Bio
Joachim received his Ph.D. in microfluidics from the University of Oslo and was a postdoc at Stanford and at UCSB to learn about interfacial flows and miscible fluids. He then worked as a teacher of fluid mechanics at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences, and developed "kitchen flows" as an affordable and accessible learning strategy. Back at the University of Oslo, he now works in a multi-disciplinary team to unravel how cells work in concert to form organs. Applications of his research span from water treatment to contact lens development and drug sensitivity testing.
Utilizing light-sheet microscopy
As postdoc in the UiO:LifeScience ITOM-project, Joachim built his own light-sheet microscope to characterize how early mammalian embryo models (using so-called mouse gastruloids) grow and develop, and how the first organs form. Especially, he is interested in how cells self-organize and orchestrate their motion to form tissue. To explain the underpinning dynamics, he couples his experiments with 3D simulations.
To fully utilize light-sheet imaging, Joachim also studies collective cell migration and how nerve cells make new connections in live zebrafish with members of the Camila Esguerra Group and he studies the cells' own recycling system (autophagy) in Drosophila embryos in collaboration with the Helene Kn?velsrud's group.
Collaborators
Dag K. Dysthe (Dept. Physics) oversees the experimental investigation, and Xian Hu helps out with 3D rendering. To explain the dynamics of collective cell migration, Dr. Richard Ho from Luiza Angheluta-Bauer's group conducts complementary simulations. Postdocs Sergei Ponomartcev and Nathalia Smirnova from Hybrid Technology Hub SFF provide stained gastruloid samples. Steven Ray Haakon Wilson at the Chemistry Department contributes with important mass spectrometry measurements. Joachim reports to the center director at RITMO SFF Alexander Refsum Jensenius.
Funding
The ITOM project is funded by UiO:Life Science.
Other interests
Joachim is an avid climber and a hobby jazz musician.
Courses Taught
Certificate
Mentoring experience
- M.Sc. thesis: Particle transport in an airlift pump
- M.Sc. thesis: Transport through a permeable gully pot
Academic positions held
- 2022: University lecturer at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences
- 2020-2021: Postdoctoral fellow in Todd Squires' group at UC Santa Barbara
- 2018-2020: Postdoctoral fellow in Gerry Fuller's group at Stanford University
- 2013-2017: Ph.D. student in Atle Jensen's group at the University of Oslo