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Featured researches published by Chang-Ho Baek.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2006

Cyclo(Phe-Pro) Modulates the Expression of ompU in Vibrio spp.

Dae-Kyun Park; Ko-Eun Lee; Chang-Ho Baek; In Hwang Kim; Ji-Hyoun Kwon; Won Koo Lee; Kyuho Lee; Byung-Soo Kim; Sang-Ho Choi; Kun-Soo Kim

Vibrio vulnificus was found to produce a chemical that induced the expression of Vibrio fischeri lux genes. Electron spray ionization-mass spectrometry and 1H nuclear magnetic resonance analyses indicated that the compound was cyclo(L-Phe-L-Pro) (cFP). The compound was produced at a maximal level when cell cultures reached the onset of stationary phase. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel analysis of the total proteins of V. vulnificus indicated that expression of OmpU was enhanced by exogenously added synthetic or purified cFP. A toxR-null mutant failed to express ompU despite the addition of cFP. The related Vibrio spp. V. cholerae, V. parahaemolyticus, and V. harveyi also produced cFP, which induced the expression of their own ompU genes. cFP also enhanced the expression in V. cholerae of the ctx genes, which are known to be regulated by ToxR. Our results suggest that cFP is a signal molecule controlling the expression of genes important for the pathogenicity of Vibrio spp.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2003

Convergent Evolution of Amadori Opine Catabolic Systems in Plasmids of Agrobacterium tumefaciens

Chang-Ho Baek; Stephen K. Farrand; Ko-Eun Lee; Dae-Kyun Park; Jeong Kug Lee; Kun-Soo Kim

Deoxyfructosyl glutamine (DFG, referred to elsewhere as dfg) is a naturally occurring Amadori compound found in rotting fruits and vegetables. DFG also is an opine and is found in tumors induced by chrysopine-type strains of Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Such strains catabolize this opine via a pathway coded for by their plasmids. NT1, a derivative of the nopaline-type A. tumefaciens strain C58 lacking pTiC58, can utilize DFG as the sole carbon source. Genes for utilization of DFG were mapped to the 543-kb accessory plasmid pAtC58. Two cosmid clones of pAtC58 allowed UIA5, a plasmid-free derivative of C58, harboring pSa-C that expresses MocC (mannopine [MOP] oxidoreductase that oxidizes MOP to DFG), to grow by using MOP as the sole carbon source. Genetic analysis of subclones indicated that the genes for utilization of DFG are located in a 6.2-kb BglII (Bg2) region adjacent to repABC-type genes probably responsible for the replication of pAtC58. This region contains five open reading frames organized into at least two transcriptional soc (santhopine catabolism) groups: socR and socABCD. Nucleotide sequence analysis and analyses of transposon-insertion mutations in the region showed that SocR negatively regulates the expression of socR itself and socABCD. SocA and SocB are responsible for transport of DFG and MOP. SocA is a homolog of known periplasmic amino acid binding proteins. The N-terminal half of SocB is a homolog of the transmembrane transporter proteins for several amino acids, and the C-terminal half is a homolog of the transporter-associated ATP-binding proteins. SocC and SocD could be responsible for the enzymatic degradation of DFG, being homologs of sugar oxidoreductases and an amadoriase from Corynebacterium sp., respectively. The protein products of socABCD are not related at the amino acid sequence level to those of the moc and mot genes of Ti plasmids responsible for utilization of DFG and MOP, indicating that these two sets of genes and their catabolic pathways have evolved convergently from independent origins.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2001

Intracellular accumulation of mannopine, an opine produced by crown gall tumors, transiently inhibits growth of Agrobacterium tumefaciens.

Kun-Soo Kim; Chang-Ho Baek; Jeong Kug Lee; Jai Myung Yang; Stephen K. Farrand

pYDH208, a cosmid clone from the octopine-mannityl opine-type tumor-inducing (Ti) plasmid pTi15955 confers utilization of mannopine (MOP) and agropine (AGR) on Agrobacterium tumefaciens strain NT1. NT1 harboring pYDH208 with an insertion mutation in mocC, which codes for MOP oxidoreductase, not only fails to utilize MOP as a sole carbon source, but also was inhibited in its growth by MOP and AGR. In contrast, the growth of mutants with insertions in other tested moc genes was not inhibited by either opine. Growth of strains NT1 or UIA5, a derivative of C58 that lacks pAtC58, was not inhibited by MOP, but growth of NT1 or UIA5 harboring pRE10, which codes for the MOP transport system, was inhibited by the opine. When a clone expressing mocC was introduced, the growth of strain NT1(pRE10) was not inhibited by MOP, although UIA5(pRE10) was still weakly inhibited. In strain NT1(pRE10, mocC), santhopine (SOP), produced by the oxidation of MOP by MocC, was further degraded by functions encoded by pAtC58. These results suggest that MOP and, to a lesser extent, SOP are inhibitory when accumulated intracellularly. The growth of NT1(pRE10), as measured by turbidity and viable cell counts, ceased upon the addition of MOP but restarted in a few hours. Regrowth was partly the result of the outgrowth of spontaneous MOP-resistant mutants and partly the adaptation of cells to MOP in the medium. Chrysopine, isochrysopine, and analogs of MOP in which the glutamine residue is substituted with other amino acids were barely taken up by NT1(pRE10) and were not inhibitory to growth of the strain. Sugar analogs of MOP were inhibitory, and those containing sugars in the D form were more inhibitory than those containing sugars in the L form. MOP analogs containing hexose sugars were more inhibitory than those containing sugars with three, four, or five carbon atoms. Mutants of NT1(pRE10) that are resistant to MOP arose in the zone of growth inhibition. Genetic and physiological analyses indicate that the mutations are located on pRE10 and abolish uptake of the opine.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2005

Genes for utilization of deoxyfructosyl glutamine (DFG), an amadori compound, are widely dispersed in the family Rhizobiaceae

Chang-Ho Baek; Stephen K. Farrand; Dae-Kyun Park; Ko-Eun Lee; Won Hwang; Kun-Soo Kim


Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2007

IVET-based identification of virulence factors in Vibrio vulnificus MO6-24/O.

Ko-Eun Lee; Ji-Sun Bang; Chang-Ho Baek; Dae-Kyun Park; Won Hwang; Sang-Ho Choi; Kun-Soo Kim


Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2003

lacZ- and aph-Based Reporter Vectors for In Vivo Expression Technology

Chang-Ho Baek; Kun-Soo Kim


Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2007

Genetic Analysis of Spontaneous Lactose-Utilizing Mutants from Vibrio vulnificus

Chang-Ho Baek; Ko-Eun Lee; Dae-Kyun Park; Sang-Ho Choi; Kun-Soo Kim


Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2005

luxS and smcR Quorum-Sensing System of Vibrio vulnificus as an Important Factor for In Vivo Survival

Na-Ri Shin; Chang-Ho Baek; Deog-Yong Lee; Young-Wook Cho; Dae-Kyun Park; Ko-Eun Lee; Kun-Soo Kim; Han Sang Yoo


Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology | 1999

Analysis of trans-acting elements for regulation of moc operons of pTi15955 in Agrobacterium tumefaciens

Won-Hee Jung; Chang-Ho Baek; Jeong Kug Lee; Kun-Soo Kim


한국미생물학회 학술대회논문집 | 2003

Utilization of Amadori Opines by Agrobacterium spp.

Chang-Ho Baek; Kun-Soo Kim

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Deog-Yong Lee

Seoul National University

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Han Sang Yoo

Seoul National University

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