Research
The main goal of our research is to uncover stromal and immune pathways that facilitate organ-specific tumor metastasis.
The major cause of cancer mortality is metastasis to distant organs. Metastatic cancers are still mostly incurable and available therapies can only prolong life to a limited extent. Therefore, uncovering the mechanisms that facilitate metastasis is an urgent and unmet clinical need. While it has become clear that tumors are complex ecosystems, changes in metastatic microenvironments that enable the growth of metastasizing tumor cells are poorly characterized, and our research is focused on deciphering them.
Our main focus is on studying the role of stromal and immune cells and their interactions in organ-specific metastatic niches that enable the growth of disseminated cancer cells. Expanding our understanding of the early stages of metastatic growth is an essential prerequisite for the discovery of novel therapeutic targets to prevent and inhibit metastatic disease.
We combine state-of-the-art transgenic mouse models with transcriptome and spatial profiling, intra-vital imaging, ex-vivo models and pre-clinical functional approaches to reveal the molecular events at the metastatic microenvironment that create a hospitable niche for metastatic growth.
