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Zhou Research Lab

February 09, 2026
ID
13819

Transcript

  • 00:03My lab is a biomedical
  • 00:04engineering lab. Our chemistry and
  • 00:06engineering group, and, work on
  • 00:09developing a ray of tachology,
  • 00:12mainly for,
  • 00:13drug delivery to the brain
  • 00:15and also for non viral
  • 00:16delivery gene therapy.
  • 00:18And our biology team,
  • 00:20work together with, our engineering
  • 00:22team, you know, to apply,
  • 00:24this new technology
  • 00:26for treatment of selective neurological
  • 00:28disease.
  • 00:32We focus on developing three
  • 00:34major platform technology,
  • 00:36you know, for different applications.
  • 00:38The first one, is nanoparticles,
  • 00:40you know, because we use
  • 00:41a lot of nanoparticles. We
  • 00:43engineer particles,
  • 00:45blood brain barrier, for delivering
  • 00:46drugs into the brain for
  • 00:47brain cancer or stroke treatment.
  • 00:50The second technology we call
  • 00:51step engineering,
  • 00:52so which we pioneered,
  • 00:55the development. And, we are
  • 00:56the only group still now,
  • 00:58in the world in, working
  • 00:59on delivering genome editing therapy
  • 01:01for,
  • 01:02many new genetic disease. The
  • 01:04third topic actually is the
  • 01:06antibody, is a new technology,
  • 01:07which are the development in
  • 01:09the lab. So we are
  • 01:10working on, engineering, developing
  • 01:13a group of antibodies
  • 01:15which can penetrate cells for
  • 01:17treatment now, like Parkinson disease
  • 01:19or Huntington disease.
  • 01:21But on the biology side,
  • 01:23we try to use the
  • 01:24established, you know, procedural techniques.
  • 01:27We don't want to innovate
  • 01:29on the biology side because
  • 01:30we our major innovation is
  • 01:32on technology, you know, development.
  • 01:38My goal is that, you
  • 01:39know, translate all research into
  • 01:41clinical applications.
  • 01:42And for example, for step
  • 01:44engineering and, our first,
  • 01:46genomic team program, we are
  • 01:48more to clinical and, translation.
  • 01:50And then nanoparticles,
  • 01:52we have a program focused
  • 01:54on clinical trials in the
  • 01:55next two years.
  • 01:56And we also anticipate the
  • 01:57antibody work will be, applied
  • 01:59into, clinical, you know, for
  • 02:01disease treatment in the very
  • 02:02near future.
  • 02:04Most of my work cannot
  • 02:05be carried out without, the
  • 02:07collaboration,
  • 02:09particularly this collaboration with our
  • 02:10physician colleagues. For example, for
  • 02:12Geelong Medicine,
  • 02:14we closely collaborated with Yong
  • 02:15Heizhan's group. You know, for
  • 02:18antibody, we, closely work with,
  • 02:20Professor James Hansen.
  • 02:22And then for stroke, you
  • 02:23know, we work with, chemo
  • 02:24chairs. For brain cancer, we
  • 02:26work in a chair monitor.
  • 02:28That's actually how make our
  • 02:30research unique and, translational.