Frontiers in Nanotechnology Seminar Series, and the Chemical & Biological Engineering Department Presents, Rosemary Schnell Distinguished Lecturer Natalie Artzi
*Special thanks to the Chemical & Biological Engineering Department for co-sponsoring this event.
“Supercharging Immunotherapy Through Nanotechnology: Chemical Structure Matters”
Get to know Natalie
Natalie CV and Impact
Natalie Artzi is the Head of Structural Nanomedicine at Mass General Brigham’s Gene and Cell Therapy Institute (GCTI) and an Associate Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. She is also a Core Faculty at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University and a Principal Research Scientist at the Institute for Medical Engineering and Science (IMES) at MIT.
A chemical engineer and scientist, Dr. Artzi is renowned for her transformative contributions to structural nanomedicine and pioneering development of tissue- and cell-responsive materials. She designed materials that activate in response to chemical cues, enabling precise drug delivery, and uncovering a novel “paracrine transfer effect,” where nanotherapeutics transfer from one cell to a neighboring cell—a process which can be used to enhance therapeutic outcomes.
Dr. Artzi is the principal investigator of a $27M ARPA-H grant to develop a disease-agnostic innate immunotherapeutic RNA platform to treat cancer and infectious diseases. Her groundbreaking work has earned numerous prestigious honors, including the 2024 Acta Biomaterialia Silver Medal, the 2024 Clemson Award for Applied Research, and the mid-career award from the Society for Biomaterials. She was also the inaugural recipient of the Kabiller Rising Star Award in Nanomedicine. Dr. Artzi is a Fellow of both the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering (AIMBE) and the Controlled Release Society.
Frontiers in Nanotechnology Seminar Series, and the Chemical & Biological Engineering Department Presents, Rosemary Schnell Distinguished Lecturer Natalie Artzi
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