UBC Math Bio Seminar: Herbert Levine (Online)
Topic
What is epithelial-mesenchymal plasticity and why is it important for metastasis? [video]
Speakers
Details
Until very recently most cancer biologists operated with the assumption that the most common route to metastasis involved cells of the primary tumor transforming to a motile single-cell phenotype via complete EMT (the epithelial-mesenchymal transition). This change allowed them to migrate individually to distant organs, eventually leading to clonal growths in other locations. But, a new more nuanced picture has been emerging, based on advanced measurements and on computational systems biology approaches. It has now been realized that cells can readily adopt states with hybrid properties, use these properties to move collectively and cooperatively, and reach distant niches as highly metastatic clusters. This talk will focus on the accumulating evidence for this revised perspective, the role of biological physics theory in instigating this whole line of investigation, and on open questions currently under investigation.
Additional Information
This event was conducted using zoom. A video of the event is available on mathtube.org.
Herbert Levine, Northeastern University
Herbert Levine, Northeastern University
This is a Past Event
Event Type
Scientific, Seminar
Date
May 6, 2020
Time
-
Location