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Milan Mrksich, Ph.D.

Milan Mrksich

Milan Mrksich is considered a world leader in the realm of engineering the interface between cells and surfaces. As a postdoctoral fellow, he helped transform an inexpensive process for making computer microchips into a method to control the shape, position, and function of living cells. This method, based on adhesive molecules immobilized on substrates within microarrays, was used to gain insight into how mammalian cells decide to grow, differentiate, move, or die.

Moving with ease between chemistry, molecular biology, biophysics, nanotechnology, materials science, and cell biology, Mrksich focuses much attention on how cell surfaces are engineered. These surfaces support the cell and regulate its migration and adhesion to other cells. Understanding how this extracellular matrix works can lead to ideas for drugs and methods of engineering artificial tissues.

Mrksich has a fundamental question of cell biology in his sights: how do cells control the assembly of focal adhesions that mediate cell adhesion to extracellular matrix? This is a critical question because focal adhesions are where cells sense and integrate the mechanical and chemical signals responsible for controlling their growth and function. He has genetically engineered mimics of specific cellular adhesion proteins and shown how they assemble into focal adhesions. The work led to development of small molecule inhibitors that disrupt the adhesion process.

Mrksich used artificial cell surfaces to develop biochips—arrays of biological molecules that can be used to assay for specific activities. One success of biochip screening is identification of compounds that inhibit two toxins of anthrax.

Mrksich also uses these artificial surfaces to improve culturing of cells for scientific study of cell adhesion, because cultured cells require surfaces to grow.

Dr. Mrksich is also Professor of Chemistry at the University of Chicago.


RESEARCH ABSTRACT SUMMARY:

Milan Mrksich's laboratory combines chemistry and materials science to create model surfaces that mimic complex biological surfaces. These approaches are used to study the adhesion of cells to the extracellular matrix and to construct biochip arrays for the analysis of biological function.

View Research Abstractsmall arrow

Photo: Paul Fetters

HHMI INVESTIGATOR
2005–Present
The University of Chicago

Education
bullet icon B.S., chemistry, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
bullet icon Ph.D., chemistry, California Institute of Technology
Member
bullet icon American Association for the Advancement of Science
Awards
bullet icon Arthur C. Cope Young Scholar Award, American Chemical Society
bullet icon Technology Review 100 Young Innovators Award

Research Abstract
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Chemical Biology of Cell Adhesion and the Extracellular Matrix

Related Links

AT HHMI

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Electrifying Cells

ON THE WEB

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The Mrksich Lab
(uchicago.edu)

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