Dan Luo is a Professor in the Department of Biological and Environmental Engineering. He works with DNA and RNA as both generic and genetic materials.
Education
Doctorate
The Ohio State University
1997
Bachelor of Science
University of Science and Technology of China
1989
Recent Research
Nucleic acids play a critical role in living organisms as the carriers of genetic information. The Luo Lab has been using DNA as a true polymer and has developed generic DNA materials, including tree-shaped DNA, DNA gels, and DNA-nanoparticle hybrid assemblies. With these novel DNA materials, Professor Luo’s group is exploring real-world applications from biology to materials in diagnostics, pharmaceutics, protein production, drug delivery, cell culture, and optoelectronics.
Awards & Honors
Cornell Outstanding Educator for having most influenced a Merrill Presidential Scholar (2015) Cornell University
College Fellow (2013) American Institute of Medical and Biological Engineering
Outstanding Accomplishments in Basic Research (2012) Cornell University College of Agriculture and Life Sciences
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Grand Challenge Diagnostics Award recipient (2011) Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Professor Luo’s teaching emphasizes active learning, and students are exposed to real-world problems and solutions. In BEE 3801, emphasis will be on the integration of biotechnology and nanotechnology. BEE 3801 is offered as part of the CALS Signature Semester in Shanghai, China (Toward a Sustainable Future and Emerging Technologies). In BEE 7600, students learn the structure-property-function relationship of nucleic acids, and a project design using nucleic acids as a general material for non-medical applications will be required.
Four Cornell faculty members have been awarded grants from the Bezos Earth Fund’s inaugural AI Grand Challenge for Climate and Nature. Among 1,200 global applicants, only 24 were selected – three from the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences...