不良研究所

New biomed engineering chair thrives on 鈥榗hange鈥

You may as well race against Lance Armstrong as try to keep pace with Kyriacos Athanasiou, the new distinguished professor and chair of the 不良研究所 Department of Biomedical Engineering

Athanasiou has authored or co-authored some 225 peer-reviewed papers (in 2009 alone, his name appears as principal investigator on 18.) He is a co-founder of five biomedical engineering companies, including one that was sold for $75 million in 2006. He has 28 issued and pending patents; holds two adjunct professorships at the University of Texas; and in October, will take over as editor-in-chief of the Annals of Biomedical Engineering, the flagship publication for his profession.

Now Athanasiou, 49, is champing at the bit to bring the achievements of his new department to the attention of the world.

鈥淚f you look at what we鈥檙e doing in the department, we鈥檙e rocking the world here. And people don鈥檛 know about us,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here is this dichotomy, this gap, between people鈥檚 perception of us and the top-tier research of our outstanding faculty and students.鈥

Ask Athanasiou why he left his previous position as the Karl F. Hasselmann Professor of Bioengineering at Rice University in Houston to come to Davis, and you begin to understand what motivates him.

鈥淚 came here because of promise. Rice is an exceptional place, but it has reached a steady state. I like to effect change. I like things with a delta,鈥 he said, referring to the Greek letter that serves as a mathematical symbol indicating a change in value. 鈥淗ere there is a tremendous opportunity to build, to extend, to expand and to bring our visibility up.鈥

As a seasoned entrepreneur, Athanasiou sees great opportunity in the 鈥渉ighly inventive, highly translational research鈥 that many in his department are conducting. He鈥檚 already scheduled meetings to discuss the business possibilities of this research with an old colleague from Rice, the new dean of the 不良研究所 Graduate School of Management, Steve Currall. And he plans to forge ties between the department and the campus鈥檚 technology transfer office.

鈥淲hat I hope to do here is work as a facilitator, an effector and a cheerleader,鈥 he said. 鈥淭his department has excellence imprinted in its DNA. How can I not be excited?鈥

From Cyprus to the Wild West

A Greek, Athanasiou grew up in the island nation of Cyprus. From an early age, he knew he wasn鈥檛 going to stay put. 鈥淚 was growing up watching Bonanza and Gunsmoke, and I had a desire to go to the United States of America,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here was something mythical, something wonderful about it.鈥

In 1980, after serving two years in the Greek army, he headed to the New York Institute of Technology on Long Island. Even at this early stage of life, he knew how to get things done. In just nine years he notched his belt with four degrees in mechanical engineering: a B.S. from the institute, and an M.S., Ph.M. and Ph.D. all from Columbia University.

Only then did he make his way to the real West.

Not exactly to 骋耻苍蝉尘辞办别鈥檚 Dodge City or 叠辞苍补苍锄补鈥檚 Ponderosa Ranch, but to the home of the Alamo, San Antonio, where for 10 years he held an array of appointments at the University of Texas. These included assistant and associate professorships in orthopaedics and mechanical engineering and directorship of the Musculoskeletal Bioengineering Center.

He spent another 10 years in Texas 鈥 at Rice University 鈥 before coming to Davis in August.

Engineering cartilage

About half of Athanasiou鈥檚 research group accompanied him in the move from Rice: one senior scientist, two postdoctoral fellows and six Ph.D. students. One of the group鈥檚 principal focuses is the regeneration and repair of cartilage.

Padding the ends of joints that are constantly being exercised, such as knees, shoulders, jaws and feet, cartilage is a tissue that is central to our quality of life. Yet it is one of the very rare tissues that lacks the ability to heal itself. When damaged by injury, or degenerated by osteoarthritis, the effects can be long-lasting and devastating.

鈥淚f I cut a tiny line on articular cartilage (the cartilage that covers the surfaces of bones at joints), it will never be erased,鈥 Athanasiou said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like writing on the moon. If I go back to look at it a year later, it will look exactly the same.鈥

Work that he and his group started in the early 1990s has resulted in the only FDA-approved products for treatment of small lesions on articular cartilage. (In total, Athanaisou鈥檚 patents have resulted in 15 FDA-approved products.) But bigger things are in store.

鈥淲e are now in a position to engineer cartilage in the laboratory,鈥 Athanasiou explained. 鈥淭his will be live, biological cartilage that will not only fill defects, but will potentially be able to resurface the entire surface of joints that have been destroyed by osteoarthritis.鈥

Starting with stem cells, including adult stem cells from bone marrow and skin as well as human embryonic stem cells, Athanasiou and his group have already engineered the tissue in the lab. Now they are experimenting with various chemical and mechanical stimuli to improve its properties.

Currently, joint replacements using metal and plastic prosthetics are the only recourse for the one in five adults who will suffer major joint damage from osteoarthritis. 鈥淏ut when we can talk about resurfacing the entire surface of the joint with new cartilage,鈥 Athanasiou said, 鈥渢hat is huge.鈥

Greek olives

After nearly 30 years in the U.S., Athanasiou still maintains close ties to Greece. He and his wife, Kiley, are raising their two sons, Aristos and Thasos, bilingually and they own a house and nearly six acres of 200-year-old olive trees on the Pelion peninsula on the country鈥檚 Aegean coast.

Kiley 鈥 who learned Greek from listening to her husband speak it with their sons and from the year the family spent in Greece in 2006 鈥 travels to Greece each year to oversee the olive harvest and pressing. She will be putting her experience, along with her M.B.A. in international business, to work as an assistant director at the Mondavi Institute鈥檚 Olive Center.

鈥淲hat she has said so far is that the olive oil here is good,鈥 Athanasiou said, 鈥渁nd she hopes that she will help in it becoming the best olive oil possible.鈥
 

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Clifton B. Parker, Dateline, (530) 752-1932, cparker@ucdavis.edu

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