Silk Biomaterials for Disease Modeling and Rehabilitative Engineering.

Unique mechanical and structural properties arise from silk fibroin-based materials when these proteins are rendered water-insoluble through a process that results in the collapse of the linearized protein into beta sheet structures resulting in nanocrystalline domains within the tertiary structure. We are leveraging these mechanical and structural properties to create useful silk biomaterial-based culture platforms for investigating mechanisms of disease as well as developing implantable biomaterials for applications in rehabilitative engineering.
However, in the biomaterials community, it is often difficult to quantify the term “useful.” Thus, recent work has focused on improving predictive material design through kinetic modeling of silk biomaterial degradation in vitro as a fucntion of nanocrystaline domains and addition of secondary components, such as extracellular matrix, to the silk biomaterial formulation.
This work, coupled with the investigation of growth factor delivery and in vivo cell infiltration, sheds light on the influence of silk fibroin protein structure on in vitro and in vivo material performance based on intial material formulations. Our results aid in the reduction of biomaterial formulation optimiation using a “guess and check” strategy. On-going work by Stoppel Lab PhD student Julie Jameson, in collaboration with a PhD student in the Zare Lab in UF ECE, Joshua Peeples, takes this a step further using machine learning to evaluate key parameters of biomaterial performance following implantation, such as degradation rate and adipose tissue accumulation, as we aim to build tools and methods to quantitatively assess biomaterial performance in vivo.

The Global Home of Chemical Engineers
At every stage of your career, AIChE Academy is the definitive resource engineers use to sharpen their professional skills. We offer up-to-date courses and webinars in chemical engineering, process and hydrogen safety, bioengineering, sustainability, professional development, and many more.

Assistant Professor
Whitney Stoppel is an assistant professor in the department of Chemical Engineering at the University of Florida. She received her B.S. in Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering from Tulane University, a Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering and a graduate certificate in Cellular Engineering from the University of Massachusetts Amherst, and completed an NIH IRACDA postdoctoral fellowship in Biomedical Engineering at Tufts University. Her current research centers on the development of all natural biomaterial platforms for investigating skeletal muscle disease and repair, delivering bioactive molecules to sites of injury or disease in vivo, and for the delivery of genetic materials into silk worms for engineering silk fibroin protein production. The Stoppel lab exploits the highly tunable mechanical and structural properites of silk fibroin proteins to address pressing clinical problems and lead to fundamental investigation of disease mechanisms in vitro. Dr. Stoppel is the recent recipient of a Department of Defense Congressionally Directed Medical Research fund Discovery Award. At UF, Dr. Stoppel enjoys teaching Elementary Transport for undergraduate chemical engineers, serving as a chair of the Graduate Recruiting Committee and a member of the ChE DEI committee, as well as mentoring over 15 UF undergraduates in the laboratory since starting her lab in Fall 2018.