Matthew Dalby
Matthew Dalby | |
---|---|
Born | mesenchymal stem cells, tissue engineering | 19 October 1972
Institutions | University of Glasgow |
Thesis | Hydroxyapatite/polyethylene composite: an in vitro study of osteoblast response to composition and topography (2001) |
Doctoral advisor | William Bonfield, Lucy Di Silvio |
Other academic advisors | Adam S. G. Curtis |
Website | Professor Matthew Dalby Centre for the Cellular Microenvironment |
Matthew John Dalby
FRSE is Professor of Cell Engineering at the University of Glasgow.[1] His research is focused on mesenchymal stem cell interactions with nanotopography,[2][3] with particular focus on the use of metabolomics,[4] to study mechanotransduction.[5]
He was part of a team, led by Prof Manuel Salmeron-Sanchez, who developed bone growth technology that was used in Eva the Large Münsterländer to save her leg from amputation.[6]
He completed his PhD in Biomedical Materials at Queen Mary University of London in 2001. He has an h-index of 70.[7]
References
- ^ "Research Institutes - Institute of Molecular, Cell and Systems Biology - All staff - Dr Matthew J Dalby". University of Glasgow. 22 October 2020. Retrieved 13 April 2021.
- PMID 21350640.
- PMID 17891143.
- ^ "Professor Matthew Dalby". University of Glasgow. Retrieved 4 April 2018.
- S2CID 39642567.
- ^ "World first for dog's broken leg - BBC News" – via www.youtube.com.
- ^ "Matthew Dalby". Google Scholar. Retrieved 1 November 2018.
External links
- Matthew Dalby publications indexed by Google Scholar