Renowned chemical engineer and nanomedicine pioneer joining USC
Mark E. Davis is a noted expert in technologies that hold great promise for curing intractable diseases. Photo courtesy of Mark Davis.

Renowned chemical engineer and nanomedicine pioneer joining USC

Mark E. Davis, whose work holds promise for cancer treatment, will join the faculties of USC Dornsife, USC Viterbi and Keck School of Medicine of USC this fall.
ByMarc Ballon

Mark E. Davis, a renowned chemical engineering professor and nanomedicine pioneer at Caltech will join the USC faculty in October. His research on biomaterials for cancer treatment holds great promise to make medicines more targeted and effective

Davis, one of few academics selected to the National Academy of Engineering (1997), National Academy of Sciences (2006) and National Academy of Medicine (2011), will hold a Provost Professor appointment at USC.

He will be based at both the soon-to-open USC Michelson Center for Convergent Bioscience and at USC’s Health Sciences Campus. He will hold joint appointments in USC Dornsife’s chemistry department and the Department of Medicine at the Keck School of Medicine of USC, with a primary academic home in the Mork Family Department of Chemical Engineering in the USC Viterbi School of Engineering.

Catalysts, polymers and nanoparticles

Davis’ research efforts involve materials synthesis in two general areas: zeolites and other solids that can be used for molecular recognition and catalysis, and polymers for the delivery of a broad range of therapeutics. He also conducts pioneering work on engineering nanoparticles for cancer therapeutics.

During his time at Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University from 1981–91, Davis and his research team invented a number of new zeolites and molecular sieves. They were the first to report the synthesis of a molecular sieve with uniform pore sizes larger than 1 nanometer. In recognition of his work, Davis became the first engineer to ever receive the National Science Foundations’s Alan T. Waterman Award in 1990.

In 1995, while at Caltech, Davis expanded the focus of his research to biomaterials for cancer research. He did so in response to his wife’s long, painful but ultimately successful fight against breast cancer.

Davis and his team became the first researchers to successfully engineer nanoparticles that are made from polymeric materials specifically designed and created for human cancer therapeutics. To date, three different nanoparticles invented by his lab have gone to numerous human cancer clinical trials that have been and are being conducted both in the United States and throughout the world.

At USC, Davis will continue his groundbreaking work on engineering nanoparticles that can deliver drugs to the brain, research that began in recent years and could improve the treatment of brain cancer, Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases, among other conditions.

At Caltech, he and his team discovered how to successfully design nanoparticles that safely cross the blood-brain barrier in rodent models. Their work continues on the pathway to clinical translation of these nanoparticles that, if successful, would be a major medical breakthrough.

Leadership

Davis also will serve as a strategic advisor to the deans of USC Dornsife and USC Viterbi, and he will mentor faculty and students on convergent bioscience and engineering. As part of his duties at the Keck School of Medicine, Davis will serve as co-director of the M.D./Ph.D. program.

“The connection between engineering and medicine is really a focal point for me,” Davis said. “At USC, I will work on trying to be a conduit to help people do translational medicine, especially in the area of therapeutics.”

“Mark Davis is a stellar addition to our faculty,” said USC Provost Michael Quick. “His multidisciplinary scholarship and research is an asset to the Michelson Center, where we are building bridges across our campus to transform medicine and science. I know he will help move us forward in these efforts. We are looking forward to his expertise and guidance.”

USC Dornsife Dean Amber D. Miller welcomed Davis, expressing high expectations for his contributions.

“USC Dornsife extends a warm welcome to Provost Professor Davis,” she said. “We greatly benefit from his strong record of leadership, innovation, and expertise in creating synergies across scientific fields.”

Yannis C. Yortsos, dean of USC Viterbi, expressed enthusiasm for Davis’ potential to bridge engineering and health science.

“We are truly excited to have such a superb engineer and scientist as Mark Davis join USC,” Yortsos said. “We are eagerly looking forward to his leadership in advancing the rapidly accelerating convergence between engineering and medicine.”

Said Rohit Varma, dean of the Keck School and director of the USC Gayle and Edward Roski Eye Institute: “We are delighted to welcome Mark to the Keck School family. He will be a tremendous resource for our M.D./Ph.D. program. His visionary work that converges the disciplines of technology and health and medicine will inspire our students to innovate and create at the forefront of translational science.”

Myriad achievements

Davis has written more than 425 scientific publications, two textbooks and holds 75 U.S. patents. He is a founding editor of CaTTech and a former associate editor of Chemistry of Materials and the AIChE Journal.”

Over the decades, Davis has won a raft of awards, including the Colburn and Professional Progress Awards from the American Institute of Chemical Engineers and the Somorjai, Ipatieff, Langmuir, Murphree and Gaden Prizes from the ACS. In 2014, he received the Prince of Asturias Award for Technical and Scientific Research from the King of Spain, and in 2015, he was elected to the National Academy of Inventors.

A scientist with an entrepreneurial bent, Davis founded Insert Therapeutics Inc.; Calando Pharmaceuticals Inc., a company that created the first RNAi therapeutic to reach the clinic for treating cancer; and Avidity Bioscience.

Apart from his scientific achievements, Davis attained All American Status for Masters Track and Field in the 400, 200 and 100 Meter Dashes. In 2011, he won the 400 Meter Dash for men of age 55-59 at the Masters World Championship.

He holds three degrees from the University of Kentucky, all in chemical engineering.