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Dive into the research topics where Hye Sup Yun is active.

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Featured researches published by Hye Sup Yun.


Plant Biotechnology Reports | 2010

Use of plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria to control stress responses of plant roots

Bin Goo Kang; Woo Taek Kim; Hye Sup Yun; Soo Chul Chang

AbstractsEthylene is a key gaseous hormone that controls various physiological processes in plants including growth, senescence, fruit ripening, and responses to abiotic and biotic stresses. In spite of some of these positive effects, the gas usually inhibits plant growth. While chemical fertilizers help plants grow better by providing soil-limited nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphate, over-usage often results in growth inhibition by soil contamination and subsequent stress responses in plants. Therefore, controlling ethylene production in plants becomes one of the attractive challenges to increase crop yields. Some soil bacteria among plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPRs) can stimulate plant growth even under stressful conditions by reducing ethylene levels in plants, hence the term “stress controllers” for these bacteria. Thus, manipulation of relevant genes or gene products might not only help clear polluted soil of contaminants but contribute to elevating the crop productivity. In this article, the beneficial soil bacteria and the mechanisms of reduced ethylene production in plants by stress controllers are discussed.


Molecules and Cells | 2012

Molecular communications between plant heat shock responses and disease resistance

Jae-Hoon Lee; Hye Sup Yun; Chian Kwon

As sessile, plants are continuously exposed to potential dangers including various abiotic stresses and pathogen attack. Although most studies focus on plant responses under an ideal condition to a specific stimulus, plants in nature must cope with a variety of stimuli at the same time. This indicates that it is critical for plants to fine-control distinct signaling pathways temporally and spatially for simultaneous and effective responses to various stresses. Global warming is currently a big issue threatening the future of humans. Reponses to high temperature affect many physiological processes in plants including growth and disease resistance, resulting in decrease of crop yield. Although plant heat stress and defense responses share important mediators such as calcium ions and heat shock proteins, it is thought that high temperature generally suppresses plant immunity. We therefore specifically discuss on interactions between plant heat and defense responses in this review hopefully for an integrated understanding of these responses in plants


Brain Research | 2012

Decreased levels of nuclear glucocorticoid receptor protein in the hippocampus of aged Long-Evans rats with cognitive impairment

Sun-Young Lee; Yoo Kyeong Hwang; Hye Sup Yun; Jung-Soo Han

Previous studies using animal models of cognitive aging showed that hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) responses to stress are impaired and glucocorticoid receptor (GR) mRNA is decreased in cognitively impaired aged rats, compared with those in young rats and cognitively unimpaired aged rats. Increased HPA activity is associated with the loss of hippocampal corticosteroid receptors. In the current investigation, GR expressions in the hippocampus were examined in young and aged male Long-Evans rats whose spatial memory was initially assessed on the Morris water maze task. We evaluated GR protein level in the hippocampus in young and aged rats characterized on the basis of the spatial task. In the hippocampus of aged rats with spatial memory impairments, GR protein level was decreased in the nucleus but not in the cytosol, and levels of glucocorticoid response elements binding activity was decreased. These results suggest that GR signaling is impaired in the hippocampus of rats with cognitive impairment. Impaired GR signaling may contribute to HPA axis dysfunction in aged rats and aged humans with cognitive impairment.


Journal of Plant Physiology | 2013

Vesicle-associated membrane proteins 721 and 722 are required for unimpeded growth of Arabidopsis under ABA application.

Changhyun Yi; Sohyeon Park; Hye Sup Yun; Chian Kwon

Soluble N-ethylmaleimide sensitive factor attachment protein receptor (SNARE) proteins are core factors in driving vesicle fusion with target membranes, which is critical in eukaryotes having distinct subcellular organelles. Amongst them, vesicle-associated membrane proteins (VAMP) 721 and 722 are involved in plant growth/development and immunity. In the course of stress responses, plants often show retarded growth. The precise mechanism of this retardation is not fully understood. The plant stress hormone abscisic acid (ABA), which can cause growth inhibition, down-regulates VAMP721/722 protein levels but not transcript levels. Enhanced growth inhibition and early depletion of the amount of VAMP721/722 caused by ABA in haploinsufficient VAMP721(+/-)VAMP722(-/-) and VAMP721(-/-)VAMP722(+/-) plants suggest that ABA impedes plant growth in part by reducing VAMP721/722 proteins. Since VAMP721/722 are engaged in exocytosis, our data implies that ABA-induced growth retardation may result from diminished secretory activities leading to decreased transport of molecules required for plant growth in the plasma membrane and cell wall.


Plant and Cell Physiology | 2016

Synaptotagmin 1 Negatively Controls the Two Distinct Immune Secretory Pathways to Powdery Mildew Fungi in Arabidopsis.

Hyeran Kim; Hyeokjin Kwon; Soohong Kim; Mi Kyung Kim; Miguel A. Botella; Hye Sup Yun; Chian Kwon

PEN1, one of the plasma membrane (PM) syntaxins, comprises an immune exocytic pathway by forming the soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptor (SNARE) complex with SNAP33 and VAMP721/722 in plants. Although this secretory pathway is also involved in plant growth and development, how plants control their exocytic activity is as yet poorly understood. Since constitutive PEN1 cycling between the PM and endocytosed vesicles is critical for its immune activity, we studied here the relationship of PEN1 to synaptotagmin 1 (SYT1) that is known to regulate endocytosis at the PM. Interestingly, syt1 plants showed enhanced disease resistance to the Arabidopsis-adapted Golovinomyces orontii fungus, and elevated protein but not transcript levels of PEN1 Calcium-dependent promotion of PEN1-SYT1 interaction suggests that SYT1 controls defense activities of the PEN1-associated secretory pathway by post-translationally modulating PEN1. Increased PEN1-SYT1 interaction and inhibited PEN1 SNARE complex induction by G. orontii additionally suggest that the adaption of phytopathogens to host plants might partly result from effective suppression of the PEN1-related secretory pathway. Further genetic analyses revealed that SYT1 also regulates the atypical peroxisomal myrosinase PEN2-associated secretory pathway.


The American Journal of Chinese Medicine | 2016

Coriandrum sativum Suppresses Aβ42-Induced ROS Increases, Glial Cell Proliferation, and ERK Activation

Quan Feng Liu; Haemin Jeong; Jang Ho Lee; Yoon Ki Hong; Youngje Oh; Young Mi Kim; Yoon Seok Suh; Semin Bang; Hye Sup Yun; Kyungho Lee; Sung Man Cho; Sung Bae Lee; Songhee Jeon; Young-Won Chin; Byung-Soo Koo; Kyoung Sang Cho

Alzheimers disease (AD), the most common neurodegenerative disease, has a complex and widespread pathology that is characterized by the accumulation of amyloid [Formula: see text]-peptide (A[Formula: see text]) in the brain and various cellular abnormalities, including increased oxidative damage, an amplified inflammatory response, and altered mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling. Based on the complex etiology of AD, traditional medicinal plants with multiple effective components are alternative treatments for patients with AD. In the present study, we investigated the neuroprotective effects of an ethanol extract of Coriandrum sativum (C. sativum) leaves on A[Formula: see text] cytotoxicity and examined the molecular mechanisms underlying the beneficial effects. Although recent studies have shown the benefits of the inhalation of C. sativum oil in an animal model of AD, the detailed molecular mechanisms by which C. sativum exerts its neuroprotective effects are unclear. Here, we found that treatment with C. sativum extract increased the survival of both A[Formula: see text]-treated mammalian cells and [Formula: see text]42-expressing flies. Moreover, C. sativum extract intake suppressed [Formula: see text]-induced cell death in the larval imaginal disc and brain without affecting A[Formula: see text]42 expression and accumulation. Interestingly, the increases in reactive oxygen species levels and glial cell number in AD model flies were reduced by C. sativum extract intake. Additionally, C. sativum extract inhibited the epidermal growth factor receptor- and A[Formula: see text]-induced phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK). The constitutively active form of ERK abolished the protective function of C. sativum extract against the [Formula: see text]-induced eye defect phenotype in Drosophila. Taken together, these results suggest that C. sativum leaves have antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and ERK signaling inhibitory properties that are beneficial for patients with AD.


Journal of Plant Biology | 2012

Trafficking at the host cell surface during plant immune responses

Hye Sup Yun; Chian Kwon

The plasma membrane (PM) of eukaryotic cells is not only an outermost covering to contain and protect inner molecules required for cell viability but also a place where communications dynamically occur with adjacent cells and environments including pathogens. However the selective permeability limits the free translocation of information across the PM between cells. Therefore, eukaryotic cells have invented an elaborate machinery to safely export and import proteins and small molecules within a membrane-wrapped container called a vesicle. Upon infection, a host plant cell also actively interacts with a phytopathogen to achieve its goal, defense to frustrate the pathogen attempt. To understand communications between pathogens and plants, hence this review is mainly focused on molecular transport events that occur at the host PM during plant immune responses.


Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2016

Arabidopsis immune secretory pathways to powdery mildew fungi.

Hye Sup Yun; Bin Goo Kang; Chian Kwon

ABSTRACT Innate immune responses in host plants begin with the recognition of pathogen-specific nonself molecules and terminate with the secretion of immune molecules. In the dicotyledonous model plant, Arabidopsis thaliana, two distinct secretory pathways required for disease resistance to powdery mildew fungi have been identified so far. One is an exocytic pathway consisting of PEN1, SNAP33 and VAMP721/722 SNARE proteins, but the other is an efflux-mediated one composed of PEN2 atypical myrosinase and PEN3 ABC transporter. Based on the conservation of the mechanically same exocytic pathway in the monocotyledonous plant barely, the former is regarded as an ancient secretory pathway, whereas the latter is considered as a newly evolved one in the Brassicaceae family including Arabidopsis. We recently identified synaptotagmin 1 as an additional regulator of these two secretory pathways. With current results, we discuss how these two secretory pathways contribute to Arabidopsis immunity depending on fungal adaptedness to Arabidopsis.


Current Opinion in Plant Biology | 2017

Vesicle trafficking in plant immunity

Hye Sup Yun; Chian Kwon

To defend against extracellular pathogens, plants primarily depend on cell-autonomous innate immunity due to the lack of the circulatory immune system including mobile immune cells. To extracellularly restrict or kill the pathogens, plant cells dump out antimicrobials. However, since antimicrobials are also toxic to plant cells themselves, they have to be safely delivered to the target sites in a separate vesicular compartment. In addition, because immune responses often requires energy otherwise used for the other metabolic processes, it is very important to properly control the duration and strength of immune responses depending on pathogen types. This can be achieved by regulating the sensing of immune signals and the delivery/discharge of extracellular immune molecules, all of which are controlled by membrane trafficking in plant cells. Soluble N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor attachment protein receptors (SNAREs) are now considered as the minimal factors that can merge two distinct membranes of cellular compartments. Hence, in this review, known and potential immune functions of SNAREs as well as regulatory proteins will be discussed.


Journal of Plant Biology | 2015

Non-proteinaceous yeast extract induces arabidopsis defense responses independently of salicylic acid

Hana Moon; Gayoung Lee; Hye Sup Yun; Chian Kwon

In spite of more severe effect on crop productivity, difficulties in artificial culturing and plant inoculation lead to less understanding of plant defense responses to fungal pathogens compared to bacteria. Therefore, it is of great importance to better understand detailed plant defense responses to fungal pathogens. We here show that the commercially available yeast extract includes at least a fungal pathogen-associated molecular pattern (PAMP) to induce defense gene expression via the mitogen-activated protein kinase activation in Arabidopsis plants. Yeast extract induced the expression of PR1 and EDS5 genes in the salicylic acid-deficient nahG plants. Induction of PR1 and EDS5 gene expression by proteinase K-treated yeast extract suggests that at least a non-proteinaceous fungal PAMP in yeast extract induces the PAMP-triggered immunity in Arabidopsis plants in a manner independent of salicylic acid.

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Bin Goo Kang

Korea Institute of Science and Technology Information

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