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| Treena Arinzeh and Cheul Cho |
The Coulter program provides funding for professors in established biomedical engineering departments in the U.S. The initial amount of funding for each professor will be at least $200,000 over a period of two years.
NJIT Associate Professor Treena Arinzeh will receive funding for her patent application to create an electro-spun composite material for bone repair applications. Her composite material can be combined with stem cells to increase the rate of bone repair.
NJIT Assistant Professor Cheul Cho will receive support for his patent application for an extracorporeal bio-artificial liver assist device with hepatocytes derived from human stem cells for treatment of liver failure. His project aims to differentiate human embryonic stem (ES) cells into functional hepatocytes and to evaluate their therapeutic efficacy in a bio-artificial liver (BAL) for the treatment of acute liver failure. Current potential cell-based therapies and extracorporeal BAL devices for the treatment of liver failure are severely limited by low availability of functional human liver cells, called hepatocytes.
Arinzeh's research focuses on tissue engineering, the application of principles and methods of engineering and life sciences toward a fundamental understanding and development of biological substitutes to restore, maintain and improve the functions of human tissues. Bone regeneration can be achieved through the use of osteogenic cells and/or factors to induce bone growth in combination with an appropriate scaffold to guide and support the establishment of new bone.
Ideally, a scaffold for bone tissue engineering should meet the following minimum requirements, she said. It must be biocompatible, can coexist with living tissues or organisms without causing damage. It must have osteoconductivity capable of serving as a matrix or scaffold in which migrating bone cells can attach and form new bone. It must have minute openings, pores or holes, so the bone can grow inside the material. It should be biodegradable, capable of breaking down within the body without causing damage. Furthermore, it must have mechanical integrity and the ability to withstand chemical, physical, and biological forces.
Cho's research focuses on the design of a clinically scaled bio-artificial liver. About 10 percent of the liver mass is needed to support a patient with acute liver failure, which is a critical limitation for many cell-based therapies for liver failure.
Embryonic stem cells are considered a potential source for cells for hepatic therapies because of their unlimited capacity for self-renewal and proliferation, and their ability to differentiate into all lineages of larger cells.
Cho's novel method differentiates human embryonic stem cells into hepatocytes with high purity. Incorporating these cell derived hepatocytes into a device to treat fulminant hepatic failure has improved test subject survival, demonstrating the potential of the cell therapy. (A provisional patent has also been submitted for this project.)
The Coulter Foundation supports biomedical research that is translational in nature, and it encourages and assists eligible biomedical engineering researchers to establish themselves in academic careers that involve translational research. The translational research projects are directed at promising technologies with the goal of moving toward the commercial development and entering clinical practice.

