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Dive into the research topics where Hwan Tae Park is active.

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Featured researches published by Hwan Tae Park.


Nature | 2001

The neuronal repellent Slit inhibits leukocyte chemotaxis induced by chemotactic factors

Jane Y. Wu; Lili Feng; Hwan Tae Park; Necat Havlioglu; Leng Wen; Hao Tang; Kevin B. Bacon; Zhi Hong Jiang; Xiao Chun Zhang; Yi Rao

Migration is a basic feature of many cell types in a wide range of species. Since the 1800s, cell migration has been proposed to occur in the nervous and immune systems, and distinct molecular cues for mammalian neurons and leukocytes have been identified. Here we report that Slit, a secreted protein previously known for its role of repulsion in axon guidance and neuronal migration, can also inhibit leukocyte chemotaxis induced by chemotactic factors. Slit inhibition of the chemokine-induced chemotaxis can be reconstituted by the co-expression of a chemokine receptor containing seven transmembrane domains and Roundabout (Robo), a Slit receptor containing a single transmembrane domain. Thus, there is a functional interaction between single and seven transmembrane receptors. Our results reveal the activity of a neuronal guidance cue in regulating leukocyte migration and indicate that there may be a general conservation of guidance mechanisms underlying metazoan cell migration. In addition, we have uncovered an inhibitor of leukocyte chemotaxis, and propose a new therapeutic approach to treat diseases involving leukocyte migration and chemotactic factors.


Nature Neuroscience | 2004

Netrin requires focal adhesion kinase and Src family kinases for axon outgrowth and attraction

Guofa Liu; Hilary E. Beggs; Claudia Jürgensen; Hwan Tae Park; Hao Tang; Jessica A. Gorski; Kevin R. Jones; Louis F. Reichardt; Jane Y. Wu; Yi Rao

Although netrins are an important family of neuronal guidance proteins, intracellular mechanisms that mediate netrin function are not well understood. Here we show that netrin-1 induces tyrosine phosphorylation of proteins including focal adhesion kinase (FAK) and the Src family kinase Fyn. Blockers of Src family kinases inhibited FAK phosphorylation and axon outgrowth and attraction by netrin. Dominant-negative FAK and Fyn mutants inhibited the attractive turning response to netrin. Axon outgrowth and attraction induced by netrin-1 were significantly reduced in neurons lacking the FAK gene. Our results show the biochemical and functional links between netrin, a prototypical neuronal guidance cue, and FAK, a central player in intracellular signaling that is crucial for cell migration.


Current Opinion in Genetics & Development | 2002

Slit proteins: molecular guidance cues for cells ranging from neurons to leukocytes

Kit Wong; Hwan Tae Park; Jane Y. Wu; Yi Rao

Recent studies of molecular guidance cues including the Slit family of secreted proteins have provided new insights into the mechanisms of cell migration. Initially discovered in the nervous system, Slit functions through its receptor, Roundabout, and an intracellular signal transduction pathway that includes the Abelson kinase, the Enabled protein, GTPase activating proteins and the Rho family of small GTPases. Interestingly, Slit also appears to use Roundabout to control leukocyte chemotaxis, which occurs in contexts different from neuronal migration, suggesting a fundamental conservation of mechanisms guiding the migration of distinct types of somatic cells.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007

p130CAS Is Required for Netrin Signaling and Commissural Axon Guidance

Guofa Liu; Weiquan Li; Xue Gao; Xiaoling Li; Claudia Jürgensen; Hwan Tae Park; Nah Young Shin; Jian Yu; Ming-Liang He; Steven K. Hanks; Jane Y. Wu; Kun-Liang Guan; Yi Rao

Netrins are an important family of axon guidance cues. Here, we report that netrin-1 induces tyrosine phosphorylation of p130CAS (Crk-associated substrate). Our biochemical studies indicate that p130CAS is downstream of the Src family kinases and upstream of the small GTPase Rac1 and Cdc42. Inhibition of p130CAS signaling blocks both the neurite outgrowth-promoting activity and the axon attraction activity of netrin-1. p130CAS RNA interference inhibits the attraction of commissural axons in the spinal cord by netrin-1 and causes defects in commissural axon projection in the embryo. These results demonstrate that p130CAS is a key component in the netrin signal transduction pathway and plays an important role in guiding commissural axons in vivo.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2009

Interleukin‐6 is required for the early induction of glial fibrillary acidic protein in Schwann cells during Wallerian degeneration

Hyun Kyoung Lee; In Ae Seo; Duk Joon Suh; Jeong-In Hong; Young Hyun Yoo; Hwan Tae Park

Signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) regulates gene transcription in response to cytokines and growth factors. In the central nervous system, STAT3 plays a role in neuroprotection and reactive gliosis after lesions. During peripheral nerve regeneration, a nerve injury‐induced up‐regulation of cytokines and growth factors accompanies STAT3 activation in sensory neurons and Schwann cells (SCs) even though its molecular details and functions are unknown. We then analyzed the ligands and functions of STAT3 activation in RT4 schwannoma cells and adult SCs in vitro and in vivo. We have identified that interleukin‐6 (IL‐6), but not ciliary neurotrophic factor, leukemia inhibitory factor, or ligands for receptor tyrosine kinases, activates STAT3 in SCs. The IL‐6/STAT3 signaling in primary SCs and RT4 cells induced the gene expression of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), which is known to be required for the proper regeneration of the injured nerves. Finally, the GFAP induction in the sciatic nerves after injury was significantly delayed in IL‐6‐deficient mice. These findings indicate that IL‐6 plays an important role in STAT3‐dependent GFAP induction in SCs during peripheral nerve regeneration.


Glia | 2009

Proteasome inhibition suppresses Schwann cell dedifferentiation in vitro and in vivo.

Hyun Kyoung Lee; Yoon Kyung Shin; Junyang Jung; Su-Yeong Seo; Sun-Yong Baek; Hwan Tae Park

The ubiquitin‐proteasome system (UPS), lysosomes, and autophagy are essential protein degradation systems for the regulation of a variety of cellular physiological events including the cellular response to injury. It has recently been reported that the UPS and autophagy mediate the axonal degeneration caused by traumatic insults and the retrieval of nerve growth factors. In the peripheral nerves, axonal degeneration after injury is accompanied by myelin degradation, which is tightly related to the reactive changes of Schwann cells called dedifferentiation. In this study, we examined the role of the UPS, lysosomal proteases, and autophagy in the early phase of Wallerian degeneration of injured peripheral nerves. We found that nerve injury induced an increase in the ubiquitin conjugation and lysosomal‐associated membrane protein‐1 expression within 1 day without any biochemical evidence for autophagy activation. Using an ex vivo explant culture of the sciatic nerve, we observed that inhibiting proteasomes or lysosomal serine proteases prevented myelin degradation, whereas this was not observed when inhibiting autophagy. Interestingly, proteasome inhibition, but not leupeptin, prevented Schwann cells from inducing dedifferentiation markers such as p75 nerve growth factor receptor and glial fibrillary acidic protein in vitro and in vivo. In addition, proteasome inhibitors induced cell cycle arrest and cellular process formation in cultured Schwann cells. Taken together, these findings indicate that the UPS plays a role in the phenotype changes of Schwann cells in response to nerve injury.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2007

Nidogen is a prosurvival and promigratory factor for adult Schwann cells

Hyun Kyoung Lee; In Ae Seo; Hye Kyung Park; Yoo Mi Park; Kyoung Jin Ahn; Young Hyun Yoo; Hwan Tae Park

Schwann cells provide a favorable microenvironment for successful regeneration of the injured peripheral nerve. Even though the roles of extracellular matrix proteins in the Schwann cell physiology have long been studied, the precise function of nidogen, a ubiquitous component of the basal lamina, in Schwann cells is unknown. In this study, we show that the protein and mRNA messages for nidogens are up‐regulated in the sciatic nerve after sciatic nerve transection. We demonstrate that recombinant nidogen‐1 increased the process formation of Schwann cells cultured from adult rat sciatic nerves and that nidogen‐1 prevented Schwann cells from serum‐deprivation‐induced death. In addition, nidogen‐1 promoted spontaneous migration of Schwann cells in two‐independent migration assays. The Schwann cell responses to the recombinant nidogen‐1 were specific because the nidogen‐binding ectodomain of tumor endothelial marker 7 inhibited the nidogen responses without affecting Schwann cell response to laminin. Finally, we found that β1 subunit‐containing integrins play a key role in the nidogen‐induced process formation, survival, and migration of Schwann cells. Altogether, these results indicate that nidogen has a prosurvival and promigratory activity on Schwann cells in the peripheral nerve.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2005

Netrin induces down-regulation of its receptor, Deleted in Colorectal Cancer, through the ubiquitin–proteasome pathway in the embryonic cortical neuron

Tae Hong Kim; Hyun Kyoung Lee; In Ae Seo; Hae Rahn Bae; Duk Joon Suh; Jane Y. Wu; Yi Rao; Kyu Geun Hwang; Hwan Tae Park

The proper regulation of temporal and spatial expression of the axon guidance cues and their receptors is critical for the normal wiring of nervous system during development. Netrins, a family of secreted guidance cues, are involved in the midline crossing of spinal commissural axons and in the guidance of cortical efferents. Axons normally lose the responsiveness to their attractants when they arrive at their targets, where the attractant is produced. However the molecular mechanism is still unknown. We investigated the molecular mechanism of down‐regulation of netrin‐1 signaling in the embryonic cortical neurons. Netrin‐1 induced the ubiquitination and proteolytic cleavage of Deleted in Colorectal Cancer (DCC), a transmembrane receptor for netrin, in dissociated cortical neurons. A dramatic decrease of DCC level particularly on the cell surface was also observed after netrin‐1 stimulation. Specific ubiquitin–proteasome inhibitors prevented the netrin‐induced DCC cleavage and decrease of cell surface DCC. We suggest that the ligand‐mediated down‐regulation of DCC might participate in the loss of netrin‐responsiveness in the developing nervous system.


Glia | 2016

Autophagic myelin destruction by Schwann cells during Wallerian degeneration and segmental demyelination.

So Young Jang; Yoon Kyung Shin; So Young Park; Joo Youn Park; Hye Jeong Lee; Young Hyun Yoo; Jong Kuk Kim; Hwan Tae Park

As lysosomal hydrolysis has long been suggested to be responsible for myelin clearance after peripheral nerve injury, in this study, we investigated the possible role of autophagolysosome formation in myelin phagocytosis by Schwann cells and its final contribution to nerve regeneration. We found that the canonical formation of autophagolysosomes was induced in demyelinating Schwann cells after injury, and the inhibition of autophagy via Schwann cell‐specific knockout of the atg7 gene or pharmacological intervention of lysosomal function caused a significant delay in myelin clearance. However, Schwann cell dedifferentiation, as demonstrated by extracellular signal‐regulated kinase activation and c‐Jun induction, and redifferentiation were not significantly affected, and thus the entire repair program progressed normally in atg7 knockout mice. Finally, autophagic Schwann cells were also found during segmental demyelination in a mouse model of inflammatory peripheral neuropathy. Together, our findings suggest that autophagy is the self‐myelin destruction mechanism of Schwann cells, but mechanistically, it is a process distinct from Schwann cell plasticity for nerve repair. GLIA 2016;64:730–742


Glia | 2013

The Neuregulin‐Rac‐MKK7 pathway regulates antagonistic c‐jun/Krox20 expression in Schwann cell dedifferentiation

Yoon Kyung Shin; So Young Jang; Joo Youn Park; So Young Park; Hye Jeong Lee; Duk Joon Suh; Hwan Tae Park

Schwann cells respond to nerve injury by dedifferentiating into immature states and producing neurotrophic factors, two actions that facilitate successful regeneration of axons. Previous reports have implicated the Raf‐ERK cascade and the expression of c‐jun in these Schwann cell responses. Here we used cultured primary Schwann cells to demonstrate that active Rac1 GTPase (Rac) functions as a negative regulator of Schwann cell differentiation by upregulating c‐jun and downregulating Krox20 through the MKK7‐JNK pathway, but not through the Raf‐ERK pathway. The activation of MKK7 and induction of c‐jun in sciatic nerves after axotomy was blocked by Rac inhibition. Microarray experiments revealed that the expression of regeneration‐associated genes, such as glial cell line‐derived neurotrophic factor and p75 neurotrophin receptor, after nerve injury was dependent on Rac but not on ERK. Finally, the inhibition of ErbB2 signaling prevented MKK7 activation, c‐jun induction, and Rac‐dependent gene expression in sciatic nerve explant cultures. Taken together, our results indicate that the neuregulin‐Rac‐MKK7‐JNK/c‐jun pathway regulates Schwann cell dedifferentiation following nerve injury.

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