(July 2nd, 2025) The World’s Smallest Pacemaker: Design and Applications
(July 2, 2025) The World’s Smallest Pacemaker: Design and Applications Minimally Invasive. Wireless.
This webinar features two expert-led talks showcasing advanced approaches in in vivo biomedical research, with a focus on immune dynamics and real-time visualization in living systems.
1. Invited Talk Real-time
Visualization of Immune Cell Trafficking in the Tumor Microenvironment
Professor Jung’s research centers on cancer immunology, with a strong focus on myeloid cell trafficking and dynamic immune–tumor interactions within the tumor microenvironment. In this session, he will present advanced in vivo imaging approaches that enable real-time visualization of immune cell behavior in living tissues.
2. Technical Talk Seeing In Vivo Immune Responses: The Power of Intravital Microscopy
Professor Kim will demonstrate how intravital microscopy enables real-time visualization of immune dynamics in living systems, highlighting its role in advancing in vivo research and translational biomedical applications.
Pilhan Kim received his bachelor’s and PhD degree in Electrical Engineering from Seoul National University (Korea) in 2000 and 2005, respectively. From 2005 to 2010, he worked as a postdoctoral research fellow at Harvard Medical School (Boston, USA) with a cross-disciplinary postdoctoral fellowship from Human Frontier Science Program (HFSP). In 2010, he joined the Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) where he is currently a tenured Associate Professor at the Graduate School of Nanoscience and Technology. His main research interests focus on systemic cellular-level visualization of various preclinical model organism to investigate complex pathophysiology of human disease, leading to the development of an advanced in vivo cellular imaging technology based on an ultrafast laser-scanning intravital microscopy system.
Keehoon Jung received his bachelor’s and PhD degree in Biological Sciences the Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST, Korea) in 2005 and 2010, respectively. From 2010 to 2018, he worked as a research fellow at Harvard Medical School (Boston, USA). In 2018, he joined the Seoul National University College of Medicine as Assistant Professor at the Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology/Biomedical Sciences. His lab’s research focuses on the immune microenvironment in tumors, with the aim to provide novel avenues for immunotherapy of cancer by means of identifying promising targets in tumor immunity utilizing advanced methodologies including in vivo imaging and single-cell genomics.
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