Steve Soper,
Foundation Distinguished Professor, Director, Center of BioModular Multi-Scale System for Precision Medicine,
The University of Kansas
Prof. Soper is currently a Foundation Distinguished Professor in Chemistry and Mechanical Engineering at the University of Kansas, Lawrence. Prof. Soper also holds an appointment at Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology in Ulsan, South Korea, where he is a World Class University Professor. He is also serving as a Science Advisor for a number of major worldwide companies. Prof. Soper is currently on the Editorial Board for Scientific Reports and Journal of Micro- and Nanosystems.
As a result of his efforts, Prof. Soper has secured extramural funding totaling >$103M and has published over 265 peer-reviewed manuscripts (h index = 71) and is the author of 20 patents. He is also the founder of a startup company, BioFluidica, which is marketing devices for the isolation and enumeration of circulating tumor cells. His list of awards includes Chemical Instrumentation by the American Chemical Society, the Benedetti-Pichler Award for Microchemistry, Fellow of the AAAS, Fellow of Applied Spectroscopy, Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry, R&D 100 Award, Distinguished Masters Award at LSU and Outstanding Scientist/Engineer in the state of Louisiana in 2001. Finally, Prof. Soper has granted 60 PhDs and 6 MS degrees to students under his mentorship. He currently heads a group of 20 researchers.
Mixed-Scale Fluidic System: Searching for Drug-induced DNA Damage in Circulating Tumor Cells
Monday, 2 October 2017 at 16:45
Add to Calendar ▼2017-10-02 16:45:002017-10-02 17:45:00Europe/LondonMixed-Scale Fluidic System: Searching for Drug-induced DNA Damage in Circulating Tumor CellsPOC Diagnostics, Global Health-Viral Diseases 2017 in Coronado Island, CaliforniaCoronado Island, CaliforniaSELECTBIOenquiries@selectbiosciences.com
Improved therapies that yield more cures and better overall survival for
cancer patients are needed. For example, women with breast cancer have a
5-year survival rate of 22% (Stage IV) and 72% (Stage III).
Doxorubicin, cisplatin, paclitaxel, and tamoxifen are examples of drugs
used for treating breast cancer with selection of therapy typically
based on the classification and staging of the patient’s cancer. While
treatment regimens assigned to some patients may be optimal using the
current classification model, others within certain breast cancer
sub-types fail therapy. New assays must be developed to determine how a
patient’s physiology and genetic makeup affects drug efficacy. In this
presentation, a series of chips are used for the isolation and
processing of circulating tumor cells (CTCs). The chips quantify
response to therapy using three pieces of information secured from the
CTCs; (1) CTC number; (2) CTC viability; and (3) the frequency of DNA
damage (abasic (AP) sites) in genomic DNA (gDNA) harvested from the
CTCs. Microscale chips are used for CTC selection, CTC enumeration and
viability determinations. The chip to read AP sites is a nanosensor chip
made via nano-imprinting in plastics and contains a nanochannel with
dimensions less than the persistence length of double-stranded DNA (~50
nm). Labeling AP sites with fluorescent dyes and stretching the gDNA in
the nanochannel to near its full contour length allows for the direct
readout of the AP sites, even from a single CTC. This information is
used to determine how a patient is responding to therapy.
Add to Calendar ▼2017-10-02 00:00:002017-10-04 00:00:00Europe/LondonPOC Diagnostics, Global Health-Viral Diseases 2017POC Diagnostics, Global Health-Viral Diseases 2017 in Coronado Island, CaliforniaCoronado Island, CaliforniaSELECTBIOenquiries@selectbiosciences.com