Investigator
Associate Professor · Instituto Superior Técnico, Department of Bioengineering
Ovarian tumor cells gain competitive advantage by actively reducing the cellular fitness of microenvironment cells
Cell competition and fitness comparison between cancer and tumor microenvironment (TME) cells determine oncogenic fate. Our previous study established a role for human Flower isoforms as fitness fingerprints, where the expression of Flower Win isoforms in tumor cells leads to growth advantage over TME cells expressing Lose isoforms. Here we demonstrate that the expression of Flower Lose and reduced microenvironment fitness is not a pre-existing condition but, rather, a cancer-induced phenomenon. Cancer cells actively reduce TME fitness by the exosome-mediated release of a cancer-specific long non-coding RNA, Tu-Stroma, which controls the splicing of the Flower gene in the TME cells and expression of Flower Lose isoform, which leads to reduced fitness status. This mechanism controls cancer growth, metastasis and host survival in ovarian cancer. Targeting Flower protein with humanized monoclonal antibody (mAb) in mice significantly reduces cancer growth and metastasis and improves survival. Pre-treatment with Flower mAb protects intraperitoneal organs from developing lesions despite the presence of aggressive tumor cells.
Associate Professor
Instituto Superior Técnico · Department of Bioengineering
Assistant Professor
Universidade Técnica de Lisboa Instituto Superior Técnico · Department of Bioengineering
Habilitation in Bioengineering
Higher Technical Institute, University of Lisbon · Department of Bioengineering
PhD in Biotechnology (collaboration with Department of Animal Biotechnology, University of Nevada, Reno, USA )
Universidade de Lisboa Instituto Superior Técnico
Licenciatura In Chemical Engineering (Biotechnology)
Universidade Técnica de Lisboa Instituto Superior Técnico
PT
Scopus: 22933449000
Researcher Id: K-6104-2012