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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
October
NIH grant to fund Nanomedicine
Development Center at Illinois
Jim Barlow,
Life Sciences Editor
217-333-5802; jebarlow@uiuc.edu
10/25/05
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
A $6.2 million five-year grant from the National Institutes of Health
will fund the establishment of a Nanomedicine Development Center to
be directed by Eric G. Jakobsson of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
The award was part of a grant package of about $43 million for four
advanced national centers in nanomedicine announced for this year under
the NIH’s New Pathways to Discovery Program. The NIH program began
in 2003 as a “Roadmap for Medical Research” initiative to
spur medical research discoveries from bench to bedside. The other centers
will be at the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, the University
of California at San Francisco, and Columbia University in New York
City.
The broad goal of the Illinois center – called the National Center
for Design of Biomimetic Nanoconductors – is to develop a technology
that combines silicon wafers with biological or biomimetic transport
molecules as a foundation for devices that accomplish many of the functions
of biological membranes.
Initially, Jakobsson and colleagues plan to design a biocompatible,
sustainable power source for the artificial retina developed at the
Doheny Eye Institute at the University of Southern California. Such
bio-batteries could power a wide range of implantable devices.
In addition to the University of Southern California, the other collaborating
institutions are the University of California at Davis, Illinois Institute
of Technology, Oxford University, Purdue University, Sandia National
Laboratory, University of Chicago, University of New Mexico, Wabash
College and Yale University.
The leadership and administration of the center will take place at the
Beckman Institute for Advanced
Science and Technology at Illinois.
“The technology our center is based on has its proof of concept
in nature itself,” said Jakobsson, a professor in the department
of molecular and integrative physiology and at the Beckman Institute.
“We now understand on a molecular level how biological membranes
organize themselves into cell-sized electrical power sources, electrical
signaling devices, pumps, and devices that convert one form of energy
into another.
“It is now time to translate that knowledge into the design of
devices that can address a variety of needs in medicine and industry,”
said Jakobsson, who also is a senior research scientist at the National
Center for Supercomputing Applications at Illinois.
All of the national centers will combine work of researchers from different
institutions to conduct novel, multidisciplinary research that could
speed the development of engineered, highly specific diagnostic tools
and therapeutics that could help them to better understand and treat
a multitude of human diseases. In each of the centers, the goal is to
translate underlying biological knowledge into nanoscale technologies
for medicine.
Funding for the National Center for Design of Biomimetic Nanoconductors
was distributed by the NIH’s National Eye Institute, which administers
Roadmap grants from combined funding pooled by all of the NIH institutes
and centers.
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