Centre for Cancer Sciences
 

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Jennifer Ashworth

Assistant Professor in Biomaterials and Complex Tissue Models, Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences

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Biography

Dr Jennifer Ashworth is an Anne McLaren research fellow at the University of Nottingham, working jointly between the Vet School and the School of Medicine. She completed her PhD in medical materials at the University of Cambridge in 2015, creating collagen materials to characterise the link between extracellular matrix and cell invasion, in collaboration with Geistlich Pharma AG, Switzerland. She initially moved to Nottingham as a postdoctoral research fellow in 2016, where she has since applied her materials science background to develop advanced materials for in vitro disease models. Her work developing peptide gel technology for 3D cell culture, providing an animal-free alternative to basement membrane extract, has been recognised by a highly commended award from the International 3Rs Prize 2020.

Expertise Summary

Jenny's main research interest is developing tissue-mimetic biomaterials for application to disease modelling. Her fellowship will focus on designing tissue-realistic models of fibrotic conditions in humans and animals, by combining biomaterials science with 3D tissue imaging.

Research Summary

My research focus is the design of bespoke biomaterial models of soft tissues, to study how cells interact with their surroundings in development, normal homeostasis, and disease. To create tissue-… read more

Recent Publications

Current Research

My research focus is the design of bespoke biomaterial models of soft tissues, to study how cells interact with their surroundings in development, normal homeostasis, and disease. To create tissue- and species-specific models, we must be able to understand and mimic the surroundings that our cells experience in the body. This has many potential applications, e.g. in finding future treatments for cancer. For example, as breast cancer progresses, cells make their surroundings stiffer, which is one of the danger factors that leads to cancer spread. Using biomaterials science, we can recreate this process in the lab, which can help us understand how to design new treatments and how these might work. My group uses 3D imaging of healthy and diseased tissues to understand what makes them different, how this changes between types of tissue and species, and how to recreate this in a 3D biomaterial to improve our understanding of health and disease.

https://www.nottingham.ac.uk/research/inspiring-people/fellows/jennifer-ashworth.aspx

Centre for Cancer Sciences

The University of Nottingham
Centre for Biomolecular Sciences
Nottingham, NG7 2RD


telephone: +44 (0) 115 823 1546
email: MS-CCS@nottingham.ac.uk