University of Southern California Mork Family Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science The USC Andrew and Erna Viterbi School of Engineering USC
Sitemap  |  Contact Us
Spitzer Lecture Series

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

NanoSystems Biology and New Technologies for in vitro and in vivo Diagnostics of Cancer


Professor James R. Heath
The California Institute of Technology Department of Chemistry
MC 127-72 Pasadena, CA


Abstract

The emerging world of personalized, preventative, predictive, and participatory (P4) medicine will likely be enabled by the developing field of systems biology. Systems biology and P4 medicine both data driven and, accordingly, both require new tools for making large numbers of measurements rapidly, quantitatively, and inexpensively. Microfluidics, chemical, and nanotechnologies will revolutionize our ability to generate comprehensive data sets that span from individual cells to patients, and will allow us to build multiparameter analysis tools (quantitating genes, proteins, and cells) for achieving an informative in vitro disease diagnosis, as well as in vivo molecular imaging probes for spatially localizing specific diseases. Using cancer as a theme, I will describe the state-of-the-art in terms of network models of human diseases, and I will describe how those models may be harnessed for information that can impact clinical care of cancer. I will then describe a suite of in vitro and in vivo multiparameter diagnostics technologies that we are developing in my lab in concert with other groups, in the context of both near term and far term applications.


About the Speaker
Professor James Heath is the Elizabeth W. Gilloon Professor and Professor of Chemistry at Caltech, Professor of Molecular & Medical Pharmacology at UCLA, and Director of the National Cancer Institute's NanoSystems Biology Cancer Center. Heath received his Ph.D. in Chemistry in 1988 from Rice, where he was the principal student involved in the Nobel Prize–winning discovery of C60 and the fullerenes. He was a Miller Fellow at UC Berkeley from 1988-91, and on the Technical Staff at IBM Watson Labs from 1991-94. In 1994 he joined the faculty at UCLA. He founded the California NanoSystems Institute in 2000 and served as its Director until moving to Caltech. Heath has investigated quantum phase transitions in quantum-dot designed materials, and he has developed architectures, devices, and circuits for molecular electronics. His group has recently been applying their nano/molecular electronics work toward addressing problems in cancer. He has received a number of awards, including a Public Service Commendation from Governor Grey Davis, the Feynman Prize, the Raymond and Beverly Sackler Prize in the Physical Sciences (Israel), and the Spiers Medal from the Royal Society (U.K.)