Luke Pyungse Lee

Luke PyungSe Lee
Born March 22, 1959
Nationality United States
Fields Biophysics, Bioengineering, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Institutions University of California, Berkeley
Alma mater University of California, Berkeley
Known for Photonic RNA Switch, Photonic Gene Circuits
Notable awards

2003 National Science Foundation Career Award
2005 Lester John and Lynne Dewar Lloyd Distinguished Professorship
2009 IEEE The William J. Morlock Award
2010 Arnold and Barbara Silverman Distinguished Professorship

2010 The Ho-Am Prize
Luke Pyungse Lee
Hangul 이평세
Revised Romanization I Pyeong-se
McCune–Reischauer I P'yŏngse

Luke PyungSe Lee(born in March 22, 1959) is the Arnold and Barbara Silverman Distinguished Professor of Bioengineering, Biophysics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, at University of California, Berkeley. He was elected to a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry in 2010 and the American Institute of Medical and Biological Engineering in 2012. Lee received the 2009 IEEE William J. Morlock Award in 2009 and the 2010 Ho-Am Prize for his discovery of Plasmon Resonance Energy Transfer(PRET) and the development of quantum nanobiophotonics for optical gene regulations and molecular imaging(Photonic RNA Switch and Gene Circuit).

Education & Career

Luke P. Lee was born as the youngest of three boys in the family of a poet father, Sang Ro Lee and a midwife, Bok Soon Ha. After the death of father, he immigrated to America with his mother and brothers in 1976.

Lee spent his childhood in Seoul attending Kang Nam School for elementary grades, followed by Sang Do Middle School for grades 7 through 9, and Seoul High School for grades 10 through 11. After he came to the US, he went Wasson High School in Colorado Springs, Colorado for grade 12. He graduated with a BA in Biophysics from the University of California, Berkeley in 1996 and received his PhD in Applied Science and Technology(Applied Physics: major & Bioengineering: minor) from the University of California, Berkeley in 2000. His doctoral dissertation is entitled “Key Elements of BioPOEMS: Biomedical Polymer Opto-Electro-Mechanical Systems”. In 1999, he became an assistant professor of bioengineering at the University of California, Berkeley. In 2005, he became a full professor and the Lester John and Lynne Dewar Lloyd Distinguished professor of bioengineering and a professor of biophysics at Berkeley. He also served as the Chair Professor in Systems Nanobiology at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology(ETH, Zürich) from 2006 to 2007. Lee also has a joint appointment in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at Berkeley. He is also the co-director of the Berkeley Sensor & Actuator Center since 1999.

Prior to his academic career, he has over ten years of extensive R&D and industrial experience in integrated optoelectronics and superconducting electronics. In the late 80s, as a member of technical staff at TRW Inc, he worked on laser holography, quantum-well surface emitting laser, Nb-based Josephson tunnel junctions, and superconducting quantum interference device(SQUID) electronics. In the early 90’s, he worked on high-temperature SQUID magnetometers, Josephson junction devices, and biomagnetic sensors at Conductus Inc.

Selected Publications(selected from over 250 peer-reviewed publications)

  1. Luke P. Lee and Robert Szema, “Inspirations from Biological Optics for Advanced Photonic Systems”, Science, vol. 310, no. 5751, 1148 – 1150(2005).
  2. Cristian Ionescu-Zanetti, Robin M. Shaw, Jeonggi Seo, Yuh-Nung Jan, Lily Y. Jan, and Luke P. Lee, “Mammalian Electrophysiology on a Microfluidic Platform”, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, vol. 102, no. 26, 9112-9117(2005).
  3. Ki-Hun Jeong, Jaeyoun Kim, Luke P. Lee, “Biologically Inspired Artificial Compound Eyes”, Science, vol. 312, p. 557-561(2006).
  4. Gang L. Liu, Jaeyoun Kim, Yu Lu, and Luke P. Lee, “Optofluidic Control using Photothermal Nanoparticles”, Nature Materials, 5, 27-32(2006).
  5. Gang L. Liu, Yadong Yin, Siri Kunchakarra, Bipasha Mukherjee, Daniele Gerion, Stephen D. Jett, David G. Bear, Joe W. Gray, A. Paul Alivisatos, Luke P. Lee, and Fanqing Frank Chen, "A nanoplasmonic molecular ruler for measuring nuclease activity and DNA footprinting”, Nature Nanotechnology, 1, 47-52(2006).
  6. Gang Logan Liu, Yi-Tao Long, Yeonho Choi, Taewook Kang and Luke P. Lee, “Quantized Plasmon Quenching Dips Nanospectroscopy via Plasmon Resonance Energy Transfer”, Nature Methods, 4, 1015-1017(2007).
  7. Yeonho Choi, Younggeun Park, Taewook Kang, and Luke P. Lee, "Selective and sensitive detection of metal ions by plasmonic resonance energy transfer-based nanospectroscopy”, Nature Nanotechnology, 4, 742-746(2009).
  8. Sung Sik Lee, Ima Avalos Vizcarra, Daphne H. E. W. Huberts, Luke P. Lee, and Matthias Heinemann, Whole Lifespan Microscopic Observation of Budding Yeast Aging Through a Microfluidic Dissection Platform, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 109(13), pp. 4916–4920(2012).
  9. Ruoxue Yan, Ji-Ho Park, Yeonho Choi, Chul-Joon Heo, Seung-Man Yang, Luke P. Lee, and Peidong Yang, Nanowire-based single-cell endoscopy, Nature Nanotechnology, 7(3), pp. 191–196(2012).

Family

Lee is married to Audrey J. Lee, and they have two daughters: Eunice and Hannah. Audrey Lee is the daughter of Joseph K. Lee and Hannah S. Lee.

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