Congratulations to Nadia Cheng with mentor Jonathan Zatorski and Dorienne Hochard with mentor Parris Anbaei for the nano-STAR Summer Fellowship!

Every year, nanoSTAR invites undergraduate students to apply to spend a summer in their UVA laboratory. They match students to nanoscience projects based on their interests and abilities and students will get hands-on laboratory experience while learning the subject. They will prepare for a culminating oral and poster presentations at the end of the program. We are proud of Nadia and Jon for winning this!

Posted on July 11, 2022 and filed under Grants & Awards, Collaborations, People.

Celebration for Lavoisier

Yesterday we celebrated Research Scientist Dr. Lavoisier Akoolo (3rd from left, 2nd row), who is moving into a leadership role in UVA's Biorepository & Tissue Research Facility. He has been a part of our group since October 2020, and made significant contributions to our understanding of cell behavior in lymph node slices during long term culture. We will miss him and wish him the best in his new position!

We had a great time outside with ice cream and delicious treats home-made by Djuro and Jon. Yum!

Pompano lab members, standing outside in front of a tree and posing for photo.
Posted on July 9, 2022 .

Sophie Cook Awarded the Sidney M. Hecht Graduate Fellowship in Chemistry for next year!

The Hecht Fellowship was established by Professor Sidney Hecht whose mid-career spanned 28 highly prolific and influential years in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Virginia. The Hecht Fellowship secures one full year of living support with a $2000 additional award as well as the standard healthcare and tuition & fees support. It goes to a single student each year based on excellence in their graduate studies and research. Congratulations Sophie!! This is well deserved.

Posted on February 18, 2022 and filed under People, Grants & Awards.

New paper: Photopatterned 3D cultures in a chip

We are delighted that Jennifer Ortiz-Cardenas’s thesis work is now published in Organs-on-a-chip! Jenn established a method to micropattern cell-laden 3D cultures on a microfluidic chip, with resolution as good as 100-micron. She established everything from how to design and fabricate the PDMS chamber to avoid catching bubbles or patterning microcracks in the gel, to choosing what light source would provide the required wavelength, intensity, and columnation, to rigorously comparing the properties of two types of biomaterials in terms of patterning, and carefully establishing the capabilities and limitations of biocompatibility of this system with primary lymphocytes. Read the paper here! https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666102022000040

Posted on January 26, 2022 and filed under Papers.

Ovi is off to Intel!

Yesterday we bid a fond farewell to postdoctoral scholar Amirus (Ovi) Saleheen, PhD. He has been a big contributor to our lymph-node chip project since arriving in fall 2020. He’s a whiz at microfabrication and the driving force behind some cool new technology that will be published soon. Now, he will be taking those skills to an exciting new position at Intel!

Congrats Ovi, we will miss you!

Posted on January 15, 2022 and filed under People, Lab Updates.

New paper: Magnetic impeller pump for organs-on-chip

Congratulations to Sophie Cook and co-author Hannah Musgrove for their paper now available online before print in Lab on a Chip! Sophie invented a creative impeller pump design for in-line recirculaton of media through on-chip cultures and organs-on-chip. The pump does not require any tubing or external pumps, just a magnetic stirring platform that easily fits in the incubator without heating it up. This was an exciting collaboration with Prof. Amy Throckmorton of Drexel University, who conducted advanced fluid dynamic simulations to better understand and predict the fluid flow around the pump and how it controlled flow through the channels.

This pump lays the groundwork for recirculating flow control in long-term cultures and multi-tissue cultures. Sophie and Hannah showed that it was mechanically compatible with recirculating of lymphocytes, and when 3D printed in the right resin, could be used to circulate model lymphocytes overnight.

Posted on January 5, 2022 and filed under Papers, Collaborations.

Prof. Pompano gives invited talk at Drexel IMES

Drexel Immune Modulation and Engineering Symposium

It was an honor for Dr. Pompano to speak in the 3rd Annual Immune Modulation & Engineering Symposium, Dec 9-10, 2021 . All of the talks and discussions during panels were insightful and thought-provoking. With over 375 participants, many of whom were students from around the world, this was a special opportunity for the immune-engineering community to come together virtually.

This workshop was generously subsidized by the National Institutes of Health.



Posted on December 17, 2021 .