Deok-Ho Kim: Difference between revisions

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'''Biosketch'''  
'''Biosketch'''  
[[Image:Kim_Deok-Ho.jpg|left|170px]]
Dr. Deok‐Ho Kim is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at the Johns Hopkins University. He received his Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering from The Johns Hopkins University (2010), his M.S. in Mechanical Engineering from Seoul National University (2000), and his B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from POSTECH (1998). In 1996, he studied at the University of Birmingham, UK, as a Hogil-Kim Memorial Fellow Exchange Student. From March 2000 to June 2005, he worked as a Research Scientist at the Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST), which included a 7 month academic visit to the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology at Zurich (ETH‐Zurich). Prior to joining the Johns Hopkins University, he was an Associate Professor in the Department of Bioengineering at the University of Washington at Seattle. He is also the scientific founder of NanoSurface Biomedical Inc (2015).  His research interests center on the development and application of engineered microenvironments and functional tissue engineering models for elucidating regenerative biology, drug screening, disease modeling, and cell-based therapies. His current research aims to investigate how engineered microenvironments can direct cell function and tissue regeneration. Several specific thrusts of his current research program include multiscale biomimetic materials/devices, human iPSC-based microphysiological models of neuromuscular and cardiac muscle disease, microscale stem/tumor cell niche engineering, and cell mechanobiology. He has authored and co-authored over 180 peer-reviewed journal articles and referenced conference proceedings, as well as 27 book chapters/editorials. In addition, he has edited two books and filed 25 patents (issued or pending; 5 licensed), and given more than 100 invited/keynote lectures. His papers have been cited over 9200 times in total (h-index: 47) and have been highlighted in Science Magazine, the JHU Gazette, UW Today, and many newspapers.  Dr. Kim is an Associate Editor for Biomedical Microdevices, the Journal of Biomedical Nanotechnology, IEEE Transactions on NanoBioscience, the Journal of Micro-Bio Robotics, and the Journal of Tissue Engineering, and serves as a member of the editorial boards of numerous journals including Scientific Reports (Nature Publishing Group), Theranostics, Advanced Biosystems, International Journal of Nanomedicine, IET Nanobiotechnology, and SLAS Technology. Dr. Kim has also served as reviewer for many high-profiled journals including Nature, Science Signaling, Angewandte Chemie, Advanced Materials, ACS Nano, Biomaterials, Lab on a Chip, and Tissue Engineering.  Among the award he has received are the KIST Scientist of the Month Award (2005), the Surface Engineering Best Paper Award (2006), the American Heart Association Predoctoral Fellowship (2008), the Samsung Humantech Thesis Award (2009), the Harold M. Weintraub Award in Biological Sciences (2010), the Perkins Coie Award for Discovery (2011), the American Heart Association National Scientist Development Award (2012), the KSEA Young Investigator Award (2013), the Springer Award for Most Downloaded and Most Cited Review Article from Annals of Biomedical Engineering (2013), the BMES-CMBE Rising Star Award (2013), the BMES-CMBE Young Innovator Award (2015), the Chemical Communications Emerging Investigator (2017), and the IEEE NANOMED Innovator Award (2018). <br> <br>


Dr. Deok‐Ho Kim is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Bioengineering and is jointly appointed in
the Center for Nanotechnology, the Institute for Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine, and the Center for Cardiovascular Biology at the University of Washington. He received the B.S. from POSTECH in1998, the M.S. degree from Seoul National University in 2000, in Mechanical Engineering, and the Ph.D. degree in Biomedical Engineering from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in 2010. In 1996, he studied at the University of Birmingham, UK, as a Hogil-Kim Memorial Fellow Exchange Student. From March 2000 to June 2005, he worked as a research scientist at the Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST), including his 7 months academic visit at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology at Zurich (ETH‐Zurich). Prior to joining the University of Washington, he was an Assistant Research Professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at the Johns Hopkins University.  His research focuses on micro and nanoengineering of the cell microenvironment for stem cell bioengineering and tissue regeneration, and development of micro‐ and nanofabricated biomaterials and functional tissue engineering constructs for regenerative and therapeutic medicine. He has published 46 peer‐reviewed articles in journals such as PNAS,
Science Signaling, Advanced Materials, Lab on a Chip, Annual Review of Biomedical Engineering, and Biomaterials, filed 12 patents issued or pending, and given +40 invited lectures. Among the award he has received are American Heart Association Predoctoral Fellowship (2008), Samsung Humantech Thesis Award (2009), and the Harold M. Weintraub Award in Biological Sciences (2010). <br> <br>
'''Research Interests'''


&bull; ''Cell and Tissue Engineering in Microsystems'': Micro- and nanoengineering of the cell microenvironment designed to facilitate advances in the biomedical sciences; particularly, microscale control of cell positioning, soluble and substratum-bound ligands, microscale stem/progenitor cell niche engineering, and microscale cardiovascular tissue engineering.
'''Selected Awards and Honors'''
<br>
*BMES-CMBE Young Innovator Award; 2015; Biomedical Engineering Society
*Springer Award for Most Downloaded and Most Cited Review Article; 2013; Annals of Biomedical Engineering
*KSEA Young Investigator Award ($10,000 award); 2013; Korean-American Scientists and Engineers Association
*BMES-CMBE 'Rising Star' Award; 2013; Biomedical Engineering Society
*National Scientist Development Grant Award; 2013; American Heart Association
*Elected Senior Member; 2012; IEEE
*Perkins Coie Award for Discovery; 2011; University of Washington
*Harold M. Weintraub Award in the Biological Sciences; 2010; Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
*Samsung HumanTech Thesis Award – Silver Prize; 2009; Samsung
*Predoctoral Fellowship Award; 2008 – 2010; American Heart Association
*The Surface Engineering Best Paper Award; 2007; the Society of Tribologists and Lubrication Engineers
*KIST Scientist of the Month Award; March, 2005; Korea Institute of Science and Technology
*Scientist of the Year Award; 2004; Future Technology Research Division, Korea Institute of Science and Technology
*Recipient of KOSEF Oversea Research Fellowship; 2003; the Korea Science and Engineering Foundation (KOSEF)
*Hogil-Kim Memorial Fellow Exchange Student; 1996; University of Birmingham, UK


&bull; ''Mechanobiology and Mechanotransduction'': Signal transduction by engineered extracellular matrices, molecular in-chip live-cell imaging, cell and tissue morphodynamics, gradient sensing and directed cell migration, biophysical regulation of stem cell fates, cell mechanics.
<br>


&bull; ''Biomedical Micro/Nanotechnology'': Fabrication of biomimetic micro/nanoscale systems and structures, nanoscale engineering in cell biology and therapy, micro/nanoengineered cell-biomaterial interaction, micro/nanoscale force measurements on biology, microrobotics for intelligent cell micromanipulation.
'''Research Interests'''
<br> <br>
*'''Biomedical Micro/Nanotechnology''': Fabrication of biomimetic micro/nanoscale systems and structures, nanoscale engineering in cell biology and therapy, micro/nanoengineered cell-biomaterial interaction, micro/nanoscale force measurements on biology, microrobotics for intelligent cell micromanipulation.
*'''Mechanobiology and Mechanotransduction''': Signal transduction by engineered extracellular matrices, molecular in-chip live-cell imaging, cell and tissue morphodynamics, gradient sensing and directed cell migration, biophysical regulation of stem cell fates, cell mechanics.
*'''Cell and Tissue Engineering in Microsystems''': Micro- and nanoengineering of the cell microenvironment designed to facilitate advances in biomedical sciences; particularly, microscale control of cell positioning, soluble and substratum-bound ligands, microscale stem/tumor cell niche engineering, and microscale cardiovascular tissue engineering.

Latest revision as of 02:08, 1 June 2020

Biosketch

Dr. Deok‐Ho Kim is currently an Associate Professor in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at the Johns Hopkins University. He received his Ph.D. in Biomedical Engineering from The Johns Hopkins University (2010), his M.S. in Mechanical Engineering from Seoul National University (2000), and his B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from POSTECH (1998). In 1996, he studied at the University of Birmingham, UK, as a Hogil-Kim Memorial Fellow Exchange Student. From March 2000 to June 2005, he worked as a Research Scientist at the Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST), which included a 7 month academic visit to the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology at Zurich (ETH‐Zurich). Prior to joining the Johns Hopkins University, he was an Associate Professor in the Department of Bioengineering at the University of Washington at Seattle. He is also the scientific founder of NanoSurface Biomedical Inc (2015). His research interests center on the development and application of engineered microenvironments and functional tissue engineering models for elucidating regenerative biology, drug screening, disease modeling, and cell-based therapies. His current research aims to investigate how engineered microenvironments can direct cell function and tissue regeneration. Several specific thrusts of his current research program include multiscale biomimetic materials/devices, human iPSC-based microphysiological models of neuromuscular and cardiac muscle disease, microscale stem/tumor cell niche engineering, and cell mechanobiology. He has authored and co-authored over 180 peer-reviewed journal articles and referenced conference proceedings, as well as 27 book chapters/editorials. In addition, he has edited two books and filed 25 patents (issued or pending; 5 licensed), and given more than 100 invited/keynote lectures. His papers have been cited over 9200 times in total (h-index: 47) and have been highlighted in Science Magazine, the JHU Gazette, UW Today, and many newspapers. Dr. Kim is an Associate Editor for Biomedical Microdevices, the Journal of Biomedical Nanotechnology, IEEE Transactions on NanoBioscience, the Journal of Micro-Bio Robotics, and the Journal of Tissue Engineering, and serves as a member of the editorial boards of numerous journals including Scientific Reports (Nature Publishing Group), Theranostics, Advanced Biosystems, International Journal of Nanomedicine, IET Nanobiotechnology, and SLAS Technology. Dr. Kim has also served as reviewer for many high-profiled journals including Nature, Science Signaling, Angewandte Chemie, Advanced Materials, ACS Nano, Biomaterials, Lab on a Chip, and Tissue Engineering. Among the award he has received are the KIST Scientist of the Month Award (2005), the Surface Engineering Best Paper Award (2006), the American Heart Association Predoctoral Fellowship (2008), the Samsung Humantech Thesis Award (2009), the Harold M. Weintraub Award in Biological Sciences (2010), the Perkins Coie Award for Discovery (2011), the American Heart Association National Scientist Development Award (2012), the KSEA Young Investigator Award (2013), the Springer Award for Most Downloaded and Most Cited Review Article from Annals of Biomedical Engineering (2013), the BMES-CMBE Rising Star Award (2013), the BMES-CMBE Young Innovator Award (2015), the Chemical Communications Emerging Investigator (2017), and the IEEE NANOMED Innovator Award (2018).


Selected Awards and Honors

  • BMES-CMBE Young Innovator Award; 2015; Biomedical Engineering Society
  • Springer Award for Most Downloaded and Most Cited Review Article; 2013; Annals of Biomedical Engineering
  • KSEA Young Investigator Award ($10,000 award); 2013; Korean-American Scientists and Engineers Association
  • BMES-CMBE 'Rising Star' Award; 2013; Biomedical Engineering Society
  • National Scientist Development Grant Award; 2013; American Heart Association
  • Elected Senior Member; 2012; IEEE
  • Perkins Coie Award for Discovery; 2011; University of Washington
  • Harold M. Weintraub Award in the Biological Sciences; 2010; Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
  • Samsung HumanTech Thesis Award – Silver Prize; 2009; Samsung
  • Predoctoral Fellowship Award; 2008 – 2010; American Heart Association
  • The Surface Engineering Best Paper Award; 2007; the Society of Tribologists and Lubrication Engineers
  • KIST Scientist of the Month Award; March, 2005; Korea Institute of Science and Technology
  • Scientist of the Year Award; 2004; Future Technology Research Division, Korea Institute of Science and Technology
  • Recipient of KOSEF Oversea Research Fellowship; 2003; the Korea Science and Engineering Foundation (KOSEF)
  • Hogil-Kim Memorial Fellow Exchange Student; 1996; University of Birmingham, UK


Research Interests

  • Biomedical Micro/Nanotechnology: Fabrication of biomimetic micro/nanoscale systems and structures, nanoscale engineering in cell biology and therapy, micro/nanoengineered cell-biomaterial interaction, micro/nanoscale force measurements on biology, microrobotics for intelligent cell micromanipulation.
  • Mechanobiology and Mechanotransduction: Signal transduction by engineered extracellular matrices, molecular in-chip live-cell imaging, cell and tissue morphodynamics, gradient sensing and directed cell migration, biophysical regulation of stem cell fates, cell mechanics.
  • Cell and Tissue Engineering in Microsystems: Micro- and nanoengineering of the cell microenvironment designed to facilitate advances in biomedical sciences; particularly, microscale control of cell positioning, soluble and substratum-bound ligands, microscale stem/tumor cell niche engineering, and microscale cardiovascular tissue engineering.