Title

Felipe Quiroz

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Title/Position
Assistant Professor
Contact

Contact

HSRB E184Emory
404.251.5435
Education

Education

  • B.S. Biomedical Engineering, Universidad EIA and Universidad CES, 2008
  • M.S. Biomedical Engineering, Duke University, 2011
  • Ph.D. Biomedical Engineering, Duke University, 2013
  • Postdoctoral Fellow, Rockefeller University, 2014-2019
Research Interests

Research Interests

My lab engineers self-assembling materials that are genetically-encoded and stimuli-responsive. Using these materials, together with genetic and protein engineering tools, we tackle exciting challenges in nanotechnology, biotechnology and medicine. As curious engineers, our work has led us to dissect the DNA and genomic parts that encode for such material systems and their emergent biophysical properties at the DNA/genome and protein levels. To learn new principles of self-assembly and stimuli-responsiveness, we take a bioinspired approach. We probe and manipulate self-assembly phenomena within cells and tissues. The resulting findings illuminate fundamental aspects of biology and serve as foundation to engineer advanced biomaterials.

Teaching Interests

Teaching Interests

I am interested in guiding BME graduate students to the leading-edge of scientific progress in cell engineering, with a particular focus on immune and stem cell engineering. I serve as course director for Stem Cell Engineering (BMED7310) and regularly support my colleagues instructing BME students across a range of topics like Rational Design of Biomaterials, Biomolecular Engineering and Tissue Engineering.
Publications

Publications

A.R.C. Avecilla, J. Thomas, and F.G. Quiroz. Genetically-encoded phase separation sensors enable high-fidelity live-cell probing of biomolecular condensates. ACS Sensors, 10.3: 1857-1869, 2025.
M.C. Giraldo-Castaño, K.A. Littlejohn, A.R.C. Avecilla., N. Barrera-Villamizar, F.G. Quiroz. Programmability and biomedical utility of intrinsically-disordered protein polymers. Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews, 115418, 2024
A.R.C. Avecilla, F.G. Quiroz. Cracking the skin barrier: liquid-liquid phase separation shines under the skin. JID Innovations, 1: 100036, 2021
F.G. Quiroz, V.F. Fiore, J. Levorse, L. Polak, E. Wong, H.A. Pasolli, E. Fuchs. Liquid-liquid phase separation drives skin barrier formation. Science, 367.6483, 2020.
Media

Media