The NextGen Precision Health Discovery Series provides learning opportunities for UM System faculty and staff across disciplines, the statewide community and our other partners to learn about the scope of precision health research and identify potential collaborative opportunities. The series consists of monthly lectures geared toward a broad multidisciplinary audience so all can participate and appreciate the spectrum of precision health efforts.
Information about this upcoming talk, including continuing education, is available below.
For questions about this event or any others in the Discovery Series, please reach out to Veronica Lemme at lemmev@health.missouri.edu.
“Chemistry in the Service of Biomedicine: Using Light to Control Biology and the Delivery of Therapeutics”
Speaker: Simon Friedman, Ph.D., Curator’s Distinguished Professor, Pharmacy, University of Missouri-Kansas City
Date: April 9, 2024, noon-1 p.m.
Location: Live presentation at Health Sciences Building, Room 3301, University of Missouri-Kansas City campus; live audience at Roy Blunt NextGen Precision Health Building, Atkins Family Seminar Room; and virtual option available
Description
So much of biology and medicine hinges on the timing and spacing of events: The development of an organism is emblematic of this. The patterning of body shape depends on the spacing, timing and amount of gene expression. We have developed chemical tools that allow for us to control the spacing, timing and degree of gene expression using light. Light is a particularly appealing tool, because it is easy to manipulate, and once you link a process to it, it is relatively straightforward to control when the process happens, where it happens and to what degree it happens. We also have applied this idea of light control of biological processes to the challenge of therapeutic protein delivery. Some therapeutics require dosing that varies continuously throughout the day (e.g. insulin). The classic ways of enabling this variability, namely a pump and canula inserted into a patient, are beset by a wide range of problems (infections, occlusions and variability). Instead, we are developing tools to use light to control the release of therapeutics, which then allows continuous variability with minimal invasiveness. All of this work leverages the power of chemistry and applies it at the interface of chemistry, biology and medicine to answer critical questions and address important therapeutic needs.
ϱ the Speaker
Simon Friedman is an interfacial scientist, writer and artist. He trained in chemistry at Massachusetts Institute Technology (S.B.), University of California, San Francisco (Ph.D.) and California Institute of Technology (National Institutes of Health, or NIH, postdoctoral fellowship). He is currently a Curators Distinguished Professor at the University of Missouri-Kansas City and heads an NIH supported laboratory focused on biomedical problems at the interface of chemistry and biology. His work has been