BME Faculty Candidate Seminar: Michael Mak, PhD, Asst. Prof. of BME, Yale University: "Understanding and Building Mechanobiological Systems"

Friday, December 15, 2023
12:00 pm to 12:50 pm
Floor/Room #
1002
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WPI Biomedical Engineering with school seal

Faculty Candidate

"Understanding and Building Mechanobiological Systems" 

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A photo of Dr. Michael Mac

Michael Mak, PhD

Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering

Yale University

Friday, December 15, 2023

Gateway 1002

12:00pm – 12:50pm

Abstract:   Tissue microenvironments are complex and contain many biophysical and mechanical signals, ranging from simplistic mechanical properties such as stiffness to more complex features such as mesoscopic architectures, compression, and non-elastic material behaviors.  These signals play critical roles in guiding cell states and tissue organization and function, and their dysregulation contributes to disease processes such as fibrosis and cancer progression.  My lab focuses on both understanding how cells sense and respond to complex biophysical signals and constructing biomimetic systems that capture realistic tissue properties.  In this talk, we discuss cell mechanosensing and adaptation to complex microenvironmental cues.  We demonstrate the critical roles of dynamic cell protrusions in the sensing and regulation of multiple signal types.  We also discuss advanced biofabrication developments for controlling the assembly of physiological materials and the generation of tunable mechanobiological signals across multiple scales, enabling the production of (patho)physiologically relevant tissue and organ systems.

Biography:   Michael Mak received his undergraduate degree from Brown University, followed by his Ph.D. at Cornell University in Biomedical Engineering and postdoctoral studies at MIT and Boston University.  He is currently an Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering at Yale University.  His lab specializes in developing and applying integrated experimental-computational approaches to understand mechanobiological principles in development and disease.  His lab also develops advanced biofabrication methods to generate realistic tissues and mini-organs, based on extensive considerations of mechanobiology and microenvironmental factors.  Dr. Mak’s research has been funded by multiple NIH awards.

For a zoom link please contact June Norton at jnorton@wpi.edu or Kate Harrison at kharrison@wpi.edu

Audience(s)

Department(s):

Biomedical Engineering
Contact Person
June Norton

Phone Number: