In-Hwan Jang
Ewha Womans University
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Featured researches published by In-Hwan Jang.
Current Biology | 2006
Zakaria Kambris; Sylvain Brun; In-Hwan Jang; Hyuck-Jin Nam; Yves Romeo; Kuniaki Takahashi; Won-Jae Lee; Ryu Ueda; Bruno Lemaitre
Unlike mammalian Toll-like Receptors, the Drosophila Toll receptor does not interact directly with microbial determinants but is rather activated upon binding a cleaved form of the cytokine-like molecule Spatzle (Spz). During the immune response, Spz is thought to be processed by secreted serine proteases (SPs) present in the hemolymph that are activated by the recognition of gram-positive bacteria or fungi . In the present study, we have used an in vivo RNAi strategy to inactivate 75 distinct Drosophila SP genes. We then screened this collection for SPs regulating the activation of the Toll pathway by gram-positive bacteria. Here, we report the identification of five novel SPs that function in an extracellular pathway linking the recognition proteins GNBP1 and PGRP-SA to Spz. Interestingly, four of these genes are also required for Toll activation by fungi, while one is specifically associated with signaling in response to gram-positive bacterial infections. These results demonstrate the existence of a common cascade of SPs upstream of Spz, integrating signals sent by various secreted recognition molecules via more specialized SPs.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2004
Ji-Hwan Ryu; Kibum Nam; Chun-Taek Oh; Hyuck-Jin Nam; Sung Hee Kim; Joo-Heon Yoon; Je-Kyeong Seong; Mi-Ae Yoo; In-Hwan Jang; Paul T. Brey; Won-Jae Lee
ABSTRACT In Drosophila melanogaster, although the NF-κB transcription factors play a pivotal role in the inducible expression of innate immune genes, such as antimicrobial peptide genes, the exact regulatory mechanism of the tissue-specific constitutive expression of these genes in barrier epithelia is largely unknown. Here, we show that the Drosophila homeobox gene product Caudal functions as the innate immune transcription modulator that is responsible for the constitutive local expression of antimicrobial peptides cecropin and drosomycin in a tissue-specific manner. These results suggest that certain epithelial tissues have evolved a unique constitutive innate immune strategy by recruiting a developmental “master control” gene.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Yang Yu; Ji-Won Park; Hyun-Mi Kwon; Hyun-Ok Hwang; In-Hwan Jang; Akiko Masuda; Kenji Kurokawa; Hiroshi Nakayama; Won-Jae Lee; Naoshi Dohmae; Jinghai Zhang; Bok Luel Lee
In Drosophila, the synthesis of antimicrobial peptides in response to microbial infections is under the control of the Toll and immune deficiency (Imd) signaling pathway. The Toll signaling pathway responds mainly to the lysine-type peptidoglycan of Gram-positive bacteria and fungal β-1,3-glucan, whereas the Imd pathway responds to the meso-diaminopimelic acid (DAP)-type peptidoglycan of Gram-negative bacteria and certain Gram-positive bacilli. Recently we determined the activation mechanism of a Toll signaling pathway biochemically using a large beetle, Tenebrio molitor. However, DAP-type peptidoglycan recognition mechanism and its signaling pathway are still unclear in the fly and beetle. Here, we show that polymeric DAP-type peptidoglycan, but not its monomeric form, formed a complex with Tenebrio peptidoglycan recognition protein-SA, and this complex activated the three-step proteolytic cascade to produce processed Spätzle, a Toll receptor ligand, and induced Drosophila defensin-like antimicrobial peptide in Tenebrio larvae similarly to polymeric lysine-type peptidoglycan. Monomeric DAP-type peptidoglycan induced Drosophila diptericin-like antimicrobial peptide in Tenebrio hemocytes. In addition, both polymeric and monomeric DAP-type peptidoglycans induced expression of Tenebrio peptidoglycan recognition protein-SC2, which is DAP-type peptidoglycan-selective N-acetylmuramyl-l-alanine amidase that functions as a DAP-type peptidoglycan scavenger, appearing to function as a negative regulator of the DAP-type peptidoglycan signaling by cleaving DAP-type peptidoglycan in Tenebrio larvae. Taken together, these results demonstrate that molecular recognition mechanism for polymeric DAP-type peptidoglycan is different between Tenebrio larvae and Drosophila adults, providing biochemical evidences of biological diversity of innate immune responses in insects.
Insect Molecular Biology | 2004
S.-H. Han; Ji-Hwan Ryu; C.-T. Oh; K.-B. Nam; Hyuck-Jin Nam; In-Hwan Jang; Paul T. Brey; Won-Jae Lee
The homeobox gene, Caudal, encodes the DNA‐binding nuclear transcription factor that plays a crucial role during development and innate immune response. The Drosophila homologue of importin‐7 (DIM‐7), encoded by moleskin, was identified as a Caudal‐interacting molecule during yeast two‐hybrid screening. Both mutation of the minimal region of Caudal responsible for moleskin binding and RNA interference (RNAi) of moleskin dramatically inhibited the Caudal nuclear localization. Furthermore, Caudal‐mediated constitutive expression of antifungal Drosomycin gene was severely affected in the moleskin‐RNAi flies, showing a local Drosomycin expression pattern indistinguishable from that of the Caudal‐RNAi flies. These in vivo data suggest that DIM‐7 mediates Caudal nuclear localization, which is important for the proper Caudal function necessary for regulating innate immune genes in Drosophila.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Sandeep Kumar; In-Hwan Jang; Chan Woo Kim; Dong-Won Kang; Won Jae Lee; Hanjoong Jo
Disturbed blood flow (d-flow) induces atherosclerosis by altering the expression of mechanosensitive genes in the arterial endothelium. Previously, we identified >580 mechanosensitive genes in the mouse arterial endothelium, but their role in endothelial inflammation is incompletely understood. From this set, we obtained 84 Drosophila RNAi lines that silences the target gene under the control of upstream activation sequence (UAS) promoter. These lines were crossed with C564-GAL4 flies expressing GFP under the control of drosomycin promoter, an NF-κB target gene and a marker of pathogen-induced inflammation. Silencing of psmd12 or ERN1 decreased infection-induced drosomycin expression, while Bap60 silencing significantly increased the drosomycin expression. Interestingly, knockdown of Bap60 in adult flies using temperature-inducible Bap60 RNAi (C564ts-GAL4-Bap60-RNAi) enhanced drosomycin expression upon Gram-positive bacterial challenge but the basal drosomycin expression remained unchanged compared to the control. In the mammalian system, smarcd3 (mammalian ortholog of Bap60) expression was reduced in the human- and mouse aortic endothelial cells exposed to oscillatory shear in vitro as well as in the d-flow regions of mouse arterial endothelium in vivo. Moreover, siRNA-mediated knockdown of smarcd3 induced endothelial inflammation. In summary, we developed an in vivo Drosophila RNAi screening method to identify flow-sensitive genes that regulate endothelial inflammation.
Developmental Cell | 2005
Eun-Mi Ha; Chun-Taek Oh; Ji-Hwan Ryu; Yunsoo Bae; Sang-Won Kang; In-Hwan Jang; Paul T. Brey; Won-Jae Lee
Developmental Cell | 2006
In-Hwan Jang; Naoyuki Chosa; Sung-Hee Kim; Hyuck-Jin Nam; Bruno Lemaitre; Masanori Ochiai; Zakaria Kambris; Sylvain Brun; Carl Hashimoto; Masaaki Ashida; Paul T. Brey; Won-Jae Lee
Journal of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2008
In-Hwan Jang; Hyuck-Jin Nam; Won-Jae Lee
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2004
Sang-Pyo Kim; Jong-Wook Park; Sung-Hee Lee; Jun Hee Lim; Byeong-Churl Jang; Sang-Han Lee; In-Hwan Jang; Jean-Noël Freund; Seong-Il Suh; Kyo Cheol Mun; Dae-Kyu Song; Eun-Mi Ha; Won-Jae Lee; Taeg Kyu Kwon
Circulation | 2013
Jessilyn Dunn; Soyeon Kim; Haiwei Qiu; Chan Woo Kim; Ryan Hoffman; In-Hwan Jang; Hanjoong Jo