Hoon-Ki Sung
Mount Sinai Hospital
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Publication
Featured researches published by Hoon-Ki Sung.
Nature | 2009
Knut Woltjen; Iacovos P. Michael; Paria Mohseni; Ridham Desai; Maria Mileikovsky; Riikka H. Hämäläinen; Rebecca Cowling; Wei Wang; Pentao Liu; Marina Gertsenstein; Keisuke Kaji; Hoon-Ki Sung; Andras Nagy
Transgenic expression of just four defined transcription factors (c-Myc, Klf4, Oct4 and Sox2) is sufficient to reprogram somatic cells to a pluripotent state. The resulting induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells resemble embryonic stem cells in their properties and potential to differentiate into a spectrum of adult cell types. Current reprogramming strategies involve retroviral, lentiviral, adenoviral and plasmid transfection to deliver reprogramming factor transgenes. Although the latter two methods are transient and minimize the potential for insertion mutagenesis, they are currently limited by diminished reprogramming efficiencies. piggyBac (PB) transposition is host-factor independent, and has recently been demonstrated to be functional in various human and mouse cell lines. The PB transposon/transposase system requires only the inverted terminal repeats flanking a transgene and transient expression of the transposase enzyme to catalyse insertion or excision events. Here we demonstrate successful and efficient reprogramming of murine and human embryonic fibroblasts using doxycycline-inducible transcription factors delivered by PB transposition. Stable iPS cells thus generated express characteristic pluripotency markers and succeed in a series of rigorous differentiation assays. By taking advantage of the natural propensity of the PB system for seamless excision, we show that the individual PB insertions can be removed from established iPS cell lines, providing an invaluable tool for discovery. In addition, we have demonstrated the traceless removal of reprogramming factors joined with viral 2A sequences delivered by a single transposon from murine iPS lines. We anticipate that the unique properties of this virus-independent simplification of iPS cell production will accelerate this field further towards full exploration of the reprogramming process and future cell-based therapies.
Cell Stem Cell | 2010
Payman Samavarchi-Tehrani; Azadeh Golipour; Laurent David; Hoon-Ki Sung; Tobias A. Beyer; Alessandro Datti; Knut Woltjen; Andras Nagy; Jeffrey L. Wrana
Somatic cells can be reprogrammed to induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) by expression of defined embryonic factors. However, little is known of the molecular mechanisms underlying the reprogramming process. Here we explore somatic cell reprogramming by exploiting a secondary mouse embryonic fibroblast model that forms iPSCs with high efficiency upon inducible expression of Oct4, Klf4, c-Myc, and Sox2. Temporal analysis of gene expression revealed that reprogramming is a multistep process that is characterized by initiation, maturation, and stabilization phases. Functional analysis by systematic RNAi screening further uncovered a key role for BMP signaling and the induction of mesenchymal-to-epithelial transition (MET) during the initiation phase. We show that this is linked to BMP-dependent induction of miR-205 and the miR-200 family of microRNAs that are key regulators of MET. These studies thus define a multistep mechanism that incorporates a BMP-miRNA-MET axis during somatic cell reprogramming. PAPERCLIP:
Nature | 2014
Scott Smemo; Juan J. Tena; Kyoung-Han Kim; Eric R. Gamazon; Noboru Jo Sakabe; Carlos Gómez-Marín; Ivy Aneas; Flavia L. Credidio; Débora Rodrigues Sobreira; Nora F. Wasserman; Ju Hee Lee; Vijitha Puviindran; Davis Tam; Michael Shen; Joe Eun Son; Niki Alizadeh Vakili; Hoon-Ki Sung; Silvia Naranjo; Rafael D. Acemel; Miguel Manzanares; Andras Nagy; Nancy J. Cox; Chi-chung Hui; José Luis Gómez-Skarmeta; Marcelo A. Nobrega
Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have reproducibly associated variants within introns of FTO with increased risk for obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2D). Although the molecular mechanisms linking these noncoding variants with obesity are not immediately obvious, subsequent studies in mice demonstrated that FTO expression levels influence body mass and composition phenotypes. However, no direct connection between the obesity-associated variants and FTO expression or function has been made. Here we show that the obesity-associated noncoding sequences within FTO are functionally connected, at megabase distances, with the homeobox gene IRX3. The obesity-associated FTO region directly interacts with the promoters of IRX3 as well as FTO in the human, mouse and zebrafish genomes. Furthermore, long-range enhancers within this region recapitulate aspects of IRX3 expression, suggesting that the obesity-associated interval belongs to the regulatory landscape of IRX3. Consistent with this, obesity-associated single nucleotide polymorphisms are associated with expression of IRX3, but not FTO, in human brains. A direct link between IRX3 expression and regulation of body mass and composition is demonstrated by a reduction in body weight of 25 to 30% in Irx3-deficient mice, primarily through the loss of fat mass and increase in basal metabolic rate with browning of white adipose tissue. Finally, hypothalamic expression of a dominant-negative form of Irx3 reproduces the metabolic phenotypes of Irx3-deficient mice. Our data suggest that IRX3 is a functional long-range target of obesity-associated variants within FTO and represents a novel determinant of body mass and composition.
Cell | 2011
Mathieu Gabut; Payman Samavarchi-Tehrani; Xinchen Wang; Valentina Slobodeniuc; Dave O'Hanlon; Hoon-Ki Sung; Manuel M Alvarez; Shaheynoor Talukder; Qun Pan; Esteban O. Mazzoni; Stephane Nedelec; Hynek Wichterle; Knut Woltjen; Timothy R. Hughes; Peter W. Zandstra; Andras Nagy; Jeffrey L. Wrana; Benjamin J. Blencowe
Alternative splicing (AS) is a key process underlying the expansion of proteomic diversity and the regulation of gene expression. Here, we identify an evolutionarily conserved embryonic stem cell (ESC)-specific AS event that changes the DNA-binding preference of the forkhead family transcription factor FOXP1. We show that the ESC-specific isoform of FOXP1 stimulates the expression of transcription factor genes required for pluripotency, including OCT4, NANOG, NR5A2, and GDF3, while concomitantly repressing genes required for ESC differentiation. This isoform also promotes the maintenance of ESC pluripotency and contributes to efficient reprogramming of somatic cells into induced pluripotent stem cells. These results reveal a pivotal role for an AS event in the regulation of pluripotency through the control of critical ESC-specific transcriptional programs.
Nature | 2013
Hong Han; Manuel Irimia; P. Joel Ross; Hoon-Ki Sung; Babak Alipanahi; Laurent David; Azadeh Golipour; Mathieu Gabut; Iacovos P. Michael; Emil N. Nachman; Eric T. Wang; Dan Trcka; Tadeo Thompson; Dave O’Hanlon; Valentina Slobodeniuc; Nuno L. Barbosa-Morais; Christopher B. Burge; Jason Moffat; Brendan J. Frey; Andras Nagy; James Ellis; Jeffrey L. Wrana; Benjamin J. Blencowe
Previous investigations of the core gene regulatory circuitry that controls the pluripotency of embryonic stem (ES) cells have largely focused on the roles of transcription, chromatin and non-coding RNA regulators. Alternative splicing represents a widely acting mode of gene regulation, yet its role in regulating ES-cell pluripotency and differentiation is poorly understood. Here we identify the muscleblind-like RNA binding proteins, MBNL1 and MBNL2, as conserved and direct negative regulators of a large program of cassette exon alternative splicing events that are differentially regulated between ES cells and other cell types. Knockdown of MBNL proteins in differentiated cells causes switching to an ES-cell-like alternative splicing pattern for approximately half of these events, whereas overexpression of MBNL proteins in ES cells promotes differentiated-cell-like alternative splicing patterns. Among the MBNL-regulated events is an ES-cell-specific alternative splicing switch in the forkhead family transcription factor FOXP1 that controls pluripotency. Consistent with a central and negative regulatory role for MBNL proteins in pluripotency, their knockdown significantly enhances the expression of key pluripotency genes and the formation of induced pluripotent stem cells during somatic cell reprogramming.
Cancer Cell | 2010
Young Jun Koh; Hak-Zoo Kim; Seong-Ik Hwang; Jeung Eun Lee; Nuri Oh; Keehoon Jung; Minah Kim; Kyung Eun Kim; Ho-Min Kim; Nam-Kyu Lim; Choon-Ju Jeon; Gyun Min Lee; Byeong Hwa Jeon; Do-Hyun Nam; Hoon-Ki Sung; Andras Nagy; Ook Joon Yoo; Gou Young Koh
Two vascular growth factor families, VEGF and the angiopoietins, play critical and coordinate roles in tumor progression and metastasis. A single inhibitor targeting both VEGF and angiopoietins is not available. Here, we developed a chimeric decoy receptor, namely double anti-angiogenic protein (DAAP), which can simultaneously bind VEGF-A and angiopoietins, blocking their actions. Compared to VEGF-Trap or Tie2-Fc, which block either VEGF-A or angiopoietins alone, we believe DAAP is a highly effective molecule for regressing tumor angiogenesis and metastasis in implanted and spontaneous solid tumors; it can also effectively reduce ascites formation and vascular leakage in an ovarian carcinoma model. Thus, simultaneous blockade of VEGF-A and angiopoietins with DAAP is an effective therapeutic strategy for blocking tumor angiogenesis, metastasis, and vascular leakage.
Cell | 2012
Jing Jin; Karen Sison; Chengjin Li; Ruijun Tian; Monika Wnuk; Hoon-Ki Sung; Marie Jeansson; Cunjie Zhang; Monika Tucholska; Nina Jones; Dontscho Kerjaschki; Masabumi Shibuya; I. George Fantus; Andras Nagy; Hans Gerber; Napoleone Ferrara; Tony Pawson; Susan E. Quaggin
Vascular endothelial growth factor and its receptors, FLK1/KDR and FLT1, are key regulators of angiogenesis. Unlike FLK1/KDR, the role of FLT1 has remained elusive. FLT1 is produced as soluble (sFLT1) and full-length isoforms. Here, we show that pericytes from multiple tissues produce sFLT1. To define the biologic role of sFLT1, we chose the glomerular microvasculature as a model system. Deletion of Flt1 from specialized glomerular pericytes, known as podocytes, causes reorganization of their cytoskeleton with massive proteinuria and kidney failure, characteristic features of nephrotic syndrome in humans. The kinase-deficient allele of Flt1 rescues this phenotype, demonstrating dispensability of the full-length isoform. Using cell imaging, proteomics, and lipidomics, we show that sFLT1 binds to the glycosphingolipid GM3 in lipid rafts on the surface of podocytes, promoting adhesion and rapid actin reorganization. sFLT1 also regulates pericyte function in vessels outside of the kidney. Our findings demonstrate an autocrine function for sFLT1 to control pericyte behavior.
Aging Cell | 2015
Assaf Ben-Meir; Eliezer Burstein; Aluet Borrego-Alvarez; Jasmine Chong; Ellen Wong; Tetyana Yavorska; Taline Naranian; Maggie M.-Y. Chi; Ying Wang; Yaakov Bentov; Jennifer Alexis; James Meriano; Hoon-Ki Sung; David L. Gasser; Kelle H. Moley; Siegfried Hekimi; Robert F. Casper; Andrea Jurisicova
Female reproductive capacity declines dramatically in the fourth decade of life as a result of an age‐related decrease in oocyte quality and quantity. The primary causes of reproductive aging and the molecular factors responsible for decreased oocyte quality remain elusive. Here, we show that aging of the female germ line is accompanied by mitochondrial dysfunction associated with decreased oxidative phosphorylation and reduced Adenosine tri‐phosphate (ATP) level. Diminished expression of the enzymes responsible for CoQ production, Pdss2 and Coq6, was observed in oocytes of older females in both mouse and human. The age‐related decline in oocyte quality and quantity could be reversed by the administration of CoQ10. Oocyte‐specific disruption of Pdss2 recapitulated many of the mitochondrial and reproductive phenotypes observed in the old females including reduced ATP production and increased meiotic spindle abnormalities, resulting in infertility. Ovarian reserve in the oocyte‐specific Pdss2‐deficient animals was diminished, leading to premature ovarian failure which could be prevented by maternal dietary administration of CoQ10. We conclude that impaired mitochondrial performance created by suboptimal CoQ10 availability can drive age‐associated oocyte deficits causing infertility.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2014
Benjamin R. Thomson; Stefan Heinen; Marie Jeansson; Asish K. Ghosh; Anees Fatima; Hoon-Ki Sung; Tuncer Onay; Hui Chen; Shinji Yamaguchi; Aris N. Economides; Ann M. Flenniken; Nicholas W. Gale; Young-Kwon Hong; Amani A. Fawzi; Xiaorong Liu; Tsutomu Kume; Susan E. Quaggin
Glaucoma is a leading cause of blindness, afflicting more than 60 million people worldwide. Increased intraocular pressure (IOP) due to impaired aqueous humor drainage is a major risk factor for the development of glaucoma. Here, we demonstrated that genetic disruption of the angiopoietin/TIE2 (ANGPT/TIE2) signaling pathway results in high IOP, buphthalmos, and classic features of glaucoma, including retinal ganglion degeneration and vision loss. Eyes from mice with induced deletion of Angpt1 and Angpt2 (A1A2Flox(WB) mice) lacked drainage pathways in the corneal limbus, including Schlemms canal and lymphatic capillaries, which share expression of the PROX1, VEGFR3, and FOXC family of transcription factors. VEGFR3 and FOXCs have been linked to lymphatic disorders in patients, and FOXC1 has been linked to glaucoma. In contrast to blood endothelium, in which ANGPT2 is an antagonist of ANGPT1, we have shown that both ligands cooperate to regulate TIE2 in the lymphatic network of the eye. While A1A2Flox(WB) mice developed high IOP and glaucoma, expression of ANGPT1 or ANGPT2 alone was sufficient for ocular drainage. Furthermore, we demonstrated that loss of FOXC2 from lymphatics results in TIE2 downregulation, suggesting a mechanism for ocular defects in patients with FOXC mutations. These data reveal a pathogenetic and molecular basis for glaucoma and demonstrate the importance of angiopoietin ligand cooperation in the lymphatic endothelium.
Embo Molecular Medicine | 2013
Minah K Kim; Hyeung Ju Park; Jae Won Seol; Jeon Yeob Jang; Young-Suk Cho; Kyu Rae Kim; Youngsok Choi; John P. Lydon; Francesco J. DeMayo; Masabumi Shibuya; Napoleone Ferrara; Hoon-Ki Sung; Andras Nagy; Kari Alitalo; Gou Young Koh
The features and regulation of uterine angiogenesis and vascular remodelling during pregnancy are poorly defined. Here we show that dynamic and variable decidual angiogenesis (sprouting, intussusception and networking), and active vigorous vascular remodelling such as enlargement and elongation of ‘vascular sinus folding’ (VSF) and mural cell drop‐out occur distinctly in a spatiotemporal manner in the rapidly growing mouse uterus during early pregnancy — just after implantation but before placentation. Decidual angiogenesis is mainly regulated through VEGF‐A secreted from the progesterone receptor (PR)‐expressing decidual stromal cells which are largely distributed in the anti‐mesometrial region (AMR). In comparison, P4‐PR‐regulated VEGF‐A‐VEGFR2 signalling, ligand‐independent VEGFR3 signalling and uterine natural killer (uNK) cells positively and coordinately regulate enlargement and elongation of VSF. During the postpartum period, Tie2 signalling could be involved in vascular maturation at the endometrium in a ligand‐independent manner, with marked reduction of VEGF‐A, VEGFR2 and PR expressions. Overall, we show that two key vascular growth factor receptors — VEGFR2 and Tie2 — strikingly but differentially regulate decidual angiogenesis and vascular remodelling in rapidly growing and regressing uteri in an organotypic manner.