Successful immune responses against cancer require immune cells of various types to control each other’s proliferation, differentiation, and death. These interactions collectively constitute a set of intercellular signaling circuits. A fundamental challenge in cancer research is to understand the relationship between the architecture and functions of these circuits. Dr. Indana [HHMI Fellow] will quantitatively model and synthetically construct intercellular circuits with immune-like functions to understand how circuit architectures empower immune behaviors such as threat detection and cancer elimination while maintaining the ability to return to a non-inflammatory state. This work promises to uncover the “design principles” underlying various immune functions, providing a foundation for engineering novel immunotherapies. Dr. Dhiraj received his PhD and MS from Stanford University, Stanford and his BTech from Indian Institute of Technology, Roorkee.
Damon Runyon Researchers
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Dhiraj Indana, PhD
Project title: "Synthetic intercellular signaling circuits for threat sensing and response"
Institution: California Institute of Technology
Named Award: HHMI Fellow
Award Program: Fellow
Sponsor(s) / Mentor(s): Michael B. Elowitz, PhD
Cancer Type: All Cancers
Research Area: Systems Biology