Dr. Beverly A. Rzigalinski
The ScienceDaily article University Of Central Florida Researchers Find That Nanomaterials Developed For Industry Triple Or Quadruple Life Of Brain Cells said
A molecular biologist and a nanoscientist at the University of Central Florida have found that nanomaterials developed for industry have an unexpected and potentially revolutionary side effect: They can triple or quadruple the life of brain cells.
The result is people could live longer and with fewer age-related health problems.
Beverly Rzigalinski, assistant professor in the Department of Molecular Biology and Microbiology and at the Biomolecular Sciences Center, and Sudipta Seal, associate engineering professor at the Advanced Materials Processing and Analysis Center and the Department of Mechanical, Materials and Aerospace Engineering, will receive $1.4 million from the National Institutes of Health, National Institute on Aging to study the reasons behind the reaction and possible future applications.
Beverly A. Rzigalinski, Ph.D. is a Professor of Pharmacology at VCOM
and the
director of NanoNeuro Laboratory and is known, by nickname, as Dr Z. She
also has adjunct appointments in the Virginia-Maryland Regional College
of Veterinary Medicine, Dept. of Biomedical Sciences and Pathobiology,
and the Wake Forest Virginia Tech School of Biomedical
Engineering. Her research interests are
Nanobiology of Aging, Nanotechnology, Traumatic Brain Injury, and Brain
Inflammation. She is on the Editorial Board of
Nanotechnology, Science, and Applications.
Bev earned her undergraduate degree in Biochemistry from Rutgers
University, New Brunswick, NJ. She earned her Master’s degree
in Environmental Medicine from New York University. She
ran her own environmental testing and mitigation
firm, located in the New York metropolitan area. After selling the
business, Bev completed her PhD at Eastern Virginia
Medical School and Old Dominion University in 1990 with
the thesis
In situ regulation of cytosolic phospholipase Av(2).
She
served as a post
doc and assistant professor at the Medical College of Virginia,
working in traumatic injury and neuronal, astrocyte, and
microglial signaling. She conducted her research at the
University of Central Florida, where she also taught Physiology &
Endocrinology. She has published many papers in the field of
neuroscience, traumatic injury, and nanotechnology and has received
several awards in the field.
Bev authored
Nanoparticles and Cell Longevity and
coauthored
Treatment of Neurodegenerative Disorders with Radical
Nanomedicine,
Traumatic Injury of Cortical Neurons Causes Changes in Intracellular
Calcium Stores and Capacitative Calcium Influx,
Reduction of Voltage-Dependent Mg2+ Blockade of NMDA
Current
in
Mechanically Injured Neurons, and
NMDA Receptor Activation Contributes to a Portion of the Decreased
Mitochondrial Membrane Potential and Elevated Intracellular Free Calcium
in Strain-Injured Neurons.
Read
Radical Nanotechnology — How Medicine Can Learn From Materials
Science.