Key research themes
1. How do viral fusion proteins mediate cell-cell fusion and contribute to pathogenesis?
This theme focuses on the molecular mechanisms by which viral fusion proteins facilitate membrane fusion between infected and uninfected host cells, resulting in multinucleated syncytia formation. Understanding these mechanisms is critical for elucidating viral dissemination strategies, immune evasion, and tissue pathology during infections by enveloped viruses.
2. What roles does cell fusion play in tumor heterogeneity, progression, and metastasis?
This research theme explores how fusion between cancer cells and other cell types, especially leukocytes and stromal cells, contributes to tumor cell heterogeneity, acquisition of metastatic traits, and disease progression. It investigates the detection, characterization, and clinical relevance of hybrid cells, aiming to understand fusion's functional and diagnostic implications in oncology.
3. How do physical properties and mechanical forces regulate multicellular aggregate fusion and cell membrane fusion?
This theme covers the biophysical properties underpinning cell-cell and tissue fusion, including the viscoelastic and mechanical aspects that modulate fusion dynamics. It emphasizes the interplay between cellular mechanical tension, cytoskeletal forces, material properties of tissues, and the resultant fusion behavior, with implications for morphogenesis, cancer progression, and synthetic biology.