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Dive into the research topics where Hae Jin Kee is active.

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Featured researches published by Hae Jin Kee.


Circulation | 2005

Inhibition of Histone Deacetylation Blocks Cardiac Hypertrophy Induced by Angiotensin II Infusion and Aortic Banding

Hae Jin Kee; Il Suk Sohn; Kwang-Il Nam; Jong Eun Park; Yong Ri Qian; Zhan Yin; Youngkeun Ahn; Myung Ho Jeong; Yung-Jue Bang; Nacksung Kim; Jong-Keun Kim; Kyung Keun Kim; Jonathan A. Epstein; Hyun Kook

Background— A number of distinct stress signaling pathways in myocardium cause cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure. Class II histone deacetylases (HDACs) antagonize several stress-induced pathways and hypertrophy. However, cardiac hypertrophy induced by transgenic overexpression of the homeodomain only protein, HOP, can be prevented by the nonspecific HDAC inhibitors trichostatin A and valproic acid, suggesting that alternate targets that oppose class II HDAC function might exist in myocardium. We tested the effects of several HDAC inhibitors, including a class I HDAC-selective inhibitor, SK-7041, on cardiac hypertrophy induced by angiotensin II (Ang II) treatment or aortic banding (AB). Methods and Results— Cardiac hypertrophy was induced by chronic infusion of Ang II or by AB in mice or rats and evaluated by determining the ratio of heart weight to body weight or to tibia length, cross-sectional area, or echocardiogram. Cardiac hypertrophy induced by Ang II or AB for 2 weeks was significantly reduced by simultaneous administration of trichostatin A, valproic acid, or SK-7041. Echocardiogram revealed that exaggerated left ventricular systolic dimensions were relieved by HDAC inhibitors. HDAC inhibitors partially reversed preestablished cardiac hypertrophy and improved survival of AB mice. The expressions of atrial natriuretic factor, &agr;-tubulin, &bgr;-myosin heavy chain, and interstitial fibrosis were reduced by HDAC inhibition. Conclusions— These results suggest that the predominant effect of HDAC inhibition, mainly mediated by class I HDACs, is to prevent cardiac hypertrophy in response to a broad range of agonist and stretch stimuli.


Developmental Cell | 2010

Hopx and Hdac2 interact to modulate Gata4 acetylation and embryonic cardiac myocyte proliferation

Chinmay M. Trivedi; Wenting Zhu; Qiaohong Wang; Cheng Jia; Hae Jin Kee; Li Li; Sridhar Hannenhalli; Jonathan A. Epstein

Regulation of chromatin structure via histone modification has recently received intense attention. Here, we demonstrate that the chromatin-modifying enzyme histone deacetylase 2 (Hdac2) functions with a small homeodomain factor, Hopx, to mediate deacetylation of Gata4, which is expressed by cardiac progenitor cells and plays critical roles in the regulation of cardiogenesis. In the absence of Hopx and Hdac2 in mouse embryos, Gata4 hyperacetylation is associated with a marked increase in cardiac myocyte proliferation, upregulation of Gata4 target genes, and perinatal lethality. Hdac2 physically interacts with Gata4, and this interaction is stabilized by Hopx. The ability of Gata4 to transactivate cell cycle genes is impaired by Hopx/Hdac2-mediated deacetylation, and this effect is abrogated by loss of Hdac2-Gata4 interaction. These results suggest that Gata4 is a nonhistone target of Hdac2-mediated deacetylation and that Hdac2, Hopx, and Gata4 coordinately regulate cardiac myocyte proliferation during embryonic development.


Journal of Immunology | 2014

Mucosal-Associated Invariant T Cell Deficiency in Systemic Lupus Erythematosus

Young-Nan Cho; Seung-Jung Kee; Tae-Jong Kim; Hye Mi Jin; Moon-Ju Kim; Hyun-Ju Jung; Ki-Jeong Park; S.-S. Lee; Shin-Seok Lee; Yong-Soo Kwon; Hae Jin Kee; Nacksung Kim; Yong-Wook Park

Mucosal-associated invariant T (MAIT) cells contribute to protection against certain microorganism infections and play an important role in mucosal immunity. However, the role of MAIT cells remains enigmatic in autoimmune diseases. In this study, we examined the level and function of MAIT cells in patients with rheumatic diseases. MAIT cell, cytokine, and programmed death-1 (PD-1) levels were measured by flow cytometry. Circulating MAIT cell levels were significantly reduced in systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and rheumatoid arthritis patients. In particular, this MAIT cell deficiency was more prominent in CD8+ and double-negative T cell subsets, and significantly correlated with disease activity, such as SLE disease activity index and 28-joint disease activity score. Interestingly, MAIT cell frequency was significantly correlated with NKT cell frequency in SLE patients. IFN-γ production in MAIT cells was impaired in SLE patients, which was due to an intrinsic defect in the Ca2+/calcineurin/NFAT1 signaling pathway. In SLE patients, MAIT cells were poorly activated by α-galactosylceramide–stimulated NKT cells, thereby showing the dysfunction between MAIT cells and NKT cells. Notably, an elevated expression of PD-1 in MAIT cells and NKT cells was associated with SLE. In rheumatoid arthritis patients, MAIT cell levels were significantly higher in synovial fluid than in peripheral blood. Our study primarily demonstrates that MAIT cells are numerically and functionally deficient in SLE. In addition, we report a novel finding that this MAIT cell deficiency is associated with NKT cell deficiency and elevated PD-1 expression. These abnormalities possibly contribute to dysregulated mucosal immunity in SLE.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2008

Multiple Myeloma-Related WHSC1/MMSET Isoform RE-IIBP Is a Histone Methyltransferase with Transcriptional Repression Activity

Ji Young Kim; Hae Jin Kee; Nakwon Choe; Sung-Mi Kim; Gwang-Hyeon Eom; Hee Jo Baek; Hyun Kook; Sang-Beom Seo

ABSTRACT Histone methylation is crucial for transcriptional regulation and chromatin remodeling. It has been suggested that the SET domain containing protein RE-IIBP (interleukin-5 [IL-5] response element II binding protein) may perform a function in the carcinogenesis of certain tumor types, including myeloma. However, the pathogenic role of RE-IIBP in these diseases remains to be clearly elucidated. In this study, we have conducted an investigation into the relationship between the histone-methylating activity of RE-IIBP and transcriptional regulation. Here, we report that RE-IIBP is up-regulated in the blood cells of leukemia patients, and we characterized the histone H3 lysine 27 (H3-K27) methyltransferase activity of RE-IIBP. Point mutant analysis revealed that SET domain cysteine 483 and arginine 477 are critical residues for the histone methyltransferase (HMTase) activity of RE-IIBP. RE-IIBP also represses basal transcription via histone deacetylase (HDAC) recruitment, which may be mediated by H3-K27 methylation. In the chromatin immunoprecipitation assays, we showed that RE-IIBP overexpression induces histone H3-K27 methylation, HDAC recruitment, and histone H3 hypoacetylation on the IL-5 promoter and represses expression. Conversely, short hairpin RNA-mediated knockdown of RE-IIBP reduces histone H3-K27 methylation and HDAC occupancy around the IL-5 promoter. These data illustrate the important regulatory role of RE-IIBP in transcriptional regulation, thereby pointing to the important role of HMTase activity in carcinogenesis.


BioMed Research International | 2011

Roles and Targets of Class I and IIa Histone Deacetylases in Cardiac Hypertrophy

Hae Jin Kee; Hyun Kook

Cardiac hypertrophy occurs in association with heart diseases and ultimately results in cardiac dysfunction and heart failure. Histone deacetylases (HDACs) are post-translational modifying enzymes that can deacetylate histones and non-histone proteins. Research with HDAC inhibitors has provided evidence that the class I HDACs are pro-hypertrophic. Among the class I HDACs, HDAC2 is activated by hypertrophic stresses in association with the induction of heat shock protein 70. Activated HDAC2 triggers hypertrophy by inhibiting the signal cascades of either Krüppel like factor 4 (KLF4) or inositol polyphosphate-5-phosphatase f (Inpp5f). Thus, modulators of HDAC2 enzymes, such as selective HDAC inhibitors, are considered to be an important target for heart diseases, especially for preventing cardiac hypertrophy. In contrast, class IIa HDACs have been shown to repress cardiac hypertrophy by inhibiting cardiac-specific transcription factors such as myocyte enhancer factor 2 (MEF2), GATA4, and NFAT in the heart. Studies of class IIa HDACs have shown that the underlying mechanism is regulated by nucleo-cytoplasm shuttling in response to a variety of stress signals. In this review, we focus on the class I and IIa HDACs that play critical roles in mediating cardiac hypertrophy and discuss the non-histone targets of HDACs in heart disease.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

A repressor complex, AP4 transcription factor and geminin, negatively regulates expression of target genes in nonneuronal cells

Mi-Young Kim; Byung Chul Jeong; Ji Hee Lee; Hae Jin Kee; Hyun Kook; Nack Sung Kim; Yoon Ha Kim; Jong-Keun Kim; Kyu Youn Ahn; Kyung Keun Kim

The transcription of neuron-specific genes must be repressed in nonneuronal cells. REST/NRSF is a transcription factor that restricts the expression of many neuronal genes through interaction with the neuron-restrictive silencer element at the promoter level. PAHX-AP1 is a neuronal gene that is developmentally up-regulated in the adult mouse brain but that has no functional NRSE motif in its 5′ upstream sequence. Here, we report that the transcription factor AP4 and the corepressor geminin form a functional complex in which SMRT and histone deacetylase 3 are recruited. The functional complex represses PAHX-AP1 expression in nonneuronal cells and participates in regulating the developmental expression of PAHX-AP1 in the brain. This complex also serves as a transcriptional repressor of DYRK1A, a candidate gene for Down’s syndrome. Furthermore, compared with that in normal fetal brain, the expression of AP4 and geminin is reduced in Down’s syndrome fetal brain at 20 weeks of gestation age, at which time premature overexpression of dual-specificity tyrosine-phosphorylated and regulated kinase 1A (DYRK1A) is observed. Our findings indicate that AP4 and geminin act as a previously undescribed repressor complex distinct from REST/NRSF to negatively regulate the expression of target genes in nonneuronal cells and suggest that the AP4–geminin complex may contribute to suppressing the precocious expression of target genes in fetal brain.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2009

Krüppel-like factor 4 mediates histone deacetylase inhibitor-induced prevention of cardiac hypertrophy

Hae Jin Kee; Hyun Kook

Recently, we reported that histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors block cardiac hypertrophy and that activation of HDAC2, one of the class I HDACs, is required for hypertrophy. In the present study, we tried to find the downstream target of HDAC inhibitor by utilizing cardiomyocytes and H9c2 cells. Both trichostatin A (TSA, class I and II HDAC inhibitor) and SK7041 (SK, class I HDAC blocker) attenuated the expression level and promoter activity of Nppa (natriuretic polypeptide precursor type A) and Myh7 (myosin heavy polypeptide 7), which are fetal genes associated with hypertrophy. Promoter-mapping revealed that the Nppa promoter region from -130 to approximately -105, which contains binding sites for Krüppel-like factor 4 (KLF4), is responsible for the HDAC inhibitor-mediated inhibition. SK-induced repression of Nppa promoter activity was attenuated when the KLF4-binding element was deleted or disrupted. Klf4 was upregulated by HDAC inhibitors, whereas it was down-regulated by phenylephrine in cardiomyocytes or by partial aortic constriction in mice. Klf4 successfully recruited the proximal Nppa promoter region flanking the KLF4-binding element in cardiomyocytes, and the recruitment was reduced by treatment with phenylephrine, which was recovered by SK. Overexpression of Klf4 blocked the agonist-induced increase in cardiomyocyte size, [(3)H]-leucine incorporation, and Nppa promoter activation. However, promoter activity was not prominently inhibited when the KLF4-binding element was disrupted or when a small inhibitory RNA to KLF4 was transfected into cells. Hypertrophic phenotypes were enhanced in Klf4-knockdown cells. These results suggest that KLF4, a novel anti-hypertrophic transcriptional regulator, mediates the HDAC inhibitor-induced prevention of cardiac hypertrophy.


Circulation | 2011

Casein Kinase-2α1 Induces Hypertrophic Response by Phosphorylation of Histone Deacetylase 2 S394 and its Activation in the Heart

Gwang Hyeon Eom; Young Kuk Cho; Jeong-Hyeon Ko; Sera Shin; Nakwon Choe; Yoojung Kim; Hosouk Joung; Hyung-Seok Kim; Kwang-Il Nam; Hae Jin Kee; Hyun Kook

Background— Cardiac hypertrophy is characterized by transcriptional reprogramming of fetal gene expression, and histone deacetylases (HDACs) are tightly linked to the regulation of those genes. We previously demonstrated that activation of HDAC2, 1 of the class I HDACs, mediates hypertrophy. Here, we show that casein kinase-2&agr;1 (CK2&agr;1)–dependent phosphorylation of HDAC2 S394 is required for the development of cardiac hypertrophy. Methods and Results— Hypertrophic stimuli phosphorylated HDAC2 S394, which was necessary for its enzymatic activation, and therefore the development of hypertrophic phenotypes in rat neonatal cardiomyocytes or in isoproterenol-administered mice hearts. Transgenic mice overexpressing HDAC2 wild type exhibited cardiac hypertrophy, whereas those expressing phosphorylation-resistant HDAC2 S394A did not. Compared with that in age-matched normal human hearts, phosphorylation of HDAC2 S394 was dramatically increased in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Hypertrophy-induced phosphorylation of HDAC2 S394 and its enzymatic activity were completely blocked either by CK2 blockers or by CK2&agr;1 short interfering RNA. Hypertrophic stimuli led CK2&agr;1 to be activated, and its chemical inhibitors blocked hypertrophy in both phenylephrine-treated cardiomyocytes and isoproterenol-administered mice. CK2&agr;1-transgenic mice developed hypertrophy, which was attenuated by administration of trichostatin A, an HDAC inhibitor. Overexpression of CK2&agr;1 caused hypertrophy in cardiomyocytes, whereas chemical inhibitors of both CK2 and HDAC as well as HDAC2 S394A blunted it. Hypertrophy in CK2&agr;1-transgenic mice was exaggerated by crossing these mice with wild-type-HDAC2-overexpressing mice. By contrast, however, it was blocked when CK2&agr;1-transgenic mice were crossed with HDAC2 S394A-transgenic mice. Conclusions— We have demonstrated a novel mechanism in the development of cardiac hypertrophy by which CK2 activates HDAC2 via phosphorylating HDAC2 S394.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2009

Histone methyltransferase PRDM8 regulates mouse testis steroidogenesis.

Gwang Hyeon Eom; Kabsun Kim; Sung-Mi Kim; Hae Jin Kee; Jiyoung Kim; Hye Mi Jin; Ju-Ryoung Kim; Jung Ha Kim; Nakwon Choe; Kee-Beom Kim; Junwon Lee; Hyun Kook; Nacksung Kim; Sang-Beom Seo

A family of PRDM proteins are similar to histone methyltransferases (HMTases) with SET domain in that they modulate different cellular processes, including transcriptional regulation, through chromatin modifying activities. By applying a bioinformatic approach, we searched for proteins containing the SET domain and identified a double zinc-finger domain containing PRDM8 with HMTase activity. In vitro HMTase assay and immunoblot analysis revealed that PRDM8 specifically methylates H3K9 of histones which indicates transcriptional repression activity of PRDM8. Direct recruitment of PRDM8 to the promoter mediated transcriptional repression and indicated no involvement of HDAC. Tissue blot analyses identified PRDM8 transcripts from brain and testis in adult mouse. Consistent with these observations, we demonstrate that PRDM8 repressed the expression of steroidogenic markers, p450c17c and LHR, which indicates its regulatory role in mouse testis development.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Enhancer of Polycomb1, a Novel Homeodomain Only Protein-binding Partner, Induces Skeletal Muscle Differentiation

Hae Jin Kee; Ju-Ryoung Kim; Kwang-Il Nam; Hye Young Park; Sera Shin; Jeong Chul Kim; Yohei Shimono; Masahide Takahashi; Myung Ho Jeong; Nacksung Kim; Kyung Keun Kim; Hyun Kook

Homeodomain only protein, Hop, is an unusual small protein that modulates target gene transcription without direct binding to DNA. Here we show that Hop interacts with Enhancer of Polycomb1 (Epc1), a homolog of a Drosophila polycomb group gene product that regulates transcription, to induce the skeletal muscle differentiation. Yeast two-hybrid assay with the human adult heart cDNA library revealed that Hop can associate with Epc1. The amino-terminal domain of Epc1 as well as full Epc1 physically interacted with Hop in mammalian cells and in yeast. Epc1 is highly expressed in the embryonic heart and adult skeletal muscles. Serum deprivation induced differentiation of H9c2, a myoblast cell line, into skeletal myocytes, and Epc1 was up-regulated. Differentiation of H9c2 was induced by Epc1 overexpression, although it was severely impaired in Epc1-knockdown cells. Co-transfection of Hop potentiated Epc1-induced transactivation of myogenin and myotube formation. Hop knock-out mice elicited a decrease in myosin heavy chain and myogenin expressions in skeletal muscle and showed delay in hamstring muscle healing after injury. Differentiation was impaired in skeletal myoblasts from Hop knock-out mice. These results suggest that Epc1 plays a role in the initiation of skeletal muscle differentiation, and its interaction with Hop is required for the full activity.

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Hyun Kook

Chonnam National University

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Myung Ho Jeong

Chonnam National University

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Gwi Ran Kim

Chonnam National University

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Gwang Hyeon Eom

Chonnam National University

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Sin Young Choi

Chonnam National University

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Yuhee Ryu

Chonnam National University

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Nakwon Choe

Chonnam National University

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Youngkeun Ahn

Chonnam National University

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Kyung Keun Kim

Chonnam National University

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