Marcelle Machluf | |
Birth Place: | Morocco |
Citizenship: | Israeli |
Field: | Biotechnology |
Known For: | Tissue engineering, cancer drug delivery |
Prizes: | Juludan Research Prize Gutwirth Award |
Marcelle Machluf (Hebrew: מרסל מחלוף) (Morocco, May 24, 1963) is an israeli biologist.
Machluf was born in Morocco and moved to Israel with her mother and grandmother when she was one year old. She grew up in Ashdod. Her mother supported the family as a seamstress and a cleaning lady.
After completing high school and her army service, Machluf applied to medical school, but was not accepted.[1] Instead she decided to study Biology and received a B.Sc. in biology from Hebrew University. She went on to receive her Master of Science and a Ph.D. in biotechnology engineering from Ben-Gurion University of the Negev. She conducted her postdoctoral research as a fellow at Harvard Medical School, and focused on gene therapy, tissue engineering and the control of drug delivery in cancer therapy.
Currently, Machluf is a Full Professor and the Dean of the Faculty of Biotechnology and Food Engineering at the Technion in Israel,[2] [3] as well as the director of the Laboratory for Cancer Drug Delivery & Cell Based Technologies,[4] where the nanoghost, a modified stem cell to treat metastatic melanoma and mesothelioma, has been developed jointly with the New York University Langone Medical Center.[5]
Her research interests include: Developing nano-particles for the delivery of anti cancer drugs to the brain and other organs; developing nano-delivery system for DNA vaccination; and tissue engineering of heart and its blood vessels using pig heart tissue,[6] under the auspices of Technion's Russell Berrie Nanotechnology Institute (RBNI).[7]
Machluf is married to Yigal and has three children.