Researcher Database

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PD Dr. Rebecca Kesselring

Freiburg
Department of Surgery, Clinics of General and Visceral Surgery

ZTZ

Breisacher Strasse 115

79106 Freiburg

Program

Exploitation of Oncogenic Mechanisms (EOM)

Summary

Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a heterogeneous disease at molecular level leading to heterogeneous outcomes, therapy, drug responses and primary or secondary resistance to targeted treatments. This heterogeneity represents a major challenge for precise interpretation of prognostic and predictive markers. Whereas primary colorectal cancer without metastasis is mostly curable by surgical resection and adjuvant systemic therapy, metastatic disease remains largely incurable and is still a major life-threatening situation. Preclinical studies so far rarely focus on the metastatic situation but focus on the primary tumor. Therefore, it is critical to expand these preclinical studies to the process of metastasis and to develop metastasis-specific therapeutic approaches. It is well known since Virchow that there is an association between cancer and the immune system and now it is well described that the tumor microenvironment plays a critical role in carcinogenesis. Dissemination and metastasis is only facilitated when tumors evade detection and destruction by the immune system and it is assumed that immune subversion by primary tumors plays an essential role in enabling metastatic spread to distant organs and spread of tumor-induced inflammation to become systemic plays a critical role in metastasis. Thus, there is an urgent need to deepen our fundamental understanding of immune cell crosstalk in cancer especially for metastatic cancer, how this crosstalk can be manipulated for direct therapeutic targeting or can be modulated that conservative therapeutic approaches are more efficient. Suggesting that treatment approaches for CRC metastasis should include considerations about the underlying tumor microenvironment in the specific metastasis location and possible adapted immunomodulation strategies. It is well described that the microbiome impacts colorectal carcinogenesis. As metastasis of colorectal cancer are not a sterile microenvironment either. We hypothesized that bacteria also regulate the process of metastasis. Therefore to understand the cellular and microbial landscape of the metastatic tumor microenvironment and the intercellular interactions in the metastasis of CRC is a critical prerequisite for the design of new immunotherapeutic treatment strategies.

DKTK Junior Group Leader for Cancer Systems Biology

Single-cell approaches have not only revealed a wide variety of cell states, characterized by cells exhibiting striking differences in their transcriptional profile, but have also illuminated the mechanisms underlying state transitions in health and disease. Cellular plasticity and adaptive state changes have recently emerged as a basis for therapeutic resistance in cancer, and a better understanding of how cell state transitions are regulated is critical to develop therapeutic approaches that can overcome therapy resistance. 

Our research focuses on understanding the mechanisms driving non-genetic cellular heterogeneity and therapy resistance in malignancy. Using novel single-cell sequencing approaches, we seek to develop new experimental and computational strategies to define altered cell states in both, cancer and immune cells. Our aim is to leverage a data driven strategy combined with single cell genomics and systems biology to address the challenges posed by heterogeneity in cancer, and to develop new strategies to overcome it, with the aim of translating laboratory-based findings into the clinic.