Skip to main content

TME dynamics

This challenge was announced in March 2025 and is now closed for Expressions of Interest. Successful team(s) will be awarded up to £20m ($25m) to take it on. Submissions closed on 18 June 2025, and shortlisted teams will be notified in July.
TME dynamics challenge icon

Challenge: Develop methods to identify the functional role of the tumour microenvironment over time. 

This is one of seven new challenges. 

The call for Expressions of Interest is now closed. Global research teams were invited to apply to take on this challenge, with submissions accepted until 18 June 2025. Shortlisted teams will be announced in July.

Context

Advances in spatial transcriptomics and proteomics have significantly advanced the characterisation of the cellular composition and heterogeneity of tumour lesions. Despite these advances, major gaps remain in understanding the functional interactions that drive organisation and the formation of microanatomical niches of the tumour microenvironment (TME), how the TME evolves over time and during exposure to therapies, and how specific TME organisation promotes tumour growth or resistance to current therapies.

Standard biopsy and histology approaches provide static snapshots, failing to capture the diverse but spatially restricted and evolving cell populations that may drive therapeutic resistance. Moreover, the TME continuously evolves, responding to tumour cues, cellular interactions, immune pressures, metabolic changes and therapeutic interventions.

This challenge goes beyond mapping the TME and aims to develop new methods to interrogate over time and at a functional level, interactions between the cellular, stromal, and non-cellular components of the TME to understand cancer development, progression and response to therapy. 

Barriers and opportunities

A major opportunity lies in obtaining longitudinal data on TME formation and evolution in patients, generating hypotheses that can be tested in preclinical models using dynamic functional spatial genomics and other approaches.

Interdisciplinary teams will be required to overcome barriers such as the need for novel sampling technologies that capture the full heterogeneity of the TME while preserving spatial integrity. Teams may also need to develop new tools to investigate functional inter-cellular interactions, incorporating AI and computational modelling to simulate and test hypotheses of which cellular interactions may drive cancer progression and therapeutic response or resistance.

Note: Applications focused on a subset of cell types in the TME, cross-sectional measurements of spatial organisation in the TME, studies only in animal models without guidance from human analyses, pure ‘mapping’ exercises, or studies lacking functional and longitudinal components will not be considered responsive to the challenge. 

Vision and impact

This challenge will enable the dynamic functional profiling of the TME, elucidating the drivers of TME organisation and evolution, and the functional role of the TME in cancer development, progression and response to treatment.

Understanding how these interactions dynamically shift over time and in response to therapy will inform next-generation treatment strategies that prevent resistance and enhance patient outcomes, ultimately reshaping cancer treatment and improving long-term survival. 

Plain language summary: why TME dynamics?

A tumour does not grow in isolation; it is surrounded by a complex supportive network of cells, blood vessels, and immune signals known as the tumour microenvironment (TME). This environment plays a key role in how cancer develops, spreads, and responds to treatment. Scientists have made significant progress in mapping the different cells within a tumour at a single point in time, but cancer is constantly changing. Understanding how the TME changes over time, and how it helps tumours resist treatment, is a major challenge in cancer research.

This Cancer Grand Challenge aims to develop new ways to track and study the TME in real-time. These methods could reveal how interactions between cancer cells and the TME influence cancer progression and treatment response. By identifying which parts of the TME help cancer grow or make it resistant to therapy, researchers could design new strategies to stop tumours from adapting to treatment. If successful, this research could lead to new therapies that prevent resistance from happening, improving long-term survival for cancer patients. 

EOI submissions are now closed

We are no longer accepting Expressions of Interest for the TME dynamics collaborations in cancer challenge. Global, interdisciplinary research teams were invited to apply for the opportunity to receive awards of up to £20m ($25m).
Shortlisted teams will be announced in July 2025.
Learn more
People interacting at Cancer Grand Challenges event

Support the next scientific breakthrough

If you're interested in joining our international network of partners and donors and funding our next round of teams, please get in touch.