Dr. Neva Ciftcioglu
Born in Turkey,
Neva Ciftcioglu, Ph.D. is codiscoverer and a
principal researcher of Calcifying Nano Particles (CNP) formerly known
as Nanobacteria with Dr. E. Olavi Kajander. She has been
director of science at
Nanobac Pharmaceuticals since 2004. Drs.
Ciftcioglu and Kajander are regarded as the world’s experts in CNP
research. While her early work centered on general infectious diseases
and bacterial pathogenicity, her recent area of interest is in
biological
characterization and pathogenicity of CNP. She has been performing this
research at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston/TX since 2001.
Neva holds an undergraduate degree from Kocatepe Mimar Kemal
School in Ankara, Turkey and both a master’s degree and a doctorate
degree in microbiology from the University of Ankara, Faculty of
Medicine. She served as a post-doctoral research fellow at the
University of Kuopio and received her “docent/professor” title on
Biotechnical Microbiology in the same faculty in 2000.
Her work has been recognized through a number of
scientific
awards from Finnish Scientific Societies and Academies, Turkish
Research
Institutions and from NASA Johnson Space Center. She has
authored or coauthored 60 scientific publications and 50 scientific
abstract communications, and 10 book chapters.
She is a professional member of NASA Astrobiology Institute, the
American Society for Microbiology, the American Society for Cell
Biology, The American Physiological Society, and Mineralogical Society
of America. She lectures to professional societies and universities
worldwide on the subject of nanobacteria/CNP.
Neva is also one of the scientists of The Planetary Society designing
the LIFE
mission (An experiment on the survivability of microorganisms
during
interplanetary transfer) for the
Russian Phobos Space Mission which
will
take place on 2009. This project can be summarized as: The possibility
that transpermia, the interplanetary transfer of microorganisms, may
have played a role in the origins of terrestrial life, depends on the
ability of microorganisms to survive the voyage. While it is unlikely
that loose microbes could escape a planet’s gravity well or survive
radiation and vacuum or entry through a planetary atmosphere,
approximately one ton of Martian rock ejected via major impact events
arrives on Earth each year in the form of meteorites.
Whether survival
of active microbes or spores during the interplanetary transfer phase
itself would be sufficient to allow for transpermia is unknown. To
advance survivability knowledge to the level of 34 months in the
interplanetary space environment, and thus in time range appropriate to
the transpermia hypothesis, the Planetary Society and the Russian Space
Agency are preparing an experiment known as LIFE (Living Interplanetary
Flight Experiment), which would fly on the Russian Phobos Soil mission.
This experiment is being done in collaboration with the Space Research
Institute and the Institute of Microbiology of the Russian Academy of
Sciences. Currently, the experiment is under formal consideration by
NPO Lavochkin, the engineering organization building the spacecraft.
She coauthored
Nanobacteria from blood, the smallest culturable autonomously
replicating agent on Earth,
Nanobacteria: An alternative mechanism for pathogenic intra- and
extracellular calcification and stone formation,
Nanobacteria as extremophiles,
Endotoxin and nanobacteria in polycystic kidney disease,
Extraordinary survival of nanobacteria under extreme
conditions,
Nanoforms: a new type of protein-associated mineralization,
Radiolabeling and in vivo distribution of
nanobacteria in rabbit,
Are apatite nanoparticles safe?, and
Nanobacteria: Fact or Fiction? Characteristics, Detection, and
Medical Importance of Novel Self-Replicating, Calcifying
Nanoparticles.
Read
Tiny Particles May Open New Ways to Study Calcification and
Nanobacteria in Clouds may Spread Diseases Around the World.