HHMI News
  Top Stories  
dashed line
  Research News  
dashed line
  Science Education News  
dashed line
  Institute News  
dashed line
  NewsSrch  
dashed line
  Noticias  


News Alert
Sign Up

Stephen R. Quake, D.Phil.

Stephen Quake might be considered a plumber on a miniature scale—one who specializes in technologies that use tiny volumes of fluids, often contained on a single microchip within a maze of channels, valves, and collection wells. Quake has done more than unplug the kitchen sink, however. With a toolbox that draws upon the fields of physics, mathematics, engineering, and materials chemistry, he has developed technology that will allow scientists to integrate several complex experiments on a single device and devised an entirely new approach to the vexing challenge of growing protein crystals.

HHMI Media
Stephen R. Quake
Stephen R. Quake, D.Phil.
Professor of Bioengineering
Stanford University
Palo Alto, California
Research Field: Biophysics


Photo: George Nikitin/AP, © HHMI
A high-resolution photograph is available on request.
Request a photosmall arrow

Quake’s interests unite physics, biology, and biotechnology. Over the past five years, he has focused on understanding the basic physics microfluidic technology, and how that biology can be applied to biological problems. His group pioneered the development of microfluidic large-scale integration (LSI), demonstrating the first integrated microfluidic devices with thousands of mechanical valves. This technology is helping to pave the way for large-scale automation of biology at the nanoliter scale. He and his students have been exploring applications of this “lab on a chip” technology in diverse areas such as functional genomics, genetic analysis, microbiology, and structural biology.

Quake’s group was the first to use microfluidic technology in the determination of protein structure through x-ray crystallography. The group found that the unique fluid physics of nanoliter-scale reactors allow for control and manipulation of the kinetics of protein growth that are impossible at the macroscale—enabling them to develop a chip that outperforms conventional methods of screening protein crystal growth conditions. This chip, which is used in structural biology labs in industry and academia, has been used to grow crystals from proteins that resisted all conventional attempts.

To spread this emerging technology and find new biological applications for microfluidics, Quake plans to establish a foundry service at Stanford. Researchers and students will be able to submit microfluidic chip designs electronically to the foundry, and its staff will fabricate the requested chips. He ran a similar pilot program while at the California Institute of Technology.

Quake is also active in the field of single-molecule biophysics. His group has shown how to tie individual DNA molecules into knots and how to make extraordinarily precise force measurements on single molecules. In 2003, his group demonstrated the first successful single-molecule DNA-sequencing experiments—another promising technology for large-scale biological automation.

Stephen R. Quake received a B.S. in physics and an M.S. in mathematics from Stanford University and a D.Phil. in physics from Oxford University. He is Professor of Bioengineering at Stanford University. He has won the NIH Director’s Pioneer Award and been named a Packard Fellow.

   

MORE HEADLINES

bullet icon

RESEARCH NEWS

07.02.09 | 

Study Pinpoints Genetic Drivers of Lung Cancer’s Spread

07.01.09 | 

Multiple Sclerosis: A New Theory for Why Repair of the Brain’s Wiring Fails

06.24.09 | 

Eat Less, Live Longer: Unraveling the Connection
bullet icon

INSTITUTE NEWS

06.16.09 | 

Jeffrey Friedman Awarded Shaw Prize

06.12.09 | 

HHMI Issues Notice of Fraudulent Activity

06.08.09 | 

Janelia Farm to Expand Campus Housing
Noticias del HHMI Search News Archive

Related Links

AT HHMI

bullet icon

HHMI Taps 43 of the Nation's Most Promising Scientists
(03.21.05)

bullet icon

2005 New Investigators

bullet icon

Investigator Program FAQ

bullet icon

HHMI's Investigator Program

ON THE WEB

external link icon

The Quake Lab

dashed line
 Back to Topto the top
© 2009 Howard Hughes Medical Institute. A philanthropy serving society through biomedical research and science education.
4000 Jones Bridge Road, Chevy Chase, MD 20815-6789 | (301) 215-8500 | email: webmaster@hhmi.org