Integrating Multi-Modal, Multi-Scale Models of Cardiovascular Disease Mechanisms
Organisers: Jennifer Davis, Christine Mummery and Beth Pruitt
Date: 8 – 11 November 2026
Location: Buxted Park, East Sussex, UK
Human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC)-derived cardiac cells present an exciting model for providing mechanistic insights into heart disease. Human heart physiology differs in significant ways from animal models, and this workshop seeks to address the potential and challenges of hiPSC-derived models to understand disease mechanisms, especially when combined with in vivo animal and patient data to accelerate the development of therapies. We will discuss a roadmap for the use of hiPSC-models of heart disease for discovery and for validating the use of cell-lines from a diverse range of donors to help the field democratize pre-clinical research for human health.
The Workshop will bring together interdisciplinary researchers spanning in vitro and in vivo cardiovascular disease models to patient level clinical data. It aims to foster dialogue on the strengths of different scales and types of experimental data and discuss a roadmap for how complementary, multi-modal data types and models can be integrated in silico to produce integrative knowledge greater than could be discovered from one data stream or model alone. We will have sessions dedicated to methodologies and applications for:
- Unravelling phenotypes and mechanisms of disease at the cellular level
- Multi-scale mechanobiology of cardiac physiology and pathology
- Sex differences in cardiac disease
- Mapping genotypes to phenotypes
A key feature of this Workshop is that we have invited bioengineers, biologists, and clinicians to stimulate cross-model conversations and further the utility of non-animal models in disease mechanism research. Each session will span in vitro and in vivo research to anchor dialogue on the challenges and opportunities for integrating multi-scale, multi-modal data from different models and systems.
Organisers & speakers
Jennifer Davis University of Washington, USA
Christine Mummery Leiden University, The Netherlands
Beth Pruitt University of California, Santa Barbara, USA
Milena Bellin University of Padova, Italy
Claudia Crocini Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Germany
Sharlene Day University of Pennsylvania, USA
Timothy Downing University of California, Irvine, USA
Thomas Eschenhagen UKE Hamburg, Germany
Leslie Leinwand University of Colorado Boulder, USA
Joost Lumens Maastricht University, The Netherlands
Steven Niederer Imperial College London, UK
Brenda Ogle University of Minnesota, USA
Michael Regnier University of Washington, USA
Eva van Rooij Hubrecht Institute, The Netherlands
Yuji Shiba Shinshu University, Japan
Sanjay Sinha University of Cambridge, UK
Jil Tardiff The University of Arizona, USA
Sarah Teichmann University of Cambridge, UK
Jolanda van der Velden Amsterdam University, The Netherlands
Viola Vogel ETH Zurich, Germany
Early-career researchers
Application closes on Friday 8 May 2026
We offer 10 funded places for early-career researchers (PhD, postdocs and PIs in the first three years of their first appointment) to attend our Workshops along with the 20 invited speakers. We just ask that you pay for your own travel costs. If you would like to attend please complete the online application form and include a one page CV and a letter of support from your supervisor. If your supervisor would prefer to send the letter directly to us please ask them to email it to workshops@biologists.com
All attendees are expected to actively contribute to the Workshops by asking questions at presentation sessions and taking part in discussions, as well as giving a short talk on their research.
Some travel grants are available for researchers that are based in Global South countries (list of qualifying GS countries), on an application basis. Please contact us for more details.
About Buxted Park

The Workshop will be held at the beautiful Buxted Park in East Sussex which dates back to the 12th century. The current house was built in 1722 by Sir Thomas Medley and is an elegant Grade II Palladian mansion set in 312 acres of parkland. Over the years it has played host to a number of high profile visitors including William Wordsworth, Winston Churchill, and George V and Queen Mary. Whilst it was a health hydro in the 1960s Gregory Peck, Dudley Moore and Marlon Brando were regular visitors.
Buxted Park is less than 25 miles from Gatwick Airport and 60 miles from Heathrow Airport. There are direct trains taking 1 hour 10 minutes from London Bridge to the village of Buxted which is only a mile away from the hotel.
The Buxted Park Hotel
Station Road
Buxted
East Sussex
TN22 4AY
Tel: +44 (0) 1825 733333





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