On this page
- Our research interest
- Background
- Goals
- Research focus
- Selected publications
- Group members
The MMPU is a joint venture between the Medical Faculties of the University of Heidelberg and the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL).
Brain tumours, particularly gliomas, are associated with a poor prognosis and frequently resist standard therapy. Due to their infiltrative nature and ability to form networks they cannot be controlled by localized therapies such as surgery and radiotherapy.
Despite the demonstrated importance of tissue mechanics in cancer, and the immense promise that it holds for the identification of new therapeutic targets, our understanding of the molecular basis of brain mechanics is limited. Moreover, the roles mechanical properties and alterations of the extracellular matrix (ECM) play in dictating immune responses in brain tumours are not well understood.
Immunotherapies aimed at activating tumour-specific T-cells, such as vaccines, or at delivering T cells to tumours, such as chimeric antigen receptor T-cell therapy, are promising. However, tumours are often poorly infiltrated by T-cells. This lack of infiltrative capacity has largely been attributed to immunosuppressive mediators and niche-specific microenvironmental factors such as hypoxia and acidification. But in addition, tumours are often surrounded by a high-density extracellular structure, which constitutes a protective wall. In fact, tumour stiffness provides an instructive environment that cells sense and react to, with elevated stiffness predictive of more metastases and poor overall survival in several cancer types.
With ECM-brain we aim to shed light on this next frontier in cancer treatment via an in-depth multifaceted study of physical barriers in brain tumor tissue. Such barriers are an important yet still largely uncharacterized component of the tumour microenvironment that likely impairs effective immunotherapy. Our interdisciplinary approach combines the analysis of tumour tissue using light and atomic force microscopy with high-performance spatial omics tools to gain a comprehensive knowledge of the impact of tissue stiffness and ECM properties on T cell phenotypes and function.
Prediction of tumor-reactive T cell receptors from scRNA-seq data for personalized T cell therapy.
Tan CL, Lindner K, Boschert T, Meng Z, Rodriguez Ehrenfried A, De Roia A, Haltenhof G, Faenza A, Imperatore F, Bunse L, Lindner JM, Harbottle RP, Ratliff M, Offringa R, Poschke I, Platten M*, Green EW*. (2024).
Nat Biotechnol Mar 7 [Epub]. doi: 10.1038/s41587-024-02161-y *equal contribution
A vaccine targeting mutant IDH1 in newly diagnosed glioma.
Platten M, Bunse l, Wick A, Bunse T, Le Cornet L, Harting I, Sahm F, Sanghvi K, Tan CL, Poschke I, Green E, Justesen S, Behrens G, Breckwoldt M, Freitag A, Rother LM, Schmitt A, Schnell O, Hense J, Misch M, Krex D, Stevanovic S, Tabatabai G, Steinbach JP, Bendszus M, von Deimling A, Schmitt M, Wick W (2021).
Nature 592:463-468. doi: 10.1038/s41586-021-03363-z
Reduction of liver metastasis stiffness improves response to bevacizumab in metastatic colorectal cancer.
Shen Y, Wang X, Lu J, Salfenmoser M, Wirsik NM, Schleussner N, Imle A, Freire Valls A, Radhakrishnan P, Liang J, Wang G, Muley T, Schneider M, Ruiz de Almodovar C, Diz-Muñoz A, Schmidt T. (2020).
Cancer Cell. 37(6):800-817.e7. doi: 10.1016/j.ccell.2020.05.005.
Tom N. Kuhn, MD
Clinician Scientist
Platten Group
Department of Neurology, Mannheim University Hospital
Phone: 0621 383 9283
Tom.Kuhn@umm.de