From: Rachel Christofel [rchristo@mailer.fsu.edu]
Sent:
Monday, April 23, 2007 10:04 AM
Subject: NEWS RELEASE: FSU
RESEARCHER'S AWARD WILL FUND STUDY INTO CARDIOVASCULAR GRAFTS
CONTACT: Teng Ma
(850) 410-6558; teng@eng.fsu.edu
By Barry
Ray
April 2007
FSU RESEARCHER'S AWARD WILL FUND STUDY INTO CARDIOVASCULAR
GRAFTS
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- A Florida State University researcher who is
developing methods for regenerating blood vessels damaged by secondhand tobacco
smoke has received a fellowship award that could provide as much as $450,000
over five years for her to pursue new scientific approaches.
Feng Zhao, a
postdoctoral researcher in the Florida A&M University-Florida State
University College of Engineering, was selected by the Flight Attendant Medical
Research Institute (FAMRI) to receive a 2006-2007 FAMRI Young Clinical Scientist
Award. The award, which is designed to support young scientists as they
transition into independent research careers, will provide Zhao with two years
of fellowship support at the rate of $75,000 per year. If she obtains a
university faculty appointment during that time, she will be eligible to receive
up to three years of additional funding at $100,000 per year.
A postdoctoral researcher at the FAMU-FSU College of Engineering since
2003, Zhao's main area of research is tissue engineering - the creation of
synthetic or natural materials that can be used to replace part of a living
system or to function alongside living tissue within the human body. For the
project that is being funded by FAMRI, she is focused on addressing
cardiovascular diseases caused by secondhand smoke.
"Tobacco is the
leading cause of preventable death worldwide - and the cardiovascular effects of
secondhand smoke are nearly as large as those of smoking," Zhao said.
"Secondhand smoke increases the risk of coronary heart disease by 30 percent and
causes an estimated 35,000 deaths each year in the United States."
For
the FAMRI study, Zhao seeks to construct small-diameter blood vessels
in a
laboratory setting that will mimic the elasticity and other biological
characteristics of living blood vessels but that won't be rejected by the body
after being implanted. The blood vessels themselves will be constructed from
chitosan, a naturally occurring polymer, and gelatin, a denatured, naturally
occurring protein.
"Once the blood-vessel scaffolds are constructed, they
will be immersed in a solution that contains human mesenchymal, or adult, stem
cells," Zhao said. "The stem cells then will be stimulated to produce a
substance known as an extracellular matrix, or ECM, which will coat and be used
by the blood vessels. This ECM is found in living blood vessels and will enable
the artificial ones to behave more like living tissue when grafted into the
body."
Although researchers have had some success in engineering larger
blood vessels for implantation, small-diameter blood vessels such as the ones
proposed by Zhao posed special challenges. For that reason, there is a pressing
need for new technological approaches that can produce them quickly and in
greater quantities.
"Vascular grafts are needed by thousands of patients
who undergo bypass surgery every year," said Teng Ma, an FSU associate professor
of biomedical engineering who supervises Zhao's research. "Small-diameter blood
vessel regeneration is especially challenging due to the intricate biological
requirements. Dr. Zhao is a gifted junior researcher who has developed a strong
background in biomaterials, bioreactor research and vascular tissue engineering.
FAMRI's Young Clinical Scientist Award will not only promote Dr. Zhao's career
but also will lead to the development of an important technology to fight
cardiovascular disease."
Zhao will receive the award at FAMRI's Sixth
Scientific Symposium, taking place in Miami on May 14-16.
According to
its Web site (www.famri.org), FAMRI "honors flight attendants who have dedicated
their lives to make air travel healthy and safe since its inception, especially
the advocates for smoke-free cabins. FAMRI salutes flight attendants worldwide,
and remembers those who have given their lives for safer skies."
###
--
Rachel Christofel
Information Specialist
News and Public Affairs
Office
Florida State University
114 Westcott Building
Tallahassee, FL
32306-1430
TEL: (850) 644-4030
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