Kyu Young Han, an assistant professor in 麻豆原创鈥檚 , is the university鈥檚 first faculty member to be awarded the National Institutes of Health鈥檚 Maximizing Investigators鈥 Research Award for early stage investigators.

The five-year $1.7 million grant is intended to provide stable funding so recipients can pursue ambitious challenges, according to the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, which oversees the program.

Han, who has a doctorate in chemistry, will use the grant to develop a novel bioengineering tool and imaging system to enable researchers to image multiple proteins in a single cell under a super-resolution microscope. The current technique is extremely slow, taking weeks to months to image fewer than 20 target proteins. Han expects to be able to accomplish this with nanoscale resolution in 24 hours.

If successful, this new tool could be invaluable to researchers trying to understand key biomedical problems from diabetes to cancer because proteins are linked to so many important processes in the body. Specialized proteins play a variety of roles including biochemical reactions, the body鈥檚 immune system, scaffolding structures and regulation of metabolisms.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 why I study optics,鈥 Han says. 鈥淢y background, how I got into this, is biophysics and biochemistry. I recognize the potential. It makes sense because we need to know how proteins interact with each other and the surrounding systems. We need to be able to observe those to understand all the connections.鈥

Han鈥檚 work aligns to the goal of the award, which is part of NIH鈥檚 Maximizing Investigator Research Awards program.

鈥淭his is my dream job,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 am excited to get started.鈥

Kyu Young Han

Han said he knew of college鈥檚 reputation for optics and photonics, which is why in 2016 he accepted a position at 麻豆原创. He has received several grants 鈥 including a National Science Foundation award 鈥 published several journal papers and began training students in this interdisciplinary area of research. Two of his graduate students, Jinhan Ren and Vahid Ebrahimi, will work on the NIH project.

Interdisciplinary ties are critical, he says because of the complexity of the challenge. That鈥檚 why for this NIH project he is collaborating with a neuroscientist at Rutgers University and a cell biologist at the University of Illinois.

Before joining 麻豆原创, Han worked at the Max Planck Institute in Germany where he studied super-resolution fluorescence imaging. His postdoctoral research, at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, focused on designing new optical tools for biological applications, such as studying DNA-protein interactions, RNA imaging in live-cells, and revealing nuclear structure in mammalian cells. He has one patent, which was commercialized by Leica