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Polina Anikeeva

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Polina Olegovna Anikeeva (born 1982) is a Russian-born American materials scientist who is a Professor of Material Science & Engineering as well as Brain & Cognitive Sciences at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).[3][1][4] She also holds faculty appointments in the McGovern Institute for Brain Research and Research Laboratory of Electronics at MIT. Her research is centered on developing tools for studying the underlying molecular and cellular bases of behavior and neurological diseases. She was awarded the 2018 Vilcek Foundation Prize for Creative Promise in Biomedical Science, the 2020 MacVicar Faculty Fellowship at MIT, and in 2015 was named a MIT Technology Review Innovator Under 35.

Early life and education

Anikeeva was born in Saint Petersburg, Russia (then Leningrad, Soviet Union). She studied biophysics at St. Petersburg State Polytechnic University, where she worked under the guidance of Tatiana Birshtein,[5] a polymer physicist at the Institute of Macromolecular Compounds of the Russian Academy of Sciences. During her undergraduate studies she also completed an exchange program at ETH Zurich.[3] After graduating in 2003, Anikeeva spent a year working in the Physical Chemistry Division at Los Alamos National Laboratory where she developed photovoltaic cells based on quantum dots (QDs). In 2004, she enrolled in the Materials Science and Engineering Ph.D. program at MIT and joined Vladimir Bulović's laboratory of organic electronics.[2] Working with Bulović, she engineered light-emitting diodes based on quantum dots and organic semiconductors. While a graduate student, she was the lead author on a seminal paper[6] that reported a method for generating QD light-emitting devices with electroluminescence tunable over the entire visible spectrum (460 nm to 650 nm). Her doctoral research was commercialized by the display industry, and acquired by a manufacturer that would eventually become part of Samsung.[7]

Research and career

Anikeeva moved to Stanford University and was appointed to Karl Deisseroth's neuroscience laboratory as a Postdoctoral Scholar. The Deisseroth laboratory pioneered Optogenetics, a technique that utilizes light-sensitive ion channels such as Channelrhodopsins to modulate neuronal activity. Anikeeva worked on combining tetrodes, which are electronic modalities used to record neuronal activity, with optical waveguides[8] to create optetrodes. These optoelectronic devices could be used to record the electrical activity invoked by light delivered through the waveguide, which became the precursor to the multi-functional fiber-based neural interfaces Anikeeva would later pioneer in her own laboratory at MIT.[9][10][11]

After her postdoctoral studies in California, Anikeeva returned to Cambridge, Massachusetts as an AMAX Career Development Assistant Professor at MIT in 2011.[12] The Anikeeva laboratory, which is also referred to as Bioelectronics@MIT, engineers tools to study and control the nervous system.[13][14] Her laboratory has two main research themes. The first is using the thermal drawing technique, a process originally developed for applications such as fiber optics and textiles, to create flexible polymer, fiber-based neural interfaces.[9][10][15][11] In 2015, Anikeeva and co-workers first reported these flexible neural interfaces, which are also referred to as neural probes, and demonstrated that they could combine optical, electronic, and microfluidic modalities into a single implantable device for chronic interrogation of the nervous system.[9] These fibers are a more advanced and scalable technology than their optetrode precursors. Since then, Anikeeva and her students have created even more advanced neural interfaces that can be highly customized[16] and include materials such as photoresists[17] and hydrogels.[18]

Anikeeva's second main research theme is using magnetic fields to wirelessly modulate neuronal activity. Unlike light, which has a limited penetration depth in biological tissues due to attenuation, weak alternating magnetic fields (AMFs) have minimal coupling to biological tissues due to tissues' low conductivity and negligible magnetic permeability.[19] Magnetic nanomaterials can be engineered to heat up or rotate when in the presence of AMFs. If these nanomaterials are injected into biological tissues such as the brain and exposed to AMFs, they can be triggered to cause local thermal or mechanical stimulation. These technologies can be used to stimulate the TRP family of ion channels, including TRPV1 and TRPV4. In 2015, Anikeeva and her students demonstrated in a key paper published in Science[20] that magneto-thermal stimulation with magnetic nanomaterials could be used for wireless deep brain stimulation. Follow up studies from the Anikeeva laboratory then extended this concept to stimulate mechanosensitive channels.[21] Anikeeva and her colleagues have also shown that these magnetic nanomaterials can additionally be used to trigger drug delivery,[22] hormone release,[23] and for stimulating acid-sensing ion channels.[19]

Anikeeva has given multiple talks on the technologies invented in her laboratory and neural interfaces more broadly, including in two TED talk given in 2015[24] and 2017.[25]

Awards and honors

Selected publications

  • Anikeeva, Polina O.; Halpert, Jonathan E.; Bawendi, Moungi G.; Bulović, Vladimir (2009). "Quantum Dot Light-Emitting Devices with Electroluminescence Tunable over the Entire Visible Spectrum". Nano Letters. 9 (7): 2532–2536. Bibcode:2009NanoL...9.2532A. doi:10.1021/nl9002969. ISSN 1530-6984. PMID 19514711.
  • Anikeeva, Polina; et al. (2012). "Optetrode: a multichannel readout for optogenetic control in freely moving mice". Nature Neuroscience. 15 (1): 163–170. doi:10.1038/nn.2992. PMC 4164695. PMID 22138641.
  • Gunaydin, Lisa A.; Grosenick, Logan; Finkelstein, Joel C.; Kauvar, Isaac V.; Fenno, Lief E.; Adhikari, Avishek; Lammel, Stephan; Mirzabekov, Julie J.; Airan, Raag D.; Zalocusky, Kelly A.; Tye, Kay M.; Anikeeva, Polina; Malenka, Robert C.; Deisseroth, Karl (2014). "Natural Neural Projection Dynamics Underlying Social Behavior". Cell. 157 (7): 1535–1551. doi:10.1016/j.cell.2014.05.017. ISSN 0092-8674. PMC 4123133. PMID 24949967.
  • Canales, Andres; Jia, Xiaoting; Froriep, Ulrich P.; Koppes, Ryan A.; Tringides, Christina M.; Selvidge, Jennifer; Lu, Chi; Hou, Chong; Wei, Lei; Fink, Yoel; Anikeeva, Polina (2015). "Multifunctional fibers for simultaneous optical, electrical and chemical interrogation of neural circuits in vivo". Nature Biotechnology. 33 (3): 277–284. doi:10.1038/nbt.3093. ISSN 1546-1696. PMID 25599177. S2CID 12319389.
  • Chen, Ritchie; Romero, Gabriela; Christiansen, Michael G.; Mohr, Alan; Anikeeva, Polina (2015-03-27). "Wireless magnetothermal deep brain stimulation". Science. 347 (6229): 1477–1480. Bibcode:2015Sci...347.1477C. doi:10.1126/science.1261821. hdl:1721.1/96011. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 25765068. S2CID 43687881.

References

  1. ^ a b Polina Anikeeva publications indexed by Google Scholar Edit this at Wikidata
  2. ^ a b Anikeeva, Polina Olegovna (2009). Physical properties and design of light-emitting devices based on organic materials and nanoparticles. mit.edu (PhD thesis). Massachusetts Institute of Technology. hdl:1721.1/46680. OCLC 428140641.
  3. ^ a b bioelectronics.mit.edu Edit this at Wikidata
  4. ^ Polina Anikeeva publications from Europe PubMed Central
  5. ^ a b "Polina Anikeeva | Women in Optics | SPIE". spie.org. Retrieved 2020-11-10.
  6. ^ Anikeeva, Polina O.; Halpert, Jonathan E.; Bawendi, Moungi G.; Bulović, Vladimir (2009-07-08). "Quantum Dot Light-Emitting Devices with Electroluminescence Tunable over the Entire Visible Spectrum". Nano Letters. 9 (7): 2532–2536. Bibcode:2009NanoL...9.2532A. doi:10.1021/nl9002969. ISSN 1530-6984. PMID 19514711.
  7. ^ a b "Polina Anikeeva". Vilcek Foundation. Retrieved 2020-11-10.
  8. ^ Anikeeva, Polina; Andalman, Aaron S; Witten, Ilana; Warden, Melissa; Goshen, Inbal; Grosenick, Logan; Gunaydin, Lisa A; Frank, Loren M; Deisseroth, Karl (January 2012). "Optetrode: a multichannel readout for optogenetic control in freely moving mice". Nature Neuroscience. 15 (1): 163–170. doi:10.1038/nn.2992. ISSN 1097-6256. PMC 4164695. PMID 22138641.
  9. ^ a b c Canales, Andres; Jia, Xiaoting; Froriep, Ulrich P; Koppes, Ryan A; Tringides, Christina M; Selvidge, Jennifer; Lu, Chi; Hou, Chong; Wei, Lei; Fink, Yoel; Anikeeva, Polina (March 2015). "Multifunctional fibers for simultaneous optical, electrical and chemical interrogation of neural circuits in vivo". Nature Biotechnology. 33 (3): 277–284. doi:10.1038/nbt.3093. ISSN 1087-0156. PMID 25599177. S2CID 12319389.
  10. ^ a b Park, Seongjun; Guo, Yuanyuan; Jia, Xiaoting; Choe, Han Kyoung; Grena, Benjamin; Kang, Jeewoo; Park, Jiyeon; Lu, Chi; Canales, Andres; Chen, Ritchie; Yim, Yeong Shin (April 2017). "One-step optogenetics with multifunctional flexible polymer fibers". Nature Neuroscience. 20 (4): 612–619. doi:10.1038/nn.4510. hdl:1721.1/111655. ISSN 1097-6256. PMC 5374019. PMID 28218915.
  11. ^ a b Frank, James A.; Antonini, Marc-Joseph; Chiang, Po-Han; Canales, Andres; Konrad, David B.; Garwood, Indie C.; Rajic, Gabriela; Koehler, Florian; Fink, Yoel; Anikeeva, Polina (2020-11-18). "In Vivo Photopharmacology Enabled by Multifunctional Fibers". ACS Chemical Neuroscience. 11 (22): 3802–3813. doi:10.1021/acschemneuro.0c00577. ISSN 1948-7193. PMC 10251749. PMID 33108719. S2CID 225099176.
  12. ^ "Polina Anikeeva". MIT McGovern Institute. Retrieved 2020-11-10.
  13. ^ "Polina Anikeeva". World Economic Forum. Retrieved 2020-11-10.
  14. ^ "Polina Anikeeva". TEDxCambridge. Retrieved 2020-11-10.
  15. ^ Park, Jimin; Jin, Kyoungsuk; Sahasrabudhe, Atharva; Chiang, Po-Han; Maalouf, Joseph H.; Koehler, Florian; Rosenfeld, Dekel; Rao, Siyuan; Tanaka, Tomo; Khudiyev, Tural; Schiffer, Zachary J. (August 2020). "In situ electrochemical generation of nitric oxide for neuronal modulation". Nature Nanotechnology. 15 (8): 690–697. Bibcode:2020NatNa..15..690P. doi:10.1038/s41565-020-0701-x. ISSN 1748-3387. PMC 7415650. PMID 32601446.
  16. ^ Antonini, Marc-Joseph; Sahasrabudhe, Atharva; Tabet, Anthony; Schwalm, Miriam; Rosenfeld, Dekel; Garwood, Indie; Park, Jimin; Loke, Gabriel; Khudiyev, Tural; Kanik, Mehmet; Corbin, Nathan (2021-05-18). "Customizing Multifunctional Neural Interfaces through Thermal Drawing Process". doi:10.1101/2021.05.17.444577. S2CID 234795185. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  17. ^ Lee, Youngbin; Canales, Andres; Loke, Gabriel; Kanik, Mehmet; Fink, Yoel; Anikeeva, Polina (2020-12-23). "Selectively Micro-Patternable Fibers via In-Fiber Photolithography". ACS Central Science. 6 (12): 2319–2325. doi:10.1021/acscentsci.0c01188. ISSN 2374-7943. PMC 7760470. PMID 33376793.
  18. ^ Tabet, Anthony; Antonini, Marc-Joseph; Sahasrabudhe, Atharva; Park, Jimin; Rosenfeld, Dekel; Koehler, Florian; Yuk, Hyunwoo; Hanson, Samuel; Stinson, Jordan A.; Stok, Melissa; Zhao, Xuanhe (2021-05-07). "Modular Integration of Hydrogel Neural Interfaces". ACS Central Science. 7 (9): 1516–1523. doi:10.26434/chemrxiv.14541432. PMC 8461769. PMID 34584953.
  19. ^ a b Park, Jimin; Tabet, Anthony; Moon, Junsang; Chiang, Po-Han; Koehler, Florian; Sahasrabudhe, Atharva; Anikeeva, Polina (2020-09-09). "Remotely Controlled Proton Generation for Neuromodulation". Nano Letters. 20 (9): 6535–6541. Bibcode:2020NanoL..20.6535P. doi:10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c02281. ISSN 1530-6984. PMC 8558523. PMID 32786937.
  20. ^ Chen, R.; Romero, G.; Christiansen, M. G.; Mohr, A.; Anikeeva, P. (2015-03-27). "Wireless magnetothermal deep brain stimulation". Science. 347 (6229): 1477–1480. Bibcode:2015Sci...347.1477C. doi:10.1126/science.1261821. hdl:1721.1/96011. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 25765068. S2CID 43687881.
  21. ^ Gregurec, Danijela; Senko, Alexander W.; Chuvilin, Andrey; Reddy, Pooja D.; Sankararaman, Ashwin; Rosenfeld, Dekel; Chiang, Po-Han; Garcia, Francisco; Tafel, Ian; Varnavides, Georgios; Ciocan, Eugenia (2020-07-28). "Magnetic Vortex Nanodiscs Enable Remote Magnetomechanical Neural Stimulation". ACS Nano. 14 (7): 8036–8045. doi:10.1021/acsnano.0c00562. ISSN 1936-0851. PMC 8592276. PMID 32559057.
  22. ^ Rao, Siyuan; Chen, Ritchie; LaRocca, Ava A.; Christiansen, Michael G.; Senko, Alexander W.; Shi, Cindy H.; Chiang, Po-Han; Varnavides, Georgios; Xue, Jian; Zhou, Yang; Park, Seongjun (October 2019). "Remotely controlled chemomagnetic modulation of targeted neural circuits". Nature Nanotechnology. 14 (10): 967–973. Bibcode:2019NatNa..14..967R. doi:10.1038/s41565-019-0521-z. ISSN 1748-3387. PMC 6778020. PMID 31427746.
  23. ^ Rosenfeld, Dekel; Senko, Alexander W.; Moon, Junsang; Yick, Isabel; Varnavides, Georgios; Gregureć, Danijela; Koehler, Florian; Chiang, Po-Han; Christiansen, Michael G.; Maeng, Lisa Y.; Widge, Alik S. (April 2020). "Transgene-free remote magnetothermal regulation of adrenal hormones". Science Advances. 6 (15): eaaz3734. Bibcode:2020SciA....6.3734R. doi:10.1126/sciadv.aaz3734. ISSN 2375-2548. PMC 7148104. PMID 32300655.
  24. ^ Rethinking the Brain Machine Interface | Polina Anikeeva | TEDxCambridge, retrieved 2021-05-25
  25. ^ Anikeeva, Polina (10 January 2018), Why You Shouldn't Upload Your Brain To A Computer, retrieved 2020-11-10
  26. ^ "NSF Award Search: Award#1253890 - CAREER: Optoelectronic neural scaffolds: materials platform for investigation and control of neuronal activity and development". nsf.gov. Retrieved 2020-11-10.
  27. ^ "Polina Anikeeva". naefrontiers.org. Retrieved 2020-11-10.
  28. ^ "Polina Anikeeva". World Economic Forum. Retrieved 2021-05-25.
  29. ^ "Dresselhaus Award announced | MIT DMSE". dmse.mit.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-10.
  30. ^ "Junior Bose Award | MIT DMSE". dmse.mit.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-10.
  31. ^ "Technology Review announces TR35 | MIT DMSE". dmse.mit.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-10.
  32. ^ "Seven MIT educators honored for digital learning innovation". MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Retrieved 2021-05-25.
  33. ^ "2020 MacVicar Faculty Fellows named". MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Retrieved 2021-05-25.
This page was last edited on 11 January 2024, at 09:09
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