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Dive into the research topics where Jeong Hyeon Park is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeong Hyeon Park.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2006

GAS41 Is Required for Repression of the p53 Tumor Suppressor Pathway during Normal Cellular Proliferation

Jeong Hyeon Park; Robert G. Roeder

ABSTRACT GAS41 is a common subunit of the TIP60 and SRCAP complexes and is essential for cell growth and viability. Here, we report that GAS41 is required for repression of the p53 tumor suppressor pathway during normal cellular proliferation. Either GAS41 small interfering RNA-mediated knockdown of GAS41 expression or specific interruptions of the carboxy-terminal coiled-coil motif of the GAS41 protein activate the p53 tumor suppressor pathway, as evidenced by p53 up-regulation, p53 serine-15 phosphorylation, and p21 transcriptional activation. Activation of the p53 pathway does not result from changes in TIP60 complex assembly or TIP60 coactivator functions for p53, since a TIP60 complex containing a coiled-coil mutant of GAS41 retains the same composition and histone acetyltransferase activity as its wild-type counterpart and since mutant GAS41 does not compromise ectopic p53-dependent transcriptional activation in a reporter gene assay. Finally, we demonstrate that GAS41 is prebound to the promoters of two p53 tumor suppressor pathway genes (p21 and p14ARF) in normal unstressed cells but is dissociated from both promoters in response to stress signals that activate p53. Our data suggest that GAS41 plays a role in repressing the p53 tumor suppressor pathway during the normal cell cycle by a TIP60-independent mechanism.


Nutrition Research and Practice | 2015

Butyrate modulates bacterial adherence on LS174T human colorectal cells by stimulating mucin secretion and MAPK signaling pathway

Tae Hwan Jung; Jeong Hyeon Park; Woo Min Jeon; Kyoung Sik Han

BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES Fermentation of dietary fiber results in production of various short chain fatty acids in the colon. In particular, butyrate is reported to regulate the physical and functional integrity of the normal colonic mucosa by altering mucin gene expression or the number of goblet cells. The objective of this study was to investigate whether butyrate modulates mucin secretion in LS174T human colorectal cells, thereby influencing the adhesion of probiotics such as Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium strains and subsequently inhibiting pathogenic bacteria such as E. coli. In addition, possible signaling pathways involved in mucin gene regulation induced by butyrate treatment were also investigated. MATERIALS/METHODS Mucin protein content assay and periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) staining were performed in LS174T cells treated with butyrate at various concentrations. Effects of butyrate on the ability of probiotics to adhere to LS174T cells and their competition with E. coli strains were examined. Real time polymerase chain reaction for mucin gene expression and Taqman array 96-well fast plate-based pathway analysis were performed on butyrate-treated LS174T cells. RESULTS Treatment with butyrate resulted in a dose-dependent increase in mucin protein contents in LS174T cells with peak effects at 6 or 9 mM, which was further confirmed by PAS staining. Increase in mucin protein contents resulted in elevated adherence of probiotics, which subsequently reduced the adherent ability of E. coli. Treatment with butyrate also increased transcriptional levels of MUC3, MUC4, and MUC12, which was accompanied by higher gene expressions of signaling kinases and transcription factors involved in mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signaling pathways. CONCLUSIONS Based on our results, butyrate is an effective regulator of modulation of mucin protein production at the transcriptional and translational levels, resulting in changes in the adherence of gut microflora. Butyrate potentially stimulates the MAPK signaling pathway in intestinal cells, which is positively correlated with gut defense.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2010

The SANT Domain of p400 ATPase Represses Acetyltransferase Activity and Coactivator Function of TIP60 in Basal p21 Gene Expression

Jeong Hyeon Park; Xiao Jian Sun; Robert G. Roeder

ABSTRACT The TIP60 histone acetyltransferase plays diverse roles in DNA damage responses, DNA double-strand break repair, and transcriptional regulation. TIP60 resides within a multisubunit complex that has been shown to be targeted by transcription factors and to be involved in histone acetylation and transcriptional activation. p400, an SWI2/SNF2-related ATPase that serves as an ATP-dependent chromatin remodeling enzyme, exists as an integral subunit of a TIP60 complex but also resides within a distinct complex that presumably lacks TIP60 and appears to be involved in the transcriptional repression of basal p53 target gene expression. Here, we describe a TIP60-containing p400 complex population in which the acetyltransferase activity of TIP60 is repressed by interactions with p400. We further show that an SWI3-ADA2-N-CoR-TFIIIB (SANT) domain of p400 binds directly to the histone acetyltransferase (HAT) domain of TIP60 and blocks both its enzymatic activity and its coactivator function in regulating basal p21 gene expression. Our results thus suggest that p400 represses basal p21 gene expression through dual mechanisms that include the direct inhibition of TIP60 enzymatic activity described here and the previously described ATP-dependent positioning of H2A.Z at the promoter.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

The GAS41-PP2Cβ Complex Dephosphorylates p53 at Serine 366 and Regulates Its Stability

Jeong Hyeon Park; Rebecca J. Smith; Sheau-Yann Shieh; Robert G. Roeder

The p53 tumor suppressor is principally regulated by post-translational modifications and proteasome-dependent degradation. Various kinases have been shown to phosphorylate p53, but little is known about the counteracting phosphatases. We demonstrate here that the newly identified complex GAS41-PP2Cβ, and not PP2Cβ alone, is specifically required for dephosphorylation of serine 366 on p53. Ectopic expression of GAS41 and PP2Cβ reduces UV radiation-induced p53 up-regulation, thereby increasing the cell survival upon genotoxic DNA damage. To our knowledge, the GAS41-PP2Cβ complex is the first example in which substrate specificity of a PP2C family member is controlled by an associated regulatory subunit. Because GAS41 is frequently amplified in human gliomas, our finding illustrates a novel oncogenic mechanism of GAS41 by p53 dephosphorylation.


Mechanisms of Ageing and Development | 2012

Decrease of p400 ATPase complex and loss of H2A.Z within the p21 promoter occur in senescent IMR-90 human fibroblasts

Kangmoon Lee; Zin Zee Lau; Courtney Meredith; Jeong Hyeon Park

Replicative senescence in human diploid fibroblasts is characterised by an exhaustion of proliferative potential and permanent cell cycle arrest. During senescence, telomere shortening-generated DNA damage activates p53 pathway that upregulates cell cycle inhibitors, such as p21. Human p400 ATPase is a chromatin remodeller that plays a key role in the deposition of the histone variant, H2A.Z within the p21 promoter, repressing p21 gene expression. Decline of p400 ATPase in senescent IMR-90 cells prompted us to investigate structural changes in the chromatin of the p21 promoter during in vitro aging. Whereas doxorubicin treatment in early-passaged cells results in nucleosome density changes near the p53 binding sites of the p21 promoter, our studies show that senescent cells with a high p21 transcription activity had a comparable nucleosome distribution as unstressed young cells. However, H2A.Z that is highly enriched within the p21 promoter of young cells is depleted in senescent cells, suggesting that downregulation of p400 and loss of H2A.Z localisation play roles in relieving p21 gene repression in senescent IMR-90 cells. Taken together, our results indicate that age-dependent p400 downregulation and loss of H2A.Z localisation may contribute to the onset of replicative senescence through a sustained high rate of p21 transcription.


Plasmid | 2014

Development of a doxycycline-inducible lentiviral plasmid with an instant regulatory feature

Tian Yang; Christopher Burrows; Jeong Hyeon Park

Lentiviruses provide highly efficient gene delivery vehicles in both dividing and non-dividing cells. Inducible gene expression systems often employ a specific cell line that constitutively expresses a regulatory protein for transgene expression. As one of such inducible expression systems the Tet-On system uses a cell line expressing reverse tetracycline-responsive transcriptional activator (rtTA). The rtTA protein binds to the tetracycline-responsive element (TRE) in the promoter and activates transcription of a transgene in a doxycycline-dependent manner. To establish a universal and instant regulatory system without generating Tet-On cell lines, the cDNAs of rtTA and a testing target gene (PPM1B) were cloned in the bi-directional TRE-containing promoters. Here, we examined whether a basal leaky expression of rtTA allows instantly inducible expression of both rtTA itself and the target gene, PPM1B in a single plasmid using the two mini-CMV promoters. Transient transfection of the lentiviral plasmids into human embryonic kidney HEK293T cells showed a significant induction of PPM1B expression in response to doxycycline, suggesting that these lentiviral plasmids can be used as an instantly inducible mammalian expression vector. However, the expression of rtTA by lentiviral transduction shows a minimal expression without a consistent response to doxycycline, suggesting that the utility of these lentiviral vectors is limited. A potential solution to overcome lentiviral transgene inactivation is proposed.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Reverse Transcriptase-Coupled Quantitative Real Time PCR Analysis of Cell-Free Transcription on the Chromatin-Assembled p21 Promoter

Jeong Hyeon Park; Natisha Magan

Background Cell-free eukaryotic transcription assays have contributed tremendously to the current understanding of the molecular mechanisms that govern transcription at eukaryotic promoters. Currently, the conventional G-less cassette transcription assay is one of the simplest and fastest methods for measuring transcription in vitro. This method requires several components, including the radioisotope labelling of RNA product during the transcription reaction followed by visualization of transcripts using autoradiography. Methodology/Principal Findings To further simplify and expedite the conventional G-less cassette transcription assay, we have developed a method to incorporate a reverse transcriptase-coupled quantitative real time PCR (RT-qPCR). By using DNA template depletion steps that include DNA template immobilization, Trizol extraction and DNase I treatment, we have successfully enriched p21 promoter-driven transcripts over DNA templates. The quantification results of RNA transcripts using the RT-qPCR assay were comparable to the results of the conventional G-less cassette transcription assay both in naked DNA and chromatin-assembled templates. Conclusions We first report a proof-of-concept demonstration that incorporating RT-qPCR in cell-free transcription assays can be a simpler and faster alternative method to the conventional radioisotope-mediated transcription assays. This method will be useful for developing high throughput in vitro transcription assays and provide quantitative data for RNA transcripts generated in a defined cell-free transcription reaction.


BMC Molecular Biology | 2016

Ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM) interacts with p400 ATPase for an efficient DNA damage response

Rebecca J. Smith; Matthew S. Savoian; Lauren E. Weber; Jeong Hyeon Park

BackgroundAtaxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM) and TRRAP proteins belong to the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase-related kinase family and are involved in DNA damage repair and chromatin remodeling. ATM is a checkpoint kinase that is recruited to sites of DNA double-strand breaks where it phosphorylates a diverse range of proteins that are part of the chromatin and DNA repair machinery. As an integral subunit of the TRRAP-TIP60 complexes, p400 ATPase is a chromatin remodeler that is also targeted to DNA double-strand break sites. While it is understood that DNA binding transcriptional activators recruit p400 ATPase into a regulatory region of the promoter, how p400 recognises and moves to DNA double-strand break sites is far less clear. Here we investigate a possibility whether ATM serves as a shuttle to deliver p400 to break sites.ResultsOur data indicate that p400 co-immunoprecipitates with ATM independently of DNA damage state and that the N-terminal domain of p400 is vital for this interaction. Heterologous expression studies using Sf9 cells revealed that the ATM-p400 complex can be reconstituted without other mammalian bridging proteins. Overexpression of ATM-interacting p400 regions in U2OS cells induced dominant negative effects including the inhibition of both DNA damage repair and cell proliferation. Consistent with the dominant negative effect, the stable expression of an N-terminal p400 fragment showed a decrease in the association of p400 with ATM, but did not alter the association of p400 with TRRAP.ConclusionTaken together, our findings suggest that a protein–protein interaction between ATM and p400 ATPase occurs independently of DNA damage and contributes to efficient DNA damage response and repair.


Mechanisms of Ageing and Development | 2014

PPM1B depletion induces premature senescence in human IMR-90 fibroblasts

Jeong Hyeon Park; Tracy K. Hale; Rebecca J. Smith; Tian Yang

p53 and NF-κB are key transcription factors in regulating the gene expression program of cellular and organismal senescence. PPM1B is a member of the protein phosphatase 2C family and plays a role in negatively regulating p53 and NF-κB thereby possibly attenuating the gene expression program of cellular senescence. Here, possible involvement of PPM1B in replicative senescence has been investigated using the in vitro aging model of IMR-90 cells. PPM1B protein levels are progressively decreased in a replicative age-dependent manner. Importantly, PPM1B depletion induces a robust senescence phenotype as evidenced by significant growth arrest and senescence marker expression. Given that PPM1B depletion-induced senescence is partially rescued by inactivating p38 MAPK, our results identify PPM1B as a critical regulator of both p38 MAPK-dependent and independent senescence pathways during normal cellular aging process.


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2018

Formaldehyde-mediated peptide coupling for the titration of epitope-specific antibody in an ELISA format

Harry M.C. Deare; Geunyoung Eom; Jeong Hyeon Park

Synthetic peptides are commonly used as an immobilised substrate in ELISA to measure antibody responses in serum. However, in addition to poor adsorption on the plastic surfaces of plates, titration of antibody response to a specific epitope of interest is challenging because the majority of antibodies in serum may be directed to other regions of the antigen. Using Ras peptides containing either the G12V or G12D mutation as a model antigen, we have tested formaldehyde as a crosslinker to immobilise Ras peptides on the plastic surface of microtitre plates in the presence of bovine serum albumin (BSA) as a carrier. Using this method, specific antibody against the G12V mutation was titrated from a simulated rabbit serum. Non-cognate Ras peptides were included in the ELISA reactions to suppress binding against non-mutated regions of the peptide. Our results showed that formaldehyde enhanced in-well peptide immobilisation of peptide approximately 3-fold and this enhancement required addition of BSA as a carrier. Wild type Ras peptide was not ideal as a non-cognate competitor as it tended to inhibit specific antibody binding against G12D or G12V. In the presence of the non-cognate peptide containing G12D, concentrations of the anti-G12V antibody in a simulated serum were determined with approximately 95% accuracy. Our method will be useful to determine a specific antibody response against a certain epitope in various peptide-based immunotherapy trials.

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