Hasini Jayatilaka: How cancer cells communicate -- and how we can slow them down
Hasini Jayatilaka discovered a novel mechanism that causes cancer cells to break away from tumors and metastasize. Full bio
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that takes an enormous emotional toll.
but the patient's loved ones, as well.
has been fighting for centuries.
will develop cancer in their lifetime.
to the disease due to metastases.
from a primary site to a distal site,
or the lymphatic system.
with breast cancer
because she has a mass on her breast.
because it spreads
lymph nodes, brain, bone,
or untreatable.
for several years now.
and I discovered recently
to communicate with each other
in the tumor microenvironment.
through two signaling molecules
the signal is enhanced,
to move away faster from the primary site
using a drug cocktail that we developed,
between cancer cells
this all began for me in 2010,
in Dr Danny Wirtz's lab
naive, Sri Lankan girl,
to look at how cancer cells move
are exposed to in our bodies.
on 2D, flat, plastic dishes
are exposed to in our bodies.
aren't stuck onto plastic dishes.
that I attended a seminar
from Princeton University,
communicate with each other,
and perform a specific action.
went off in my head, and I thought,
in my cancer cells every day,
are able to communicate with each other
in the tumor microenvironment.
this hypothesis.
with my crazy ideas.
students, graduate students,
and multiple disciplines
as a sophomore in college.
experiments together
and perspectives,
communicate with each other and move,
as the Hasini effect.
to block this signaling pathway
the spread of cancer.
animal models.
consisting of tocilizumab,
rheumatoid arthritis,
in clinical trials against breast cancer.
was that this cocktail of drugs
FDA-approved therapeutics
of tumor growth.
the tumor from growing,
that this is not true.
came up with the drug cocktail
not by targeting tumor growth,
mechanisms that govern it,
of the Hasini effect.
in "Nature Communications,"
response from around the world.
this sort of response.
for the positive response that I received,
affected by this terrible disease.
I've encountered with the Hasini effect,
that I was fortunate enough to work with.
through their hard work and dedication.
and the postdoctoral fellows,
who taught me new techniques
and my Obi-Wan Kenobis,
making this work into what it is today.
on our ambitious endeavors.
we could have asked for.
study metastasis.
I wouldn't be here.
to develop combination therapies
tumor growth and metastases.
new anticancer therapeutics,
drug resistance.
groundbreaking systems
of better human clinical trials.
talking to you today --
at the back of a seminar
I am on this incredible journey
that I am extremely passionate about,
my curiosity on a daily basis.
my favorite part of all of this --
talking to you, today --
with a diverse group of people,
better and just so much more fun.
superhuman power.
is that it's not unique to me.
and spread their wrath.
that has produced incredible discoveries
that we can all turn to
something bigger than ourselves,
the world a better place.
that I turn to, to help me fight cancer.
that with the right collaborations,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Hasini Jayatilaka - Cancer fighterHasini Jayatilaka discovered a novel mechanism that causes cancer cells to break away from tumors and metastasize.
Why you should listen
Hasini Jayatilaka is postdoctoral fellow at Stanford University focused on elucidating mechanisms that govern relapse in childhood cancers, particularly B-cell precursor acute lymphoblastic leukemia (BCP-ALL) and neuroblastoma.
BCP-ALL is a common childhood malignancy that has seen dramatic improvements in survival using current treatment regimens. However, relapse is the most frequent cause of cancer-related death among children with BCP-ALL. Jayatilaka is studying the activation of pro-survival and drug resistance mechanisms in a subset of the BCP-ALL population that allow tumor cells to persist following treatment and cause relapse.
Jayatilaka is currently conducting research on understanding the complex pathways that govern metastasis, the spread of cancer, which is responsible for 90% of cancer related deaths. She recently discovered a new signaling pathway that controls metastasis and showed that by blocking the pathway, the spread of cancer can be slowed down.
Jayatilaka grew up in Sri Lanka and pursued her BS and PhD in Chemical and Bimolecular Engineering at Johns Hopkins University.
Hasini Jayatilaka | Speaker | TED.com