Description
Tuesday 04, 2021
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By Marian Dennis
Originally published in the Summer/Fall 2020 Issue of Forward
Growing up in Barcelona, Spain, Israel Cañadas, PhD, was fascinated by the world around him and dreamed of a career in science.
Cañadas, now an assistant professor in the Blood Cell Development and Function Program at Fox Chase Cancer Center, was the first member of his family to go into the sciences. His father was a carpenter and his mother worked at a large company before they eventually opened their own business together.
But when Cañadas started showing an interest in science, his parents eagerly supported him. “As a kid, my parents gave me a toy microscope as a gift. I remember taking samples of plants and insects from the forest to check under the microscope. It was just a toy, but that always stands out to me because I loved it,” said Cañadas.
He eventually graduated to a real microscope and carried that passion with him throughout his academic and professional career. He studied biology at Barcelona University before receiving a master’s degree in biomedical research in 2009 from Pompeu Fabra University, also in Barcelona, where he went on to earn a doctorate in biomedicine in 2013.
- rience at Dana-Farber that solidified his dream of running his own lab and doing his own research. That goal came to fruition when he came to Fox Chase in November 2019. “I found that Fox Chase is a great place for me to be able to work in the middle of all these fields, in cancer biology and immunology in the lab, and to be close to the hospital, patients, and physicians to find applications for all the research I’m doing,” he said.
“Since I visited the center to do my interview, I found that the environment, the community is very nice. I feel a lot of support in this environment and it feels like a kind of family,” Cañadas said.
Immunotherapy-Resistant Tumors
His work focuses mainly on identifying how tumors resist immunotherapy and how to use existing immune signaling pathways to break that resistance and find new therapies. As part of this work, he is developing a technology that would allow researchers to use a microfluidic device to culture cancer cells, immune cells, and other cell types from the environment of a human tumor sample. The tool will allow researchers to conduct analyses of specimens on smaller scales, as well as doing them more quickly and cheaply.
“I’m interested in using this technology to treat fresh tumor samples from patients at Fox Chase with immunotherapy and then check how effective different therapies are. These could include experimental therapies or therapies I have conceived from my projects that would be interesting to test in tumors. My passion is to know the unknown, to make discoveries. That’s my dream,” Cañadas said.
“My philosophy in work is to really enjoy the moments. In science this is very important, because a lot of times you don’t find what you’re looking for. You can be wrong or you can find something that you were not expecting, so I think it’s really important to have an optimistic outlook and never give up.”
Cañadas said his family’s support, along with dedication and hard work, have been paramount to a successful and rewarding career in science. “I come from a working-class family. It’s some- thing I’m proud of, particularly because my parents continue to support my brother and me in our education. I’d like to encourage all kinds of social classes to pursue a path in science or biomedicine if it’s really their dream. Work hard, be positive, and you will finally reach what you really want.”
Period | Apr 1 2021 |
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Media contributions
1Media contributions
Title A Working-Class Scientist: Israel Cañadas focuses on identifying how tumors resist immunotherapy and exploring ways to break that resistance and find new therapies Degree of recognition Local Media type Web Country/Territory United States Date 04/1/21 URL https://www.foxchase.org/blog/a-working-class-scientist Persons Israel Canadas