Meenal Datta awarded Maximizing Investigators’ Research Award (MIRA) from NIH to investigate immune cell response to mechanical forces
Meenal Datta, assistant professor of aerospace and mechanical engineering at the University of Notre Dame, has received the Maximizing Investigators’ Research Award (MIRA) from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS), part of the National Institutes of Health.
The award, which provides $1.9 million over five years, will enable Datta and her lab to contribute to the developing fields of immunomechanics and mechano-immunology by investigating the ways in which immune cells respond to mechanical forces.
Datta, an expert on the biological and mechanical features of tissue microenvironments, will use MIRA funding to establish an immune “mechanome” — a complete inventory of the mechanical responses and characteristics of immune cells. This will provide crucial insights into the relationship between mechanobiology and immunology.
Many diseases and conditions trigger inflammation capable of complicating or entirely thwarting immune function and treatment outcomes. Datta has previously investigated these relationships in infectious disease, genetic abnormalities, and cancer. This is the second time in two years that the NIH has invested in Datta’s research in this area.
“Little is known about the ways immune cells respond to mechanical forces,” said Datta. “A better understanding of the biophysical relationships between these forces and immune cell populations and functions will provide key insights into disease progression and treatment resistance.”
To this end, her lab uses mechanobiological tools combined with mouse models of health and disease, single-cell RNA sequencing, functional immunology, artificial intelligence-informed bioinformatics, and intravital imaging.
Datta joined the Notre Dame faculty in 2021. She teaches in the Notre Dame Bioengineering program, the Materials Science and Engineering doctoral program, and in Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering.
Latest Research
- NDTL Develops CO₂ Component Test Capability and Successfully Tests High Efficiency Transcritical CO₂ CompressorNDTL Propulsion and Power (NDTL) has designed and built a closed test loop and a CO₂ storage and management system to support testing for supercritical and transcritical CO₂ power and thermal management components. The test loop can be installed in NDTL’s 10-megawatt, 5-megawatt, or 3-megawatt test cells to match the power, speed, and flow requirements of a particular test article. NDTL recently completed testing of the first stage of a high-efficiency multistage transcritical CO₂ compressor.…
- Eck Institute announces 2023-2024 graduate research fellowsEck Institute 2023-2024 graduate research fellows. Four Ph.D. students at the University of Notre Dame have joined the Eck Institute for Global Health as graduate research fellows…
- Notre Dame to lead new consortium funded to strategize wireless innovation and economic development in the midwestThe University of Notre Dame and a group of over twenty partners have been selected for a Strategy Development Grant…
- Notre Dame undergraduates create route optimization app to help reduce fuel costs, travel time and carbon emissionsThe app, which integrates seamlessly with Google Maps, Apple Maps and Waze, not only saves drivers’ time and money, but also reduces their carbon footprint. It is targeted toward people running everyday errands and independent drivers for companies like Amazon, Walmart and Target — who represent an underserved population, according to the students.
- Anthropologist's studies aim to correct history about 'woman the hunter'New research from Cara Ocobock, an assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology and director of the Human Energetics Laboratory at the University of Notre Dame, combined both physiological and archaeological evidence to argue that not only did prehistoric women engage in the practice of hunting, but their female anatomy and biology would have made them intrinsically better suited for it.
- Exploring the Maritain papers at Notre Dame: Five questions with Jacob SalibaJacob Saliba Jacob Saliba recently received a Research Travel Grant from the Cushwa Center for his dissertation project, “The Discovery of the Sacred in Interwar France: From Contestation to Cooperation, 1919–1941.” A doctoral candidate at Boston College, Saliba visited the University of Notre Dame in June 2023 to see materials at the Jacques Maritain Center’s collection, which includes papers of Jacques Maritain, Yves René Simon, and Charles de Koninck—materials that have been…