10:30 – 11:00 uur

Across biomedical research, we increasingly recognize that understanding disease requires measuring function in human cells—not only molecular signatures. In CELLSYSTEMICS, we therefore developed a human measurement platform that combines standardized hiPSC differentiation, engineered vascular tissues, and quantitative functional readouts. From a simple blood sample, we generate patient-specific vascular muscle constructs whose contractility and drug response can be assessed in real time.

In the follow-up CARTA project, we are advancing the existing Cuore platform into a patient-specific assay to diagnose vascular smooth muscle cell dysfunction and enable in vitro screening of therapeutic options. Today I will show how integrating standardized media and scalable structure–function readouts brings human tissue models closer to routine use in research and personalized medicine.

– Koen Reesink –

Featured article

Living with a ticking time bomb

What determines whether a blood vessel remains elastic for decades or ruptures unexpectedly? It is a question that not only keeps doctors, but especially patients awake. Within the CELLSYSTEMICS project, Koen Reesink of the Cardiovascular Research Institute Maastricht (Maastricht UMC) investigates how the human vascular wall works, reacts and sometimes fails, using a unique human measurement model.
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