Microengineered Platforms for Immune Profiling and Personalized Therapeutics

2025-05-22 12:30 2025-05-22 13:30 Microengineered Platforms for Immune Profiling and Personalized Therapeutics

Dr. Tania Konry, professeure à Northeastern University (Boston), où elle dirige un programme de recherche interdisciplinaire à l’interface du génie biomédical, de la microfluidique et de l’immunologie translationnelle, donnera une conférence vendredi 23 mai de 12h30 à 13h30 sur le thème : « Microengineered Platforms for Immune Profiling and Personalized Therapeutics».

Brief Bio:
Dr. Tania Konry is a Professor at Northeastern University, where she leads an interdisciplinary research program at the intersection of biomedical engineering, microfluidics, and translational immunology. She received her Ph.D. in Biotechnology Engineering and completed her postdoctoral training at Harvard Medical School, where she focused on single-cell analysis and clinical diagnostics. Dr. Konry’s lab develops next-generation lab-on-chip and single-cell technologies aimed at advancing diagnostic and therapeutic strategies. Her research is supported by the NIH, NSF, and ARPA-H and industry. She is a recognized leader in developing innovative tools for immune profiling, 3D tissue models, and integrated biosensing, with a strong focus on translational applications in cancer and immune-related diseases.

Talk Summary:
Dr. Konry will present her lab’s recent advances in the development of integrated microsystems for real-time immune profiling and personalized medicine. The talk will cover novel 3D tissue-engineered models and microfluidic platforms that enable dynamic single-cell analysis and functional immune monitoring. These technologies aim to replicate physiologically relevant environments to better understand disease mechanisms and therapeutic responses. Applications include immuno-oncology, infectious disease, and patient-specific treatment design, highlighting how microengineering and systems biology can converge to impact next-generation diagnostics and therapeutics.

Le jeudi 22 mai 2025 de 12h30 à 13h30.
Comodal : présentiel & visioconférence
Salle 1 Bâtiment Recherche à la Faculté de Médecine Paris-Saclay
Cliquez ici pour vous inscrire.

Faculté de Médecine Paris-Saclay

Présentation des nouvelles plateformes microfluidiques innovantes pour le profilage immunitaire et la médecine personnalisée.

  • Conditions

    Entrée libre sur inscription

  • Dates
    Jeudi 22 mai, 12h30
    12:30 pm - 01:30 pm
  • Lieu
    Faculté de Médecine Paris-Saclay

Dr. Tania Konry, professeure à Northeastern University (Boston), où elle dirige un programme de recherche interdisciplinaire à l’interface du génie biomédical, de la microfluidique et de l’immunologie translationnelle, donnera une conférence vendredi 23 mai de 12h30 à 13h30 sur le thème : « Microengineered Platforms for Immune Profiling and Personalized Therapeutics».

Brief Bio:
Dr. Tania Konry is a Professor at Northeastern University, where she leads an interdisciplinary research program at the intersection of biomedical engineering, microfluidics, and translational immunology. She received her Ph.D. in Biotechnology Engineering and completed her postdoctoral training at Harvard Medical School, where she focused on single-cell analysis and clinical diagnostics. Dr. Konry’s lab develops next-generation lab-on-chip and single-cell technologies aimed at advancing diagnostic and therapeutic strategies. Her research is supported by the NIH, NSF, and ARPA-H and industry. She is a recognized leader in developing innovative tools for immune profiling, 3D tissue models, and integrated biosensing, with a strong focus on translational applications in cancer and immune-related diseases.

Talk Summary:
Dr. Konry will present her lab’s recent advances in the development of integrated microsystems for real-time immune profiling and personalized medicine. The talk will cover novel 3D tissue-engineered models and microfluidic platforms that enable dynamic single-cell analysis and functional immune monitoring. These technologies aim to replicate physiologically relevant environments to better understand disease mechanisms and therapeutic responses. Applications include immuno-oncology, infectious disease, and patient-specific treatment design, highlighting how microengineering and systems biology can converge to impact next-generation diagnostics and therapeutics.

Le jeudi 22 mai 2025 de 12h30 à 13h30.
Comodal : présentiel & visioconférence
Salle 1 Bâtiment Recherche à la Faculté de Médecine Paris-Saclay
Cliquez ici pour vous inscrire.