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11:00 - 12:00 CEST on Zoom
This free webinar is hosted in collaboration with SYNENTEC, one of our valued EACR Industry Partners. In this webinar we will welcome Lisa-Marie Philipp from the Institute for Experimental Cancer Research in Kiel, who will present how automated wound healing assays are applied to study pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) cell migration and treatment responses. We will also hear from Reinhild Geisen and Ben Werdelmann from SYNENTEC, who will introduce their wound healing workflow and imaging platforms.
Analyzing cancer cell migration is critical for understanding metastatic mechanisms and identifying novel therapeutic targets. A commonly used method to study this is the scratch or wound healing assay. However, these assays are often manual, time-consuming, and limited in throughput. In addition, they typically involve multiple disconnected steps from image acquisition to data analysis, which can introduce variability, reduce reproducibility, and make it difficult to compare results across experiments or laboratories.
In this joint webinar, Lisa-Marie Philipp from the Institute for Experimental Cancer Research in Kiel will present how automated wound healing assays are applied to study pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) cell migration and treatment responses. Using label-free live-cell imaging, wound closure dynamics are monitored in 96 wells in real time, providing highly robust, quantitative insights into cellular behavior and treatment effects.
Building on this scientific foundation, Reinhild Geisen from SYNENTEC will introduce their wound healing workflow, combining automated imaging with integrated analysis in a single system. This enables researchers to reduce hands-on time and minimize user bias. Ben will conclude with a short introduction to SYNENTEC’s imaging platforms and how they can be integrated into routine research workflows including fully integrated walk-away automation.
Together, the webinar provides practical insights into improving migration assays and generating more reliable data, so researchers can spend less time on exhausting, repetitive tasks and more time on doing actual science.
Lisa-Marie Philipp, Ph.D.
Institute for Experimental Cancer Research, University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein, Campus Kiel, Germany
Lisa-Marie Philipp is a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute for Experimental Cancer Research at the University Clinic of Kiel. Her work focuses on pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC), with a particular interest in clonal heterogeneity and cellular plasticity, and how these features influence tumor progression, metastasis and therapy resistance.

Reinhild Geisen, Ph.D.
SYNENTEC GmbH, Elmshorn, Germany
Reinhild Geisen earned her PhD studying the role of inflammation in colorectal and pancreatic cancer. She now leads SYNENTEC’s Cell Culture Application Lab, where she develops and advances cell-based assays using high-throughput microscopy. Her work focuses on simplifying the path from cell images to quantitative data through automated and user-friendly workflows.

Ben Werdelmann
SYNENTEC GmbH, Elmshorn, Germany
As Head of Business Development and Biological Applications at SYNENTEC, Ben Werdelmann develops microscopy solutions for cell culture applications. He specializes in translating complex imaging technologies into robust, easy-to-use workflows that are designed to be integrated into automated end to end workflows. In close collaboration with partners from biotechnology and pharmaceutical research, he helps turn laboratory challenges into practical solutions.
Open to all, you do not need to be an EACR member to attend.
