Lab-grown bone cell breakthrough
STV News - 12-Sep-2017Nanokicking used to grow 3D samples of mineralised bone for the first time. Laser interferometer...
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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/
See also: University of Glasgow - Public research university for UK and international students
Details last updated 16-Apr-2020
Nanokicking used to grow 3D samples of mineralised bone for the first time. Laser interferometer...