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Dive into the research topics where JinSeok Park is active.

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Featured researches published by JinSeok Park.


Integrative Biology | 2012

Control of stem cell fate and function by engineering physical microenvironments

Kshitiz; JinSeok Park; Peter H. Kim; Wilda Helen; Adam J. Engler; Andre Levchenko; Deok Ho Kim

The phenotypic expression and function of stem cells are regulated by their integrated response to variable microenvironmental cues, including growth factors and cytokines, matrix-mediated signals, and cell–cell interactions. Recently, growing evidence suggests that matrix-mediated signals include mechanical stimuli such as strain, shear stress, substrate rigidity and topography, and these stimuli have a more profound impact on stem cell phenotypes than had previously been recognized, e.g. self-renewal and differentiation through the control of gene transcription and signaling pathways. Using a variety of cell culture models enabled by micro and nanoscale technologies, we are beginning to systematically and quantitatively investigate the integrated response of cells to combinations of relevant mechanobiological stimuli. This paper reviews recent advances in engineering physical stimuli for stem cell mechanobiology and discusses how micro- and nanoscale engineered platforms can be used to control stem cell niche environments and regulate stem cell fate and function.


IEEE Transactions on Nanobioscience | 2012

Quantitative Analysis of the Combined Effect of Substrate Rigidity and Topographic Guidance on Cell Morphology

JinSeok Park; Hong-Nam Kim; Deok Ho Kim; Andre Levchenko; Kahp-Yang Suh

Live cells are exquisitely sensitive to both the sub- stratum rigidity and texture. To explore cell responses to both these types of inputs in a precisely controlled fashion, we analyzed the responses of Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells to nanotopographically defined substrata of different rigidities, ranging from 1.8 MPa to 1.1 GPa. Parallel arrays of nanogrooves (800-nm width, 800-nm space, and 800-nm depth) on polyurethane (PU)-based material surfaces were fabricated by UV-assisted capillary force lithography (CFL) over an area of 5 mm × 3 mm. We observed dramatic morphological responses of CHO cells, evident in their elongation and polarization along the nanogrooves direction. The cells were progressively more spread and elongated as the sub- stratum rigidity increased, in an integrin β1 dependent manner. However, the degree of orientation was independent of substratum rigidity, suggesting that the cell shape is primarily determined by the topographical cues.


Pigment Cell & Melanoma Research | 2013

Notch signaling mediates melanoma-endothelial cell communication and melanoma cell migration.

Jason D. Howard; Whei F. Moriarty; JinSeok Park; Katherine Riedy; Izabela P. Panova; Christine H. Chung; Kahp Y. Suh; Andre Levchenko; Rhoda M. Alani

Stromal and cellular components within the tumor microenvironment significantly influence molecular signals mediating tumor growth and progression. We recently performed a screen to evaluate critical mediators of melanoma–endothelial communication and identified several molecular pathways associated with these cellular networks, including Notch3. Here, we evaluate the nature of melanoma–endothelial communication mediated by Notch3 and its functional significance. We find that Notch3 is specifically upregulated in melanoma–endothelial cell cocultures and is functionally associated with increased Notch signaling in melanoma cells. Furthermore, induced Notch3 signaling in melanoma cell lines leads to enhanced tumor cell migration without associated increases in tumor cell growth. Additionally, Notch3 expression is specifically associated with malignant patient samples and is not evident in benign nevi. We conclude that Notch3 mediates melanoma–endothelial cell communication and tumor cell migration and may serve as a meaningful therapeutic target for this aggressive malignancy.


PLOS Computational Biology | 2017

A mathematical model coupling polarity signaling to cell adhesion explains diverse cell migration patterns

William R. Holmes; JinSeok Park; Andre Levchenko; Leah Edelstein-Keshet

Protrusion and retraction of lamellipodia are common features of eukaryotic cell motility. As a cell migrates through its extracellular matrix (ECM), lamellipod growth increases cell-ECM contact area and enhances engagement of integrin receptors, locally amplifying ECM input to internal signaling cascades. In contrast, contraction of lamellipodia results in reduced integrin engagement that dampens the level of ECM-induced signaling. These changes in cell shape are both influenced by, and feed back onto ECM signaling. Motivated by experimental observations on melanoma cells lines (1205Lu and SBcl2) migrating on fibronectin (FN) coated topographic substrates (anisotropic post-density arrays), we probe this interplay between intracellular and ECM signaling. Experimentally, cells exhibited one of three lamellipodial dynamics: persistently polarized, random, or oscillatory, with competing lamellipodia oscillating out of phase (Park et al., 2017). Pharmacological treatments, changes in FN density, and substrate topography all affected the fraction of cells exhibiting these behaviours. We use these observations as constraints to test a sequence of hypotheses for how intracellular (GTPase) and ECM signaling jointly regulate lamellipodial dynamics. The models encoding these hypotheses are predicated on mutually antagonistic Rac-Rho signaling, Rac-mediated protrusion (via activation of Arp2/3 actin nucleation) and Rho-mediated contraction (via ROCK phosphorylation of myosin light chain), which are coupled to ECM signaling that is modulated by protrusion/contraction. By testing each model against experimental observations, we identify how the signaling layers interact to generate the diverse range of cell behaviors, and how various molecular perturbations and changes in ECM signaling modulate the fraction of cells exhibiting each. We identify several factors that play distinct but critical roles in generating the observed dynamic: (1) competition between lamellipodia for shared pools of Rac and Rho, (2) activation of RhoA by ECM signaling, and (3) feedback from lamellipodial growth or contraction to cell-ECM contact area and therefore to the ECM signaling level.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Mechanochemical feedback underlies coexistence of qualitatively distinct cell polarity patterns within diverse cell populations

JinSeok Park; William R. Holmes; Sung Hoon Lee; Hong-Nam Kim; Deok Ho Kim; Moon Kyu Kwak; Chiaochun Joanne Wang; Leah Edelstein-Keshet; Andre Levchenko

Significance Directional cell migration accompanied by cell polarization is key to progression of aggressive cancers, such as melanoma. Cells can display diverse dynamical patterns, with no single mechanism proposed to account for all of them. We show that a simple model predicts the simultaneous presence of random, oscillatory, and persistent dynamic polarization and migration patterns. This mechanism postulates spatially distributed, mechanochemical feedback, coupling the dynamically changing extracellular matrix–cell contacts to the activation of signaling downstream of the Rho-family small GTPases. We validate this mechanism experimentally and use it to explain the transition from a more benign to a more aggressive cell behavior in melanoma progression. This mechanistic analysis framework is general and can be used for diverse stochastic cell migration behaviors in cancer. Cell polarization and directional cell migration can display random, persistent, and oscillatory dynamic patterns. However, it is not clear whether these polarity patterns can be explained by the same underlying regulatory mechanism. Here, we show that random, persistent, and oscillatory migration accompanied by polarization can simultaneously occur in populations of melanoma cells derived from tumors with different degrees of aggressiveness. We demonstrate that all of these patterns and the probabilities of their occurrence are quantitatively accounted for by a simple mechanism involving a spatially distributed, mechanochemical feedback coupling the dynamically changing extracellular matrix (ECM)–cell contacts to the activation of signaling downstream of the Rho-family small GTPases. This mechanism is supported by a predictive mathematical model and extensive experimental validation, and can explain previously reported results for diverse cell types. In melanoma, this mechanism also accounts for the effects of genetic and environmental perturbations, including mutations linked to invasive cell spread. The resulting mechanistic understanding of cell polarity quantitatively captures the relationship between population variability and phenotypic plasticity, with the potential to account for a wide variety of cell migration states in diverse pathological and physiological conditions.


Biophysical Journal | 2018

Topotaxis: A New Mechanism of Directed Cell Migration in Topographic ECM Gradients

JinSeok Park; Deok Ho Kim; Andre Levchenko

Living cells orient the cytoskeleton polarity and directional migration in response to spatial gradients of multiple types of cues. The resulting tactic behaviors are critical for the proper cell localization in the context of complex single-cell and tissue behaviors. In this perspective, we highlight the recent discovery of, to our knowledge, a new -taxis phenomenon, the topotaxis, which mediates directional cell migration in response to the gradients of such topographic features as the density of extracellular matrix fibers. The direction of topotactic migration critically depends on the effective stiffness of the cortical cytoskeleton, which is controlled by the balance between two parallel signaling pathways activated by the extracellular matrix input. Topotaxis can account for such striking cell behaviors as the opposite directionality of migration of benign and metastatic cancer cells and certain aspects of the wound-healing process. We anticipate that, in conjunction with other tactic phenomena, topotaxis can provide critical information for understanding and design of tissue structure and function.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Combined HMG-COA reductase and prenylation inhibition in treatment of CCM

Sayoko Nishimura; JinSeok Park; Yulia V. Surovtseva; Said M. Sebti; Andre Levchenko; Angeliki Louvi; Murat Gunel

Significance Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) are common vascular anomalies of the central nervous system that can lead to seizures, focal neurological deficits, and brain hemorrhage. Clinical options are limited mainly to treatment of symptoms or surgical resection, and targeted pharmacological therapy is lacking. Here we undertake a high-throughput screen and identify fluvastatin and zoledronate, two drugs already approved for clinical use for other indications, which act synergistically to reverse outcomes of CCM3 loss. Used in combination, fluvastatin and zoledronate effectively attenuate neural and vascular deficits in mouse models of CCM in vivo, significantly reducing formation of lesions and extending longevity. Our studies suggest that combined therapy targeting the mevalonate pathway might have therapeutic effects in CCM disease. Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) are common vascular anomalies that develop in the central nervous system and, more rarely, the retina. The lesions can cause headache, seizures, focal neurological deficits, and hemorrhagic stroke. Symptomatic lesions are treated according to their presentation; however, targeted pharmacological therapies that improve the outcome of CCM disease are currently lacking. We performed a high-throughput screen to identify Food and Drug Administration-approved drugs or other bioactive compounds that could effectively suppress hyperproliferation of mouse brain primary astrocytes deficient for CCM3. We demonstrate that fluvastatin, an inhibitor of 3-hydroxy-3-methyl-glutaryl (HMG)-CoA reductase and the N-bisphosphonate zoledronic acid monohydrate, an inhibitor of protein prenylation, act synergistically to reverse outcomes of CCM3 loss in cultured mouse primary astrocytes and in Drosophila glial cells in vivo. Further, the two drugs effectively attenuate neural and vascular deficits in chronic and acute mouse models of CCM3 loss in vivo, significantly reducing lesion burden and extending longevity. Sustained inhibition of the mevalonate pathway represents a potential pharmacological treatment option and suggests advantages of combination therapy for CCM disease.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Biomechanical interplay between anisotropic re-organization of cells and the surrounding matrix underlies transition to invasive cancer spread

Deok Ho Kim; Andrew J. Ewald; JinSeok Park; Kshitiz; Moon Kyu Kwak; Ryan S. Gray; Chia-Yi Su; Jayhyun Seo; Steven S. An; Andre Levchenko

The root cause of cancer mortality and morbidity is the metastatic spread of the primary tumor, but underlying mechanisms remain elusive. Here we investigate biomechanical interactions that may accompany invasive spread of melanoma cells. We find that metastatic cells can exert considerable traction forces and modify local collagen organization within a 3D matrix. When this re-organization is mimicked using a nano-fabricated model of aligned extracellular matrix fibers, metastatic cells, including less invasive melanoma cells, were in turn induced to align, elongate and migrate, guided by the local ridge orientations. Strikingly, we found that this aligned migration of melanoma cells was accompanied by long-range regulation of cytoskeletal remodeling that show anisotropic stiffening in the direction of fiber orientation suggestive of a positive feedback between ECM fiber alignment and forces exerted by cancer cells. Taken together, our findings suggest that the invasive spread of cancer cells can be defined by complex interplay with the surrounding matrix, during which they both modify the matrix and use the matrix alignment as a persistent migration cue, leading to more extensive and rapid invasive spread.


Integrative Biology | 2016

Precisely parameterized experimental and computational models of tissue organization

Jared M. Molitoris; Saurabh Paliwal; Rajesh B. Sekar; Robert C. Blake; JinSeok Park; Natalia A. Trayanova; Leslie Tung; Andre Levchenko


Neuro-oncology | 2014

YAP IS A CRITICAL AND NOVEL REGULATOR OF MIGRATION AND INVASION AND PREDICTS POOR OUTCOME IN GLIOBLASTOMA

Alfredo Quinones-Hinojosa; Sagar R. Shah; JinSeok Park; Andre Levchenko

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Deok Ho Kim

University of Washington

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Kshitiz

Johns Hopkins University

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Sagar R. Shah

Johns Hopkins University

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Hong-Nam Kim

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

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Peter H. Kim

University of Washington

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Leah Edelstein-Keshet

University of British Columbia

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Kahp-Yang Suh

Seoul National University

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