena will spark research on other biological systems.

Status

SIGNED

Call topic

ERC-2023-COG

Update Date

26-11-2024
Images
No images available.
Geographical location(s)
Structured mapping
Unfold all
/
Fold all
Horizon Europe
HORIZON.1 Excellent Science
HORIZON.1.1 European Research Council (ERC)
HORIZON.1.1.0 Cross-cutting call topics
ERC-2023-COG ERC CONSOLIDATOR GRANTS
HORIZON.1.1.1 Frontier science
ERC-2023-COG ERC CONSOLIDATOR GRANTS