Join the club for FREE to access the whole archive and other member benefits.

Matthew Dalby

Director of the lifETIME CDT and Professor of Cell Engineering at the University of Glasgow.

Obtaining a PhD in Biomedical Materials from Queen Mary, University of London on osteoblast response to the topography and composition of hydroxyapatite containing composite materials, I moved to Glasgow to join Cell Engineering as a PDRA on EU grant Nanomed. Here I researched how cells interacted with nanoscale features producing early literature on cellular ability to respond to nanotopography. During this time I became focussed on dissecting  how cells processed nanoscale information through mechanotransductive processes. Together, these interests in bone, nanotopography and mechanotransduction led me to apply for a BBSRC David Phillips Fellowship in 2003. During this fellowship I focussed on how mesenchymal stem cells were directed to differentiate and to self-renew by nanotopography and this led to a lectureship in Cell Engineering  in 2008. Now, as Professor of Cell Engineering, I am still fascinated by the nanoscale and mechanotransductive processes, but my interests have broadened to include metabolomics-based research and a growing interest in how growth factors can be controlled at the nanoscale to direct stem cell fate.

Visit website: https://www.gla.ac.uk/researchinstitutes/biology/staff/matthewdalby/

 matt-dalby-a58283a

 DalbyMatthew

See also: Academia University of Glasgow - Public research university for UK and international students

Details last updated 16-Apr-2020

Matthew Dalby News

Lab-grown bone cell breakthrough

Lab-grown bone cell breakthrough

STV News - 12-Sep-2017

Nanokicking used to grow 3D samples of mineralised bone for the first time. Laser interferometer...