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Dive into the research topics where Jean-Pyo Lee is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean-Pyo Lee.


Stem Cells Translational Medicine | 2015

Bystander Effect Fuels Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell-Derived Neural Stem Cells to Quickly Attenuate Early Stage Neurological Deficits After Stroke

Auston Eckert; Lei Huang; Rodolfo Gonzalez; Hye-Sun Kim; Milton Hamblin; Jean-Pyo Lee

Present therapies for stroke rest with tissue plasminogen activator (tPA), the sole licensed antithrombotic on the market; however, tPAs effectiveness is limited in that the drug not only must be administered less than 3–5 hours after stroke but often exacerbates blood‐brain barrier (BBB) leakage and increases hemorrhagic incidence. A potentially promising therapy for stroke is transplantation of human induced pluripotent stem cell‐derived neural stem cells (hiPSC‐NSCs). To date, the effects of iPSCs on injuries that take place during early stage ischemic stroke have not been well studied. Consequently, we engrafted iPSC‐NSCs into the ipsilesional hippocampus, a natural niche of NSCs, at 24 hours after stroke (prior to secondary BBB opening and when inflammatory signature is abundant). At 48 hours after stroke (24 hours after transplant), hiPSC‐NSCs had migrated to the stroke lesion and quickly improved neurological function. Transplanted mice showed reduced expression of proinflammatory factors (tumor necrosis factor‐α, interleukin 6 [IL‐6], IL‐1β, monocyte chemotactic protein 1, macrophage inflammatory protein 1α), microglial activation, and adhesion molecules (intercellular adhesion molecule 1, vascular cell adhesion molecule 1) and attenuated BBB damage. We are the first to report that engrafted hiPSC‐NSCs rapidly improved neurological function (less than 24 hours after transplant). Rapid hiPSC‐NSC therapeutic activity is mainly due to a bystander effect that elicits reduced inflammation and BBB damage.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2017

Sex differences in vascular physiology and pathophysiology: estrogen and androgen signaling in health and disease

Austin C. Boese; Seong Chul Kim; Ke-Jie Yin; Jean-Pyo Lee; Milton Hamblin

Sex differences between women and men are often overlooked and underappreciated when studying the cardiovascular system. It has been long assumed that men and women are physiologically similar, and this notion has resulted in women being clinically evaluated and treated for cardiovascular pathophysiological complications as men. Currently, there is increased recognition of fundamental sex differences in cardiovascular function, anatomy, cell signaling, and pathophysiology. The National Institutes of Health have enacted guidelines expressly to gain knowledge about ways the sexes differ in both normal function and diseases at the various research levels (molecular, cellular, tissue, and organ system). Greater understanding of these sex differences will be used to steer future directions in the biomedical sciences and translational and clinical research. This review describes sex-based differences in the physiology and pathophysiology of the vasculature, with a special emphasis on sex steroid receptor (estrogen and androgen receptor) signaling and their potential impact on vascular function in health and diseases (e.g., atherosclerosis, hypertension, peripheral artery disease, abdominal aortic aneurysms, cerebral aneurysms, and stroke).


Cns & Neurological Disorders-drug Targets | 2016

Neural Stem Cell Transplantation and CNS Diseases

Rodolfo Gonzalez; Milton Hamblin; Jean-Pyo Lee

In neurological disorders, pathological lesions in the central nervous system (CNS) may be globally dispersed throughout the brain or localized to specific regions. Although native neural stem cells (NSCs) are present in the adult mammalian brain, intrinsic self-repair of injured adult CNS tissue is inadequate or ineffective. The brains poor regenerative ability may be due to the fact that NSCs are restricted to discrete locations, are few in number, or are surrounded by a microenvironment that does not support neuronal differentiation. Therapeutic potential of NSC transplantation in CNS diseases characterized by global degeneration requires that gene products and/or replaced cells be widely distributed. Global degenerative CNS diseases include inherited pediatric neurodegenerative diseases (inborn errors of metabolism, including lysosomal storage disorders (LSDs), such as Tay-Sachs-related Sandhoff disease), hypoxic or ischemic encephalopathy, and some adult CNS diseases (such as multiple sclerosis). Both mouse and human NSCs express many chemokines and chemokine receptors (including CXCR4 and adhesion molecules, such as integrins, selectins, and immunoglobulins) that mediate homing to sources of inflammatory chemokines, such as SDF-1α. In mammalian brains of all ages, NSCs may be attracted even at a great distance to regions of neurodegeneration. Consequently, NSC transplantation presents a promising strategy for treating many CNS diseases.


Journal of Pharmacological Sciences | 2017

Alterations in protein phosphorylation in the amygdala of the 5XFamilial Alzheimer's disease animal model

Eun-Jeong Yang; Usman Mahmood; Hyun-Ju Kim; Moonseok Choi; Yunjung Choi; Jean-Pyo Lee; Moon-Jeong Chang; Hye-Sun Kim

Alzheimers disease is the most common disease underlying dementia in humans. Two major neuropathological hallmarks of AD are neuritic plaques primarily composed of amyloid beta peptide and neurofibrillary tangles primarily composed of hyperphosphorylated tau. In addition to impaired memory function, AD patients often display neuropsychiatric symptoms and abnormal emotional states such as confusion, delusion, manic/depressive episodes and altered fear status. Brains from AD patients show atrophy of the amygdala which is involved in fear expression and emotional processing as well as hippocampal atrophy. However, which molecular changes are responsible for the altered emotional states observed in AD remains to be elucidated. Here, we observed that the fear response as assessed by evaluating fear memory via a cued fear conditioning test was impaired in 5XFamilial AD (5XFAD) mice, an animal model of AD. Compared to wild-type mice, 5XFAD mice showed changes in the phosphorylation of twelve proteins in the amygdala. Thus, our study provides twelve potential protein targets in the amygdala that may be responsible for the impairment in fear memory in AD.


Stem Cell Research & Therapy | 2018

Neural stem cell therapy for subacute and chronic ischemic stroke

Austin C. Boese; Quan-Son Eric Le; Dylan Pham; Milton Hamblin; Jean-Pyo Lee

Neural stem cells (NSCs) play vital roles in brain homeostasis and exhibit a broad repertoire of potentially therapeutic actions following neurovascular injury. One such injury is stroke, a worldwide leading cause of death and disability. Clinically, extensive injury from ischemic stroke results from ischemia-reperfusion (IR), which is accompanied by inflammation, blood-brain barrier (BBB) damage, neural cell death, and extensive tissue loss. Tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) is still the only US Food and Drug Administration–approved clot-lysing agent. Whereas the thrombolytic role of tPA within the vasculature is beneficial, the effects of tPA (in a non-thrombolytic role) within the brain parenchyma have been reported as harmful. Thus, new therapies are needed to reduce the deleterious side effects of tPA and quickly facilitate vascular repair following stroke. The Stroke Treatment Academic Industry Roundtable (STAIR) recommends that stroke therapies “focus on drugs/devices/treatments with multiple mechanisms of action and that target multiple pathways”. Thus, based on multifactorial ischemic cascades in various stroke stages, effective stroke therapies need to focus on targeting and ameliorating early IR injury as well as facilitating angiogenesis, neurogenesis, and neurorestorative mechanisms following stroke. This review will discuss the preclinical perspectives of NSC transplantation as a promising treatment for neurovascular injury and will emphasize both the subacute and chronic phase of ischemic stroke.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2018

Phloroglucinol ameliorates cognitive impairments by reducing the amyloid β peptide burden and pro-inflammatory cytokines in the hippocampus of 5XFAD mice

Eun-Jeong Yang; Usman Mahmood; Hyun-Ju Kim; Moonseok Choi; Yunjung Choi; Jean-Pyo Lee; Joo-Youn Cho; Jin Won Hyun; Yong Sik Kim; Moon-Jeong Chang; Hye-Sun Kim

Abstract Among the various causative factors involved in the pathogenesis of Alzheimers disease (AD), oxidative stress has emerged as an important factor. Phloroglucinol is a polyphenol component of phlorotannin, which is found at sufficient levels in Ecklonia cava (E. cava). Phloroglucinol has been reported to exert antioxidant activities in various tissues. Previously, we reported that the stereotaxic injection of phloroglucinol regulated synaptic plasticity in an AD mouse model. In this study, we aimed to investigate the effects of oral administration of phloroglucinol in AD. The oral administration of phloroglucinol for 2 months attenuated the impairments in cognitive function observed in 6‐month‐old 5X familial AD (5XFAD) mice, as assessed with the T‐maze and Y‐maze tests. The administration of phloroglucinol for 2 months in 5XFAD mice caused a reduction in the number of amyloid plaques and in the protein level of BACE1, a major amyloid precursor protein cleavage enzyme, together with &ggr;‐secretase. Phloroglucinol also restored the reduction in dendritic spine density and the number of mature spines in the hippocampi of 5XFAD mice. In addition, phloroglucinol‐administered 5XFAD mice displayed lower protein levels of GFAP and Iba‐1 and mRNA levels of TNF‐&agr; and IL‐6 compared with vehicle‐administered 5XFAD mice. These results demonstrated that phloroglucinol alleviated the neuropathological features and behavioral phenotypes in the 5XFAD mouse model. Taken together, our results suggest that phloroglucinol has therapeutic potential for AD treatment. Graphical abstract Figure. No caption available. HighlightsPhloroglucinol rescues the cognitive impairments when evaluated with Y‐maze and T‐maze tests using 5XFAD mice.Phloroglucinol reduces the number of amyloid plaques in the hippocampus of 5XFAD mice.Phloroglucinol restores the reduction in dendritic spine density in CA1 region of the hippocampus in 5XFAD mice.Phloroglucinol reduces the gliosis and level of the pro‐inflammatory cytokines in the hippocampus of 5XFAD mice.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2018

Sex differences in abdominal aortic aneurysms

Austin C. Boese; Lin Chang; Ke-Jie Yin; Y. Eugene Chen; Jean-Pyo Lee; Milton Hamblin

Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is a vascular disorder with a high case fatality rate in the instance of rupture. AAA is a multifactorial disease, and the etiology is still not fully understood. AAA is more likely to occur in men, but women have a greater risk of rupture and worse prognosis. Women are reportedly protected against AAA possibly by premenopausal levels of estrogen and are, on average, diagnosed at older ages than men. Here, we review the present body of research on AAA pathophysiology in humans, animal models, and cultured cells, with an emphasis on sex differences and sex steroid hormone signaling.


Stem Cell Research & Therapy | 2014

Human neural stem cells rapidly ameliorate symptomatic inflammation in early-stage ischemic-reperfusion cerebral injury

Lei Huang; Sunnie Wong; Evan Y. Snyder; Milton Hamblin; Jean-Pyo Lee


Stroke | 2018

Abstract TP407: Combination of Minocycline and Neural Stem Cells Ameliorates Neurological Deficit in Aged Stroke Mice With Delayed Tpa Treatment

Auston Eckert; Milton Hamblin; Jean-Pyo Lee


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2018

Rapid estrogen receptor alpha signaling mediated by ERK activation regulates vascular tone in male and ovary-intact female mice

Seong Chul Kim; Austin C. Boese; Matthew Moore; Rea M. Cleland; Lin Chang; Patrice Delafontaine; Ke-Jie Yin; Jean-Pyo Lee; Milton Hamblin

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Hye-Sun Kim

Seoul National University

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Ke-Jie Yin

University of Pittsburgh

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Eun-Jeong Yang

Seoul National University

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Hyun-Ju Kim

Seoul National University

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Moonseok Choi

Seoul National University

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