Ronawk using stem cell tech developed at Olathe lab to advance liver cancer research in Turkey
October 5, 2021 | Startland News Staff
A Kansas City-based biomanufacturing startup announced its first international customer Tuesday: a university team in Istanbul that was among the first to beta test Ronawk’s lauded T-Blocks.
The maker of 3D cell culture products said the collaboration with Professor Ranan Aktas and the Cancer and Stem Cell Research Center at Maltepe University in Turkey will help researchers to better understand cancer development across different environmental conditions using T-Blocks.
“We love working with Professor Aktas’ group and their thoughtful feedback,” said Heather Decker, CTO and co-founder of Ronawk. “We cannot wait to see how the T-Blocks will continue to help and accelerate their research for cancer patients.”
Click here to learn why Ronawk was named one of Startland News’ 2021 Kansas City Startups to Watch.
Ronawk spun out of the University of Kansas’ Department of Plastic Surgery (KUMC) and the Bioengineering Graduate Program in 2019, gained its own manufacturing facility in 2020, and now is making an impact with researchers in 2021, emphasized A.J. Mellott, CEO and co-founder of the startup. Operating from a lab in Olathe, Ronawk was selected this summer for MassChallenge’s 50th accelerator program.
The T-Blocks product has been recognized as one of the “Coolest Things Made in Kansas” for the past two years by the Kansas Manufacturing Council, an affiliate program of the Kansas Chamber.
Aktas’ group was among 30 pilot studies across the globe that sought to use Ronawk’s bioprinting technologies to develop products that simplify and modernize cell culture practices to accelerate research across virtually all disease specialties. The follow-up purchase of T-Blocks for current and future studies by Maltepe University is a major milestone for Ronawk, Mellott added.

T-Blocks in 6-well plate; image courtesy of Ronawk
T-Blocks (Tissue-Blocks) enable researchers to rapidly expand growth of cells — up to one trillion at a time.
“T-blocks have provided an excellent opportunity to investigate the effects of the change in the stiffness of the microenvironment on liver cancer cells and cancer stemness,” said Aktas, describing her team’s interest in the technology. “We will present our first data during the Liver Meeting in Boston and continue creating different micro-environments using T-blocks with various stiffness. We already learned a lot from T- blocks and would love to gather more information using those well-designed 3D scaffolds.”
Click here to read more about the Olathe startup and it’s plan to launch a STEM training facility and create 150 jobs over next seven years.
This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.
For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn

2021 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Why a social network for basketball players bounced off court to recruit STEM, solar players
In an industry where connections can mean as much as talent, DeMarcus Weeks envisioned a LinkedIn-type network to create exposure for athletes — specifically basketball players from historically Black colleges and universities, as well as other small schools. Put in his words: to give the small guys a voice by providing them a network to connect…
Plot builds momentum as its new-to-market tool digs into construction communications tech gap
Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. This series is possible thanks to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, which leads a collaborative, nationwide effort to identify and remove large and small barriers to new business creation. WICHITA…
This KC-designed LEGOLAND attraction puts young builders in the driver’s seat of their own Ferrari
Racers, start your (virtual) engines. Dimensional Innovations has partnered with Merlin Entertainments and Ferrari to bring a one-of-a-kind experience to LEGOLAND California Resort in Carlsbad, California, shared Spencer Farley. “We continue to liberate the world from mediocre experiences,” said Farley, an account director for Entertainment and Retail at the Overland Park-based design firm, Dimensional Innovations. …
His portable lab can detect COVID in saliva within minutes; how this former Navy SEAL’s startup is expanding its target
Foothold Labs is on a mission to develop a next-generation, portable diagnostics system that can not only rapidly detect infectious diseases in saliva within five-to-eight minutes, but also indicate deadly contaminants in other common substances, shared Sean McIntosh. “To get equivalent results to our technology, someone would need to submit a sample to a professional…


