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Dive into the research topics where Inhan Lee is active.

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Featured researches published by Inhan Lee.


Pharmaceutical Research | 2002

DESIGN AND FUNCTION OF A DENDRIMER-BASED THERAPEUTIC NANODEVICE TARGETED TO TUMOR CELLS THROUGH THE FOLATE RECEPTOR

Antonio Quintana; Ewa Raczka; Lars T. Piehler; Inhan Lee; Andrzej Myc; Istvan J. Majoros; Anil K. Patri; Thommey P. Thomas; James J. Mulé; R James BakerJr.

AbstractPurpose. We sought to develop nanoscale drug delivery materials that would allow targeted intracellular delivery while having an imaging capability for tracking uptake of the material. A complex nanodevice was designed and synthesized that targets tumor cells through the folate receptor. Methods. The device is based on an ethylenediamine core polyamidoamine dendrimer of generation 5. Folic acid, fluorescein, and methotrexate were covalently attached to the surface to provide targeting, imaging, and intracellular drug delivery capabilities. Molecular modeling determined the optimal dendrimer surface modification for the function of the device and suggested a surface modification that improved targeting. Results. Three nanodevices were synthesized. Experimental targeting data in KB cells confirmed the modeling predictions of specific and highly selective binding. Targeted delivery improved the cytotoxic response of the cells to methotrexate 100-fold over free drug. Conclusions. These results demonstrate the ability to design and produce polymer-based nanodevices for the intracellular targeting of drugs, imaging agents, and other materials.


Science Signaling | 2011

p53 and microRNA-34 are suppressors of canonical Wnt signaling.

Nam Hee Kim; Hyun Sil Kim; Nam Gyun Kim; Inhan Lee; Hyung Seok Choi; Xiao Yan Li; Shi Eun Kang; So Young Cha; Joo Kyung Ryu; Jung Min Na; Changbum Park; Kunhong Kim; Sanghyuk Lee; Barry M. Gumbiner; Jong In Yook; Stephen J. Weiss

The tumor suppressor p53 activates miRNA-34 to inhibit Wnt signaling and colorectal cancer cell invasiveness. p53 Activates MicroRNA-34 to Inhibit Wnt Signaling The tumor suppressor p53 is missing or nonfunctional in many cancers, whereas the canonical Wnt signaling pathway is frequently activated. Here, Kim et al. show that p53 restrained Wnt signaling during Xenopus development, whereas loss of p53 function led to aberrant activation of the canonical Wnt signaling pathway, with microRNA-34 (miR-34) providing the connection between the two. They found that p53 stimulated production of miR-34, which, in turn, targeted key genes in the Wnt signaling pathway. Analyses of gene expression data sets indicated that loss of p53 or miR-34 function was associated with activation of Wnt signaling in human cancers; moreover, loss of p53 function increased Wnt signaling in colon cancer cells in vitro. In p53-mutant colon cancer cells, miR-34 attenuated Wnt signaling and decreased the invasiveness of these cells in vitro. Thus, the p53–miR-34–Wnt pathway appears to be crucial not only during development but also for p53’s tumor suppressor function. Although loss of p53 function and activation of canonical Wnt signaling cascades are frequently coupled in cancer, the links between these two pathways remain unclear. We report that p53 transactivated microRNA-34 (miR-34), which consequently suppressed the transcriptional activity of β-catenin–T cell factor and lymphoid enhancer factor (TCF/LEF) complexes by targeting the untranslated regions (UTRs) of a set of conserved targets in a network of genes encoding elements of the Wnt pathway. Loss of p53 function increased canonical Wnt signaling by alleviating miR-34–specific interactions with target UTRs, and miR-34 depletion relieved p53-mediated Wnt repression. Gene expression signatures reflecting the status of β-catenin–TCF/LEF transcriptional activity in breast cancer and pediatric neuroblastoma patients were correlated with p53 and miR-34 functional status. Loss of p53 or miR-34 contributed to neoplastic progression by triggering the Wnt-dependent, tissue-invasive activity of colorectal cancer cells. Further, during development, miR-34 interactions with the β-catenin UTR affected Xenopus body axis polarity and the expression of Wnt-dependent patterning genes. These data provide insight into the mechanisms by which a p53–miR-34 network restrains canonical Wnt signaling cascades in developing organisms and human cancer.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2002

Prevention of Influenza Pneumonitis by Sialic Acid–Conjugated Dendritic Polymers

Jeffrey J. Landers; Zhengyi Cao; Inhan Lee; Lars T. Piehler; Piotr P. Myc; Andrzej Myc; Tarek Hamouda; Andrzej T. Galecki; James R. Baker

Influenza A viral infection begins by hemagglutinin glycoproteins on the viral envelope binding to cell membrane sialic acid (SA). Free SA monomers cannot block hemagglutinin adhesion in vivo because of toxicity. Polyvalent, generation 4 (G4) SA-conjugated polyamidoamine (PAMAM) dendrimer (G4-SA) was evaluated as a means of preventing adhesion of 3 influenza A subtypes (H1N1, H2N2, and H3N2). In hemagglutination-inhibition assays, G4-SA was found to inhibit all H3N2 and 3 of 5 H1N1 influenza subtype strains at concentrations 32-170 times lower than those of SA monomers. In contrast, G4-SA had no ability to inhibit hemagglutination with H2N2 subtypes or 2 of 5 H1N1 subtype strains. In vivo experiments showed that G4-SA completely prevented infection by a H3N2 subtype in a murine influenza pneumonitis model but was not effective in preventing pneumonitis caused by an H2N2 subtype. Polyvalent binding inhibitors have potential as antiviral therapeutics, but issues related to strain specificity must be resolved.


Cell Cycle | 2012

MiRNA-34 intrinsically links p53 tumor suppressor and Wnt signaling

Yong Hoon Cha; Nam Hee Kim; Changbum Park; Inhan Lee; Hyun Sil Kim; Jong In Yook

Though tumor suppressor p53 and the canonical Wnt cascade have been extensively studied for the last 30 years, due to their important physiological roles, the two signaling pathways have been largely considered independent. Recently, the miR-34 family was found to directly link p53 and Wnt, revealing the tight connection between loss of tumor suppressor function and activation of oncogenic signaling. These observations demonstrate that miR-34, known to be directly downstream of p53, targets a set of highly conserved sites in the UTR of Wnt and EMT genes, specifically WNT1, WNT3, LRP6, AXIN2, β-catenin, LEF1 and Snail, resulting in suppression of TCF/LEF transcriptional activity and the EMT program. The loss of p53 function increases Wnt activities and promotes the Snail-dependent EMT program at multiple levels in a miR-34/UTR-specific manner. The TCF/LEF transcriptional signature was closely associated with functionality of p53 and miR-34 in clinical samples, suggesting the pervasive impact of miR-34 loss on the oncogenic pathway in human cancer. Here, we review recent findings on ceRNA in light of novel data to elucidate the physiological relevance of the p53-miR-34-Wnt network, which encompasses sets of genes and directions of signaling. As loss of wt-p53 or hyperactivation of Wnt is critical in maintaining cancer stem cell properties and in establishing the metastatic program, these observations indicate a mechanism of miR-mediated quasi-sufficiency which connects tumor suppressor and oncogenic signaling pathways, supporting a continuum model of human cancer.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2008

Acetylation of dendrimer-entrapped gold and silver nanoparticles

Xiangyang Shi; Inhan Lee; James R. Baker

Surface functionalization of dendrimer-entrapped metal nanoparticles (NPs) is of great importance in the area of biological sensing and therapeutics. In this work, dendrimer-entrapped gold and silver NPs (Au DENPs and Ag DENPs) prepared using amine-terminated poly(amidoamine) dendrimers of generation 5 (G5.NH2) as templates were subjected to acetylation in order to neutralize the surface positive charges. UV-Vis spectrometry, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), and ζ-potential measurements were utilized to characterize both Au DENPs and Ag DENPs modified with a defined degree of acetylation. The size, size distribution, optical properties, water solubility, and stability of Au DENPs do not change after acetylation, while their surface charges change. In contrast, acetylated Ag DENPs show optical properties that are slightly different from the unmodified ones, while reserving similar water solubility and stability. The surface charge decreases towards neutral with an increasing degree of acetylation. More interestingly, the size of partially acetylated Ag DENPs displays a bimodal distribution (2.9 nm and 11.0 nm), whereas the pristine Ag DENPs and the completely acetylated Ag DENPs are relatively monodisperse with sizes of 2.9 nm and 11.0 nm, respectively. It indicates that complete acetylation transfers Ag DENPs to dendrimer-stabilized Ag NPs (Ag DSNPs). The size and morphology changes of Au and Ag DENPs upon acetylation were further confirmed by molecular dynamics simulations. Such synthetic modifications are expected to reduce the toxicity of dendrimer-entrapped metal NPs and offer further biofunctionalization to produce multifunctional metal NPs for a range of biological sensing and therapeutics applications.


Journal of Nanoparticle Research | 2002

Imaging {Au0-PAMAM} Gold-dendrimer Nanocomposites in Cells

Anna U. Bielinska; Jonathan D. Eichman; Inhan Lee; R James BakerJr.; Lajos Balogh

Dendrimer nanocomposites (DNC) are hybrid nanoparticles formed by the dispersion and immobilization of guest atoms or small clusters in dendritic polymer matrices. They have a great potential in biomedical applications due to their controlled composition, predetermined size, shape and variable surface functionalities. In this work, d=5–25 nm spherical nanoparticles composed of gold and poly(amidoamine) (PAMAM) dendrimers have been selected to demonstrate this nanoparticle based concept. {Au(0)n-PAMAM} gold dendrimer nanocomposites with a well-defined size were synthesized and imaged by transmission electron microscopy both in vitro and in vivo. DNC have also the potential to be used for imaging and drug delivery vehicles either by utilizing bioactive guests or through the incorporation of radioactive isotopes, such as Au-198.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2008

Discriminating single-base difference miRNA expressions using microarray Probe Design Guru (ProDeG)

Inhan Lee; Subramanian S. Ajay; Haiming Chen; Atsushi Maruyama; Nulang Wang; Melvin G. McInnis; Brian D. Athey

MicroRNAs (miRNA) are endogenous tissue-specific short RNAs that regulate gene expression. Discriminating each let-7 family member expression is especially important due to let-7s abundance and connection with development and cancer. However, short lengths (22 nt) and similarities between multiple sequences have prevented identification of individual members. Here, we present ProDeG, a computational algorithm which designs imperfectly matched sequences (previously yielding only noise levels in microarray experiments) for genome-wide microarray “signal” probes to discriminate single nucleotide differences and to improve probe qualities. Our probes for the entire let-7 family are both homogeneous and specific, verified using microarray signals from fluorescent dye-tagged oligonucleotides corresponding to the let-7 family, demonstrating the power of our algorithm. In addition, false let-7c signals from conventional perfectly-matched probes were identified in lymphoblastoid cell-line samples through comparison with our probe-set signals, raising concerns about false let-7 family signals in conventional microarray platform.


Cell Cycle | 2013

p53 regulates nuclear GSK-3 levels through miR-34-mediated Axin2 suppression in colorectal cancer cells

Nam Hee Kim; Yong Hoon Cha; Shi Eun Kang; Yoon Mi Lee; Inhan Lee; So Young Cha; Joo Kyung Ryu; Jung Min Na; Changbum Park; Ho-Geun Yoon; Gyeong-Ju Park; Jong In Yook; Hyun Sil Kim

p53 is a bona fide tumor suppressor gene whose loss of function marks the most common genetic alteration in human malignancy. Although the causal link between loss of p53 function and tumorigenesis has been clearly demonstrated, the mechanistic links by which loss of p53 potentiates oncogenic signaling are not fully understood. Recent evidence indicates that the microRNA-34 (miR-34) family, a transcriptional target of the p53, directly suppresses a set of canonical Wnt genes and Snail, resulting in p53-mediated suppression of Wnt signaling and the EMT process. In this study, we report that p53 regulates GSK-3β nuclear localization via miR-34-mediated suppression of Axin2 in colorectal cancer. Exogenous miR-34a decreases Axin2 UTR-reporter activity through multiple binding sites within the 5′ and 3′ UTR of Axin2. Suppression of Axin2 by p53 or miR-34 increases nuclear GSK-3β abundance and leads to decreased Snail expression in colorectal cancer cells. Conversely, expression of the non-coding UTR of Axin2 causes depletion of endogenous miR-34 via the miR-sponge effect together with increased Axin2 function, supporting that the RNA-RNA interactions with Axin2 transcripts act as an endogenous decoy for miR-34. Further, RNA transcripts of miR-34 target were correlated with Axin2 in clinical data set of colorectal cancer patients. Although the biological relevance of nuclear GSK-3 level has not been fully studied, our results demonstrate that the tumor suppressor p53/miR-34 axis plays a role in regulating nuclear GSK-3 levels and Wnt signaling through the non-coding UTR of Axin2 in colorectal cancer.


Biopolymers | 2009

Comparison of the internalization of targeted dendrimers and dendrimer-entrapped gold nanoparticles into cancer cells.

Xiangyang Shi; Su He Wang; Inhan Lee; Mingwu Shen; James R. Baker

Dendrimer-based nanotechnology significantly advances the area of targeted cancer imaging and therapy. Herein, we compared the difference of surface acetylated fluorescein isocyanate (FI) and folic acid (FA) modified generation 5 (G5) poly(amidoamine) dendrimers (G5.NHAc-FI-FA), and dendrimer-entrapped gold nanoparticles with similar modifications ([(Au(0))(51.2)-G5.NHAc-FI-FA]) in terms of their specific internalization to FA receptor (FAR)-overexpressing cancer cells. Confocal microscopic studies show that both G5.NHAc-FI-FA and [(Au(0))(51.2-)G5.NHAc-FI-FA] exhibit similar internalization kinetics regardless of the existence of Au nanoparticles (NPs). Molecular dynamics simulation of the two different nanostructures reveals that the surface area and the FA moiety distribution from the center of the geometry are slightly different. This slight difference may not be recognized by the FARs on the cell membrane, consequently leading to similar internalization kinetics. This study underlines the fact that metal or inorganic NPs entrapped within dendrimers interact with cells in a similar way to that of dendrimers lacking host NPs.


Genomics & Informatics | 2015

Small Non-coding Transfer RNA-Derived RNA Fragments (tRFs): Their Biogenesis, Function and Implication in Human Diseases

Yu Fu; Inhan Lee; Yong Sun Lee; Xiaoyong Bao

tRNA-derived RNA fragments (tRFs) are an emerging class of non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs). A growing number of reports have shown that tRFs are not random degradation products but are functional ncRNAs made of specific tRNA cleavage. They play regulatory roles in several biological contexts such as cancer, innate immunity, stress responses, and neurological disorders. In this review, we summarize the biogenesis and functions of tRFs.

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Xiaoyong Bao

University of Texas Medical Branch

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Yong Sun Lee

University of Texas Medical Branch

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