# Project 1: Effects of the Physical Microenvironment on Metabolism

> **NIH NIH U54** · CORNELL UNIVERSITY · 2020 · $371,270

## Abstract

Project Summary – Project 1 
Triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) is characterized by physical changes in the tumor microenvironment, 
including aberrant multiscale structure, and mechanics of the extracellular matrix (ECM), disturbed distributions 
of soluble factors, and population-level abnormalities in cellular composition and collective behavior (the tumor 
ecology). Additionally, obesity is known to increase the risk and worsen the prognosis for TNBC. However, the 
functional interconnections between these physical changes of the microenvironment and tumor metabolism 
remain unclear. This gap in understanding can be largely attributed to a lack of computational and experimental 
models that permit reliable prediction, recapitulation, and study of tumor and obesity-associated physical 
mechanisms in TNBC. By integrating biomaterials, tissue engineering, and microfabrication, our groups have 
made significant advances in the design of realistic culture microenvironments that recapitulate biological and 
physical properties of tumors. Furthermore, we have iteratively coupled these platforms with computational 
models to generate novel testable hypotheses. Here, we will capitalize on this expertise to investigate the overall 
hypothesis that physical changes in the microenvironment regulate malignancy by perturbing cellular 
metabolism. Furthermore, we will test whether obesity primes for tumorigenesis through similar physical 
and metabolic mechanisms. We will focus on hypoxia-inducible factor alpha (HIF1a) as a first candidate 
of the molecular pathways that underlie these effects, with other candidates pursued in collaboration 
with Projects 2 and 3. These hypotheses are based on our preliminary data and will be tested in 3 aims that 
will integrate engineering-centric approaches with transgenic mouse models, PDXs, patient-derived organoid 
cultures, and drug testing. Aim 1 will examine the physical mechanisms by which tumor and obesity-associated 
ECM induce metabolic reprogramming of mammary epithelial and stromal cells and define the consequences of 
these properties on malignancy. Aim 2 will define how HIF1a mechanistically links physical changes of the 
microenvironment with tumor metabolism, metastasis, and drug response. Aim 3 will analyze the collective 
cellular dynamics of tumor and stromal cell metabolic reprogramming in complex physical microenvironments. 
Collectively, these studies will reveal physical mechanisms in tumor metabolic reprogramming and link these 
changes to targetable molecular mechanisms thus generating new physical sciences-inspired insights for clinical 
translation. Project 1 heavily uses both the Tissue Microfabrication and Biophysics and Metabolic Imaging Cores 
and complements Projects 2 and 3 by testing the role of ECM physical properties in microvesicle biogenesis 
(Project 2) and by evaluating tumor cell migratory and invasive properties in response to defined ECM physical 
and transport characteristics...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10020779
- **Project number:** 5U54CA210184-05
- **Recipient organization:** CORNELL UNIVERSITY
- **Principal Investigator:** Claudia Fischbach
- **Activity code:** U54 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $371,270
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** — → 2022-07-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10020779

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10020779, Project 1: Effects of the Physical Microenvironment on Metabolism (5U54CA210184-05). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-24 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10020779. Licensed CC0.

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