Cheolwha Jung
University of Massachusetts Lowell
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Featured researches published by Cheolwha Jung.
Cytoskeleton | 2000
Jason T. Yabe; Cheolwha Jung; Thomas B. Shea
Recent studies demonstrate co-localization of kinesin with neurofilament (NF) subunits in culture and suggest that kinesin participates in NF subunit distribution. We sought to determine whether kinesin was also associated with NF subunits in situ. Axonal transport of NF subunits in mouse optic nerve was perturbed by the microtubule (MT)-depolymerizing drug vinblastine, indicating that NF transport was dependent upon MT dynamics. Kinesin co-precipitated during immunoprecipitation of NF subunits from optic nerve. The association of NFs and kinesin was regulated by NF phosphorylation, since (1) NF subunits bearing developmentally delayed phospho-epitopes did not co-purify in a microtubule motor preparation from CNS while less phosphorylated forms did; (2) subunits bearing these phospho-epitopes were selectively not co-precipitated with kinesin; and (3) phosphorylation under cell-free conditions diminished the association of NF subunits with kinesin. The nature and extent of this association was further examined by intravitreal injection of (35)S-methionine and monitoring NF subunit transport along optic axons. As previously described by several laboratories, the wave of NF subunits underwent a progressive broadening during continued transport. The front, but not the trail, of this broadening wave of NF subunits was co-precipitated with kinesin, indicating that (1) the fastest-moving NFs were associated with kinesin, and (2) that dissociation from kinesin may foster trailing of NF subunits during continued transport. These data suggest that kinesin participates in NF axonal transport either by directly translocating NFs and/or by linking NFs to transporting MTs. Both Triton-soluble as well as cytoskeleton-associated NF subunits were co-precipitated with kinesin; these data are considered in terms of the form(s) in which NF subunits undergo axonal transport.
Brain Research | 2000
Cheolwha Jung; Jason T. Yabe; Thomas B. Shea
We probed the relationship of NF axonal transport of neurofilaments (NFs) to their phosphorylation state by comparing these parameters in two closely-aged groups of young adult mice - 2 and 5 months of age. This particular time interval was selected since prior studies demonstrate that optic axons have already completed axonal caliber expansion and attained adult NF levels by 2 months but, as shown herein, continue to increase NF-H C-terminal phosphorylation. NF axonal transport was monitored by autoradiographic analysis of the distribution of radiolabeled subunits immunoprecipitated from optic axon segments at intervals following intravitreal injection of 35S-methionine. Both the peak and front of radiolabeled NFs translocated faster in 2- vs. 5-month-old mice. This developmental decline in NF transport rate was not due to reduced incorporation of NFs into the cytoskeleton, nor to an overall decline in slow axonal transport. By excluding or minimizing other factors, these findings support previous conclusions that C-terminal NF phosphorylation regulates NF axonal transport.
Trends in Neurosciences | 2003
Thomas B. Shea; Cheolwha Jung; Harish C. Pant
Phosphorylation of neurofilaments has long been considered to regulate their axonal transport rate and, in doing so, to provide stability to mature axons. Interpretation of data recently obtained following C-terminal deletion experiments has prompted a challenge to this hypothesis. We present evidence that these deletion studies remain consistent with, rather than refute, a role for C-terminal phosphorylation in regulation of neurofilament axonal transport.
Cytoskeleton | 2000
Cheolwha Jung; Jason T. Yabe; Sangmook Lee; Thomas B. Shea
Axonal transport of neurofilaments (NFs) has long been considered to be regulated by phosphorylation. We present evidence that in optic axons of normal mice, the rate of NF axonal transport is inversely correlated with the NF phosphorylation state. In addition to 200 kDa NF-H and 145 kDa NF-M, axonal cytoskeletons from CNS contained a range of phospho-variants of NF-H migrating between 160-200 kDa, and of NF-M migrating at 97-145 kDa. While 160 kDa phospho-variants of NF-H have been well characterized, we confirmed the identity of the previously-described 97 kDa species as a hypophospho-variant of NF-M since (1) pulse-chase metabolic labeling confirmed the 97 kDa species to be a new synthesis product that was converted by phosphorylation over time into a form migrating at 145 kDa, (2) the 97 kDa protein reacted with multiple NF-M antibodies, including one specific for hypophosphorylated NF-M, and (3) dephosphorylation converted NF-M isoforms to 97 kDa. Autoradiographic analyses following metabolic radiolabeling demonstrated that hypophosphorylated NF-H and NF-M isoforms underwent substantially more rapid transport in situ than did extensively phosphorylated isoforms, while NF-H subunits bearing a developmentally delayed C-terminal phospho-epitope transported at a rate slower than that of total 200 kDa NF-H. Differential transport of phospho-variants also highlights that these variants are not homogeneously distributed among NFs, but are segregated to some extent among distinct, although probably overlapping, NF populations, indicating that axonal NFs are not homogeneous with respect to phosphorylation state.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004
Cheolwha Jung; Teresa M. Chylinski; Aurea Pimenta; Daniela Ortiz; Thomas B. Shea
Real-time analyses have revealed that some newly synthesized neurofilament (NF) subunits translocate into and along axonal neurites by moving along the inner plasma membrane surface, suggesting that they may translocate against the submembrane actin cortex. We therefore examined whether or not NF axonal transport was dependent on actin and myosin. Perturbation of filamentous actin in NB2a/d1 cells with cytochalasin B inhibited translocation of subunits into axonal neurites and inhibited bidirectional translocation of NF subunits within neurites. Intravitreal injection of cytochalasin B inhibited NF axonal transport in optic axons in a dose-response manner. NF subunits were coprecipitated from NB2a/d1 cells by an anti-myosin antibody, and myosin colocalized with NFs in immunofluorescent analyses. The myosin light chain kinase inhibitor ML-7 and the myosin ATPase inhibitor 2,3-butanedione-2-monoxime perturbed NF translocation within NB2a/d1 axonal neurites. These findings suggest that some NF subunits may undergo axonal transport via myosin-mediated interactions with the actin cortex.
Cytoskeleton | 1998
Cheolwha Jung; Jason T. Yabe; Feng-Song Wang; Thomas B. Shea
We examined the form(s) in which NF subunits undergo axonal transport. Pulse-chase radiolabeling analyses with 35S-methioinine revealed that newly synthesized Triton-soluble NF subunits accumulated within axonal neurites elaborated by NB2a/d1 neuroblastoma prior to the accumulation of Triton-insoluble subunits. Gel chromatographic, immunological, ultrastructural, and autoradiographic analyses of Triton-soluble axonal fractions demonstrated that radiolabeled, Triton-soluble subunits were associated with NFs. Triton-soluble, radiolabeled axonal NF subunits were also detected within retinal ganglion cell axons following intravitreal injection of 35S-methioinine. Microinjected biotinylated subunits were prominent within axonal neurites of NB2a/d1 cells and cultured dorsal root ganglion neurons substantially before they were retained following Triton-extraction. Prevention of biotinylated subunit, but not dextran tracer, translocation into neurites by nocodazole confirmed that microinjected subunits did not enter axons merely due to diffusion or injection-based pressure. Immuno-EM confirmed the association of biotin label with axonal NFs. These findings point towards multiple populations of NF subunits within axons and leave open the possibility that axonal NFs may be more dynamic than previously considered.
Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2009
Sangmook Lee; Cheolwha Jung; Gloria Lee; Garth F. Hall
Exonic mutations in the gene coding for human tau cause familial neurofibrillary degenerative diseases (tauopathies) which exhibit mutation-specific characteristics. It is thus unclear whether such mutations have similar effects on tau structure and function in vivo and if they act via similar cytopathological mechanisms in vulnerable neuron types. We have previously shown that overexpressing wild type human tau isoforms in identified giant neurons (ABCs) of the lamprey CNS results in characteristic, stereotyped cytopathological changes in these cells over several weeks. Here, we use this model to compare the cytopathological consequences of expressing wild type and exonic mutant tau isoforms (P301L, G272V, V337M, and R406W) at a high level of resolution. We show that each of the four exonic htau mutations tested accelerate degeneration in ABCs when compared to their WT parent isoforms, and that the patterns of human tau distribution, phosphorylation and cytopathology, while similar, vary characteristically from one another among both WT and mutant isoforms in a single identified neuron in situ. Our results therefore suggest that at least some of the differences between the effects of these mutations in humans are due to cell autonomous, mutation specific differences in the cytopathological mechanism of tau-induced neurodegeneration.
Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2010
WonHee Kim; Sangmook Lee; Cheolwha Jung; Ambar Ahmed; Gloria Lee; Garth F. Hall
Cytoskeleton | 1999
Cheolwha Jung; Thomas B. Shea
Molecular Brain Research | 2005
Cheolwha Jung; Sangmook Lee; Daniela Ortiz; Qinzhang Zhu; Jean-Pierre Julien; Thomas B. Shea