New Johns Hopkins center aims to unlock genetic mysteries of breast cancer

The images were striking—cells clustering into patterns that, to biomedical engineer Joel Bader, looked like starfish and fruits and inkblots.

It was a Johns Hopkins colleague, cell biologist Andrew Ewald, who shared these models with Bader several years ago. The images revealed variations in the patterns of breast tissue grown in Ewald's lab—3-D cultures, or "organoids," derived from the cells of actual cancer patients.

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