海角社区

Jung Earns CAREER Award for Work in Engineering, Testing Designer Proteins

March 22, 2021

Philip Jung headshotBATON ROUGE, LA 鈥 Assistant Professor of Biological Engineering Philip Jung has received the National Science Foundation CAREER Award for his project, 鈥淓ngineering Laminin Globular Domains for Accelerated Cardiomyocyte Proliferation: Validation With a 3D-Bioprinted In Vitro Infarct Model.鈥

The award is for $442,451 and extends until March 2026.

Jung鈥檚 project aims to engineer designer proteins to stimulate the proliferation of cardiomyocytes, or cardiac muscle cells, which aid in recovery after myocardial infarction, or heart attack. The heart contains 2-3 billion cardiac muscle cells, which account for less than a third of the total cell number in the left ventricle, alone鈥攁nd if there is any critical damage to the heart resulting in the loss of those cells, there is no way to get them back.

鈥淚f we can figure out any single way to increase the proliferation of cardiomyocytes, even at a small scale, that would be significant help for patients suffering from heart failure,鈥 Jung said. 鈥淭raditionally, cell and stem cell therapies have been attempted to replenish the lost cardiomyocytes. However, this comes with immune rejection at varying degrees.

鈥淭he new method I proposed here is to engineer the native protein (called the extracellular matrix) to stimulate the proliferation of cardiomyocytes. If successful, we may have another strategy to grow more cardiomyocytes without the complication of preparing cells, potentially avoiding immunological rejection.鈥

The other main aspect of the project, once a pool of computationally-generated chimeras is prepared, is to build machine-learning models to screen and select them. The current process can be costly and time-consuming. Jung鈥檚 project could change that.  

鈥淐reation, screening, and selection of chimeras take a lot of time and effort,鈥 Jung said. 鈥淭his is very challenging, since the number we talk about [of chimeras] is millions to billions. This experiment has to be repeated multiple times. So, we want to save this time and effort significantly so that we can do molecular evaluation in our lab.

鈥淐omputationally-generated chimeras will be selected and screened with trained data. We are training the data with publicly available sequences. After this learning process, we will need to validate the performance of the engineered proteins鈥he idea in the proposal is to develop in vitro models (engineered cardiac tissue) with 3D bioprinting. We also propose to apply adaptive optimization to identify the best parameters of 3D bioprinting, scaffold biomaterials, and cardiac cells.鈥

Jung鈥檚 work will also make its way to local K-12 students and college undergraduates.

鈥淔or K-12 students, I am planning to show that tissue engineering is not science fiction anymore and one of the important strategies in modern medicine,鈥 he said. 鈥淔or undergraduate students, I already have two of my design-elective classes certified for the C-I (communication intensive) curriculum, where the final projects are to investigate tissue or stem cell bioengineering strategies for their favorite target tissue or organ throughout a semester.鈥

 

Like us on (@lsuengineering) or follow us on and (蔼濒蝉耻别苍驳颈苍别别谤颈苍驳).鈥

###

Contact: Joshua Duplechain

Director of Communications

josh@lsu.edu