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Dive into the research topics where Heuyn-Kil Shin is active.

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Featured researches published by Heuyn-Kil Shin.


International Journal of Food Microbiology | 2011

Functional properties of Lactobacillus strains isolated from kimchi

Heejae Lee; Hong-sup Yoon; Yosep Ji; Hannah Kim; Hyunjoon Park; Jieun Lee; Heuyn-Kil Shin; Wilhelm H. Holzapfel

The objective of this study was to evaluate the functional properties of lactic acid bacteria (LAB) from kimchi, a traditional Korean fermented vegetable product generally consumed raw as a side-dish with practically every meal. Twelve mild acid producing facultatively heterofermentative Lactobacillus strains were selected for their potential as starter cultures for fermentation of kimchi, and evaluated for their functional properties. Eleven strains were identified as Lactobacillus sakei and one as Lactobacillus plantarum. The strains identified as L. sakei differed in some physiological features; of particular interest was the fact that 9 of these strains produced L(+) lactic acid from glucose in presence of acetate. All strains were able to survive gastrointestinal conditions simulating stomach and duodenum passage. In addition, they showed higher adherence to HT-29 cells than Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG, a commercial probiotic strain used worldwide. These strains also showed antimicrobial activity against a number of food-borne pathogens. Their ability to lower cholesterol was demonstrated by BSH (bile salt hydrolytic) activity, and cholesterol assimilation tests in vitro. The results suggest the probiotic potential of these strains for use in kimchi fermentation.


Process Biochemistry | 2000

Utilization of bovine blood plasma proteins for the production of angiotensin I converting enzyme inhibitory peptides

Chang-Kee Hyun; Heuyn-Kil Shin

Hydrolysates of whole bovine plasma and its separated proteins, albumin and globulins, which inhibit the angiotensin I converting enzyme (ACE) were prepared by enzymic hydrolysis with several proteases available for industrial use. Alcalase produced ACE inhibitory peptides from plasma proteins most efficiently and the Alcalase hydrolysate of albumin showed the most high activity (IC50=0.56 mg/ml). Sequential ultrafiltration of the hydrolysate with MW cut-off 10 000, 3000 and 1000 resulted in increased activity of each filtrate up to IC50 of 0.12 mg/ml. Sephadex G-25 gel chromatography of the hydrolysate eluted a peptide fraction below MW 1000 of the most potent activity (IC50=0.09 mg/ml). The hydrolysate was compared with the tryptic hydrolysate of casein considering the practical production of a functional food material in industry. The former was found to be more advantageous to separate the purified peptide fraction by industrial processes.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 1998

Growth-associated synthesis of recombinant human glucagon and human growth hormone in high-cell-density cultures of Escherichia coli

Chul Soo Shin; Min Sun Hong; Heuyn-Kil Shin; Jeewon Lee

Synthesis of two recombinant proteins (human glucagon and human growth hormone) was investigated in fed-batch cultures at high cell concentrations of recombinant Escherichia coli. The glucose-limited growth was achieved without accumulation of metabolic by-products and hence the cellular environment is presumed invariable during growth and recombinant protein synthesis. Via exponential feeding in the two-phase fed-batch operation, the specific cell growth rate was successfully controlled at the desired rates and the fed-batch mode employed is considered appropriate for examining the correlation between the specific growth rate and the efficiency of recombinant product formation in the recombinant E. coli strains. The two recombinant proteins were expressed as fusion proteins and the concentration in the culture broth was increased to 15 g fusion growth hormone l−1 and 7 g fusion glucagon l−1. The fusion growth hormone was initially expressed as soluble protein but seemed to be gradually aggregated into inclusion bodies as the expression level increased, whereas the synthesized fusion glucagon existed as a cytoplasmic soluble protein during the whole induction period. The stressful conditions of cultivation employed (i.e. high-cell-density cultivation at low growth rate) may induce the increased production of various host-derived chaperones and thereby enhance the folding efficiency of synthesized heterologous proteins. The synthesis of the recombinant fusion proteins was strongly growth-dependent and more efficient at a higher specific growth rate. The mechanism linking specific growth rate with recombinant protein productivity is likely to be related to the change in cellular ribosomal content.


Cancer Letters | 1999

Cytotoxic effects of the components in heat-treated mistletoe (Viscum album)

Jonu-Heum Park; Chang-Kee Hyun; Heuyn-Kil Shin

Major cytotoxic components were fractionated from Korean mistletoe and the changes of their cytotoxic effects caused by heat treatment were investigated. The high cytotoxicity of isolated lectin I completely disappeared by heating for 30 min. The fractions of viscotoxins and alkaloids maintained their activities even after heating for 60 and 180 min, respectively. The alkaloid fraction was more cytotoxic to tumor MSV cells than to non-tumor A31 cells and the activity pattern was not changed by heat treatment. The possible contributions of alkaloids and viscotoxins to the activities of heat-treated mistletoe extracts such as tea or decoctions are discussed.


Journal of Fermentation and Bioengineering | 1998

Utilization of bovine blood plasma obtained from a slaughterhouse for economic production of probiotics

Chang-Kee Hyun; Heuyn-Kil Shin

Abstract The growth of a probiotic-strain of Lactobacillus sp. in a bovine blood plasma-based medium and its stability against the freeze-drying process were investigated. Nitrogen sources in a complex (MRS) medium were replaced by the enzymatic hydrolysate of blood plasma using a selected industrial protease. The cell mass produced in the medium under optimum conditions, 5.2 × 10 9 CFU/ml, was significantly high, and about 74% of that in MRS medium. The blood protein hydrolysate in the medium also enhanced the survival rate of the strain against freeze-drying, for which sucrose was selected as the most effective stabilizer.


BMC Microbiology | 2012

Indication for Co-evolution of Lactobacillus johnsonii with its hosts

Keren Buhnik-Rosenblau; Vera Matsko-Efimov; Minju Jung; Heuyn-Kil Shin; Yael Danin-Poleg; Yechezkel Kashi

BackgroundThe intestinal microbiota, composed of complex bacterial populations, is host-specific and affected by environmental factors as well as host genetics. One important bacterial group is the lactic acid bacteria (LAB), which include many health-promoting strains. Here, we studied the genetic variation within a potentially probiotic LAB species, Lactobacillus johnsonii, isolated from various hosts.ResultsA wide survey of 104 fecal samples was carried out for the isolation of L. johnsonii. As part of the isolation procedure, terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (tRFLP) was performed to identify L. johnsonii within a selected narrow spectrum of fecal LAB. The tRFLP results showed host specificity of two bacterial species, the Enterococcus faecium species cluster and Lactobacillus intestinalis, to different host taxonomic groups while the appearance of L. johnsonii and E. faecalis was not correlated with any taxonomic group. The survey ultimately resulted in the isolation of L. johnsonii from few host species. The genetic variation among the 47 L. johnsonii strains isolated from the various hosts was analyzed based on variation at simple sequence repeats (SSR) loci and multi-locus sequence typing (MLST) of conserved hypothetical genes. The genetic relationships among the strains inferred by each of the methods were similar, revealing three different clusters of L. johnsonii strains, each cluster consisting of strains from a different host, i.e. chickens, humans or mice.ConclusionsOur typing results support phylogenetic separation of L. johnsonii strains isolated from different animal hosts, suggesting specificity of L. johnsonii strains to their hosts. Taken together with the tRFLP results, that indicated the association of specific LAB species with the host taxonomy, our study supports co-evolution of the host and its intestinal lactic acid bacteria.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2017

Lactobacillus plantarum HAC01 regulates gut microbiota and adipose tissue accumulation in a diet-induced obesity murine model

Soyoung Park; Yosep Ji; Hoe-Yune Jung; Hyunjoon Park; Jihee Kang; Sang-Haeng Choi; Heuyn-Kil Shin; Chang-Kee Hyun; Kyong-Tai Kim; Wilhelm H. Holzapfel

The functional features of Lactobacillus plantarum HAC01 (HAC01), isolated from fermented Korean kimchi, were studied with regard to the fat mass, immunometabolic biomarkers and dysbiosis in a diet-induced obesity (DIO) murine model. L. rhamnosus GG (LGG) served as reference strain and a PBS-treated group as control. The administration of L. plantarum HAC01 resulted in reduction of the mesenteric adipose depot, the conjunctive tissue closely associated with the gastrointestinal tract, where lipid oxidative gene expression was upregulated compared to the control group. Metagenome analysis of intestinal microbiota showed that both strains HAC01 and LGG influenced specific bacterial families such as the Lachnospiraceae and Ruminococcaceae rather than the phyla Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes as a whole. The relative abundance of the Lachnospiraceae (phylum Firmicutes) was significantly higher in both LAB-treated groups than in the control. Comparing the impact of the two Lactobacillus strains on microbial composition in the gut also suggests strain-specific effects. The study emphasises the need for deeper studies into functional specificity of a probiotic organism at the strain level. Alleviation of obesity-associated dysbiosis by modulation of the gut microbiota appears to be associated with “indicator” bacterial taxa such as the family Lachnospiraceae. This may provide further insight into mechanisms basic to the mode of probiotic action against obesity and associated dysbiosis.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2015

Influence of gastrointestinal stress on autoinducer-2 activity of two Lactobacillus species

Soyoung Yeo; Hyunjoon Park; Yosep Ji; Soyoung Park; Jaesik Yang; Jieun Lee; Julius Maina Mathara; Heuyn-Kil Shin; Wilhelm H. Holzapfel

Quorum sensing is a bacterial communication signalling system that regulates the expression of certain target genes with autoinducers in a cell density-dependent manner. The universal luxS-mediated quorum sensing using the autoinducer-2 (AI-2) signal is present in a wide variety of bacteria with only sparse information on probiotic lactobacilli. Effective probiotics should exhibit tolerance and adaptation to stress conditions typical of the GIT. Adhesion to human intestinal epithelial cells and competitive exclusion of pathogens are also considered important. The AI-2 signal system plays an important role in the response of probiotic lactobacilli to the surrounding environment. Intraspecies-related changes in quorum signalling in the GIT were determined by monitoring the AI-2 activity of two strains each of Lactobacillus rhamnosus and L. plantarum under various stress conditions. Modulation of the AI-2 activity of all the strains was induced by stress responses to pH, bile acid, temperature, osmotic pressure and starvation, and was both species- and strain-specific. AI-2 inhibition correlated with a reduction in the stress-related genes of L. rhamnosus. We therefore suggest that AI-2 quorum signalling of probiotic lactobacilli may represent one way of adapting to the hosts ecosystem and of interacting within the intestinal environment.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2016

Development of putative probiotics as feed additives: validation in a porcine-specific gastrointestinal tract model

Soyoung Yeo; Suro Lee; Hyunjoon Park; Heuyn-Kil Shin; Wilhelm H. Holzapfel; Chul-Sung Huh

Enforced restrictions on the use of antibiotics as growth promoters (AGPs) in animal production have prompted investigations into alternative feed additives in recent decades. Probiotics are currently the main feed additive used in livestock. However, the selection of probiotic candidates relies on human-based methods and little is known about the verification criteria for host-specific selection. We investigated the probiotic potential of Lactobacillus salivarius strains isolated from fed pig feces for their use as porcine feed additives. Two methods were developed that simulated the pig gastrointestinal (GI) tract and the intestinal epithelium, and these were compared with human-based in vitro methods and used for selecting porcine probiotics. Lactobacillus salivarius strain LS6 was identified as a promising probiotic strain for potential use as a porcine feed additive. This strain prevented disruption of the epithelial integrity of pig small intestine (PSI) cells by inhibiting the adherence of enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli K88. It also showed high survival rates in the in vitro pig GI tract model and good adhesion to PSI cells. We propose that host target-specific screening and validation methods are important tools in the development of effective probiotic feed additives, and this approach may support future-oriented agriculture.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2017

Autoinducer-2 Quorum Sensing Influences Viability of Escherichia coli O157:H7 under Osmotic and In Vitro Gastrointestinal Stress Conditions

Hyunjoon Park; Kyuyeon Lee; Soyoung Yeo; Heuyn-Kil Shin; Wilhelm H. Holzapfel

Bacteria use autoinducer molecules to communicate both at intra-species and inter-species levels by quorum sensing. One such cell density-dependent signaling system is the luxS-mediated universal quorum sensing using autoinducer-2 (AI-2). Virulence of several pathogens is determined by an AI-2 system and is related to colonization and infection of the host. From this concept, numerous papers have suggested that AI-2 inhibition is an important strategy toward designing of new antimicrobial agents. However, recent studies indicate that the AI-2 system is also involved in adaptation and survival under environmental stress conditions. Therefore, we hypothesized that interaction between quorum sensing and environmental conditions may be critical in influencing predicted results in a control and when combating of target pathogens. We investigated the growth of enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli O157:H7 (EHEC) and its luxS-deficient (non AI-2 producing) mutant strain under various stress conditions, and found significant differences in the growth rate under osmotic stress. Moreover, we could also show the impact of the AI-2 molecule on viability in the gastrointestinal tract model representing a complex environmental condition. Differences in vital responses of the strains suggest that AI-2 quorum sensing has a significant influence on the viability of EHEC under environmental stress conditions.

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Chang-Kee Hyun

Handong Global University

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Hyunjoon Park

Handong Global University

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Yosep Ji

Handong Global University

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Seung-Taek Ji

Handong Global University

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Jieun Lee

Handong Global University

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Soyoung Park

Handong Global University

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Soyoung Yeo

Handong Global University

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