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Dr Michael Higgins
Qualifications:
B.Sc. (Hons) Biology - University of Melbourne, Australia
PhD Biology & Chemistry – University of Melbourne, Australia
Research Interests:
Dr Michael Higgins completed his PhD in the field of marine and freshwater microalgae at the University of Melbourne, Australia. This work involved the application of Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) to determine the nanoscale adhesive and mechanical properties of living cells with the aim of developing new approaches for the design of antifouling, “non-stick” surfaces.
In 2002, Dr Higgins moved onto a Research Fellow position in the Centre for Research on Adaptive Nanodevices and Nanostructures (CRANN), Trinity College Dublin, Ireland and in 2006 was appointed to Senior Research Fellow at the same institution. In 2007, he spent a period at the Institute of Biomolecular and Biomedical Research at University College Dublin, Ireland, before returning to Australia to commence his current position as Senior Research Fellow at the Intelligent Polymer Research Institute (IPRI), University of Wollongong.
Dr Higgins’s main interest and research has focused on the application of AFM to study the nanomechanical properties of biological systems, including living cells, model lipid membranes, single ligand-receptor interactions, individual protein unfolding, fundamental surface-force interactions, as well as being involved in AFM instrument development. He now has over 10 years experience with AFM in the field of Biophysics.
Current Research Interests:
- Cell adhesion and molecular interactions with conducting biomaterials for bionic applications
- Mechanical and electrical nanostimulation of single cells (e.g. sensory and muscle cells) using nanoscale AFM probes
- Nanomechanics of single living cells
- Adverse nanomechanical property modifications of cells in disease
- Nanomechanical properties of natural adhesives for biomaterial design.
- Development of Hybrid AFM systems (e.g. combined fluorescence and atomic force microscopy)
Memberships:
Biophysical Society (BS)
American Chemical Society (ACS)
5 Key Publications:
- M. J. Higgins, J. E. Sader, P. Mulvaney and R. Wetherbee (2003). Probing the Surface of Living Diatom Cells with Atomic Force Microscopy: The Nanostructure and Nanomechanical Properties of the Mucilage Layer. Journal of Phycology 39 (4): 527-540.
- T. Uchihashi, M. J. Higgins, S. Yasuda, S. P. Jarvis, S. Akita, Y. Nakayama, and J. E. Sader. (2004). Quantitative force measurements in liquid using frequency modulation atomic force microscopy. Applied Physics Letters 85:3575-3577.
- M. J. Higgins, C. K. Riener, T. Uchihashi, J. E. Sader, R. McKendry and S. P. Jarvis. (2005). Frequency modulation atomic force microscopy: a dynamic measurement technique for biological systems. Nanotechnology 16:85-89.
- M.J. Higgins, M. Polcik, T. Fukuma, J.E. Sader, N. Yoshikazu and S.P. Jarvis (2006). Structured Water Layers Adjacent to Biological Membranes. Biophysical Journal 91:2532-2542
- T. Fukuma, M. J. Higgins and S. P. Jarvis (2007). Direct Imaging of Individual Intrinsic Hydration Layers on Lipid Bilayers at Ångstrom Resolution. Biophysical Journal 92: 3603-3609
For further information on any of the above, including honours and post-graduate study, please contact Dr Michael Higgins on any of the following:
email: mhiggins@uow.edu.au
phone: +61 (02) 4221 4872
office: AIIM 240
IPRI Noticeboard

2009 November 18-20: International Symposium on Renewable Energy Storage and Conversion Technologies, UOW Innovation Campus
2009 December 1: ACES Workshop on Ethical issues in scientific publication: peer review, publishing ethics & the integrity of the scientific record, UOW Innovation Campus, Wollongong
2009 December 3-4: Printing of Bio-Systems and electronics:the next Generation of Bionics, UOW Innovation Campus
2010 February 17-19: 5th Annual International Electromaterials Science Symposium held jointly with the 4th Australasian Symposium on Ionic Liquids (ASIL-4), Monash University, Melbourne
2010 June 9-11: Nanobionics Symposium, UOW Innovation Campus, Wollongong


