1. Developmental biology of musculoskeletal tissues for Tissue
Engineers
2. The Mechanics of Musculoskeletal Development
3. Developmental and orthopaedic diseases
4. Synovial joint development
5. Articular and Growth plate Cartilage development
6. Bone development
7. Disc development
8. Tendon development
9. Biomimetic tissue engineering based on human development
10. Clinical translation
Since 2009 Prof. Martin Stoddart has been working as a Principal
Scientist at the AO Research Institute Davos (ARI), where he is
responsible for the Stem Cell Focus Area.
He completed his bachelor studies in Biology at the University of
Aberystwyth in 1995. He then spent a year in Davos at ARI where he
completed his M.Phil in Cartilage Biology. Between 1996–2000 he
carried out his doctoral thesis at the University of Nottingham in
the field of Cancer Angiogenesis. He then returned to Switzerland
to work in the Laboratory for experimental cartilage research in
Zürich, initially as Post-Doc and between 2003–2005 as Group Head.
During that time, he took a 6 month sabbatical at the Centre for
Molecular Orthopeadics, Harvard Medical School, Brigham and Womens
Hospital, Boston, to learn viral gene transfer techniques. In 2005
he returned to ARI, where he is the Stem Cell focus area leader. He
is a lecturer at the ETH Zürich and in 2015 he was awarded an
Honorary Professorship from the Medical Faculty, Albert-Ludwigs
University, Freiburg, Germany. In 2016 he was awarded an Honorary
Professorship at the Institute for Science & Technology in Medicine
University of Keele, UK. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of
Biology and a Fellow member of the International Cartilage Repair
Society.
His main focus is the use of autologous stem cells and gene
transfer for the repair of musculoskeletal tissues using a cell
therapy approach. To this aim he investigates novel cell
identification and isolation methods. His research interests
include the mechano-regulation of stem cell fate, in particular
chondrogenic differentiation. This has led to advances in
regenerative rehabilitation and the discovery of novel clinically
relevant biomarkers and targets. He is also interested in the
mechanisms by which stem cells direct cell fate and interact with
endogenous cells to effect a repair.
He is the author of over 80 scientific papers, 10 book chapters and
is the editor of the book, Mammalian Cell Viability Methods.
Methods in Molecular Biology – Vol.740. He is an Editor for Tissue
Engineering Journal Parts A, B, C., Scientific Editor for eCM
Journal and is the conference chair of the yearly eCM Conference.
He is also an editor of BioMed Research International Orthopedics
and is an Associate Faculty Member of Faculty of 1000 Medicine. Dr.
April Craft is an Assistant Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery &
Research at Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School,
and Principal Faculty at the Harvard Stem Cell Institute. Her
research focuses on both developmental biology and translational
medicine, and involves the use of pluripotent stem cells to
understand how articular chondrocytes and cartilage tissues are
specified during embryonic development and to generate appropriate
cells and tissues for repair.
April Craft received her Bachelor of Science cum laude from
Westminster College (New Wilmington, PA) and her Ph.D. from the
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine (Pittsburgh, PA). She
completed her doctoral thesis in the gene therapy-based laboratory
of Dr. Joseph Glorioso where she engineered non-toxic viral vectors
suitable for gene expression in stem cells, and developed viral
replication-based functional genomics platforms to screen for genes
that activate developmental programs. During her post-doctoral
studies in Dr. Gordon Keller’s laboratory at the McEwen Centre for
Regenerative Medicine (Toronto, Canada), she developed methods to
reliably and reproducibly generate both articular and growth
plate-like cartilage from mouse and human pluripotent stem cells.
She accomplished this by recapitulating the developmental events
that contribute to the specification of these tissues in utero, an
approach that resulted in cartilaginous cells and tissues that are
both molecularly and functionally distinct. Dr. Craft is currently
an Assistant Professor at Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard
Medical School, where her laboratory continues to study the
development of cartilage and other synovial joint tissues with
hopes of applying this knowledge toward the development of
therapeutics for disease attenuation and tissue regeneration and
repair. Dr. Girish Pattappa is currently a postdoctoral research
scientist in the Laboratory for Experimental Trauma Surgery,
Department of Trauma Surgery at University of Regensburg Medical
Centre. He completed his undergraduate studies in Medical
Engineering at Queen Mary University of London in 2005.
Subsequently, he began his PhD thesis under the supervision of
Prof. David Lee and Prof. Joost de Bruijn in the Department of
Engineering and Material Science at Queen Mary that focussed on the
influence of cellular metabolism and oxygen tension on mesenchymal
stem cell proliferation and differentiation. Upon completion in
2010, he moved to the AO Research Institute (Switzerland) and
joined the Musculoskeletal Regeneration group, working on
strategies for intervertebral disc regeneration. Following stints
in Canada and France, he started in current position in 2016, where
his research focuses on the effects of hypoxia and mechanical
stimulation on stem cell chondrogenesis. He has been an
author/co-author of 12 publications and has been an invited
reviewer for a variety of tissue engineering journals. He has also
organized and chaired session at many international conferences and
is a member of various societies including ORS and TERMIS. Oliver
Completed his undergraduate studies in Biomedical Sciences at
Cardiff University in 2011. His introduction to both developmental
biology and tissue engineering came through working as an
undergraduate and later a research assistant under Prof. Charlie
Archer in the Connective Tissue Biology Laboratory. Between 2012
and 2016 Oliver worked for his PhD under Prof. Martin Stoddart at
the AO Foundation Research Institute, Switzerland. His PhD focused
on the induction of chondrogenesis in human mesenchymal stem cells
using mechanical load and investigating the pathways involved in
this process. Following his PhD Oliver moved to Boston, USA, to
work on the chondrogenesis of human pluripotent stem cells with Dr.
April Craft at Boston Children’s Hospital, before moving back to
the UK in 2017. Oliver is the author of seven scientific papers and
one book chapter, he has also presented in, organized and chaired
sessions at multiple international conferences and is a member of
the International Review Panel of European Cells and Materials.
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