August
19,
2005
W.M.
Keck Foundation Gift Advances Biology-Liquid Crystal Research at Kent
State University
Scientists at Kent
State University are poised to take biological research to a new level,
thanks to a grant of $860,000 from the W.
M. Keck Foundation, a recognized pioneer in supporting leading-edge
advancements in medical research, science and engineering. This is
the third endorsement by the Keck Foundation received by Kent State
and will be directed to the study of a new class of matter that bridges
biological and liquid crystal research—biologically relevant
liquid crystals.
The multi-disciplinary study, conducted by the Department of Biological
Sciences in collaboration with the Glenn H. Brown Liquid Crystal
Institute (LCI), focuses on biological applications of lyotropic
chromonic liquid crystals (LCLCs), which, unlike the liquid crystals
used in displays, are compatible with living cells. The study of
LCLCs started with the goal of developing new types of optical
elements such as polarizing and compensating films. Recent advances
could result in further development of new technologies such as
biological sensors and drug delivery systems.
The funded area of study builds upon the works of Associate Professor
of Biological Sciences Dr. Christopher Woolverton and Dr. Oleg
Lavrentovich, LCI director and professor of chemical physics. Woolverton
and Lavrentovich have been collaborating on the use of LCLCs for
the last few years, publishing and presenting their results internationally.
The Keck Foundation funds will make possible the purchase of a
suite of equipment essential for a deeper study of this versatile
class of liquid crystals. The equipment will permit Woolverton,
Lavrentovich and their students to examine nanometer scale interactions
between LCLC living cells, DNA and proteins, to reveal new information
about biological systems that have liquid crystalline properties.
“Liquid crystals represent the fourth phase of matter,” said
Woolverton. “The Keck Foundation grant will facilitate research
on the physical and chemical properties of LCLCs, a crucial first
step in understanding the liquid crystalline nature of biological
systems and designing LCLC materials with predictable and controllable
properties.”
Because of their compatibility with living cells, LCLCs can be
used to detect harmful pathogens and microbes of the kind used
in biological warfare. Woolverton and Lavrentovich already have
translated bench research into prototyped devices for real-time
microbial detection. Their ongoing efforts also have produced applications
where LCLCs are used for controlled drug delivery and reporting
agents of certain biological activities.
Certain organic materials exhibit the liquid crystalline state
as they transition between the solid and the liquid states, known
as mesophases. Though liquid crystals are best known for their
application in displays, they also are an essential part of all
life. Liquid crystals in organisms include the amphiphilic lipids
of cellular membranes, the DNA in chromosomes, all proteins, especially
cytoskeletal proteins, muscle proteins, collagens and proteoglycans
of connective tissues. These adopt a multiplicity of mesophases
that may be crucial for biological structure and function at all
levels of organization, from processing metabolites in the cell
to pattern determination in development, as well as the coordinated
locomotion of whole organisms.
Serious scientific inquiry evaluating the relationship between
liquid crystal properties and biological function began in the
1970s but was abandoned in favor of emerging research and economic
opportunities presented by liquid crystal displays and their technologies.
“Kent State is poised to become a leader in the study of
biologically relevant research on many fronts because of its success
in developing a multidisciplinary research approach in the hard
sciences,” said Kent State President Dr. Carol A. Cartwright. “We
are delighted to have the backing of the W.M. Keck Foundation,
whose reputation for investing in innovative and emerging research
makes it an excellent partner at this early and critical juncture
in this important, emerging field.”
Founded in 1910 as a
teaching school, today Kent State University is Ohio’s second largest public university, and the largest
residential university in Northeast Ohio. Serving more than 35,000
students and offering more than 272 academic programs at the associate,
baccalaureate, master’s and doctoral levels, Kent State ranks
among the top 90 public universities in the country, an elite group
of the nation’s nearly 3,900 colleges and universities, according
to the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.
Based in Los Angeles, the W. M. Keck Foundation was established
in 1954 by the late W. M. Keck, founder of the Superior Oil Company.
The foundation also maintains a program to support undergraduate
science and humanities education and a Southern California Grant
Program that provides support in the areas of health care, civic
and community services, education and the arts, with a special
emphasis on children.
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Contact:
Lisa Lambert
330.672.8514
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