Merging Nanotechnology & Synthetic Biology toward Directed Evolution of Energy Materials
Date: Mon, December 05, 2022
Time: 4:00pm - 5:30pm
Location: Holmes Hall 485
Speaker: Dr. Elena A. Rozhkova, IEEE Nanotechnology Council
Sponsored by the IEEE Student Hawaii Branch
Abstract
Nanoscience and Technology deals with materials and devices which operate on the nanometer scale. This is one billionth of a meter, where atoms and molecules interact by certain ways, and where materials exhibit new advanced properties. Nano benefits all aspects of our everyday life, from solar cells and batteries to cancer therapy and vaccines. The interface between nanomaterials and biological systems, the living and synthetic worlds, has evolved into a new science, nanobiotechnology, which deals with the design of materials for a variety of applications, from the environmentally friendly energy sources to neural modulation through optogenetics. The evolution of a new function, which goes far beyond the individual original inorganic particles and biological entities, requires a powerful combination of chemical synthesis, fabrication, synthetic biology, and self-assembly into hybrid hierarchical structures. In our work, we use microbial opsins, transmembrane protein channels that are capable of light-guided translocation of ions across the lipid membrane. In my presentation, I will give examples of their integration with inorganic nanostructures, which can function as artificial photosynthesis for hydrogen generation and CO2 reduction. In addition, by coupling opsin with X-ray excited optical luminescence (XEOL) nanophosphors, we have developed a wireless approach to modulate neurons in the brain.
Bio
Dr. Rozhkova, earned her Ph.D. in Chemistry from Moscow
State University of Fine Chemical Technology, Russia. After completing JSPS Postdoctoral
Fellowship in Tohoku University, Japan, she joined Department of Chemistry,
Princeton University as a Research Staff member. Since 2007 she is a Staff
Scientist at the Center for Nanoscale Materials at Argonne National Laboratory.
Her area of research is nanoscale biohybrid architectures for energy conversion
and biomodulation at the nano-bio interface. She is a recipient of professional
awards: Brain Research Foundation Fay/Frank Women’s Council, the University of
Chicago Argonne Board of Governors Distinguished Performance “In recognition of
pioneering interdisciplinary cancer treatment research via bio-functionalized
vortex structures”, the Prof. M. J. Nanjan Fourth Endowment Lecture and Award “For
outstanding contributions in the field of nano-biotechnology”, the University
of Madras, India. She is a 2021/22 IEEE NC Distinguished Lecturer.