A two-year, $200,000 grant from the New York State Office of Science, Technology and Academic Research (NYSTAR) will help a Cornell University mechanical engineer design smaller, faster, and cheaper devices for processing and producing proteins. The research has implications for a vast array of applications in research of biological -systems.
Brian Kirby, assistant professor of mechanical engineering, won NYSTAR’s 2004 James D. Watson Investigator Award, which is part of the $225 million Generating Employment Through New York State Science (Gen*NY*sis) program. Gen*NY*sis supports life sciences research being conducted at New York’s academic research institutions. The Watson award recognizes and supports outstanding scientists and engineers who, early in their careers, show potential for leadership and scientific discovery in the field of -biotechnology.
The biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries are interested in cheaper and faster ways to produce and process protein pharmaceuticals, such as insulin, Kirby says. He seeks to use mechanical engineering to solve problems associated with a widely used technique, called high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), for separating and identifying proteins.
“Any time anyone does an experiment to understand how proteins are expressed in an organism, they use HPLC to quantify them,” Kirby explains.
The machines that currently perform HPLC are about twice the size of a desktop computer. Kirby plans to make hand-held devices packaged in a 4-inch cube that can separate and identify proteins. The miniaturized device should be faster, cheaper, and better suited to work with smaller volumes of proteins.
The grant also will help Kirby develop new procedures for protein production, which is of great interest to pharmaceutical companies that produce proteins on a large scale.
Kirby continues Cornell’s connection with the James D. Watson Investigator Award, which began three years ago. Each year, a Cornell faculty member has received the grant: D. Tyler McQuade, assistant professor of chemistry and chemical biology, in 2002, and Matthew Delisa, assistant professor of chemical engineering, in 2003.
—Krishna Ramanujan, Cornell News Service