Three
UCLA Engineering Faculty Win National Science Foundation 2008
Faculty Early Career Development Awards

2008 NSF CAREER AWARD Winners: Tatiana Segura,
William Klug and Eric Chiou
Three faculty members at the UCLA
Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science have
won the highly competitive and prestigious National Science
Foundation’s 2008 Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER)
award. The award, among the highest of honors for young faculty,
recognizes the dual commitment of scholarship and education.
The three this year are now among 18 UCLA Engineering faculty
who have won CAREER awards in the past five years.
Tatiana Segura, assistant professor
of chemical and biomolecular engineering, Eric Pei-Yu Chiou
and William Klug, both assistant professors of mechanical and
aerospace engineering each received $400,000 in funding for
support of their research over a five-year period.
Segura will design “Hydrogels
for Matrix-Tethered Gene Delivery.” Chiou will develop
a “Massively Parallel Light-Driven Droplet Manipulation
Platform for Large Scale Multiplexed Single Cell Analysis,”
and Klug will look at “Membrane-Protein Interactions and
the Mechanics of Cell Organelles.”
“We are extraordinarily pleased
that Tatiana, Eric and Bill were honored this year by the National
Science Foundation,” said Vijay K. Dhir, dean of the school.
“We take great pride in our young faculty and in knowing
that the research these three are conducting could one day lead
to the enhanced treatment of diseases for the medical community.”
Using a matrix tethered gene delivery
approach, Segura will focus on engineering DNA containing hydrogel
materials that have specific mechanical properties, bio-adhesive
properties and degradation rates to allow for cellular infiltration
and achieve temporally controlled gene transfer. These genes
would allow the cell itself to produce specific proteins needed
at specific stages to aid in the formation and replacement of
functional tissue and allow for the treatment of hard to heal
wounds like ulcers or those found in diabetic patients.
Regulated delivery of multiple
bioactive signals has a broad impact on biomedical and bioengineering
research because it will provide tools to investigate how multiple
bioactive factors act in concert in a particular system and
help to determine what particular combinations and release dynamics
results in a desired effect.
Chiou will design and fabricate
a device based on a novel floating electrode optoelectronic
tweezers (FEOET) mechanism that allows for the use of direct
optical images to control liquid droplets suspended in an oil
environment. The oil is required to prevent the droplets from
mixing with other chemicals. Currently, technologies exist that
allow for droplets to be released at a very high speed, about
10,000 droplets per second. But there is no technology capable
for controlling such a large number of droplets individually
and in parallel for the purpose of analysis.
The FEOET platform is potentially
capable of preparing one million different, multiplexed drug
combinations in less than two hours. This type of technology
will help researchers to test individual cell responses to different
combinations of drugs on a massive scale. Due to the capability
of using low-cost materials, this super drug screening device
could dramatically reduce the fabrication cost of large-scale
lab-on-a-chip systems. Medical and pharmaceutical labs could
eventually use this type of technology to more efficiently and
effectively find the right combination of drugs to fight diseases
like cancer.
Building a theoretical framework
for the exploration of the effects of transmembrane protein
interactions on the formation and stability of membrane structures
in cell organelles is Klug’s goal. His research aims to
understand the physical forces that maintain the structures
of membranes in cell organelles, in particular endoplasmic reticula,
Golgi apparatus, and mitochondria.
One question Klug’s research
hopes to address is whether the proteins that are so densely
packed into organelle membranes actually are responsible in
some way for producing the complex membrane structure or if
the membrane simply provides a nice home for the proteins. Recent
experiments have shown that changing the proteins can lead to
whole-scale rearrangements of the membrane, suggesting that
the protein molecules can act like a kind of “glue”
that holds the membrane together in certain geometric patterns.
The results of the study may ultimately
enable new medical techniques and treatment of diseases related
to organelle function, including viral infections, diabetes,
tumor growths, and neurodegenerative diseases.
The CAREER award also contains
a strong educational component. All three will incorporate their
research activities into their teaching curriculum for undergraduate
and graduate students. Summer outreach programs for underrepresented
students of various grade levels from Los Angeles area schools
and community colleges will also be developed.
The three 2008 CAREER awards follow
15 awards garnered by UCLA Engineering faculty over the past
five years – one from bioengineering, three from electrical
engineering, four from mechanical and aerospace engineering,
three from chemical and biomolecular engineering, three from
civil and environmental engineering and four from computer science.
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