ONCO-08

Systems Approaches to Cancer Biology

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Organizers:

Ashlee N. Ford Versypt (University at Buffalo, State University of New York), John Metzcar, University of Minnesota

Description:

Cancer systems biology aims to understand cancer as an integrated system of genes, proteins, cells, tissue microenvironments, treatments, whole body physiology, and environmental factors. Cancer is connected in interacting networks across scales, rather than an entity of isolated molecular and cellular components. Many mathematical approaches are powerful tools for both mechanistic modeling and data-driven analyses that enable new insights into various scales of cancer systems biology. A growing community of interdisciplinary researchers in cancer systems biology have assembled at a meeting called Systems Approaches to Cancer Biology, held five times since 2016. A motivation for this minisymposium is to feature researchers from the cancer systems biology community to broaden the exposure and connections with the mathematical oncology and wider community through SMB. This minisymposium will focus on the mathematical methods and models applied to understand the complexities of cancer systems biology. Potential topics include: - Dynamics for cancer cell signaling and metabolic interactions - Tensor-based/multilinear modeling for integrating cancer omics data - Agent-based models of interactions in the tumor microenvironments - Boolean network modeling for cancer cell functions - Machine learning to infer targetable pathways and treatment options

Diversity Statement:

This minisymposium features 3 women speakers and 1 man, and the organizers include 1 woman and 1 man. The speakers come from academic departments across biomedical sciences , bringing scientific diversity to the SMB meeting. Additionally, the presenters span early to mid-career stages.



Aaron Meyer (UCLA)

"Tensor-based/multilinear modeling for integrating cancer omics data"



Stacey Finley (University of Southern California)

"Dynamics for cancer cell signaling and metabolic interactions"



Erzsébet Regan (The College of Wooster)

"Boolean network modeling for cancer cell functions"



Julia B. Curd (University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus)

"Machine learning to infer targetable pathways and treatment options"



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Annual Meeting for the Society for Mathematical Biology, 2025.