On August 8, Sam had the chance to present at The A&T Provost Fellows Seed Luncheon, where they shared exciting preliminary results from our summer research with Prof. Rob Newman from A&T’s Biology department.
In a quick 90-second pitch, Sam introduced our work on 3D printing technologies to create microfluidic chips that study how macrophages and fibroblasts communicate during immune responses. We’re seeing some promising results that could really advance our understanding of these critical processes.
It was amazing to share the stage with Dr. Jerard Dumas, an Associate Professor from our Nanoengineering department at JSNN.
We’re wrapping up a research paper on this, in collaboration with Nanodimension (Boston), and are also prepping to extend this work with a proposal to the NSF by December. This project could be a game-changer for immune response research, and we’re excited to keep pushing forward!
Stay tuned for more updates as we continue this journey!
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