Schedule of Events |
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8:00 a.m. | Registration & Continental Breakfast Gallery, W.T. Young Library |
8:45 a.m. | Welcome Dr. Eli Capilouto, 糖心vlog官方入口 President Auditorium, W.T. Young Library |
9:00 a.m. | Dr. Hao Yan Designer Architectures for Programmable Self-assembly Auditorium, W.T. Young Library |
10:00 a.m. | Break (refreshments available) Gallery, W.T. Young Library |
10:30 a.m. | Dr. Donald Ingber From Cellular Mechanotransduction to Biologically Inspired Engineering Auditorium, W.T. Young Library |
11:30 a.m. | Lunch |
1:30 p.m. | Poster Session - To view abstracts, click here. King Alumni House Ballroom |
2:30 p.m. | Dr. Todd Yeates Giant Protein Cages and Assemblies in Nature and by Design Auditorium, W.T. Young Library |
Abstracts & Bios |
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Abstract: The central task of nanotechnology is to control motions and organize matter with nanometer precision. To achieve this, scientists have investigated a large variety of materials including inorganic materials, organic molecules, and biological polymers as well as different methods that can be sorted into so-called 鈥渂ottom-up鈥 and 鈥渢op-down鈥 approaches. Among all of the remarkable achievements made, the success of DNA self-assembly in building programmable nanopatterns has attracted broad attention. In this talk I will present our efforts in using DNA as an information-coding polymer to program and construct DNA nano-architectures with complex geometrical features. Use of designer DNA architectures as molecular sensor, actuator and scaffolds will also be discussed. Bio: Hao Yan studied chemistry and earned his Bachelor鈥檚 degree at Shandong University, China. He obtained his PhD in 糖心vlog官方入口 under Professor N. C. Seeman, New York University in 2001, working on design and construction of sequence dependent DNA nanomechanical devices. He then moved to the Computer Science Department at Duke Univeristy, where he continued to explore his interests in DNA based molecular computing and programming. Following a 3 year period as an Assistant Research Professor at Duke University, he joined Arizona State University as Assistant Professor in Department of 糖心vlog官方入口 and Biochemistry in 2004. In 2008, he was promoted with early tenure directly to Full Professor and he is currently the Milton D. Glick Distinguished Professor in 糖心vlog官方入口 and Biochemistry and Director of the Center for Molecular Design and Biomimicry in the Biodesign Institute at Arizona State University. The theme of his research is to use nature鈥檚 design rules as inspiration to advance biomedical, energy-related, and other technological innovations through the use of self-assembling molecules and materials. He aims to create intelligent materials with better component controls at the molecular level. He is leading an interdisciplinary team to design bio-inspired molecular building blocks and program their higher order assembly into systems that will perform complex functions. His current research focus on structural DNA nanotechnology and DNA directed self-assembly. Dr. Yan has published more than 130 papers and has received honors including the Rozenberg Tulip Award in DNA Computing, Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship, NSF Career Award, AFOSR Young Investigator Award. He is currently elected president of the International Society for Nanoscale Science, Computation and Engineering. |
Abstract: The newly emerging field of Biologically Inspired Engineering centers on understanding the fundamental principles that Nature uses to build and control living systems, and on applying this knowledge to engineer biologically inspired materials and devices for medicine, industry and the environment. A central challenge in this field is to understand of how living cells and tissues are constructed so that they exhibit their incredible organic properties, including their ability to change shape, move, grow, and self-heal. These are properties we strive to mimic, but we cannot yet build manmade devices that exhibit or selectively control these behaviors. To accomplish this, we must uncover the underlying design principles that govern how cells and tissues form and function as hierarchical assemblies of nanometer scale components. In this lecture, I will review work that has begun to reveal these design principles that guide self-assembly of living 3D structures with great robustness, mechanical strength and biochemical efficiency, even though they are composed of many thousands of flexible molecular scale components. Key to this process is that the molecular frameworks of our cells, tissues and organs are stabilized using a tension-dependent architectural system, known as 鈥榯ensegrity鈥, and these tensed molecular scaffolds combine mechanical load-bearing functions with solid-phase biochemical processing activities. I will describe how this structural perspective has led to new insights into the molecular basis of cellular mechanotransduction 鈥 the process by which living cells sense mechanical forces and convert them into changes in intracellular biochemistry, gene expression and thereby influence cell fate decisions during tissue and organ development. In addition, I will present how these scientific advances have been facilitated by development of new micro- and nano-technologies, including engineering of novel human organ-on-a-chip microdevices that also have great potential value as replacements for animal testing in drug development and discovery research. Understanding of these design principles that govern biological organization, and how scientific discovery and technology development can be facilitated by equally melding fundamental science and applied engineering, are critical for anyone who wants to fully harness the power of biology. Bio: Donald E. Ingber, MD, PhD is the Founding Director of the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University, the Judah Folkman Professor of Vascular Biology at Harvard Medical School and Boston Children's Hospital, and Professor of Bioengineering at the Harvard Sch |
Abstract: Nature has evolved myriad sophisticated structures based on the assembly of protein subunits. Many types of natural protein assemblies (such as virus capsids) have been studied extensively, while a number of equally sophisticated natural protein assemblies are only beginning to be appreciated. Among the latter group is a broad class of giant, capsid-like assemblies referred to as bacterial microcompartments. They serve as primitive metabolic organelles in many bacteria by encapsulating sequentially acting enzymes within a selectively permeable protein shell. Our laboratory has elucidated key mechanisms of these protein-based bacterial organelles through structural studies. On the engineering side, sophisticated natural protein assemblies like these have for many years represented an ultimate goal in protein design. By exploiting principles of symmetry that are shared by nearly all natural self-assembling structures, we have developed methods for engineering novel proteins that assemble to form a variety of complex, symmetric architectures. Recent successful designs include hollow protein cages composed of 12 or 24 identical subunits in cubic arrangements. Symmetric materials that extend by growth in two or three dimensions are also possible. Natural and engineered protein assemblies will be discussed, along with their future prospects for synthetic biology and biomedical applications.
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2014 Naff Committee Members:
Professor (Chair, 糖心vlog官方入口)
Professor (糖心vlog官方入口)
Professor (糖心vlog官方入口)
Professor (糖心vlog官方入口)
Professor (糖心vlog官方入口)
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