11 results on '"Yun Kyung Kwon"'
Search Results
2. A Study on the Present Status and Promotion of Expo Character
- Author
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Yun-Kyung Kwon and Il-Yang Hong
- Subjects
Engineering ,Government ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Identity (social science) ,Design systems ,Advertising ,Character (symbol) ,Public relations ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,Local community ,Promotion (rank) ,Local government ,business ,media_common - Abstract
Expo is now firmly established as one of the top three world event, with Olympic and World Cup, which can be achieved a centralized investment of various contents in economy, technology, and culture and so on. Local government, in South Korea, actively has worked to hold Expo to revitalize the local economy and to increase the local identity since Daejeon World Expo in 1993. However, it is a fact that is hard to find Expo making good professional identity design system of Expo for lack of adequate understanding of the local community and government about design system. Accordingly, this study will suggest the promotion Expo along with the importance of character development, and the present status and analysis of Expo character which is essential to identity establishment of Expo and the core of the communication.
- Published
- 2012
3. Antifolate-Induced Depletion of Intracellular Glycine and Purines Inhibits Thymineless Death in E. coli
- Author
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Joshua D. Rabinowitz, Meytal B. Higgins, and Yun Kyung Kwon
- Subjects
Purine ,medicine.drug_class ,Stringent response ,Glycine ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Antimetabolite ,Trimethoprim ,Article ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Escherichia coli ,medicine ,Purine metabolism ,Thymineless death ,Cell growth ,General Medicine ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,chemistry ,Purines ,Antifolate ,Metabolome ,Folic Acid Antagonists ,Molecular Medicine ,Thymine ,Intracellular - Abstract
Despite the therapeutic importance of antifolates, the links between their direct antimetabolite activity and downstream consequences remain incompletely understood. Here we employ metabolomics to examine the complete metabolic effects of the antibiotic trimethoprim in E. coli. In rich media, trimethoprim treatment causes thymineless death. In minimal media, in contrast, trimethoprim addition results in rapid stoppage of cell growth and stable cell stasis. We show that initial impairment of cell growth is due to rapid depletion of glycine and associated activation of the stringent response. Long-term stasis is due to purine insufficiency. Thus, E. coli has dual systems for surviving folate depletion and avoiding thymineless death: a short-term response based on sensing of amino acids and a long-term response based on sensing of nucleotides.
- Published
- 2010
4. Essential Roles of Atg5 and FADD in Autophagic Cell Death
- Author
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Dong-Hyung Cho, Yun Kyung Kwon, Ho-June Lee, Yong-Keun Jung, Joo Hang Kim, Joon Il Jun, Bo Youn Choi, Heuiran Lee, Yoshinori Oshumi, Noboru Mizushima, Jong Ok Pyo, Ha Na Woo, and Mi Hee Jang
- Subjects
Programmed cell death ,biology ,Autophagy ,ATG5 ,Cell Biology ,Vacuole ,Biochemistry ,Cell biology ,Cell culture ,biology.protein ,Ectopic expression ,FADD ,biological phenomena, cell phenomena, and immunity ,Molecular Biology ,Death domain - Abstract
Autophagic cell death is characterized by the accumulation of vacuoles in physiological and pathological conditions. However, its molecular event is unknown. Here, we show that Atg5, which is known to function in autophagy, contributes to autophagic cell death by interacting with Fas-associated protein with death domain (FADD). Down-regulation of Atg5 expression in HeLa cells suppresses cell death and vacuole formation induced by IFN-γ. Inversely, ectopic expression of Atg5 using adenoviral delivery induces autophagic cell death. Deletion mapping analysis indicates that procell death activity resides in the middle and C-terminal region of Atg5. Cells harboring the accumulated vacuoles triggered by IFN-γ or Atg5 expression become dead, and vacuole formation precedes cell death. 3-Methyladenine or expression of Atg5K130R mutant blocks both cell death and vacuole formation triggered by IFN-γ, whereas benzyloxycarbonyl-VAD-fluoromethyl ketone (Z-VAD-fmk) inhibits only cell death but not vacuole formation. Atg5 interacts with FADD via death domain in vitro and in vivo, and the Atg5-mediated cell death, but not vacuole formation, is blocked in FADD-deficient cells. These results suggest that Atg5 plays a crucial role in IFN-γ-induced autophagic cell death by interacting with FADD.
- Published
- 2005
5. Caspase cleavage product lacking amino-terminus of I?B? sensitizes resistant cells to TNF-? and TRAIL-induced apoptosis
- Author
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In-Ki Kim, Byung Ju Kim, Dong-Gyu Jo, You Hyun Song, Yong-Keun Jung, Ha Na Woo, Chul Woong Chung, Yun Kyung Kwon, and Ki Woo Kim
- Subjects
Programmed cell death ,biology ,Wild type ,Cell Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Biochemistry ,Molecular biology ,Jurkat cells ,Cell biology ,HeLa ,Transactivation ,Apoptosis ,biology.protein ,Tumor necrosis factor alpha ,Molecular Biology ,Caspase - Abstract
In response to a diverse array of signals, IkappaBalpha is targeted for phosphorylation-dependent degradation by the proteasome, thereby activating NF-kappaB. Here we demonstrate a role of the cleavage product of IkappaBalpha in various death signals. During apoptosis of NIH3T3, Jurkat, Rat-1, and L929 cells exposed to tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL), Fas, serum deprivation, or TNF-alpha, respectively, IkappaBalpha was cleaved in a caspase-dependent manner. In vitro and in vivo cleavage assays and site-directed mutagenesis showed that caspase-3 cleaved IkappaBalpha between Asp31 and Ser32. Expression of the cleavage product lacking amino-terminus (1-31), DeltaIkappaBalpha, sensitized otherwise resistant NIH3T3 fibroblast cells to apoptosis induced by TNF-alpha or TRAIL, and HeLa tumor cells to TNF-alpha. DeltaIkappaBalpha was more pro-apoptotic compared to wild type or cleavage-resistant (D31E)IkappaBalpha mutant and the sensitization elicited by DeltaIkappaBalpha was as effective as that by the dominant negative mutant, (S32,36A)IkappaBalpha, in NIH3T3 cells. DeltaIkappaBalpha suppressed the transactivation of NF-kappaB induced by TNF-alpha or TRAIL, as reflected by luciferase-reporter activity. Conversely, expression of the p65 subunit of NF-kappaB suppressed TNF-alpha-, TRAIL-, and serum deprivation-induced cell death. On the contrary, DeltaIkappaBalpha was less effective at increasing the death rate of HeLa cells that were already sensitive to death signals including TRAIL, etoposide, or taxol. These results suggest that DeltaIkappaBalpha generated by various death signals sensitizes cells to apoptosis by suppressing NF-kappaB activity.
- Published
- 2002
6. FLASH Coordinates NF-κB Activity via TRAF2
- Author
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Soo Young Lee, Hyun Hee Kim, Gil Sun Hong, Byung Ju Kim, Yun Kyung Kwon, Ki Bae Kim, Chul Woong Chung, Yang Mi Park, Yun Hee Choi, Zhong Jian Shen, and Yong-Keun Jung
- Subjects
TRAF2 ,genetic structures ,HEK 293 cells ,Cell Biology ,Transfection ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Biochemistry ,Molecular biology ,Jurkat cells ,HeLa ,Flash (photography) ,Apoptosis ,Death effector domain ,Molecular Biology - Abstract
FLASH is a protein recently shown to interact with the death effector domain of caspase-8 and is likely to be a component of the death-inducing signaling complex in receptor-mediated apoptosis. Here we show that antisense oligonucleotide-induced inhibition of FLASH expression abolished TNF-alpha-induced activation of NF-kappaB in HEK293 cells, as determined by luciferase reporter gene expression driven by a NF-kappaB responsive promoter. Conversely, overexpression of FLASH dose-dependently activated NF-kappaB, an effect suppressed by dominant negative mutants of TRAF2, NIK, and IKKalpha, and partially by those of TRAF5 and TRAF6. TRAF2 was co-immunoprecipitated with FLASH from the cell extracts of HEK293 cells or HeLa cells stably expressing exogenous FLASH (HeLa/HA-FLASH). Furthermore, serial deletion mapping demonstrated that a domain spanning the residues 856-1191 of FLASH activated NF-kappaB as efficiently as the full-length and could directly bind to TRAF2 in vitro and in the transfected cells. Taken together, these results suggest that FLASH coordinates downstream NF-kappaB activity via a TRAF2-dependent pathway in the TNF-alpha signaling.
- Published
- 2001
7. A domino effect in antifolate drug action in Escherichia coli
- Author
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Eugene Melamud, Andrew L. Bognar, Nurussaba Khanam, Wenyun Lu, Yun Kyung Kwon, and Joshua D. Rabinowitz
- Subjects
Drug action ,medicine.disease_cause ,Article ,Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry ,Trimethoprim ,Metabolomics ,Multienzyme Complexes ,Dihydrofolate reductase ,medicine ,Escherichia coli ,Computer Simulation ,Peptide Synthases ,Molecular Biology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Drug discovery ,Escherichia coli Proteins ,Cell Biology ,Tetrahydrofolate Dehydrogenase ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,biology.protein ,Folic Acid Antagonists ,Signal transduction ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Mass spectrometry technologies for measurement of cellular metabolism are opening new avenues to explore drug activity. Trimethoprim is an antibiotic that inhibits bacterial dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR). Kinetic flux profiling with (15)N-labeled ammonia in Escherichia coli reveals that trimethoprim leads to blockade not only of DHFR but also of another critical enzyme of folate metabolism: folylpoly-gamma-glutamate synthetase (FP-gamma-GS). Inhibition of FP-gamma-GS is not directly due to trimethoprim. Instead, it arises from accumulation of DHFR's substrate dihydrofolate, which we show is a potent FP-gamma-GS inhibitor. Thus, owing to the inherent connectivity of the metabolic network, falling DHFR activity leads to falling FP-gamma-GS activity in a domino-like cascade. This cascade results in complex folate dynamics, and its incorporation in a computational model of folate metabolism recapitulates the dynamics observed experimentally. These results highlight the potential for quantitative analysis of cellular metabolism to reveal mechanisms of drug action.
- Published
- 2008
8. Essential roles of Atg5 and FADD in autophagic cell death: dissection of autophagic cell death into vacuole formation and cell death
- Author
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Jong-Ok, Pyo, Mi-Hee, Jang, Yun-Kyung, Kwon, Ho-June, Lee, Joon-Il, Jun, Ha-Na, Woo, Dong-Hyung, Cho, Boyoun, Choi, Heuiran, Lee, Joo-Hang, Kim, Noboru, Mizushima, Yoshinori, Oshumi, and Yong-Keun, Jung
- Subjects
Binding Sites ,Cell Death ,Adenine ,Fas-Associated Death Domain Protein ,Gene Expression ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Oligonucleotides, Antisense ,Transfection ,Amino Acid Chloromethyl Ketones ,Autophagy-Related Protein 5 ,Cell Line ,Interferon-gamma ,Mutagenesis ,Two-Hybrid System Techniques ,Vacuoles ,Autophagy ,Humans ,Microtubule-Associated Proteins ,Gene Deletion ,Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing ,HeLa Cells - Abstract
Autophagic cell death is characterized by the accumulation of vacuoles in physiological and pathological conditions. However, its molecular event is unknown. Here, we show that Atg5, which is known to function in autophagy, contributes to autophagic cell death by interacting with Fas-associated protein with death domain (FADD). Down-regulation of Atg5 expression in HeLa cells suppresses cell death and vacuole formation induced by IFN-gamma. Inversely, ectopic expression of Atg5 using adenoviral delivery induces autophagic cell death. Deletion mapping analysis indicates that procell death activity resides in the middle and C-terminal region of Atg5. Cells harboring the accumulated vacuoles triggered by IFN-gamma or Atg5 expression become dead, and vacuole formation precedes cell death. 3-Methyladenine or expression of Atg5(K130R) mutant blocks both cell death and vacuole formation triggered by IFN-gamma, whereas benzyloxycarbonyl-VAD-fluoromethyl ketone (Z-VAD-fmk) inhibits only cell death but not vacuole formation. Atg5 interacts with FADD via death domain in vitro and in vivo, and the Atg5-mediated cell death, but not vacuole formation, is blocked in FADD-deficient cells. These results suggest that Atg5 plays a crucial role in IFN-gamma-induced autophagic cell death by interacting with FADD.
- Published
- 2005
9. Caspase cleavage product lacking amino-terminus of IkappaBalpha sensitizes resistant cells to TNF-alpha and TRAIL-induced apoptosis
- Author
-
Ki-Woo, Kim, Byung Ju, Kim, Chul-Woong, Chung, Dong-Gyu, Jo, In-Ki, Kim, You-Hyun, Song, Yun-Kyung, Kwon, Ha-Na, Woo, and Yong-Keun, Jung
- Subjects
Aspartic Acid ,Membrane Glycoproteins ,Paclitaxel ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,Blotting, Western ,NF-kappa B ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Apoptosis ,Fibroblasts ,beta-Galactosidase ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,TNF-Related Apoptosis-Inducing Ligand ,NF-KappaB Inhibitor alpha ,Drug Resistance, Neoplasm ,Caspases ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,Humans ,Female ,I-kappa B Proteins ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Apoptosis Regulatory Proteins ,Luciferases ,DNA Primers ,Etoposide - Abstract
In response to a diverse array of signals, IkappaBalpha is targeted for phosphorylation-dependent degradation by the proteasome, thereby activating NF-kappaB. Here we demonstrate a role of the cleavage product of IkappaBalpha in various death signals. During apoptosis of NIH3T3, Jurkat, Rat-1, and L929 cells exposed to tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL), Fas, serum deprivation, or TNF-alpha, respectively, IkappaBalpha was cleaved in a caspase-dependent manner. In vitro and in vivo cleavage assays and site-directed mutagenesis showed that caspase-3 cleaved IkappaBalpha between Asp31 and Ser32. Expression of the cleavage product lacking amino-terminus (1-31), DeltaIkappaBalpha, sensitized otherwise resistant NIH3T3 fibroblast cells to apoptosis induced by TNF-alpha or TRAIL, and HeLa tumor cells to TNF-alpha. DeltaIkappaBalpha was more pro-apoptotic compared to wild type or cleavage-resistant (D31E)IkappaBalpha mutant and the sensitization elicited by DeltaIkappaBalpha was as effective as that by the dominant negative mutant, (S32,36A)IkappaBalpha, in NIH3T3 cells. DeltaIkappaBalpha suppressed the transactivation of NF-kappaB induced by TNF-alpha or TRAIL, as reflected by luciferase-reporter activity. Conversely, expression of the p65 subunit of NF-kappaB suppressed TNF-alpha-, TRAIL-, and serum deprivation-induced cell death. On the contrary, DeltaIkappaBalpha was less effective at increasing the death rate of HeLa cells that were already sensitive to death signals including TRAIL, etoposide, or taxol. These results suggest that DeltaIkappaBalpha generated by various death signals sensitizes cells to apoptosis by suppressing NF-kappaB activity.
- Published
- 2002
10. A domino effect in antifolate drug action in Escherichia coli.
- Author
-
Yun Kyung Kwon, Wenyun Lu, Melamud, Eugene, Khanam, Nurussaba, Bognar, Andrew, and Rabinowitz, Joshua D.
- Subjects
- *
ANTIBIOTICS , *SPECTROMETRY , *LABORATORY techniques , *TRIMETHOPRIM , *ANTIBACTERIAL agents - Abstract
Mass spectrometry technologies for measurement of cellular metabolism are opening new avenues to explore drug activity. Trimethoprim is an antibiotic that inhibits bacterial dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR). Kinetic flux profiling with 15N-labeled ammonia in Escherichia coli reveals that trimethoprim leads to blockade not only of DHFR but also of another critical enzyme of folate metabolism: folylpoly-γ-glutamate synthetase (FP-γ-GS). Inhibition of FP-γ-GS is not directly due to trimethoprim. Instead, it arises from accumulation of DHFR's substrate dihydrofolate, which we show is a potent FP-γ-GS inhibitor. Thus, owing to the inherent connectivity of the metabolic network, falling DHFR activity leads to falling FP-γ-GS activity in a domino-like cascade. This cascade results in complex folate dynamics, and its incorporation in a computational model of folate metabolism recapitulates the dynamics observed experimentally. These results highlight the potential for quantitative analysis of cellular metabolism to reveal mechanisms of drug action. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Isotope Ratio-Based Profiling of Microbial Folates
- Author
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Yun Kyung Kwon, Joshua D. Rabinowitz, and Wenyun Lu
- Subjects
Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Tandem mass spectrometry ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Folic Acid ,Tandem Mass Spectrometry ,Structural Biology ,Dihydrofolate reductase ,Escherichia coli ,Polyglutamylation ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,Spectroscopy ,030304 developmental biology ,Antibacterial agent ,Carbon Isotopes ,0303 health sciences ,Chromatography ,biology ,Polyglutamate ,Chemistry ,Hydrophilic interaction chromatography ,010401 analytical chemistry ,Selected reaction monitoring ,Ascorbic acid ,0104 chemical sciences ,Biochemistry ,biology.protein - Abstract
Folate metabolism, which is responsible for one-carbon transfer reactions in critical cellular processes including thymidine biosynthesis, is among the most important targets of antibiotic and anticancer drugs. Analysis of intracellular folates is complicated by three different types of folate modification: oxidation/reduction, methylation, and polyglutamylation. Here we present a method for quantifying the full diversity of intracellular folates by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). The method begins with folate extraction using -75 degrees C methanol:water, with ascorbic acid and ammonium acetate added to prevent folate interconversion. The extract is then separated using hydrophilic interaction chromatography with an amino column, ionized by positive mode electrospray, and analyzed on a triple quadrupole instrument using multiple reaction monitoring. The method has been used to profile the folate pools in Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, with absolute levels of selected folates in E. coli measured by spiking extracts of cells fed uniformly (13)C-glucose with purified, unlabeled folate standards. An isotope-ratio-based approach has been applied to study the effects of trimethoprim, a clinically important antibiotic that blocks bacterial dihydrofolate reductase. In addition to causing the expected increase in oxidized and decrease in reduced folates, trimethoprim triggered a dramatic and previously unrecognized shift towards shorter polyglutamate chain lengths. This finding highlights the potential for analysis of the full spectrum of cellular folates by MS/MS to unveil novel biological phenomena.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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