Professor Ennio Tasciotti
Ennio Tasciotti, Ph.D. is Interim Co-chair, Regenerative Medicine;
Scientific Director, Spine Advanced Technology Lab;
Research Scientist, Department of Nanomedicine; and
The Methodist Hospital Research Institute
Principal Investigator.
Despite extraordinary progress in the laboratory, cancer mortality has
not been reduced by any significant amount in the last fifty years. The
main reasons are that “cancer” is actually several hundreds of disease,
which differ dramatically in terms of their biology, and respond very
differently to drugs.
Ennio’s research program focuses on: 1) the application of
nanoporous silica chip technology to the early detection of diseases and
the real time assessment of therapeutic efficacy, 2) the development of
novel materials for enhanced polymeric scaffold reinforcement; 3)
synthesis and functionalization of theranostic nanoparticles for
targeted cancer drug delivery and imaging; 4) the modulation of the
functions and properties of materials that promote cell survival and
differentiation in tissue engineering; 5) the creation of unconventional
multistage, multifunctional delivery vectors inspired by nature; 6) the
understanding of the basic mechanisms of reaction of the cell to the
exposure to and integration of nanoparticulates.
He coauthored
Novel human-derived cell-penetrating peptides for specific
subcellular
delivery of therapeutic biomolecules,
Transcellular transfer of active HSV-1 thymidine kinase mediated by
an
11-amino-acid peptide from HIV-1 Tat,
Mesoporous silicon particles as a multistage delivery system for
imaging
and therapeutic applications,
In Vivo Imaging Shows Abnormal Function of Vascular Endothelial
Growth
Factor-Induced Vasculature,
Fusion of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Tat Protein
Transduction Domain to Thymidine Kinase Increases Bystander Effect and
Induces Enhanced Tumor Killing In Vivo, and
Nanotechnology for breast cancer therapy.
His patent applications include
Multistage Delivery of Active Agents.
Ennio earned his MSc in Biological Sciences at the University of Pisa,
Italy in 2000. He earned his MSc in Molecular Biology at Scuola Normale
Superiore Pisa, Italy, 2000. He earned his
Ph.D. in Molecular Medicine at Scuola Normale Superiore Pisa, Italy,
in 2005. He did his Postdoc work at the International Centre for
Genetic Engineering and
Biotechnology (ICGEB), Trieste, Italy and at the
University of Texas Health Science Center at
Houston, Houston, Texas.
Read
UTHouston Nano Pioneer Test-Launching Multistage Drug Delivery
System,
Fracture Putty Could Save you an Arm and a Leg, and
Nanomedicine System Engineered To Enhance Therapeutic Effects of
Injectable Drugs.