Title

David R Myers

(he/him)
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Title/Position
Assistant Professor
Areas of Research
Contact

Contact

Health Sciences Research Building Suite E-160, Rm E-156Emory
404.727.0401
Biography

Biography

David R. Myers is currently an Assistant Professor in the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering at Georgia Tech and Emory University and the Aflac Cancer and Blood Disorders Center at Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta and Emory University. David’s varied interests have fueled an unusual educational background that fuses engineering, microsystem design, biology, and translational research. David received his PhD in mechanical engineering from the University of California at Berkeley, under the tutelage of one of the early microsystems pioneers, Albert P. Pisano, PhD. Driven by a desire to see new types of sensors in the clinic, David undertook a postdoctoral fellowship in biomedical and clinical research with Wilbur A. Lam, MD, PhD. Working at the intersection of these fields, David has authored or contributed to publications in Nature Materials, Nature Communications, PNAS, and Blood. He is the recipient of multiple NIH grants including an R21 Trailblazer Award, a K25, and several R01s.

Education

Education

  • Ph.D. in Mechanical Engineering, 2010 - University of California at Berkeley
  • M.S. in Mechanical Engineering, 2007 - University of California at Berkeley
  • B.S. in Mechanical Engineering, 2004 - Virginia Commonwealth University
Affiliated Centers & Institutes

Affiliated Centers & Institutes

Research Interests

Research Interests

Lab Research: Our understanding of a system centers on our ability to quantitatively measure it, from elucidating how cells function to enabling better healthcare with accurate measurements of patient vital signs. To that end, the Sensors for Living Systems Lab (SL2) finds new ways to extract information from biological systems. We are especially interested in phenomena that occur at the microscale.

Public Outreach: We create content for social media with the goal of humanizing scientists & making academia accessible. Watch the latest video from Scieneers on TikTok (@scieneers), https://www.tiktok.com/@scieneers.

Teaching Interests

Teaching Interests

Microsystems Design, Microsystems Fabrication, Mechanical Design, Heat Transfer
Publications

Publications

Hernandez S*, Miglani D*, Kimbroa J, Luna CA, Jones H, Pinsky BA, Waggoner JJ‡, Myers DR‡, “Portable hepatitis C virus RNA extraction and stabilization using low-cost lab-on-a-chip style components with shelf stable reagents,” Sensors and Actuators B: Chemical 437. 137712, Aug 2025. *Co-author; ‡ Co-Corresponding Authors
Oshinowo O, Copeland R, Patel A, Shaver N, Fay ME, Xiang Y, Caruso C, Clark AE, Hernandes S, Delgado P, Jeltuhin R, Kelvin J, Chester D, Brown A, Dreaden EC, Li R, Leong T, Waggoner J, Ortlund E, Bennett C, Lam WA‡, Myers DR‡, Autoantibodies Immuno-mechanically Modulate Platelet Contractile Force and Bleeding Risk, Nature Communications 15 (1) 10201, Nov. 2024 (‡ Co-Corresponding Authors)
Islam MM, Gaska I, Oshinowo O, Otumala A, Shekhar S, Au Yong NA, Myers DR, “Single-pericyte nanomechanics measured by contraction cytometry,” APL Bioengineering. 1 September 2024; 8 (3): 036109
Delgado P, Luna CA, Dissanayaka A, Oshinowo O, Waggoner JJ, Schley S, Fernandez T‡, Myers DR‡, “An economical in-class sticker microfluidic activity develops student expertise in microscale physics and device manufacturing,” Lab on a Chip, 2024, 24, 2176 - 2192 DOI: 10.1039/D3LC00912B. (‡ Co-Corresponding Authors)
Delgado P, Oshinowo O, Fay ME, Luna CA, Dissanayaka A, Dorbala P, Ravindran A, Shen L, Myers DR, “Universal pre-mixing dry-film stickers capable of retrofitting existing microfluidics,” Biomicrofluidics 17, 014104 (2023)

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