Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Chae Kim is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Chae Kim.


Brain | 2015

Rapidly progressive Alzheimer's disease features distinct structures of amyloid-β.

Mark L. Cohen; Chae Kim; Tracy Haldiman; Mohamed ElHag; Prachi Mehndiratta; Termsarasab Pichet; Frances M. Lissemore; Michelle Shea; Yvonne Cohen; Wei Chen; Janis Blevins; Brian S. Appleby; Krystyna Surewicz; Witold K. Surewicz; Martha Sajatovic; Curtis Tatsuoka; Shulin Zhang; Ping Mayo; Mariusz Butkiewicz; Jonathan L. Haines; Alan J. Lerner; Jiri G. Safar

Genetic and environmental factors that increase the risk of late-onset Alzheimer disease are now well recognized but the cause of variable progression rates and phenotypes of sporadic Alzheimers disease is largely unknown. We aimed to investigate the relationship between diverse structural assemblies of amyloid-β and rates of clinical decline in Alzheimers disease. Using novel biophysical methods, we analysed levels, particle size, and conformational characteristics of amyloid-β in the posterior cingulate cortex, hippocampus and cerebellum of 48 cases of Alzheimers disease with distinctly different disease durations, and correlated the data with APOE gene polymorphism. In both hippocampus and posterior cingulate cortex we identified an extensive array of distinct amyloid-β42 particles that differ in size, display of N-terminal and C-terminal domains, and conformational stability. In contrast, amyloid-β40 present at low levels did not form a major particle with discernible size, and both N-terminal and C- terminal domains were largely exposed. Rapidly progressive Alzheimers disease that is associated with a low frequency of APOE e4 allele demonstrates considerably expanded conformational heterogeneity of amyloid-β42, with higher levels of distinctly structured amyloid-β42 particles composed of 30-100 monomers, and fewer particles composed of < 30 monomers. The link between rapid clinical decline and levels of amyloid-β42 with distinct structural characteristics suggests that different conformers may play an important role in the pathogenesis of distinct Alzheimers disease phenotypes. These findings indicate that Alzheimers disease exhibits a wide spectrum of amyloid-β42 structural states and imply the existence of prion-like conformational strains.


PLOS Pathogens | 2012

Small Protease Sensitive Oligomers of PrPSc in Distinct Human Prions Determine Conversion Rate of PrPC

Chae Kim; Tracy Haldiman; Krystyna Surewicz; Yvonne Cohen; Wei Chen; Janis Blevins; Man Sun Sy; Mark L. Cohen; Qingzhong Kong; Glenn C. Telling; Witold K. Surewicz; Jiri G. Safar

The mammalian prions replicate by converting cellular prion protein (PrPC) into pathogenic conformational isoform (PrPSc). Variations in prions, which cause different disease phenotypes, are referred to as strains. The mechanism of high-fidelity replication of prion strains in the absence of nucleic acid remains unsolved. We investigated the impact of different conformational characteristics of PrPSc on conversion of PrPC in vitro using PrPSc seeds from the most frequent human prion disease worldwide, the Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD). The conversion potency of a broad spectrum of distinct sCJD prions was governed by the level, conformation, and stability of small oligomers of the protease-sensitive (s) PrPSc. The smallest most potent prions present in sCJD brains were composed only of∼20 monomers of PrPSc. The tight correlation between conversion potency of small oligomers of human sPrPSc observed in vitro and duration of the disease suggests that sPrPSc conformers are an important determinant of prion strain characteristics that control the progression rate of the disease.


PLOS Pathogens | 2011

Protease-Sensitive Conformers in Broad Spectrum of Distinct PrPSc Structures in Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease Are Indicator of Progression Rate

Chae Kim; Tracy Haldiman; Yvonne Cohen; Wei Chen; Janis Blevins; Man Sun Sy; Mark L. Cohen; Jiri G. Safar

The origin, range, and structure of prions causing the most common human prion disease, sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD), are largely unknown. To investigate the molecular mechanism responsible for the broad phenotypic variability of sCJD, we analyzed the conformational characteristics of protease-sensitive and protease-resistant fractions of the pathogenic prion protein (PrPSc) using novel conformational methods derived from a conformation-dependent immunoassay (CDI). In 46 brains of patients homozygous for polymorphisms in the PRNP gene and exhibiting either Type 1 or Type 2 western blot pattern of the PrPSc, we identified an extensive array of PrPSc structures that differ in protease sensitivity, display of critical domains, and conformational stability. Surprisingly, in sCJD cases homozygous for methionine or valine at codon 129 of the PRNP gene, the concentration and stability of protease-sensitive conformers of PrPSc correlated with progression rate of the disease. These data indicate that sCJD brains exhibit a wide spectrum of PrPSc structural states, and accordingly argue for a broad spectrum of prion strains coding for different phenotypes. The link between disease duration, levels, and stability of protease-sensitive conformers of PrPSc suggests that these conformers play an important role in the pathogenesis of sCJD.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2014

Prion disease tempo determined by host-dependent substrate reduction

Charles E. Mays; Chae Kim; Tracy Haldiman; Jacques van der Merwe; Agnes Lau; Jing Yang; Jennifer Grams; Michele Angelo Di Bari; Romolo Nonno; Glenn C. Telling; Qingzhong Kong; Jan Langeveld; Debbie McKenzie; David Westaway; Jiri G. Safar

The symptoms of prion infection can take years or decades to manifest following the initial exposure. Molecular markers of prion disease include accumulation of the misfolded prion protein (PrPSc), which is derived from its cellular precursor (PrPC), as well as downregulation of the PrP-like Shadoo (Sho) glycoprotein. Given the overlapping cellular environments for PrPC and Sho, we inferred that PrPC levels might also be altered as part of a host response during prion infection. Using rodent models, we found that, in addition to changes in PrPC glycosylation and proteolytic processing, net reductions in PrPC occur in a wide range of prion diseases, including sheep scrapie, human Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, and cervid chronic wasting disease. The reduction in PrPC results in decreased prion replication, as measured by the protein misfolding cyclic amplification technique for generating PrPSc in vitro. While PrPC downregulation is not discernible in animals with unusually short incubation periods and high PrPC expression, slowly evolving prion infections exhibit downregulation of the PrPC substrate required for new PrPSc synthesis and as a receptor for pathogenic signaling. Our data reveal PrPC downregulation as a previously unappreciated element of disease pathogenesis that defines the extensive, presymptomatic period for many prion strains.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Co-existence of Distinct Prion Types Enables Conformational Evolution of Human PrPSc by Competitive Selection

Tracy Haldiman; Chae Kim; Yvonne Cohen; Wei Chen; Janis Blevins; Liuting Qing; Mark L. Cohen; Jan Langeveld; Glenn C. Telling; Qingzhong Kong; Jiri G. Safar

Background: Mechanism of prion adaptation and evolution has not been fully elucidated. Results: Distinct human prion particles co-exist and undergo competitive selection during replication. Conclusion: The process is governed by preferential replication of the least stable pathogenic conformers. Significance: The spectrum of conformers in wild human prion isolates enables adaptation and evolution by selection of the progressively less stable and faster replicating subset. The unique phenotypic characteristics of mammalian prions are thought to be encoded in the conformation of pathogenic prion proteins (PrPSc). The molecular mechanism responsible for the adaptation, mutation, and evolution of prions observed in cloned cells and upon crossing the species barrier remains unsolved. Using biophysical techniques and conformation-dependent immunoassays in tandem, we isolated two distinct populations of PrPSc particles with different conformational stabilities and aggregate sizes, which frequently co-exist in the most common human prion disease, sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. The protein misfolding cyclic amplification replicates each of the PrPSc particle types independently and leads to the competitive selection of those with lower initial conformational stability. In serial propagation with a nonglycosylated mutant PrPC substrate, the dominant PrPSc conformers are subject to further evolution by natural selection of the subpopulation with the highest replication rate due to its lowest stability. Cumulatively, the data show that sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease PrPSc is not a single conformational entity but a dynamic collection of two distinct populations of particles. This implies the co-existence of different prions, whose adaptation and evolution are governed by the selection of progressively less stable, faster replicating PrPSc conformers.


PLOS Pathogens | 2015

Structural Determinants of Phenotypic Diversity and Replication Rate of Human Prions

Jiri G. Safar; Xiangzhu Xiao; Mohammad E. Kabir; Shugui Chen; Chae Kim; Tracy Haldiman; Yvonne Cohen; Wei Chen; Mark L. Cohen; Witold K. Surewicz

The infectious pathogen responsible for prion diseases is the misfolded, aggregated form of the prion protein, PrPSc. In contrast to recent progress in studies of laboratory rodent-adapted prions, current understanding of the molecular basis of human prion diseases and, especially, their vast phenotypic diversity is very limited. Here, we have purified proteinase resistant PrPSc aggregates from two major phenotypes of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD), determined their conformational stability and replication tempo in vitro, as well as characterized structural organization using recently emerged approaches based on hydrogen/deuterium (H/D) exchange coupled with mass spectrometry. Our data clearly demonstrate that these phenotypically distant prions differ in a major way with regard to their structural organization, both at the level of the polypeptide backbone (as indicated by backbone amide H/D exchange data) as well as the quaternary packing arrangements (as indicated by H/D exchange kinetics for histidine side chains). Furthermore, these data indicate that, in contrast to previous observations on yeast and some murine prion strains, the replication rate of sCJD prions is primarily determined not by conformational stability but by specific structural features that control the growth rate of prion protein aggregates.


Journal of Virology | 2015

Prion Infectivity Plateaus and Conversion to Symptomatic Disease Originate from Falling Precursor Levels and Increased Levels of Oligomeric PrPSc Species.

Charles E. Mays; Jacques van der Merwe; Chae Kim; Tracy Haldiman; Debbie McKenzie; Jiri G. Safar; David Westaway

ABSTRACT In lethal prion neurodegenerative diseases, misfolded prion proteins (PrPSc) replicate by redirecting the folding of the cellular prion glycoprotein (PrPC). Infections of different durations can have a subclinical phase with constant levels of infectious particles, but the mechanisms underlying this plateau and a subsequent exit to overt clinical disease are unknown. Using tandem biophysical techniques, we show that attenuated accumulation of infectious particles in presymptomatic disease is preceded by a progressive fall in PrPC level, which constricts replication rate and thereby causes the plateau effect. Furthermore, disease symptoms occurred at the threshold associated with increasing levels of small, relatively less protease-resistant oligomeric prion particles (oPrPSc). Although a hypothetical lethal isoform of PrP cannot be excluded, our data argue that diminishing residual PrPC levels and continuously increasing levels of oPrPSc are crucial determinants in the transition from presymptomatic to symptomatic prion disease. IMPORTANCE Prions are infectious agents that cause lethal brain diseases; they arise from misfolding of a cell surface protein, PrPC to a form called PrPSc. Prion infections can have long latencies even though there is no protective immune response. Accumulation of infectious prion particles has been suggested to always reach the same plateau in the brain during latent periods, with clinical disease only occurring when hypothetical toxic forms (called PrPL or TPrP) begin to accumulate. We show here that infectivity plateaus arise because PrPC precursor levels become downregulated and that the duration of latent periods can be accounted for by the level of residual PrPC, which transduces a toxic effect, along with the amount of oligomeric forms of PrPSc.


Embo Molecular Medicine | 2015

Octarepeat region flexibility impacts prion function, endoproteolysis and disease manifestation

Agnes Lau; Alex McDonald; Nathalie Daude; Charles E. Mays; Eric D. Walter; Robin Aglietti; Robert C.C. Mercer; Serene Wohlgemuth; Jacques van der Merwe; Jing Yang; Hristina Gapeshina; Chae Kim; Jennifer Grams; Beipei Shi; Holger Wille; Aru Balachandran; Gerold Schmitt-Ulms; Jiri G. Safar; Glenn L. Millhauser; David Westaway

The cellular prion protein (PrPC) comprises a natively unstructured N‐terminal domain, including a metal‐binding octarepeat region (OR) and a linker, followed by a C‐terminal domain that misfolds to form PrPSc in Creutzfeldt‐Jakob disease. PrPC β‐endoproteolysis to the C2 fragment allows PrPSc formation, while α‐endoproteolysis blocks production. To examine the OR, we used structure‐directed design to make novel alleles, ‘S1’ and ‘S3’, locking this region in extended or compact conformations, respectively. S1 and S3 PrP resembled WT PrP in supporting peripheral nerve myelination. Prion‐infected S1 and S3 transgenic mice both accumulated similar low levels of PrPSc and infectious prion particles, but differed in their clinical presentation. Unexpectedly, S3 PrP overproduced C2 fragment in the brain by a mechanism distinct from metal‐catalysed hydrolysis reported previously. OR flexibility is concluded to impact diverse biological endpoints; it is a salient variable in infectious disease paradigms and modulates how the levels of PrPSc and infectivity can either uncouple or engage to drive the onset of clinical disease.


Nature Communications | 2018

Artificial strain of human prions created in vitro

Chae Kim; Xiangzhu Xiao; Shugui Chen; Tracy Haldiman; Vitautas Smirnovas; Diane Kofskey; Miriam Warren; Krystyna Surewicz; Nicholas R. Maurer; Qingzhong Kong; Witold K. Surewicz; Jiri G. Safar

The molecular mechanism that determines under physiological conditions transmissibility of the most common human prion disease, sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (sCJD) is unknown. We report the synthesis of new human prion from the recombinant human prion protein expressed in bacteria in reaction seeded with sCJD MM1 prions and cofactor, ganglioside GM1. These synthetic human prions were infectious to transgenic mice expressing non-glycosylated human prion protein, causing neurologic dysfunction after 459 and 224 days in the first and second passage, respectively. The neuropathology, replication potency, and biophysical profiling suggest that a novel, particularly neurotoxic human prion strain was created. Distinct biological and structural characteristics of our synthetic human prions suggest that subtle changes in the structural organization of critical domains, some linked to posttranslational modifications of the pathogenic prion protein (PrPSc), play a crucial role as a determinant of human prion infectivity, host range, and targetting of specific brain structures in mice models.Synthetic prions have previously been generated from recombinant rodent PrP. Here the authors generate synthetic human prions, by seeding human PrP with CJD prions, and characterize its infectivity in mice.


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2014

DISTINCT STRUCTURES OF B-AMYLOID IN RAPIDLY PROGRESSIVE ALZHEIMER DISEASE

Mark L. Cohen; Chae Kim; Tracy Haldiman; Mohamed ElHag; Curtis Tatsuoka; Shulin Zhang; Alan J. Lerner; Jiri G. Safar

Background:While the genetic and environmental factors that increase the risk of late onset Alzheimer disease (LOAD) are well recognized, the cause of variable progression rates and phenotypes of sporadic LOAD is largely unknown. We aimed to investigate the relationship between diverse conformational structures of amyloid beta (Ab) and variable rates of clinical decline in LOAD.Methods:Using novel biophysical methods, we analyzed conformational structural characteristics of Ab in the posterior cingulate cortex, hippocampus, and cerebellum of 49 cases of LOAD with distinctly different disease durations, and correlated the data with clinical profiles and APOE gene polymorphism. Results: In both hippocampus and posterior cingulate cortex we identified an extensive array of distinct Ab42 particles that differ in conformational structure, size, and display of critical domains. In contrast, Ab40 present at low levels did not form a major particle with discernible size, and both N-terminal and Cterminal domains were largely exposed. Rapidly progressive cases demonstrated distinctly structured Ab42 forming unique spectrum of oligomeric particles. Conclusions: The link between rapid clinical decline and levels of Ab42 with distinct structural characteristics suggests that differently structured conformers play an important role in the pathogenesis od LOAD. Specifically, we assert that the variable propagation tempo and phenotypic characteristics of the disease may be encoded in the distinct structures of Ab42 by prion-like mechanism.

Collaboration


Dive into the Chae Kim's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jiri G. Safar

Case Western Reserve University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tracy Haldiman

Case Western Reserve University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mark L. Cohen

Case Western Reserve University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wei Chen

Case Western Reserve University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Witold K. Surewicz

Case Western Reserve University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yvonne Cohen

Case Western Reserve University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Xiangzhu Xiao

Case Western Reserve University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Janis Blevins

Case Western Reserve University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mohammad E. Kabir

Case Western Reserve University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Qingzhong Kong

Case Western Reserve University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge