The Magazine of Johns Hopkins Institute for NanoBioTechnology | Spring 2013
Commercializing Nanotechnology
Challenges and Rewards
nbt
INBT Alumni: Where Are They Now? Mentors Model Academic Pathway
Thank you! INBT seeks to work with industrial partners, both large established companies and start-ups, to transfer Hopkins-created technologies to market for the benefit of humanity. Corporate participation in INBT is vital to ensure that emerging technology moves from laboratory to the marketplace as well as to provide a vehicle for open exchange between Hopkins researchers and students and their counterparts in the private sector.
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Contents Johns Hopkins University Institute for NanoBioTechnology Suite 100, Croft Hall 3400 North Charles Street Baltimore, MD 21218 Phone: (410) 516-5634 Fax: (410) 516-2355 Email: inbt@jhu.edu http://inbt.jhu.edu
Featured Stories
10
20
A Digital Perspective on Cancer
International Researchers Blog
21
Fighting Brain Drain
Leadership Peter C. Searson Director; Joseph R. AND Lynn C. Reynolds Professor
Symposium
Denis Wirtz
2 Welcome
Associate Director;
3 Agenda
Theophilus H. Smoot Professor
Staff Ashanti Edwards Academic Program Administrator
Tom Fekete Director of Corporate Partnerships
Warren Fewster Senior Financial Analyst
4
Our Speakers
Research 6
Beauty is in the Eye of the Microscopist
9
Amoebas Get Social When Times Get Tough
10
Taking a Digital Perspective on Cancer
13
Unlocking the Mysteries of the Blood-Brain Barrier
Christie Johnson
Education
Research Service Analyst
15
INBT Alumni: Where Are They Now?
Sue Porterfield
20
International Researchers Blog About Adventures in Belgium
Administrator
Martin Rietveld Web/Animation Director
Tracy Smith Administrative Coordinator
Mary Spiro
Outreach 21
Internships Thwart Summer ‘Brain Drain’
23
Mentors Model Academic Pathway
25
Bringing Hopkins Solutions to the World
Science Writer;
Partnerships
Editor-in-Chief, Nano-Bio Magazine
27
Surmounting the Challenges of Commercializing Technology
Graphic Design Danielle Peterson Brio Design
Additional Photography Homewood Photography Johns Hopkins Pathology Photography Marty Katz
On The Cover The blood-brain barrier involves functional interactions between endothelial cells that form brain capillaries, astrocytes, and pericytes in a complex microenvironment that regulates transport between the vascular system and the brain. Illustration by Martin Rietveld
Symposium
Welcome This seventh installment of the Johns Hopkins Institute for NanoBioTechnology’s Annual Symposium may be our most unusual to date, but the topic is extremely important: commercialization of nanotechnology. Good ideas are of limited use to humanity if they do not move past the research stage. The key to technological progress is translation—bringing great ideas to the marketplace where they can actually help people. For today’s symposium, we have assembled an impressive lineup of speakers who have firsthand experience in what it means to bring an idea to market. They have suffered the challenges and setbacks, overcome obstacles and reaped the rewards (or are beginning to) of shepherding an idea from bench to bedside. Our speakers come from academia and private industry and from diverse disciplines. In addition, we have also included as our keynote presentation an extended interactive discussion with Justin Tom Fekete
Klein, a partner with the venture capital firm NEA. We expect the conversations generated today to continue for many weeks and months to come. You also hold in your hands our fourth edition of INBT’s Nano-Bio Magazine. Many of the stories in our 2013 issue expand on the theme of today’s symposium. Please share our annual magazine and symposium program with your colleagues and friends. If there is anything that we can do to make your experience at today’s symposium better, please let one of our student volunteers, who are wearing INBT shirts and name badges, or an INBT staff member know. Tom Fekete Director of Corporate Partnerships Johns Hopkins Institute for NanoBioTechnology
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Johns Hopkins University Nano-Bio Magazine
Symposium
agenda 2013 Institute for NanoBioTechnology Annual Nano-Bio Symposium
Translating the Promise of Nanoscience from Laboratory to Development Friday, May 17, 2013 | 8 a.m. – 3:30 p.m. | Shriver Auditorium
8:00 a.m. Registration
Lobby of Shriver Auditorium
Lobby of Shriver Auditorium 10:35 a.m. 8:15 a.m. Welcome
Translating Nanotechnology into Medicines:
Peter Searson, Tom Fekete 8:20 a.m.
8:45 am
Justin Hanes, Johns Hopkins University
Anthony Tuesca, MedImmune Challenges, Outlook and Perspectives
11:00 a.m.
Phil Vanek, Lonza
Nanotherapeutics: Two Basic Discoveries that
Scaling Up the Unscalable – or Why Cellular
Launched Biopharma Start-Ups
Technologies Fail in Development
Gabriele Putz Todd, Osiris Therapeutics
11:25 a.m.
Therapeutic Potential of Mesenchymal Stem Cells
INTERACTIVE SESSION: Justin Klein, NEA Investing in Translational Science: Preparing for the Road Ahead
9:10 am
Kristin Weidemaier, BD Technologies SERS Nanotechnology for the Development of
12:30 p.m. Adjourn/Break
Medical Diagnostics
1:30 p.m.
9:35 am Jordan Green, Johns Hopkins University
Poster Session A, even numbered posters Clipper Room
Nanobiotechnology for Nucleic Acid Delivery and Artificial Antigen
2:30 p.m.
Poster Session B, odd numbered posters Clipper Room
10:00 a.m.
Peter Gabriele, Secant Medical FT-IR Microscopy: What does Surface Chemistry
3:30 p.m.
Judging Concludes and Awards
Look Like? 10:25 a.m. Break
Spring 2013
3
Symposium
Our Speakers
Justin Klein
Phil Vanek
Anthony Tuesca
Peter Gabriele
Justin Klein
their development of scalable commercialization strategies. He cur-
Justin Klein is a Partner on NEA’s healthcare team. He joined NEA
rently serves as the Head of Innovation for Lonza’s Bioscience Sector,
in 2006 and focuses on medical device, healthcare technology,
leading a team of 165 scientists and commercial strategists, and sits
specialty pharma and biopharmaceutical company investments.
on the Global Innovation Strategy Team for Lonza Group. Vanek
He is actively involved with NEA’s investments as a director of
earned a PhD in Biochemistry from Georgetown University Medical
Legato Medical, PhaseBio Pharmaceuticals, Relievant Medsystems,
a held an IRTA fellowship at the National Cancer Institute in the
Senseonics, Topera Medical, Ulthera, VertiFlex, and VytronUS, and
Laboratory of Molecular Oncology. He was a postdoc in the Center
as a board observer for Carticept Medical, Cartiva, ExploraMed,
for Molecular and Structural Biology at the Hollings Cancer Center
Moximed, Neuropace, and TriVascular. His past board member-
at the Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston.
ships include CV Ingenuity (acquired by Covidien in 2013). Klein is also a member of the advisory boards for the National Venture
Anthony Tuesca
Capital Association’s Medical Industry Group and its Medical
Tuesca is a scientist in the Innovative Drug Delivery Group at
Innovation and Competitiveness Coalition (MedIC). Previously,
MedImmune, where he works on the evaluation and development of
Klein worked for the Duke University Health System on strategy,
enabling and differentiating drug delivery technologies for biologics.
finance and clinical service unit operations. He has also worked at
He joined MedImmune in 2008 and has worked on over 10 clinical,
Latham & Watkins LLP in Menlo Park, where he assisted life sci-
pre-clinical and research stage programs. He earned his PhD from
ences companies on numerous licensing transactions, regulatory and
Drexel University, where he was an NSF-IGERT fellow in Nanoscale
corporate securities matters. He has served as a member of the Board
Science and Engineering. At Drexel, he studied protein conjugates
of Trustees of Duke University and previously served on the medical
and oral drug delivery technologies for the treatment of diabetes.
center’s Institutional Review Board. Klein concurrently earned his MD from the Duke University School of Medicine and his JD from
Peter Gabriele
Harvard Law School. He received his AB in Economics and his BS
Gabriele is Director of Emerging Technology at Secant Medical of
in Biological Anthropology and Anatomy from Duke University.
Perkasie, Pa. He is nationally recognized for his work in biomedical research and development, and leads Secant’s activity in building
Philip G.Vanek
strategic relationships with academia, research institutions, and sur-
Vanek is Head of Innovation at Lonza Bioscience and has worked
geon groups. Gabriele brings to Secant Medical 30 years of scientific
with many emerging-stage therapeutic companies to help support
and industrial innovation and experience in advanced biomedical
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Johns Hopkins University Nano-Bio Magazine
Jordan Green
Kristin Weidemaier
Gabriele Putz Todd
Justin Hanes
technologies, including polymers, photo-imaging, fiber optics,
She has a PhD in physical chemistry from Stanford University and
and bone adhesives. He holds two master’s degrees, one from
an undergraduate degree from Duke University.
Johns Hopkins University in Biotechnology and another in Technology Management the University of Pennsylvania Wharton School
Gabriele Putz Todd
of Business.
Todd is a Senior Scientist at Osiris Therapeutics, Discovery and Development in Columbia, Md. She has wide range of technical
Jordan Green
skills and scientific background including stem cell research, cancer
Green’s Biomaterials and Drug Delivery Laboratory is acutely inter-
research, neurobiology, human genetics, and ecology. Todd has
ested in biomaterials, drug delivery, gene therapy, nanobiotechnol-
been a dedicated project and laboratory manager with more than
ogy, and cell engineering. Research findings — and the technologies
15 years of experience conducting complex research projects within
developed — are applied in the fields of ophthalmology, oncology,
the biological and medical field. She earned a PhD in Genetics and
and regenerative medicine. His lab works within the chemistry/
Neurobiology from the Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg
biology/engineering interface to answer fundamental scientific
(Germany) and held a postdoctoral position at the Max Planck
questions, and to create innovative technologies and therapeutics
Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics.
that can directly benefit human health. Green earned his PhD in Biological Engineering at MIT and his bachelor’s degree in Chemi-
Justin Hanes
cal Engineering, Biomedical Engineering from Carnegie Mellon
Hanes is the Lewis J. Ort Family Professor and Director of the
University.
Center for Nanomedicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine with a primary appointment in Ophthalmology. He is
Kristin Weidemaier
a founder and is on the board of directors of Kala Pharmaceuticals,
Weidemaier is a Senior Manager in Becton Dickinson’s Biosensors
a company commercializing mucus penetrating particle nanotech-
department, where she has spent the past 10 years designing biosen-
nology. Hanes also founded and is CEO and Chair of the Board of
sors and in vitro diagnostics. Her group works on new technol-
Directors of GrayBug, a private company developing advanced drug
ogy development, with an emphasis on taking technology from
delivery systems with a special focus on the treatment of diseases
a feasibility stage through to product development. She currently
that affect vision. He received a PhD in Chemical Engineering from
leads BD’s nanotechnology R&D program, which is focused on
MIT and did postdoctoral training in Oncology and Neurosurgery
nanotechnology-based diagnostics for Point-of-Care applications.
at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
Spring 2013
5
Research
Perinuclear actin cap stress fibers in a mouse embryonic fibroblast.
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Johns Hopkins University Nano-Bio Magazine
Photo by Dong-Hwee Kim
Beauty is in the Eye of the Microscopist By Mary Spiro
Scientists have been using microscopes to produce up-close views
the Biophysical Society’s, The Art of Science Image Contest for his
and gather data about cells and other tiny things for more than
dandelion-like representation of the geodesic actin network in a
400 years. Many times, however, those images are not just informa-
mouse fibroblast.
tive, they are beautiful. Dong-Hwee Kim, a postdoctoral fellow in the Institute for
Kim says his primary focus in collecting these images has always been purely for scientific purposes. “I am trying to better under-
NanoBioTechnology in the Whiting School of Engineering,
stand how cells recognize the physical properties of the cell envi-
frequently uses microscopy in his research on cell mechanics, a field
ronment and respond to them,” he said.
he describes as “one of the fastest growing interdisciplinary fields in biology.” Several of his images have not only yielded abundant quantita-
Engineers have developed theories about cell mechanics and about what they expect to happen at the single cell level. But instead of describing the cell’s response with a computational model
tive and qualitative data, but they have netted him awards for
or other simulation, Kim was determined to capture actual images
scientific imaging. In 2011 he earned an Image of Distinction
of live cells reacting to their surroundings.
Award from the Nikon Small World Competition for his photo
“Direct visualization of cell functions has become one of the most
of a disorganized perinuclear actin cap stress fibers in a mouse
effective ways to support scientific findings, since it is the simplest
embryonic fibroblast. That same year, he was awarded an Honor-
but most powerful way to convince others,” he said. Using various
able mention from the American Society for Cell Biology 7th
microscopy techniques, Kim has been able to visualize cell compo-
Annual Cell Biology film contest for his movie “Hurricane: Cell
nents, such as the nucleus or actin filaments, in very detailed ways.
Cytoplasm Movements”. And in 2013, Kim took second place in
“It is always exciting to become the first one to show something that others haven't seen yet,” he said.
Spring 2013
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Research
Denis Wirtz, Kim’s advisor, noticed how beautiful the postdoc’s images were turning out and suggested that he enter some of his
gives them unparalleled power to support scientific findings and persuade others,” Kim said.
work into popular imaging contests. Each contest focuses on a
The old saying goes, “a picture is worth 1,000 words.” In this
different theme, but the bottom line is that the images must be
case an expertly executed scientific image “can overcome myriad
scientifically relevant as well as visually interesting. For example,
arguments,” Kim added.
the image of the geodesic actin network in the mouse embryonic
Kim said his favorite imaging tool is the “confocal laser scanning
fibroblasts, which were used for both the Nikon and Biophysical
microscopy, which allows high resolution images in cell biology, as
Society image contests, “directly visualized the mechanical and spa-
well as qualitative and quantitative analysis of images.” He empha-
tial coordinates of filamentous actin cytoskeleton in the cell,” said
sizes that he does not use any software enhancements, such as Pho-
Kim. But the images also happen to be reminiscent of dandelions
toshop, to beautify his images. However, by attempting to create a
and fireworks.
beautiful image, he has developed several new imaging protocols.
Even if making a pretty picture is not the intent of the image, Kim thinks that having an artistic eye is important in science. “I think artistic images in science should be based on a combination of aesthetic discrimination and scientific significance, which
“In challenging myself to create artistic images, it has sometimes led me to design new scientific methodologies that were not conventionally used in the field, and I think these efforts can contribute to the advancement of science,” Kim said.
Actin network in a mouse fibroblast.
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Johns Hopkins University Nano-Bio Magazine
Photo by Dong-Hwee Kim
Amoebas Get Social When Times Get Tough By Rezina Siddique
How single-celled social amoebae respond to chemical signals is
mechanism of signal amplification that occurred in the amoeba,
shedding light on the processes and behavior of more complex
but there was no way to test it. However, using their microfluidic
organisms, including mammals. A recent paper suggests that there
pattern generator, Levchenko’s group was able to validate the
is a mechanism by which amoeba amplify a desirable chemical
model experimentally. “Understanding the dynamics of chemotaxis
stimulus in order to self-organize and collectively migrate.
within this system can shed insight into how other multicellular
Amoeba are single-celled organisms with the capability to ag-
organisms, as well as how mammalian cells interact,” Levchenko said.
gregate to form a multi-cellular organism, and later to a fruiting
During aggregation, cyclic AMP (cAMP), a molecule that
body. Andre Levchenko, professor of biomedical engineering and
stimulates hunger, serves as chemoattractant. A starving social
affiliated faculty member of Johns Hopkins Institute for NanoBio-
amoeba secretes cAMP to attract other amoebae to it, which all
Technology, used the social amoeba, Dictyostelium discoideum,
travel towards the central amoeba. These other cells also start
because as a multicellular organism it contains cells with different
releasing cAMP in a periodic fashion in order to amplify the signal
genotypes. Levchenko’s team sought to clarify how external signals
and attract additional amoebae, creating a pulsating and wave-like
were amplified by the organism to facilitate aggregation.
signal. An individual cell ends up seeing waves of activity. This
“The way [these organisms] detect signals and move are similar to how neutrophils, a natural part of our immune system, detect
is similar to pacemaker cells in the heart, where periodic activity regulates cell behavior.
and move to the site of infection…They share the ability to migrate
In a population of cells, some cells are more sensitive while oth-
in a very directed way to get where they are needed,” said Levchen-
ers are less sensitive. This discrepancy is not visible when averaging
ko. When resources are plentiful, Levchenko’s team found that
the response over the entire population or when examining a single
Dicty are content in remain alone. But when food supplies run
representative cell. By applying the hunger stimulus to cells within
low, they gather into a multicellular slug.
their device, Levchenko’s group found that there is a large differ-
As a slug, he said, “they can move together to find a more favor-
ence across cells in a given population. Some cells did not respond
able location,” said Levchenko. The cell-cell communication that
at all, while others responded very strongly to the same stimulus.
takes place during the transition relies on chemotaxis, which is the
They also found that at higher doses, the majority of cells re-
movement towards or away from a chemical stimulus along a con-
sponded, while at lower doses, smaller numbers of cells responded.
centration gradient. This behavior is similar in mammalian cells,
This indicates that the cells that respond strongly must have some
relevant in both healthy and pathological conditions. Their results,
ability to amplify the signal.
are published in volume 5, issue 213 of Science Signaling.
Differential sensitivity in the cells helps them to organize. Ad-
Levchenko’s team developed a microfluidic pattern generating
aptation allows them to transiently suppress their sensitivity long
device that allows the user to control the environment and stimulus
enough to be able to form a multi-cellular organism. The adaptive
duration in a highly tunable way, while still being able to visualize
and amplification properties of the amoeba resemble what occurs
cells under a microscope. Historically, Levchenko explained, these
in bacterial chemotaxis. The results have implications for the study
types of experiments were done with pipettes, but with the device
of cell decision making versus commitment to behavior within cells
his group was able to perform their experiments with the dynamic
of a given tissue, or different types of cells that work together.
signaling responses consistent with the known behavior of the amoeba. Previously, a mathematical model was developed to explain the
Rezina Siddique is a Ph.D. student in Biomedical Engineering at Johns Hopkins with an M.S. in Nanoscale Science and Engineering.
Spring 2013
9
Research
Pei-Hsun Wu of the Wirtz Lab examining pancreatic cancer cells.
Taking a Digital Perspective on Cancer By Bryan Kohrs
10 Johns Hopkins University Nano-Bio Magazine
Photo by Mary Spiro
Denis Wirtz lines up next to many other scientists in the war on
Over the course of the next five years, Wirtz plans to use HTCP
cancer. But while others battle with familiar technologies and ideas,
analysis as a clinically applicable tool that can help doctors treat
Wirtz has armed himself with a new imaging technology, a fresh
cancer patients with more personalized therapies.
strategy on how to better combat this dreaded disease and a fiveyear grant from the National Cancer Institute (NCI). Wirtz, a professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at
“Currently, we have a very crude approach to therapy even with the targeted therapies that are being developed. The vast majority of patients in cancer care and oncology get what are called cyto-
Johns Hopkins, is carving out a niche for himself in cancer research
toxic agents, the old agents that were made many years ago,” said
by focusing on the look and physical structure of cancerous cells
Maitra. But by using HTCP to see how cancers that look a certain
rather than the genes from which the cells originated. He believes
way respond to certain treatments, doctors will be able to better
that this technology will not only help doctors predict how cancer
personalize cancer treatments.
progresses, but will eventually change the way cancer is treated
To make the project clinically applicable, Wirtz, with the help
from a therapeutic standpoint. The technology is the keystone of
of Maitra and Ralph Hruban, also a professor of Oncology and Pa-
the new Johns Hopkins Center for Digital Pathology, which Wirtz
thology at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine who is collaborating
will direct.
with the team, will be working to create the first “phenotypic da-
To understand how this technology works, consider this analogy:
tabase,” or a cell-feature-focused database. It will combine patient
A cell is like a Lego brick. Just as individual Legos can come
data like age, sex, cancer type, progression, treatment used, genetic
together to create a building, millions of different cells come
sequencing results (analysis of tumor from a genetic standpoint),
together to make a human being. Certain bricks serve different
and so forth in an online, “cloud” database and then also add in
purposes in a building in the same way that distinctive cells carry
the structure score of the patient’s tumor performed from HTCP.
out certain functions in the body. The properties that make some
At the moment, Hopkins is the only university with Wirtz’s new
Legos better suited for one purpose over another are their size and
technology. The plan is for hospitals across the nation to begin
shape. For example, if a piece is flat and wide, it should go on
uploading patient information to the database online and sending
the base. Structural characteristics that make cells unique include
slides of cancer tumor cells to Hopkins or an alternate research
overall size, shape, the size and shape of the different cell parts or
facility using this technology. There, independent researchers will
organelles, the composition of certain organelles, and hundreds of
analyze the cells and add the HTCP analysis to the patient infor-
other parameters.
mation online.
Wirtz’s technology uses a modified scanning electron microscope
Doctors can upload all of this data into the cloud and help
and a process called high-throughput cell phenotyping (HTCP) to
the database grow initially. Eventually, an oncologist in Chicago,
instantly make hundreds of thousands of highly specific measure-
treating a 70-year-old man with lung cancer, and a HTCP score
ments defining each of these structural cellular characteristics
of X will be able to go online and find that there were two similar
of each single cell on a slide. Wirtz has software that uses an
patients, a 65-year-old man with lung cancer in Baltimore and
algorithm that adds up all of the different measurements and gives
a 75-year-old woman with lung cancer in California, both with
a cell a structural “score,” which quantifies the look of the cell with
a score of X as well. The physician would discover that the man
a number. The process will be automated and will take just minutes
in Baltimore was treated with chemotherapy A and died in six
for a slide of cells to be analyzed and given an overall structural
months, while the woman in California was treated with che-
score, which averages the scores of all the cells on the slide.
motherapy B and was cured. Doctors will be able to make more
Anirban Maitra, a professor of Oncology and Pathology at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine who is collaborating with Wirtz on
informed treatment decisions. Classifying the morphological characteristics of cancer is a shift
this project, explains the benefits of automating this process, “If
from the traditional genetic approach to categorizing cancer cells.
you were looking at a cell with the naked eye, you would say it has
Previously, scientists researched cancer from a genetic standpoint,
a large nucleus, medium sized nucleus, or a small nucleus. What
linking specific genetic mutations to specific cases of cancer. While
automation allows you to do is to spread that crude three-tiered
this has lead to gene-targeted therapies, Wirtz wants to take a dif-
category into hundreds of small denominational events that you
ferent approach to cancer research. He wants to look beyond the
could then objectively add up and get a score.”
genetic origin of cancer and focus on what cancerous cells look like.
Spring 2013 11
Research
Pancreatic tissue.
“We’ve come to realize that it is the heterogeneity – the diversity
“Millions of cells are shed by tumors every day, but only one or
of cells that have different characteristics – is also important in
two of them will have what it takes to become metastatic. These
evaluating a cancer case. In the end what matters are the cell prop-
are the decathlon cells. We need to figure out what the physical
erties. That’s what we measure,” Wirtz explained.
properties are that give these cells an edge,” Wirtz says.
The rationale for this new approach, Wirtz explained, is that
Maitra poses the question that guides the project in its appli-
while cells can be identical genetically, they can vary tremendously
cations towards therapeutic cancer treatment, “We have a lot of
in structure, just as two identical twins can develop to be very dif-
different drugs out there right now. Some work, some don’t. The
ferent people, both physically and personally. Cells from one tumor
problem is you only find out if they worked retroactively. You give
could become metastatic, latch onto a new organ, and start a new
it to a patient and six months later the metastasis keeps growing
tumor that eventually kills the patient, while a genetically identical
and you know if it’s worked or not. But wouldn’t it be nice if we
set of cells could remain localized and die as soon as they detach
knew going into the treatment that these patients would respond
from the original tumor.
to a particular regimen and these other patients respond to another
Wirtz’s theory is that the key to cancer treatment prognostication lies not in cancer genetics, but in the physical attributes of
regimen?” Maitra believes that conceptually, this project is paradigm shift-
cancerous cells. For example, you could say that muscle definition
ing. “Wirtz is analyzing cancer in a brand new way. Extending this
and physical fitness would be strongly correlated with athletics and
tool into an open-access cancer database, the project seems to have
would therefore be able to be used to predict who out of twenty
a bright future for helping doctors treat patients.”
people would become athletes. Wirtz believes that his technology will allow doctors to do the same thing with cancer. With this new technology Wirtz hopes to figure out what trig-
Maitra makes sure to keep the project in perspective while being hopeful about the direction of this project, “It is very preliminary at this point. We have a long way to go before we can actually say
gers cancer cells to metastasize. For example, do small, elliptical
this is a clinically applicable technology, but what we are doing
cells with large nuclei metastasize better than large, rod-like cells
right now is working our way up there.”
with small nuclei? He explained that cells that metastasize have to be super-cells, much like super-heroes are better, faster, and stron-
Bryan Kohrs is a junior in Biophysics at Johns Hopkins University
ger than other humans.
with a strong interest in science writing and science.
12 Johns Hopkins University Nano-Bio Magazine
Image by JHMI Pathology
The blood-brain barrier involves functional interactions between endothelial cells that form brain capillaries, astrocytes, and pericytes in a complex microenvironment.
Unlocking the Mysteries of the Blood-Brain Barrier By Mary Spiro
It might astonish you to know that, although we use our brains all
of helping to prevent and even cure neurological diseases, such
the time, science knows very little about how they actually work.
as Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s, that affect as many as 100 million
That is why recently, President Barack Obama announced a $100
Americans.
million initiative to map the human brain. “We can identify galaxies light-years away; we can study particles
Johns Hopkins University is at the forefront of brain science research. The Brain Science Institute (BSi) at the Johns Hopkins
smaller than an atom; but we still haven’t unlocked the mysteries of
School of Medicine was launched to develop new multidisciplinary
the three pounds of matter that sits between our ears,” Obama said
research teams; create cutting edge-research cores for use by all
in a press conference on the announcement April 2.
brain researchers at Hopkins; and foster translation of discoveries
Obama’s Brain Research Through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) project will seek to discover what occurs between the 100 billion cells firing inside the brain with the goal
Illustration by Martin Rietveld
to treatments of brain diseases, in part, by improving our ability to partner with industry and biotechnology. In 2012, Peter Searson, professor of materials science and engi-
Spring 2013 13
Research
neering and director of Johns Hopkins Institute for NanoBioTech-
nately, animal models are insufficient for use in understanding how
nology (INBT), joined forces with Jeffrey Rothstein MD, PhD,
the human blood-brain barrier functions or responds to drugs. In
director of the BSi, to create the Blood-Brain Barrier Working
addition, little is known about how disease, inflammation or stroke
Group. This group brings together researchers with diverse interests
disrupts or damages the blood-brain barrier.”
and expertise to address key problems associated with drug deliv-
With this in mind, the BBB working group has two primary
ery, to discover the role of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) in disease,
goals, Searson explained. “Our long-term goal is to build an arti-
and to elucidate the structure and function of the BBB.
ficial microvessel that will be the first platform that recapitulates
“The blood-brain barrier is a dynamic interface that separates the
a brain capillary in its local microenvironment. This will enable
brain from the circulatory system and protects the central nervous
fundamental studies as well as drug discovery and the development
system from potentially harmful chemicals while, at the same time,
of methods to cross the blood-brain barrier,” Searson said.
regulating transport of essential molecules and maintaining a stable
The second goal is to understand how the blood-brain barrier
environment,” Searson said. “It is formed from highly specialized
can be damaged or disrupted so that strategies can be developed to
endothelial cells that line the brain capillaries, which transduce
repair it. Injury and disease can disrupt the normal structure and
signals in two directions: from the vascular system and from the
function of the blood brain barrier.
brain. The structure and function of the BBB is dependent upon
Currently the BBB Working Group has 40 researchers from
the complex interplay between different cell types, specifically the
disciplines as diverse as anesthesiology, materials science and engi-
endothelial cells, astrocytes and pericytes, within the extracellular
neering, pharmacology and oncology. Three postdoctoral fellows
matrix of the brain and with the blood flow in the capillaries.”
and 12 pre-doctoral students are also involved. The group meets
Although the BBB serves the important purpose of tightly
monthly and hosts expert speakers on various topics. The working
regulating the environment of the brain and preventing sud-
group website also lists current funding opportunities to which
den changes, which the brain cannot tolerate, Searson said, “this
members can apply and conferences and workshops of interest.
interface also blocks the passage of drug molecules to treat disease,
Membership in the working group is open to any student, faculty
neurodegenerative disorders, inflammation or stroke. Unfortu-
member or staff at Johns Hopkins University in any discipline.
14 Johns Hopkins University Nano-Bio Magazine
Illustration by Martin Rietveld
Education
INBT Alumni: Where Are They Now? By Mary Spiro
A mission of Johns Hopkins Institute for
to learn skills outside of their primary
NanoBioTechnology since its founding in 2006 has been to edu-
degree area. They take specially de-
cate the next generation of scientists and engineers to work at the
signed courses such as Nano-Bio Labo-
interface of nanotechnology and medicine. Over the last seven years, INBT has partially funded the graduate educations of seven cohorts of doctoral students (more than 50 students so far) through a variety of nano-bio training programs. These programs have included a National Science Foundation IGERT (Integrative Graduate Education
ratory and Communication for Scientists and Engineers. And each cohort also meets for a weekly journal club, which gives them the opportunity for peer-to-peer training. How do all these added requirements and expanded experiences impact INBT graduates in their
and Research Traineeship), a Howard Hughes Medi-
professional careers. Some of the first INBT trainees are
cal Institution training program, the Cancer Nano-
making their way into the professional realm, so we wanted
technology Training Center and, in the case of one
to find out. To get to the heart of their experience, we asked
student, a partnership with Northrop Grumman.
the graduates several basic questions: What is your current
Usually after four to six years of hard work and the support of their advisors, these students complete
job? What was one of the most important lessons or experiences you had while working as an INBT doctoral trainee?
all their research and educational requirements
What nonacademic benefits did you derive as an INBT
and earn their PhDs. In the case of INBT, stu-
trainee? Some definite themes emerged. Here is what a
dents have two advisors from different depart-
few of them had to say about the benefits of an “INBT-
ments. They rotate working in the laboratories
branded� Johns Hopkins University doctoral degree.
of each of their advisors to offer them the chance
Spring 2013 15
Education
Maureen Wanjare, left, with Lauara Dickinson in the Gerecht Lab.
Laura Dickinson, (PhD, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering) is postdoctoral researcher in the lab of Dr. Nynke Dekker at the Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands. “What I found rewarding was that I was able to do things in the
that is the case for most PhD students, but that is wrong. In the
Nano-Bio Lab, such as making quantum dots, that I wouldn’t
INBT cohort I was a part of, we were a hodgepodge of students
normally have been able to do. The extra requirements, although
from different research areas and departments (computer science,
interesting and very valuable in hindsight, added extra anxiety
chemistry, engineering). Through our weekly meetings, we taught
and stress. What I found most interesting was interacting with
and shared with each other important findings or fundamentals
PhD students that I might not have had the chance to otherwise
from our own fields of research. In the end, it made me realize that
because they were in different departments. When I started my
all our disciplines are interconnected in some way, and that we
PhD, I assumed that during my time at Hopkins I would always
were all just using different methods/technologies to solve the same
be within my small scientific niche, only interacting with those
societal/health problems. I also really enjoyed the chance to live
in my research group, or in very similar fields as my own, because
and work abroad for three months at IMEC in Belgium”.
that would be most beneficial to my specialization. And I believe
16 Johns Hopkins University Nano-Bio Magazine
Photo by Marty Katz
Jacob Koskimaki (PhD, Biomedical Engineering) is a postdoc-
was a really wonderful experience that I had with INBT. Not only
toral research fellow in the Department of Biomedical Engi-
was it academically challenging but interesting. And the personal
neering at the University of Virginia.
interaction with the INBT staff members was great. They are doing
“The INBT training program gave me exposure to course work,
an awesome job!
collaborations and other students outside of my immediate discipline of biomedical engineering. This proved to be a huge asset in planning my dissertation work. In addition, I had expertise in biomedical engineering and bioinformatics that was immediately useful to my collaborators. INBT taught me to read and learn broadly across scientific disciplines, and more importantly to see that as an asset for my professional development as a scientist and engineer. Often the most creative insights and discoveries occur through collaborations at the interface of different disciplines. I have kept in contact with several of my INBT friends and collaborators. We have referred one another to various job postings and prospects that have also widened the possible career choices I will consider after my postdoctoral fellowship. We also received training in effective science writing and communication, even with video. I found in graduate school many students received no formal training in such matters. Without an effective way to communicate the big picture of complex, difficult science, the greater impact is sometimes lost. I hope collaborative, interdisciplinary institutions such as INBT continue to thrive. I found it to be an instrumental part of my growth and development of professional skills at Hopkins.” Stephen Diegelmann
Tommy Tong (PhD, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering) is a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute for Bioengineering of Catalonia (IBEC), Barcelona, Spain. “I had the opportunity to take challenging courses in addition to the ones that are required from our own department. We got to learn subjects ranging from cell biology to material science. It was rewarding to learn from professors who are the experts in their fields. The most important experience that I had was the interaction with my cohort. We met on a regular basis to discuss science and also our personal lives. We basically grew together during those years. In journal club, we would teach each other about our re-
Stephen Diegelmann (PhD, Chemistry) is a postdoc in the polymer engineering department at Case Western Reserve University. Since his contract is nearly complete, he’s actively interviewing for industrial polymer chemist jobs.
search fields and also help each other in many other ways. Through
“I think the best thing I was able to take away from the INBT
INBT, I had professional development training. We were exposed
training program was the interaction with so many other scientific
to useful workshops such as grant writing, job searching skills etc.
backgrounds. We all had very different interests, skill sets, training,
Speakers were invited to share their achievements with us. More-
and even scientific vocabularies, but throughout the four to five
over, there are many gatherings that INBT hosted that also invited
years of classes, labs, and journal club, we all were able to commu-
people from industry, which gave us a perspective that was differ-
nicate and appreciate and learn about everyone’s background. I also
ent from the academic setting. They were not only sharing their
made some good friends and had the opportunity to mentor two
experiences, but also serving as contacts for future job searches. It
summer research interns through the INBT program.”
Photo by Marty Katz
Spring 2013 17
Education
Shyam B. Khatau, (PhD, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering) is a postdoctoral researcher at the Johns Hopkins Physical Sciences-Oncology Center and an intern in Business Development and Strategic Alliances at the Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions. “INBT gave me the opportunity to learn with and from scientists and engineers from all disciplines. Even when the material was over my head, or I didn’t pay attention in class, I was gaining an understanding of science beyond my own. Also, the focus on the bigger
picture was important for (a) shaping my scientific views and (b) staying motivated during grad school. The most important lesson I learned was the value of interdisciplinary teamwork. In terms of non-academic benefits, I have been able to network with peers and industry people. Plus INBT is a cool experience to talk about in interviews. Frankly, I think it should be the only way to learn.” Justin Galloway (PhD, Materials Science and Engineering) has started working for a recently launched start up company called Twistnostics, which was founded by another former INBT affiliate Alfredo Celedon. They are looking to manipulate the unique properties of DNA for biodetection and possible pointof-care diagnostics. “The program gave me lofty ideas about what could and should be accomplished in graduate school. With so many excellent faculty members, postdocs and other graduate students available to collaborate with and seek advice from it made setting lofty goals seem
Shyam Khatau with his advisor Denis Wirtz.
18 Johns Hopkins University Nano-Bio Magazine
attainable. I think it also made these discussions more exciting because ideas from different perspectives often generated unique solutions. Science performed by scientists is often narrow in scope and focus. Different fields often speak totally different languages and the opportunity for collaboration is often lost in the disconnect. Doing graduate work in both a biology lab and material science really made me appreciate how important it is just learning to communicate. I think the people I met were the best benefit of INBT. Interacting with people from the medical school and other engineering and natural science disciplines was a unique experience that I think more graduate students should have. INBT participated in the USA Science and Engineering Festival in 2010 on the National Mall. We interacted with a lot of kids, and it was exciting to see how excited these kids were doing simple science experi-
Janice Lin
ments. Likewise, I think INBT let me be a little kid for a few years and do fun and exciting cutting edge science.
Janice Lin (PhD, Materials Science and Engineering) works as a senior engineer for Becton Dickinson. She is currently at BD Biosciences in San Jose, Calif., but spent the last two years at BD Medical in Sandy, Utah. “I didn’t feel that the program made anything challenging, rather it gave me the opportunity to see what other students in other departments were doing. I really liked learning about that because it opened up doors for potential collaborations, but also just simply provided me more exposure to the different types of research being conducted. Just having two professors’ inputs and opinions on how research should be conducted and writing papers alongside them was invaluable. Everybody has a different take on it, but working with two professors with excellent publications records and seeing how they approach research (however differently) was something I greatly appreciated. As for nonacademic benefits: extra money for supplies? Sorry, but seeing the wealth of free Apple laptops surely made other grad students envious. There really wasn’t that much more work associated with being in INBT, certainly for me nothing to complain about. I thought the extra courses were interesting and sometimes really fun (the video course!).
sends Read more INBT alumni profiles online at http://inbt.jhu.edu/education/alumni/
Photos by Marty Katz
Spring 2013 19
Education
International Researchers Blog About Adventures in Belgium By Mary Spiro
Each summer, Johns Hopkins Institute for NanoBioTechnology
devices. Internships can last a few weeks to a couple of months
supports research internships abroad and what better way for those
depending on the project. Participants spend plenty of time in the
touring scientists and engineers to keep in touch with colleagues
lab, but they also have many opportunities to explore Belgium
back home than with a blog.
and the neighboring countries, such as England and France. Their
INBT’s International Research Experience for Students (IRES) program, funded by the National Science Foundation, sends students to work with researchers at The Inter-University Mircro-
adventures are featured on the blog INBT’s Summer at IMEC Research Program, http://inbt-summer-at-imec.blogspot.com/ During the summer of 2012, five students from Johns Hopkins
Electronics Centre (IMEC) in Leuven, Belgium. Students conduct
conducted research at IMEC. Gregg Duncan, a doctoral student
experiments at IMEC’s world-class microfabrication facility and
in the lab of Michael Bevan, associate professor of chemical and
learn to design, fabricate and test a wide range of biomedical
biomolecular engineering, used dark field microscopy to quantify nanoparticle-cell interactions. Colin Paul, doctoral student in the lab of Konstantinos Konstantopoulos, professor and chair of the Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, brought cell migration devices fabricated in the Konstantopoulos lab to IMEC to perform proof-of-concept experiments with Nicolas Barbera, a rising senior working in the same lab. Barbera gained skills in fluorescence microscopy, dark field microscopy and hyperspectral imaging. Sarah Friedrich, a doctoral student from the laboratory of Andre Levchenko, professor of biomedical engineering, worked on a plat-form that could expose cells to both chemical and topographical stimulation at the same time. And Peter Nelson, a rising sophomore working in the lab of Jordan Green, assistant professor of biomedical engineering, was developing a polymer-nanoparticle with the ability to apply hyperthermia (heat) and chemotherapy treatments. They also hit the beach, toured museums, sampled international cuisine, road bikes and bought waffles from vending machines. You know you are in Belgium when waffles are served fast food style. Now what did you do on your summer vacation?
20 Johns Hopkins University Nano-Bio Magazine
Outreach
Christopher Miller, left, with his mentor Hoku West-Foyle.
Internships Thwart Summer “Brain Drain” By Mary Spiro
For most teenagers, finding a summer job is almost a rite of pas-
The Summer Academic Research Experience (SARE) program,
sage into adulthood. It’s a chance to learn responsibility and time
an opportunity funded in part by Johns Hopkins Institute for
management and practice how to get along with coworkers. It also
NanoBioTechnology and the School of Medicine, trains students
helps earn money for college or fun. A group of specially selected
from “disadvantaged” homes throughout the state. Some students
teens, however, were able to take the concept of the summer job a
may have a parent in prison or struggling with addiction. Others
step further as summer research scholars in Johns Hopkins Univer-
may face extreme financial hardship or even have been homeless.
sity laboratories.
Photo by Mary Spiro
Spring 2013 21
Outreach
SARE scholars have a chance to overcome obstacles to academic
learning curve is steep. But with mentoring from graduate students
success by working in academia under the guidance of a mentor.
and postdoctoral fellows, the scholars find their way. At the end of
They improve their writing and mathematics skills through tutor-
the summer, the scholars present their findings in a poster session
ing. And they learn how to keep good laboratory records, how to
for their peers, faculty and staff.
follow safety protocols, and how to make a professional presentation.
“At the beginning of the summer, I didn’t know what the heck
“This is way better than flipping burgers,” exclaimed Stephanie
I was talking about, but now I get it!” laughed Christopher Miller,
Keyaka, as she prepared an image of a Western Blot performed on
a tenth grader from The SEED School. Miller studied the motor
Drosophila eye genes. Keyaka is a tenth grader from The SEED
protein myosin in the Robinson lab.
School of Maryland, the state’s only public boarding school. She
Miller’s mentor, cell biology doctoral student Hoku West-Foyle,
studied rhodopsin in the eyes of flies in the lab of professor Craig
said working with students during the summer helps to re-energize
Montell during the summer of 2012.
the lab. “At first, it is a bit of extra work, but it gives you teaching
SARE, launched in 2009 through a collaboration between
experience, and when you are explaining your project to other
INBT and School of Medicine cell biology associate professor
people, it helps to reinforce why the larger research question matters.
Doug Robinson, recruits students from the private nonprofit Boys
It fires you up to work harder,” West-Foyle said.
Hope Girls Hope of Baltimore, from The SEED School, and now
Shaolin Holloman, an eleventh grader at Baltimore Polytechnic
also from The Crossroads School, operated by the nonprofit Living
Institute and Girls Hope scholar, worked in the cell biology lab of
Classrooms Foundation. While the partnership with Boys Hope
professor Carolyn Machamer. Her project sought to understand why
Girls Hope has been in place from the beginning, working with
the SARS coronavirus localizes to the Golgi apparatus of the cell.
The SEED School and The Crossroads School has expanded the
“I liked the work experience because we actually got to do hands-
potential pool of qualified and interested applicants. “Expanding
on experiments,” said Hollomon, who hopes to become an ortho-
the applicant pool makes the program more competitive, which
pedic surgeon. “The biggest challenge for me was to keep up with
is a worthwhile experience—to have to compete for something,”
my weekly essays, my summer reading and the work in the lab.”
Robinson said.
Robinson hopes the program can become self-sustaining and
During their time at Hopkins, each SARE scholar focuses on a
even scalable to accept more students. “We are at a juncture where
mini research project that advances the larger goals of the lab where
we are seeking additional funding, so we are systematically assess-
they are placed. No prior laboratory work is expected, and the
ing our impact,” Robinson said. One would judge that the SARE program’s impact is significant, since all five alumni who have graduated from high school, or who will do so this spring, have
Shaolin Holloman with Carolyn Machamer.
gone on to university, Robinson reported. Two students have declared biology as their major and the other three still in high school are interested in science, technology, mathematics or health-related disciplines. Five new scholars will join SARE this summer. Khalek Kirkland, The SEED School headmaster said summer internships of this kind are important to help keep students motivated and on track academically. “We do believe in the ‘summer brain drain,’ in that students do lose something over the summer,” Kirkland explained. “Doug and I are in talks about writing a grant together to expand the program not only to SEED School students, but to additional students as well.” Anyone with interest in supporting the efforts of the SARE program can contact Robinson via email a drobin15@jhmi.edu.
22 Johns Hopkins University Nano-Bio Magazine
Charli Dawidczyk helping students attach magnets to their foam plate speakers.
Mentors Model Academic Pathway By Colin Paul
When I was in high school, I had an inspiring chemistry teacher.
magazine of the School of Advanced International Studies, Hop-
He was funny, he rewarded hard work, and he let us light salt fires
kins president Ron Daniels stated the need for Hopkins to help
in paths around the soapstone lab benches in his classroom. He
revitalize Baltimore and outlined some of the initiatives to do so.
stayed after school to help my twin brother and me build a “ChemE
Faculty, staff, and trainees at Johns Hopkins Institute for Nano-
Car” that used a chemical reaction to stop after a given distance,
BioTechnology (INBT) are challenged to become more involved
and we placed second in a competition for local high schools held
in mentoring pre-college students. Recently, INBT partnered with
by the University of Tulsa. He made the subject interesting, and his
the Incentive Mentoring Program (IMP) to hold a “Science Day”
passion for it was contagious.
for students at the Academy for College and Career Exploration
Before taking his class, I wasn’t sure what I wanted to study in college. But as the year progressed, his mentorship helped me decide to pursue chemical engineering, and I’m still doing that as a graduate student at Johns Hopkins University. As a scientist, I hope I can inspire others to consider a career in
(ACCE), a Baltimore high school near the Hopkins Homewood campus. IMP, founded in 2004 by Hopkins biomedical engineering graduate Sarah Hemminger, pairs mentors with underperforming Baltimore city high school students who were at risk of not
science. Mentorship is particularly important to underrepresented
graduating. The program has grown to incorporate several hundred
groups in the sciences, such as minorities or women. It’s so important
volunteers from the East Baltimore and Homewood Hopkins cam-
that the National Institutes of Health supports science education and
puses. IMP provides comprehensive mentoring and tutoring
outreach through its Office of Science Education, and the National
to enrolled students, offering educational, legal, and career support
Science Foundation has made it a goal “to expand efforts to increase
to the students and their families. IMP is not merely a tutor-
participation from underrepresented groups and diverse institutions
ing program in which volunteers help students with homework.
throughout the United States in all NSF activities and programs.”
Instead, it provides students with the social support they may
Johns Hopkins University is also increasingly leading efforts to improve Baltimore communities. In an editorial published in the
Photo by Mary Spiro
otherwise lack. Teams of five to six mentors are assigned to each student, and these mentors coalesce into an extended family
Spring 2013 23
Outreach
around the student, many of whom come from environments
liquid ice cream mix. The students made excellent chefs and were
where even graduating from high school is an obstacle. So far,
excited to see water vapor roil over the lip of the bowl as liquid
all of the students enrolled in IMP have earned their high school
nitrogen was stirred in to freeze the cream. The recipe got several
diplomas or equivalent degree.
thumbs up, and the demonstration really held their attention.
As IMP grew, students from the laboratories of INBT-affiliated
I hope the students saw how science comes up in everyday life,
faculty members Peter Searson, Konstantinos Konstantopoulos,
even in things we don’t always think about, like music and cooking.
Hai-Quan Mao, Justin Hanes, and Andre Levchenko started
By having fun and doing experiments with their mentors and
to get involved. INBT sought to unite the groups for an event to
friends, they may realize that a career in science is an option for them.
encourage science education among the IMP students. The idea
In many ways, IMP is an experiment on how to provide extended
to hold a joint event came from Andrew Wong of the Searson lab,
families for at-risk students. Problems are tackled on a trial-and-
an INBT trainee who has been instrumental in IMP’s community
error basis by volunteers from a variety of backgrounds. Often,
Colin Paul, center, watches students making ice cream with liquid nitrogen.
service activities. I led the event, held on February 27, with Charli
an initial solution does not work; but, just like in the lab, we think
Dawidczyk, a doctoral student from the Searson lab.
about what went wrong and try to improve our approach. The
Our first activity was to build a simple speaker using foam
PIs at INBT have encouraged us to make a difference in the com-
plates, magnets, and wire. Students learned how electromagnetic
munity. I’m grateful that my education at Hopkins has included
forces, whose strength and frequency vary depending on the song,
IMP and the wonderful students and volunteers comprising
deflect the foam plate to create sound waves when the plate is glued
the organization.
to a magnet with a coil of wire around it. The speakers weren’t loud, but everyone participated, even though they might have been
Colin Paul is a third-year graduate student at Johns Hopkins Uni-
more interested in the strong neodymium magnets.
versity in the Konstantopoulos lab. He invites anyone with questions
Next, we moved from physics to chemistry and made liquid nitrogen ice cream. We discussed how liquid nitrogen boils at -321°F, much colder than water, and how it would very quickly freeze our
24 Johns Hopkins University Nano-Bio Magazine
about or interest in the Incentive Mentoring Program to contact him at colin.paul@incentivementoringprogram.org.
Bringing Hopkins Solutions to the World By Mary Spiro
Global Engineering
“We had to answer
Innovation, a program
many questions,” said
sponsored in part by
biomedical engineering
Johns Hopkins Institute
senior Tobechukwu Madu.
for NanoBioTechnology,
“Are the people going
sent engineering teams to
to be able to afford this?
develop solutions to local
What shape is the device
problems in Tanzania and
going to take in order to
India during the summer
fit with other GCS products?
of 2012. INBT affiliated
We noticed that something
faculty member Jennifer
as seemingly easy as fitting
Elisseeff, professor of
an already assembled mill
biomedical engineering at
to a bike wasn’t easy! We
the School of Medicine, initiated the project to give
spent a week and still
The Cooling Cure lowers a baby's body temperature to prevent brain damage.
students international outreach experience. The teams learned to
couldn’t get it to work.”
Materials science and engineering master’s student Cem Onat
establish budgets, develop time lines and create project plans for
Yilmaz wrote of the team’s experience in an article for Epidemic
specific challenges.
Proportions, a publication of the Bloomberg School of Public
The team that went to Arusha, Tanzania continued the work
Health. Typically, female villagers haul their corn to millers in cen-
from INBT’s pilot engineering missions program started in the
tralized regions. With a bicycle-powered device, however, milling
summer of 2011. The goal of the Tanzanian project was to build
could be done closer to home.
a bicycle-powered corn mill that would produce flour suitable for
“A bike-attached corn sheller, unlike its diesel-operated coun-
the region’s traditional food staple—a dish called ugali. The previ-
terpart can reach out to them. With less cost to maintain and
ous year, pilot project team members built the device with locally
mobilize the machinery, processing 10-15 bags of corn with the
obtainable materials.
bike attachment becomes economically profitable for the entrepre-
Participants in the 2012 phase refined the design of the mill and
neur running the operation. This service increases the quality of
worked on a plan for mass production and commercialization by
life for farmers (and without industrial agriculture practices most
collaborating with a company called Global Cycle Solutions (GCS)
of the population is indeed dependent on their land and farming
founded by MIT graduate Jodie Wu. GCS seeks ways to incorpo-
practices) and helps reduce the need for regular trips to the town
rate bicycle or solar power into a variety of mechanical devices. The
center, saving money and CO2 emissions at the same time,”
team supported by INBT faced plenty of challenges while refining
Yilmaz wrote.
the prototype.
Photo by Will Kirk/Homewood photography.
Spring 2013 25
Outreach
Bernard Kiwia, center, and Onat Yilmaz, right, testing out a corn grinding prototype.
The bicycle-operated device also increased “women’s empower-
engineering. “The devices were selected through an earlier class-
ment,” he reported, because women, who are primarily responsible
room competition held in a biomedical engineering course taught
for grinding the corn, would not have to leave their families
by Nitish Thakor.”
and children to visit the mechanized miller. The continued goal
One device that emerged from the competition aimed to prevent
of this project, Yilmaz said, is to make the innovations available
sleep apnea in pre-term babies. The other innovation cools infants
in an “open source” platform where others could contribute ideas
deprived of oxygen at birth to prevent neurological damage.
and improvements. In this way, he explained, the project would
With regard to the latter device, Freddy Espinoza, a biomedical
not lose traction from year to year when a new group of students
engineering doctoral student explained: “Preterm babies experience
arrived to work on it.
a shock to their brain, that continues due to a lack of oxygen. To
The team who travelled to Pune, India was part of a 4-week course called Medical Design Initiatives offered through the School of Medicine in collaboration with faculty from the medical school,
stop the chemical reaction that damages the brain cells, you must cool the baby’s body down three degrees for three days.” The Cooling Cure, Espinoza said, costs just $40 (as compared
the Bloomberg School of Public Health and from the host site in
to a $12,000 device used in Western hospitals) and is comprised of
India. The first two weeks of the course were held at Johns Hopkins
easy to find materials: a clay pot, plastic-lined burlap basket, sand,
and included lectures from a variety of Hopkins faculty and staff
the powder from an instant ice pack, a temperature sensor and two
from the Center for Bioengineering Innovation and Design, Johns
AAA batteries.
Hopkins Technology Transfer and other departments. Students also
“These devices need to go through more prototype development
visited with Hopkins clinicians. The final two weeks of the course
and patenting and then clinical trials, and hopefully eventually
were spent visiting clinics in India. The course attracted students
marketing,” Kut added.
from the undergraduate to the doctoral level in the Carey Business School, Whiting School of Engineering and School of Medicine. “A total of 10 students from the 15-member class travelled to India to further develop two devices designed specifically for pre-
INBT hopes to continue supporting Global Engineering Innovation projects but needs sponsors willing to make that happen. Anyone with an interest in supporting GEI should contact Sue Porterfield at sporterfield@jhu.edu.
mature infants,” said Carmen Kut, a doctoral student in biomedical
26 Johns Hopkins University Nano-Bio Magazine
Photo courtesy Onat Yilmaz
Partnerships
Surmounting the Challenges of Commercializing Technology By Mary Spiro
You have an idea that you think everyone can benefit from. The
Many INBT affiliated faculty have filed patents for their work.
challenge is bringing that idea to life: from the concept in your
Some have gone the next step to try to commercialize that technol-
head to a prototype to an actual product on the shelf. Add to this
ogy. We spoke to two faculty currently involved in the commercial-
the government regulations of drugs and devices used on humans
ization of their work.
and the problem becomes more complex. How does a good idea ever make it to market anyway? In the 2011 issue of Nano-Bio Magazine, Benjamin Gibbs from
Justin Hanes, an invited speaker at the 2013 symposium, is the Lewis J. Ort Family Professor and the director of the Center for Nanomedicine at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
Johns Hopkins Technology Transfer outlined some of the typi-
He holds faculty appointments in biomedical engineering, chemi-
cal steps in bringing a new idea to the market place. These steps
cal and biomolecular engineering, environmental health sciences,
include protecting your idea, submitting your invention disclosure
neurosurgery, and oncology and holds a primary appointment in
to Technology Transfer so that they can file a provisional patent
ophthalmology. He is also the founder and a member of the board
and devise a plan for presenting your patent. Technology Transfer
of directors for Kala Pharmaceuticals, a company commercializing
will also survey current literature related to your patent and seek
a nanotechnology –the mucus-penetrating nanoparticle. Hanes
out potential commercial partners for your idea. The goal, he
is also the founder, CEO and chair of the board of directors for
explained, is to take your “esoteric idea” and develop it to the point
GrayBug, a private company specializing in the development of
where you have a “fully functional prototype and prove it works.”
advanced drug delivery systems for the treatment of diseases that
Eventually and with some luck, the prototype will become the
affect vision.
blueprint for something that will go into mass production. All these steps can take years, and most do not progress in
Hai-Quan Mao, an invited speaker at the 2012 symposium, is an associate professor of materials science and engineering at Johns
a linear fashion. And in the highly competitive realm of medi-
Hopkins University. He currently holds a joint appointment in
cal research, it can sometimes be a race to file a patent first on
the Translational Tissue Engineering Center at the Johns Hopkins
something truly innovative. The theme of the seventh annual
School of Medicine. Mao’s research centers on engineering a novel
Johns Hopkins Institute for NanoBioTechnology symposium
nano-structure material for nerve regeneration and therapeutic
was “Translating the Promise of Nanoscience from Laboratory to
delivery. He has received the Cygnus Award for Outstanding Work
Development.” Speakers came from industry and the university to
in Drug Delivery from the Controlled Release Society and the
share their expertise in all levels of transferring technology from
Capsugel Award for Outstanding Research in Innovative Aspects of
the laboratory bench to the bedside for the benefit of society. The
Controlled Drug Release.
symposium also included an hour-long interactive discussion with the keynote speaker Justin Klein, a partner at the venture capital
We asked them each a few questions about their challenges and triumphs in the commercialization of technology.
firm NEA.
Spring 2013 27
In a few sentences, can you explain some of the technologies
What were some of the roadblocks you have encountered along
that you are trying to commercialize?
they way?
Mao: We have two or three technologies. Some are licensed out;
Mao: Truly novel technology will take time to develop a prototype
some in the process; and some are still in the pipeline. For example,
application; yet without a prototype, it is very hard to license. For
one technology is a nano fiber matrix for ex vivo expansion of
nanoparticle delivery systems, the bias in the field is overwhelming.
hematopoietic stem cells. It provides a more efficient method to derive a larger number of blood stem cells from cord-blood or from
What have been the rewards you have realized along the way?
bone marrow donor cells. It has been licensed to Arteriocyte -- they
Hanes: My activities with commercial entities have been highly
are marketing it as NANEX matrix now as a research product
synergistic with my academic mission. There is great reward in the
and developing a scale up product for clinical expansion. We have
excitement of working on potential therapies that could greatly
another technology in the process of commercialization. This
improve the quality of life for millions of people. The relationships
technology is a method to prepare hydrogel fibers with internal
that I have made with students, fellows, colleagues, members of the
“nano fibrous� alignment. This matrix offers the same advantage as
Hopkins community who have been incredibly helpful, company
a hydrogel 3D culture scaffold, as well as the alignment guidance of
co-founders, advisors, and investors, and many others is highly re-
an aligned nanofiber matrix. This is an early platform technology.
warding. I discovered that working through the challenges inherent
More development of a prototype product is under way.
with commercialization of a nanotechnology provides experiences and connections that greatly improve my overall approach to my work.
Hanes: Together with Peter Campochiaro, Jie Fu and Peter McDonnell, we have developed two platform technologies for drug
Mao: There is no better reward to our research than to have a
delivery to treat diseases that affect vision. The technologies use
technology realized in the market to benefit patients.
biodegradable plastics (polymers) to encapsulate drug molecules into nanoparticles or microparticles and then slowly release them
What general advice would you give to scientists, engineers or
over time in a controlled way. We have demonstrated efficacy with
clinicians attempting to commercialize a new technology?
multiple drugs in animal models of various eye diseases, including
Mao: Think about a prototype!
age-related macular degeneration and glaucoma. Hanes: There are a few critical considerations for anyone wishing What has been the timeline for this project? That is, how long
to embark on the road to commercialization. Does your prod-
as it been from initial idea to the current status?
uct address an unmet need, or create a new market? If so, strong
Mao: For the hematopoietic stem cells expansion matrix project,
patents are needed. Do not disclose prematurely. Do a thorough
it took about seven years since the initial study to the licensing. For
analysis of competition before getting too deep. Commercializing a
hydrogel fiber scaffold, we have been working on it for two years,
technology can be a worthwhile effort, but it is difficult and time-
and preparing the first publication.
consuming. You want to wait for the right opportunity so that you do not waste your time or investor money (and risk harming your
Hanes: That is a difficult question, because things we had worked
credibility for raising funding for your next idea). Is your technol-
on for years in a tangential way were critical to the relatively rapid
ogy/solution a breakthrough? If not, will there be something better
success we have had with these specific projects over the past two
on the market by the time your product is ready/approved? Is your
to three years. GrayBug has been founded to develop these products.
technology scalable to meet demand? Can it be easily manufactured?
The company’s lead product, a long-lasting treatment for age-
Will it be competitively priced while still allowing for a healthy
related macular degeneration that has an improved mechanism of
profit for the company? Assuming things go reasonably well, how
action, is in preclinical studies. We expect to initiate clinical trials
long will it be before the product is on the market? How much
in about two years.
money will you need to raise between now and then? Based on this analysis, is your technology mature enough to commercialize now? And most importantly: get help from people who have done it successfully before.
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