 Is it an organ in the fruit fly? Is it the fruit fly itself that's like, you know, behaving as the organ? We have a proprietary method that was first developed at Mount Sinai Medical Center and then further elaborated on at the company, which enables us to really interrogate or read that tumor exome and identify the mutations that are, one, driving the tumor genesis, but then also what we call passenger mutations that are kind of hopping along and helping with things like vascular development for the tumor scaffolding and things like that. And so we do integrate all of that into our models. We also look at copy number variations and we're engineering the tumor to develop in the tissue corresponding to where the patient has the tumor. For example, for colorectal cancer, we modeled the tumors in the lower most portion of the fly gut. And so the tumor is growing, it's interacting with other organ systems, it's interacting with vascular nerves, immune cells.