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BME Seminar: “Learning from cows to solve cancer malignancy”

Date/Time

03/24/2026
9:00 am-10:00 am
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Location

Biomedical Sciences Building (BMS) Room JG32
1275 Center Drive
Gainesville, FL 32610

Details

Kshitiz, Ph.D.
Associate Professor,
Department of Biomedical Engineering,
UConn Health

Abstract: Biology rhymes with recurrent themes. These recurrent themes are commonly found to be (mis) utilized in the cancer metastatic cascade — where the uncontrolled growth and spread is predicated on utilizing physiologically normal mechanisms towards a wrong end. In this talk, we will explore a remarkable correlation that exists between the evolution of pregnancy in mammals and onset of cancer malignancy. By placing fibroblasts as central players in regulating placental or cancer invasion, we have begun to explore the stromal mechanisms that have evolved to regulate epithelial invasion. Our works have shed a newer light at the invasive processes at the maternal-fetal interface, bringing the enquiry on comparative placentation, as well as pregnancy related diseases and cancer metastasis together on the same platform.

Bio: Kshitiz is an Associate Professor in Biomedical Engineering, University of Connecticut Health. He completed his B.Tech. in Computer Science & Engineering in IIT Bombay, India, and subsequently a PhD in Biomedical Engineering at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine with Dr. Andre Levchenko and Dr. Gregg Semenza working on hypoxia and mechanobiology. He took a brief time off for a startup working on a device to mature cardiomyocytes for drug screening. Thereafter he came to Yale University at the Institute of Systems Biology and joined UConn Health as it started its BME program in 2018. His group works primarily on cancer microenvironment, hypoxia, and pregnancy. Kshitiz is a published author, and a dance critic.

Categories

Hosted by

Dr. Benjamin Keselowsky, BME