William Lövfors

Cardiometabolic diseases are one of the leading causes of death in the modern society. In these diseases, dysfunctions in the intracellular signalling pathways are often present. One such disease is type-2 diabetes, where the pathways involved in the response to insulin are dysregulated. Insulin is a hormone released when the body has a high energy status, such as after a meal. In healthy cells in the fat tissue, increasing levels of insulin leads to increased glucose uptake and reduced fatty acid release. In cells from type-2 diabetic patients the response to insulin is blunted, with a reduced glucose uptake and increased fatty acid release. By investigating these pathways in the cells, it could be possible to find new drug targets, or new treatment regimens for type-2 diabetic patients.

I investigate these pathways using mathematical modelling. Roughly, I use models to make predictions of how cells would respond to different stimuli. If the prediction agrees with reality, tested by comparing the model to experimental data, the model can be used to also predict other things. Such things could be what happens if you subject the model to new substances. Potentially, such substances could, at least partially, restore the functions in the diabetic cell to a more normal state. Using the model, testing a large amount of new substances is both easy, cheap, fast, and does not require animals to test.

Using mathematical modelling to understand biology is common the field called systems biology. Systems biology is also the field in which students studying engineering biology (TB) will do their bachelor thesis work, in which I have been supervising groups for many years. Beyond the supervision in systems biology, I also teach basic optimization at the mathematical department.

Following is a link to my thesis, links to some of my publications, Pubmed, Orc ID, Scholar.