Dancing With a Moving Target: Controlling Brain Tumor Migration

Ravi V. Bellamkonda

Vinik Dean of the Pratt School of Engineering

Professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering

Duke University


Seminar Information

Seminar Date
October 18, 2019 - 2:00 PM

Location
The FUNG Auditorium


Abstract

Brain tumors present a clinical challenge due to their propensity to be highly invasive and distributed at the time of detection. Our laboratory is exploring a variety of engineering strategies to control, contain and arrest brain tumor cell invasion in the brain. In this seminar, the use of a wide range of approaches – topographical guidance, nanocarriers, and electric fields to ‘dance’ with brain tumors so that they don’t lead to fatalities will be discussed. As an example, the seminar will explore the ‘Tumor Monorail’ strategy devices to control the invasion of brain tumors along paths that we specify using topographical guidance of brain tumors in vivo. We demonstrate, for the first time to our knowledge, that topographical cues presented by thin films enable moving a primary tumor from an intracortical region to an extracortical hydrogel sink where the tumor cells are killed. This novel approach of bringing the tumor to the drug rather than the drug to the tumor is enabled by our ability to design constructs that enable controlled, directional migration of invasive brain tumors. In addition, the seminar will discuss strategies to ‘contain’ the spread of tumors using a novel strategy drawn from our understanding of astro-glial scarring. In the end, the seminar will discuss the potential role that electric fields may play in controlling or guiding tumor migration.

Speaker Bio

Ravi Bellamkonda is the Vinik Dean of the Pratt School of Engineering at Duke University. Prior to becoming dean, Bellamkonda served as the Wallace H. Coulter Professor and chair of the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology and Emory University. He is committed to fostering transformative research and pedagogical innovation as well as programs that create an entrepreneurial mindset amongst faculty and students.
A trained bioengineer and neuroscientist, Bellamkonda holds an undergraduate degree in biomedical engineering. His graduate training at Brown University was in biomaterials and medical science (with Patrick Aebischer), and his post-doctoral training at Massachusetts Institute of Technology focused on the molecular mechanisms of axon guidance and neural development (with Jerry Schneider and Sonal Jhaveri). His current research explores the interplay of biomaterials and the nervous system for neural interfaces, nerve repair and brain tumor therapy.
From 2014 to 2016, Bellamkonda served as president of the American Institute for Biological and Medical Engineering (AIMBE), the leading policy and advocacy organization for biomedical engineers with representation from industry, academia and government. Bellamkonda’s numerous awards include the Clemson Award for Applied Research from the Society for Biomaterials, EUREKA award from National Cancer Institute (National Institutes of Health), CAREER award from the National Science Foundation and Best Professor Award from the Georgia Tech Biomedical Engineering student body.