
Hyun Koo
VerifiedUniversity of Pennsylvania · Rehabilitation Medicine
Active 1976–2024
Research topics
- Computer Science
- Biology
- Nanotechnology
- Materials science
- Medicine
- Artificial Intelligence
- Chemistry
- Dentistry
- Engineering
- Pharmacology
- Biochemistry
- Inorganic chemistry
- Microbiology
- Radiology
- Engineering ethics
- Medical physics
- Systems engineering
- Biological system
Selected publications
Nature Communications · 2023 · 54 citations
Senior authorCorresponding- Chemistry
- Microbiology
- Medicine
stabilization, to prevent a widespread oral disease with reduced fluoride exposure.
Nanozyme‐Based Robotics Approach for Targeting Fungal Infection
Advanced Materials · 2023 · 48 citations
Senior authorCorresponding- Artificial Intelligence
- Computer Science
- Materials science
Fungal pathogens have been designated by the World Health Organization as microbial threats of the highest priority for global health. It remains a major challenge to improve antifungal efficacy at the site of infection while avoiding off-target effects, fungal spreading, and drug tolerance. Here, a nanozyme-based microrobotic platform is developed that directs localized catalysis to the infection site with microscale precision to achieve targeted and rapid fungal killing. Using electromagnetic field frequency modulation and fine-scale spatiotemporal control, structured iron oxide nanozyme assemblies are formed that display tunable dynamic shape transformation and catalysis activation. The catalytic activity varies depending on the motion, velocity, and shape providing controllable reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation. Unexpectedly, nanozyme assemblies bind avidly to fungal (Candida albicans) surfaces to enable concentrated accumulation and targeted ROS-mediated killing in situ. By exploiting these tunable properties and selective binding to fungi, localized antifungal activity is achieved using in vivo-like cell spheroid and animal tissue infection models. Structured nanozyme assemblies are directed to Candida-infected sites using programmable algorithms to perform precisely guided spatial targeting and on-site catalysis resulting in fungal eradication within 10 min. This nanozyme-based microrobotics approach provides a uniquely effective and targeted therapeutic modality for pathogen elimination at the infection site.
ACS Nano · 2022 · 52 citations
Senior authorCorresponding- Computer Science
- Nanotechnology
- Materials science
The eradication of biofilms remains an unresolved challenge across disciplines. Furthermore, in biomedicine, the sampling of spatially heterogeneous biofilms is crucial for accurate pathogen detection and precise treatment of infection. However, current approaches are incapable of removing highly adhesive biostructures from topographically complex surfaces. To meet these needs, we demonstrate magnetic field-directed assembly of nanoparticles into surface topography-adaptive robotic superstructures (STARS) for precision-guided biofilm removal and diagnostic sampling. These structures extend or retract at multilength scales (micro-to-centimeter) to operate on opposing surfaces and rapidly adjust their shape, length, and stiffness to adapt and apply high-shear stress. STARS conform to complex surface topographies by entering angled grooves or extending into narrow crevices and "scrub" adherent biofilm with multiaxis motion while producing antibacterial reagents on-site. Furthermore, as the superstructure disrupts the biofilm, it captures bacterial, fungal, viral, and matrix components, allowing sample retrieval for multiplexed diagnostic analysis. We apply STARS using automated motion patterns to target complex three-dimensional geometries of ex vivo human teeth to retrieve biofilm samples with microscale precision, while providing "toothbrushing-like" and "flossing-like" action with antibacterial activity in real-time to achieve mechanochemical removal and multikingdom pathogen detection. This approach could lead to autonomous, multifunctional antibiofilm platforms to advance current oral care modalities and other fields contending with harmful biofilms on hard-to-reach surfaces.
Repurposing ferumoxytol: Diagnostic and therapeutic applications of an FDA-approved nanoparticle
Theranostics · 2021 · 221 citations
- Pharmacology
- Medicine
- Nanotechnology
Ferumoxytol is an intravenous iron oxide nanoparticle formulation that has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for treating anemia in patients with chronic kidney disease. In recent years, ferumoxytol has also been demonstrated to have potential for many additional biomedical applications due to its excellent inherent physical properties, such as superparamagnetism, biocatalytic activity, and immunomodulatory behavior. With good safety and clearance profiles, ferumoxytol has been extensively utilized in both preclinical and clinical studies. Here, we first introduce the medical needs and the value of current iron oxide nanoparticle formulations in the market. We then focus on ferumoxytol nanoparticles and their physicochemical, diagnostic, and therapeutic properties. We include examples describing their use in various biomedical applications, including magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), multimodality imaging, iron deficiency treatment, immunotherapy, microbial biofilm treatment and drug delivery. Finally, we provide a brief conclusion and offer our perspectives on the current limitations and emerging applications of ferumoxytol in biomedicine. Overall, this review provides a comprehensive summary of the developments of ferumoxytol as an agent with diagnostic, therapeutic, and theranostic functionalities.
Recent grants
Biofilm Elimination and Caries Prevention using Multifunctional Nanocatalysts
NIH · $5.6M · 2016–2026
NIH · $2.5M · 2016
NIH · $158k · 2005
A novel anti-caries approach to modulate virulence of cariogenic biofilms
NIH · $3.4M · 2008–2021
S. mutans-C. albicans interactions synergize the virulence of cariogenic biofilms
NIH · $2.0M · 2015–2022
Frequent coauthors
- 86 shared
Yuan Liu
University of Pennsylvania
- 68 shared
Zhi Ren
First Affiliated Hospital of Bengbu Medical College
- 59 shared
Geelsu Hwang
Center for Innovation
- 42 shared
Jin Xiao
University of Rochester
- 42 shared
Dongyeop Kim
Jeonbuk National University
- 39 shared
Áurea Simón‐Soro
Universidad de Sevilla
- 35 shared
Marlise I. Klein
Brf (Brazil)
- 31 shared
Zhenting Xiang
University of Pennsylvania
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