Lisa A. DeLouise, Ph.D., M.P.D.

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Contact

University of Rochester
School of Medicine and Dentistry
601 Elmwood Ave, Box 697
Rochester, New York 14642

Office: 585 275-1810

Lab: 585 273-4689

Fax: 585 273-1346

Portrait

Research Interest:

The overall research area in the laboratory is the creation of Smart Bandage Biomaterial Engineering and Skin Disease. This laboratory investigates the fundamental optical, morphological, and surface chemical properties of bioengineered nanoporous silicon (PSi) in developing a platform of Smart Bandage technologies targeting biosensors for point of care diagnosis of cutaneous disease, transdermal drug delivery, and tissue engineering for wound healing. PSi is fabricated from single crystal silicon wafers using an electrochemical etch process. The pore diameter, porosity (surface area and internal void volume), bioerosion, and interferometric optical properties can be tailored over a wide range to suit the application. Ongoing projects involve developing a refractive index sensitive biosensor for detection of Candida ablicans for which we've developed methods to site direct the immobilization of phage display scFv antibody receptors. Tests are underway to evaluate detection sensitivity relative to nonspecifically immobilized whole IgG aCandida antibody receptor employing commercial antigen. Fundamental insights into the factors (pore size, steric crowding, operating frequency, device architecture, blocking agent, operation protocol, etc.) that impact detection sensitivity are being explored. Biosensor tests are typically conducted on devices attached to the silicon wafer. Recently, we developed methods to detach the sensor and mount it in a polymer support. We are conducting studies to characterize the diffusion characteristics of small molecules though hydrogel films (40 micron) cast over porous silicon sensor (4 um) by monitoring changes in the optical response that result when molecules diffuse in or out of the porous silicon layer. This work will enable us to develop models for designing transdermal drug delivery systems where the optical response can be measured, while applied to the skin, to monitor the time released delivery of therapeutics concentrated within the porous reservoir. We are interested in developing a smart bandage to deliver antifungal locally to the nail matrix where nail progenitor cells live. We are also investing the morphology and phenotype dermal human fibroblast and immortalized keratinocytes (HaCaT) cells cultured on chemically modified PSi and flat silicon wafer surfaces. The goal is systematically engineer the surface chemistry, energy and topography of biomaterial scaffolds to mimic the fetal reepithelialization process. Our hypothesis is that by controlling differential cell proliferation (keratinocyte vs. fibroblast) and cell phenotype, such as integrin and metalloproteinase expression profiles or the magnitude of actin fiber extensions, novel therapies will result that can accelerate the healing of chronic wounds (ulcers) and burns with reduced scarring. A unique aspect of this research program is the melding of cross-disciplinary skills in surface science, physical chemistry, microfluidic device engineering, optics, and biological and medical sciences. This interdisciplinary approach provides a firm basis for the investigation and fabrication of new biomedical devices, while enabling a broader perspective on quantifying biological efficacy and establishing clinical utility.

Current Appointments

Education
MPD Product Development Rochester Inst Technology 2001
PhD Physical Chemistry Penn State University 1984
BS Chemistry Providence College 1979
Recent Journal Articles
Showing the 5 most recent journal articles. (35 available)
L.A. DeLouise, Philippe M. Fauchet, Benjamin L. Miller, and A P. Pentland. "Hydrogel Supported Optical Microcavity Sensors". Advanced Materials 17 (2005): 2199-2203.
Delouise LA; Miller BL. "Enzyme immobilization in porous silicon: quantitative analysis of the kinetic parameters for glutathione-S-transferases." Analytical chemistry. 2005; 77(7):1950-6.
DeLouise LA; Kou PM; Miller BL. "Cross-correlation of optical microcavity biosensor response with immobilized enzyme activity. Insights into biosensor sensitivity." Analytical chemistry. 2005; 77(10):3222-30.
L.A. DeLouise and B.L. Miller. "Optimization of Mesoporous Silicon Microcavities for Proteomic Sensing". Mat. Res. Soc. Symp. Proc. 782 (2004): 1.
L.A. DeLouise and B.L. Miller. "Trends in Porous Silicon Biomedical Devices - Tuning Microstructure and Performance Trade-offs in Optical Biosensors Vol. 5357, pg. 111-125, 2004." Proceedings of SPIE 5357 (2004): 111-125.