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Dr. Daniel Gallego-Perez receives funding for DiaComp Pilot & Feasibility Project

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Dr. Daniel Gallego-Perez, BME assistant professor, has been awarded funding for his Diabetic Complications Consortium (DiaComp) Pilot & Feasibility Project, "Nanotechnology-based solutions for diabetic peripheral arterial disease".

The DiaComp Pilot program is sponsored by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK). The goal of DiaComp is to advance the study of diabetic complications and promote communication and collaboration between investigators involved in complications research by supporting scientific meetings and funding new research.

Read more about Dr. Gallego-Perez’s research project here:

In vivo direct cell reprogramming has the potential to facilitate the development of safer and more effective patient-specific cell-based therapies. Current reprogramming methodologies, however, face major translational hurdles, including heavy reliance on viral transfection, and a highly stochastic nature, which often leads to inefficient and unsafe reprogramming outcomes. We developed a novel nanochanneled platform technology that overcomes these barriers by enabling deterministic transduction of reprogramming factors into tissues (with single-cell resolution) without the need for viral vectors. This nanotechnology-based approach promotes remarkably fast and efficient direct cellular reprogramming in vivo, as demonstrated with a newly developed model of induced vasculature. Non-viral direct derivation of induced vasculature in vivo could find applications in the treatment of a number of disorders, including critical limb ischemia (CLI), which is a common affliction of diabetic patients. Nevertheless, currently no study has looked into developing virus-free methods for direct induction/reprogramming of endothelial cells (in vitro or in vivo). Moreover, the regenerative potential of these cells has not been investigated within the context of diabetic CLI. Here we are proposing to develop an optimized method for direct nanochannel-based derivation of vascular issue from support/stromal tissue, in vivo, and to study the extent to which this strategy induced functional recovery in a diabetic mouse model of CLI. Diabetic patients are susceptible to developing severe cases of peripheral arterial disease (PAD) that can result in CLI and significant downstream complications (e.g., ulcerations, gangrene, limb loss, etc.), which poses a substantial burden to the patient and the overall healthcare system.

Congratulations, Dr. Gallego-Perez!