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Dive into the research topics where Eddie Wang is active.

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Featured researches published by Eddie Wang.


Nature | 2011

Biomimetic self-templating supramolecular structures

Woo Jae Chung; Jin Woo Oh; Kyungwon Kwak; Byung Yang Lee; Joel Meyer; Eddie Wang; Alexander Hexemer; Seung-Wuk Lee

In nature, helical macromolecules such as collagen, chitin and cellulose are critical to the morphogenesis and functionality of various hierarchically structured materials. During tissue formation, these chiral macromolecules are secreted and undergo self-templating assembly, a process whereby multiple kinetic factors influence the assembly of the incoming building blocks to produce non-equilibrium structures. A single macromolecule can form diverse functional structures when self-templated under different conditions. Collagen type I, for instance, forms transparent corneal tissues from orthogonally aligned nematic fibres, distinctively coloured skin tissues from cholesteric phase fibre bundles, and mineralized tissues from hierarchically organized fibres. Nature’s self-templated materials surpass the functional and structural complexity achievable by current top-down and bottom-up fabrication methods. However, self-templating has not been thoroughly explored for engineering synthetic materials. Here we demonstrate the biomimetic, self-templating assembly of chiral colloidal particles (M13 phage) into functional materials. A single-step process produces long-range-ordered, supramolecular films showing multiple levels of hierarchical organization and helical twist. Three distinct supramolecular structures are created by this approach: nematic orthogonal twists, cholesteric helical ribbons and smectic helicolidal nanofilaments. Both chiral liquid crystalline phase transitions and competing interfacial forces at the interface are found to be critical factors in determining the morphology of the templated structures during assembly. The resulting materials show distinctive optical and photonic properties, functioning as chiral reflector/filters and structural colour matrices. In addition, M13 phages with genetically incorporated bioactive peptide ligands direct both soft and hard tissue growth in a hierarchically organized manner. Our assembly approach provides insight into the complexities of hierarchical assembly in nature and could be expanded to other chiral molecules to engineer sophisticated functional helical-twisted structures.


Nano Letters | 2013

Light-Controlled Graphene-Elastin Composite Hydrogel Actuators

Eddie Wang; Malav S. Desai; Seung-Wuk Lee

Hydrogels actuators (HAs) that can reversibly respond to stimuli have applications in diverse fields. However, faster response rates and improved control over actuation timing and location are required to fulfill their potential. To address these criteria, we synthesized near-infrared light-driven HAs by interfacing genetically engineered elastin-like polypeptides with reduced-graphene oxide sheets. The resulting nanocomposites exhibited rapid and tunable motions controlled by light position, intensity, and path, including finger-like flexing and crawling. This work demonstrates the ability of rationally designed proteins to be combined with synthetic nanoparticles for the creation of macroscale functional materials.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Hyperosmotic Stress Stimulates Promoter Activity and Regulates Cellular Utilization of the Serum- and Glucocorticoid-inducible Protein Kinase (Sgk) by a p38 MAPK-dependent Pathway

Lisa M. Bell; Meredith Leong; Brian Kim; Eddie Wang; Jongsun Park; Brian A. Hemmings; Gary L. Firestone

We have established that the serum- and glucocorticoid-inducible protein kinase (Sgk) is a new component of the hyperosmotic stress response. Treatment of NMuMg mammary epithelial cells with the organic osmolyte, sorbitol, caused the stable accumulation of Sgk transcripts and protein after an approximately 4-h lag. Transient transfection of a series of sgk-CAT reporter plasmids containing either 5′ deletions or continuous 6-base pair substitutions identified a hyperosmotic stress-regulated element that is GC-rich and is necessary for the sorbitol stimulation ofsgk gene promoter activity. Gel shift analysis identified four major DNA-protein complexes in the hyperosmotic stress-regulated element that, by competition with excess consensus wild type and mutant oligonucleotides and by antibody supershifts, contains the Sp1 transcription factor. Several lines of evidence suggest that the p38 MAPK signaling pathway mediates the hyperosmotic stress stimulation of sgk gene expression. Treatment with pharmacological inhibitors of p38 MAPK or with a dominant negative form of MKK3, an upstream regulator of p38 MAPK, significantly reduced or ablated the sorbitol induction ofsgk promoter activity or protein production. Using anin vitro peptide transphosphorylation assay, sorbitol treatment activates either endogenous or exogenous Sgk that is localized to the cytoplasmic compartment. Thus, we propose that the stimulated expression of enzymatically active Sgk after sorbitol treatment is a newly defined component of the p38 MAPK-mediated response to hyperosmotic stress.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Role of the CCAAT/Enhancer Binding Protein-α Transcription Factor in the Glucocorticoid Stimulation of p21 waf1/cip1 Gene Promoter Activity in Growth-arrested Rat Hepatoma Cells

Erin J. Cram; Ross A. Ramos; Eddie Wang; Helen H. Cha; Yukihiro Nishio; Gary L. Firestone

The preceding paper (Cha, H. H., Cram, E. J., Wang, E. C., Huang, A. J., Kasler, H. G., and Firestone, G. L. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 0000–0000(478563) defined a glucocorticoid responsive region within the promoter of the p21 CDK inhibitor gene that contains a putative DNA-binding site for the transcription factor CCAAT/enhancer binding protein-α (C/EBPα). Wild type rat BDS1 hepatoma cells as well as as4 hepatoma cells, which express antisense sequences to C/EBPα and ablate its protein production, were utilized to investigate the role of this transcription factor in the glucocorticoid regulation of p21 gene expression. The stimulation of p21 protein levels and promoter activity, as well as inhibition of CDK2-mediated retinoblastoma protein phosphorylation, by the synthetic glucocorticoid, dexamethasone, required the expression of C/EBPα. Overexpression of C/EBPα in as4 cells rescued the dexamethasone responsiveness of the p21 promoter. Site-directed mutagenesis of the p21 promoter revealed that dexamethasone stimulation of p21 promoter activity required the C/EBP consensus DNA-binding site. Furthermore, in glucocorticoid receptor-defective EDR1 hepatoma cells, dexamethasone failed to stimulate C/EBPα and p21 protein expression and promoter activities. Our results have established a functional link between the glucocorticoid receptor signaling pathway that mediates a G1 cell cycle arrest of rat hepatoma cells and the transcriptional control of p21 by a cascade that requires the steroid induction of C/EBPα gene expression.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Glucocorticoids Stimulate p21 Gene Expression by Targeting Multiple Transcriptional Elements within a Steroid Responsive Region of the p21 waf1/cip1 Promoter in Rat Hepatoma Cells

Helen H. Cha; Erin J. Cram; Eddie Wang; Art J. Huang; Herbert G. Kasler; Gary L. Firestone

Glucocorticoids can induce a G1arrest in the cell cycle progression of BDS1 rat hepatoma cells. In these cells, dexamethasone, a synthetic glucocorticoid, stimulated a rapid and selective increase in expression of the p21 cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitor mRNA and protein and virtually abolished CDK2 phosphorylation of the retinoblastoma protein. Expression of the p27 CDK inhibitor, and other G1-acting cell cycle proteins, remained unaffected. Dexamethasone stimulated p21 promoter activity in a p53-independent manner that required functional glucocorticoid receptors. Transforming growth factor-β, which also induced a G1 cell cycle arrest of the hepatoma cells, failed to elicit this response. Analysis of 5′ deletions of the p21 promoter uncovered a glucocorticoid responsive region between nucleotides −1481 and −1184, which does not contain a canonical glucocorticoid response element but which can confer dexamethasone responsiveness to a heterologous promoter. Fine mapping of this region uncovered three distinct 50–60-base pair transcriptional elements that likely function as targets of glucocorticoid receptor signaling. Finally, ectopic expression of p21 had no effect on hepatoma cell growth in the absence of glucocorticoids but facilitated the ability of dexamethasone to inhibit cell proliferation. Thus, our results have established a direct transcriptional link between glucocorticoid receptor signaling and the regulated promoter activity of a CDK inhibitor gene that is involved in the cell cycle arrest of hepatoma cells.


ACS Nano | 2011

Selective and Sensitive TNT Sensors Using Biomimetic Polydiacetylene- Coated CNT-FETs

Tae Hyun Kim; Byung Yang Lee; Justyn Jaworski; Keisuke Yokoyama; Woo Jae Chung; Eddie Wang; Seunghun Hong; Arun Majumdar; Seung-Wuk Lee

Miniaturized smart sensors that can perform sensitive and selective real-time monitoring of target analytes are tremendously valuable for various sensing applications. We developed selective nanocoatings by combining trinitrotoluene (TNT) receptors bound to conjugated polydiacetylene (PDA) polymers with single-walled carbon nanotube field-effect transistors (SWNT-FET). Selective binding events between the TNT molecules and phage display derived TNT receptors were effectively transduced to sensitive SWNT-FET conductance sensors through the PDA coating layers. The resulting sensors exhibited an unprecedented 1 fM sensitivity toward TNT in real time, with excellent selectivity over various similar aromatic compounds. Our biomimetic receptor coating approach may be useful for the development of sensitive and selective micro- and nanoelectronic sensor devices for various other target analytes.


Development | 2006

Diverse gap junctions modulate distinct mechanisms for fiber cell formation during lens development and cataractogenesis.

Chun Hong Xia; Haiquan Liu; Debra Cheung; Catherine Cheng; Eddie Wang; Xin Du; Bruce Beutler; Woo-Kuen Lo; Xiaohua Gong

Different mutations of α3 connexin (Cx46 or Gja8) andα 8 connexin (Cx50 or Gja8), subunits of lens gap junction channels, cause a variety of cataracts via unknown mechanisms. We identified a dominant cataractous mouse line (L1), caused by a missense α8 connexin mutation that resulted in the expression of α8-S50P mutant proteins. Histology studies showed that primary lens fiber cells failed to fully elongate in heterozygous α8S50P/+ embryonic lenses, but not in homozygous α8S50P/S50P, α8-/- andα 3-/- α8-/- mutant embryonic lenses. We hypothesized that α8-S50P mutant subunits interacted with wild-typeα 3 or α8, or with both subunits to affect fiber cell formation. We found that the combination of mutant α8-S50P and wild-type α8 subunits specifically inhibited the elongation of primary fiber cells, while the combination of α8-S50P and wild-type α3 subunits disrupted the formation of secondary fiber cells. Thus, this work provides the first in vivo evidence that distinct mechanisms, modulated by diverse gap junctions, control the formation of primary and secondary fiber cells during lens development. This explains why and how different connexin mutations lead to a variety of cataracts. The principle of this explanation can also be applied to mutations of other connexin isoforms that cause different diseases in other organs.


Experimental Neurology | 1982

Increased length of terminal dendritic segments in old adult rats' somatosensory cortex: An environmentally induced response

James R. Connor; Eddie Wang; Marian C. Diamond

Abstract In a previous study we reported longer lengths of terminal dendritic segments of superficial pyramidal neurons in the rat visual cortex for neurons from 630-day-old animals that had been exposed to enriched environments. The present investigation extends that finding to the somatosensory cortex.


Biomacromolecules | 2011

Elastin-like polypeptide based hydroxyapatite bionanocomposites.

Eddie Wang; Sang-Hyuk Lee; Seung-Wuk Lee

In nature, organic matrix macromolecules play a critical role in enhancing the mechanical properties of biomineralized composites such as bone and teeth. Designing artificial matrix analogues is promising but challenging because relatively little is known about how natural matrix components function. Therefore, in lieu of using natural components, we created biomimetic matrices using genetically engineered elastin-like polypeptides (ELPs) and then used them to construct mechanically robust ELP-hydroxyapatite (HAP) composites. ELPs were engineered with well-defined backbone charge distributions by periodic incorporation of negative, positive, or neutral side chains or with HAP-binding octaglutamic acid motifs at one or both protein termini. ELPs exhibited sequence-specific capacities to interact with ions, bind HAP, and disperse HAP nanoparticles. HAP-binding ELPs were incorporated into calcium phosphate cements, resulting in materials with improved mechanical strength, injectability, and antiwashout properties. The results demonstrate that rational design of genetically engineered polymers is a powerful system for determining sequence-property relationships and for improving the properties of organic-inorganic composites. Our approach may be used to further develop novel, multifunctional bone cements and expanded to the design of other advanced composites.


Nano Letters | 2015

Biomimetic Self-Templated Hierarchical Structures of Collagen-Like Peptide Amphiphiles

Hyo-Eon Jin; Jaein Jang; Jinhyo Chung; Hee Jung Lee; Eddie Wang; Seung-Wuk Lee; Woo-Jae Chung

Developing hierarchically structured biomaterials with tunable chemical and physical properties like those found in nature is critically important to regenerative medicine and studies on tissue morphogenesis. Despite advances in materials synthesis and assembly processes, our ability to control hierarchical assembly using fibrillar biomolecules remains limited. Here, we developed a bioinspired approach to create collagen-like materials through directed evolutionary screening and directed self-assembly. We first synthesized peptide amphiphiles by coupling phage display-identified collagen-like peptides to long-chain fatty acids. We then assembled the amphiphiles into diverse, hierarchically organized, nanofibrous structures using directed self-assembly based on liquid crystal flow and its controlled deposition. The resulting structures sustained and directed the growth of bone cells and hydroxyapatite biominerals. We believe these self-assembling collagen-like amphiphiles could prove useful in the structural design of tissue regenerating materials.

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Seung-Wuk Lee

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Xiaohua Gong

University of California

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Andrew Geng

University of California

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Dong Wang

University of California

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Ki-Young Kwon

University of California

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Byung Yang Lee

Seoul National University

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Ankur Maniar

University of California

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Chun-hong Xia

University of California

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Malav S. Desai

University of California

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