Dziubla Lab Website
Active Polymeric Biomaterials
Drug Delivery
Functionalized Polymer Nanocarriers
Postsurgical Adhesions
Pro/antioxidant
Biomaterials
Wound Healing
Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN Honors B.S 1998 Chemical Engineering
Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA Ph.D. 2002 Chemical Engineering
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA NRSA PostDoc 2002-2004 Pharmacology
2017-Present: Professor, Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY
2006-2017: Associate Gill Professor, Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY
2006-2012: Assistant Professor, Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY
Over the past 60+ years, the discoveries made in the field of biomaterials have revolutionized the health care industry. Immeasurable benefits from blood compatible tubing, bone implants, and drug delivery devices have facilitated new areas of health care including regenerative medicine and tissue engineering. The hallmark of these materials are their biocompatibility. Yet, biocompatibility is not a bulk property but rather a feature of the application and setting in which the material is used. Our laboratory is interested in taking advantage of specific tissue/cellular processes (e.g., oxidative stress, adhesion molecule expression) to design new polymeric biomaterials for cancer therapy and regenerative medicine applications.
Traditionally, free loading of drugs into hydrogels allows for release via first order diffusion. While this release strategy is generally simple to employ, drug release displays an initial burst effect due to the lack of molecular entrainment in the hydrogel matrix, and large initial concentration gradient. Many drawbacks exist in this scenario due to fast drug release, such as the disparity between drug release and degradation rate of the hydrogel; the drugs typically release more quickly. Most critically in the terms of implantable biomaterials, the residual hydrogel, now void of active drug, can become a harbor for bacteria to form a biofilm where the immune system has trouble accessing, creating grounds for infection.Utilizing acrylate-amine chemistry, certain drugs can be polymerized into the backbone of the structure while maintaining their respective activity. Two molecules being currently reviewed for this effect, as well as for combinatorial effects, are that of the antibiotic vancomycin and antioxidant curcumin. It is hypothesized that the addition of these two will show synergistic effects towards the antibiotic activity of the hydrogel degradation product (i.e. the drug(s) released).
Oral cavity possess a complex environment, including continual salivary flushing, fluid exuding from wounds, mastication, bacterial flora and digestive enzymes which poses significant treatment challenge for drug delivery and in developing an effective treatment strategy. While the current standards of therapy (e.g., gels and mouth rinses) provide temporary relief, there is still an unmet need for a robust, long acting barrier that can provide lubricating protection in oral wounds, thereby enhancing the wound healing response. Our current research is focused on developing modular treatment strategies using polymer based self-assembly for oral regenerative therapy; overcoming the inadequacies in current treatment approaches.As an alternative to the current treatment approaches, in situ multilayered barriers can be developed as a series of non-viscous mouth rinses, allowing for full coverage of all oral mucosal tissues. By providing a series of alternating streptavidin (or non-immunogenic neutravidin) and biotinylated polymer mouth rinses, multilayered polymeric barrier systems can be grown from the buccal surface in a layer-by-layer (LBL) process, as shown in Figure 1. Our research was intended towards understanding fundamental polymeric molecular properties and its effect on LBL growth. In order to realize such strategies for practical oral applications, functional property evaluation on stability of LBL under intra-oral chemical and mechanically conditions were critical. A lubricating surface that reduces adhesion to opposing tissue surfaces with significant stability against harsh intra-oral chemical conditions was observed, thus offering a potential treatment solution, which merits further investigation.
Dr. Nihar ShahResearch: Synthesis And Characterization of Antioxidant Conjugated Poly(beta amino ester) Gel Microparticles For The Suppression of Oxidative Stress.M. Arif Khan, 2019 - 2022
Dustin SavageKelley Wiegman
Dr. Irfan Ahmad, 2015-19(Thesis: Synthesis, Design, and Evaluation of the Fluorescent Detection of Polychlorinated Biphenyls(PCBs) in Aqueous System)
Dr. Carolyn Jordan, 2015-18(Thesis: Design and Analysis of Curcumin Conjugated Poly(beta-amino ester) Networks for Controlled Release in Oxidative Stress Environments)
Dr. Vinod Patil, 2012-16(Thesis: Formulation And Characterization of Poly(Beta Amino Ester) Network For Controlled Delivery of Antioxidants in Pharmaceutical Applications)
Dr. Prachi Gupta, 2011-16(Thesis: Synthesis And Characterization of Antioxidant Conjugated Poly(βeta-Amino Ester) Micro/Nanogels For The Suppression of Oxidative Stress)
Dr. Sundar Prasanth Authimoolam, 2009-15(Thesis: Biomimetic Oral Mucin From Polymer Micelle Networks)
Dr. Andrew Lakes, 2010–15(Thesis: Bioactive Poly(Beta-Amino Ester) Biomaterials For Treatment of Infection And Oxidative Stress)
Dr. David Cochran, 2009-13(Thesis: Application of Antioxidants and Anti-inflammatory Polymers to Inhibit Injury and Disease)
Dr. Paritosh Wattamwar, 2006-11(Thesis: Synthesis and Characterization of Polymeric Antioxidant Delivery Systems)
Dr. John Medley, 2006-10(Thesis: Targeted Polymeric Biomaterials for the Prevention of Post Surgical Adhesion)
Mentor: Andrew Lakes
Elysha Calhoun, Redox Behavior of Disulfide-crosslinked PBAE Hydrogels, CME 395, University of Kentucky, 2015
Nic Quammen, Extrusion of antioxidant polymers for use with 3D printing, LaFayette High School, 2014-2015
Alexandra May, 3D Printed Meshes with Antioxidant Delivery, IGERT Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) participant, Florida State University, 2013
Stephanie Cleaver, Multiphase Drug Release Through a Loaded Biodegradable Hydrogel, IGERT Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) participant, DePauw University, 2012
Adam Lyvers, Poly (β-amino ester) Coated Iron Oxide Nanoparticles as Biomimetic Sinks for Polychlorinated Biphenyl Detoxification, IGERT Research Experience for Undergraduates (REU) participant. University of Kentucky, 2011
Mentor: Prachi Gupta
Erin Bellhorn, Synthesis and Charaterization of Poly(trolox) Co-polymers to Suppress Oxidative Stress, 2014
Manali Panchal, Antioxidant Capacity of Curcumin with respect to time after incubation with Human Dermal Fibroblasts, 2014
Donavyn Coffey, Synthesis and Characterization of Curcumin conjugated Poly(Beta-Amino Ester) gel microparticles, 2014
John Bilbily, Synthesis and Characterization of Poly(L-Carnitine) Polymer, 2015
Sarah Coulson
Mentor: Sundar Prasanth Authimoolam
Robert DeJaco
Kristin Mulliniks
Mentor: Vinod Patil
Ashley Lay
Alexandra May
Benjamin Burdette
Zoe Poncher
Annah Baykal
Mentor: Carolyn Jordan
Ava Vargason
Hannah Dvorak
Mentor: Irfan Ahmad
Oscar Zabala
Barry Umeh
Thomas D. Dziubla, professor of chemical engineering at the University of Kentucky, has been named the next chair of the University of Kentucky Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering.
https://www.engr.uky.edu/news/2018/12/dziubla-named-next-chemical-and-materials-engineering-department-chair
The American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering (AIMBE) has announced the induction of Thomas D. Dziubla, Ph.D., to its College of Fellows. Dziubla was nominated, reviewed and elected by peers and members of the College of Fellows for “seminal contributions to biomaterials and advanced drug delivery, establishing the field of biomaterials capable of regulating oxidative stress.”
https://www.engr.uky.edu/news/2019/03/dziubla-inducted-aimbe-college-fellows?fbclid=IwAR0EYSMrPuZx1SIWealx5vp-RWzr0S890TRRzxWKALaAY4MZvIoXjTCXbNM