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Dive into the research topics where Joon-Yung Cha is active.

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Featured researches published by Joon-Yung Cha.


Nature Communications | 2013

Release of SOS2 kinase from sequestration with GIGANTEA determines salt tolerance in Arabidopsis

Woe-Yeon Kim; Zahir Ali; Hee Jin Park; Su Jung Park; Joon-Yung Cha; J. Pérez-Hormaeche; Francisco J. Quintero; Gilok Shin; Mi Ri Kim; Zhang Qiang; Li Ning; Hyeong Cheol Park; Sang Yeol Lee; Ray A. Bressan; José M. Pardo; Hans J. Bohnert; Dae-Jin Yun

Environmental challenges to plants typically entail retardation of vegetative growth and delay or cessation of flowering. Here we report a link between the flowering time regulator, GIGANTEA (GI), and adaptation to salt stress that is mechanistically based on GI degradation under saline conditions, thus retarding flowering. GI, a switch in photoperiodicity and circadian clock control, and the SNF1-related protein kinase SOS2 functionally interact. In the absence of stress, the GI:SOS2 complex prevents SOS2-based activation of SOS1, the major plant Na(+)/H(+)-antiporter mediating adaptation to salinity. GI overexpressing, rapidly flowering, plants show enhanced salt sensitivity, whereas gi mutants exhibit enhanced salt tolerance and delayed flowering. Salt-induced degradation of GI confers salt tolerance by the release of the SOS2 kinase. The GI-SOS2 interaction introduces a higher order regulatory circuit that can explain in molecular terms, the long observed connection between floral transition and adaptive environmental stress tolerance in Arabidopsis.


Molecular Plant | 2013

Overexpression of Arabidopsis YUCCA6 in Potato Results in High-Auxin Developmental Phenotypes and Enhanced Resistance to Water Deficit

Jeong Im Kim; Dongwon Baek; Hyeong Cheol Park; Hyun Jin Chun; Dong-Ha Oh; Min Kyung Lee; Joon-Yung Cha; Woe-Yeon Kim; Min Chul Kim; Woo Sik Chung; Hans J. Bohnert; Sang Yeol Lee; Ray A. Bressan; Shin-Woo Lee; Dae-Jin Yun

Indole-3-acetic acid (IAA), a major plant auxin, is produced in both tryptophan-dependent and tryptophan-independent pathways. A major pathway in Arabidopsis thaliana generates IAA in two reactions from tryptophan. Step one converts tryptophan to indole-3-pyruvic acid (IPA) by tryptophan aminotransferases followed by a rate-limiting step converting IPA to IAA catalyzed by YUCCA proteins. We identified eight putative StYUC (Solanum tuberosum YUCCA) genes whose deduced amino acid sequences share 50%-70% identity with those of Arabidopsis YUCCA proteins. All include canonical, conserved YUCCA sequences: FATGY motif, FMO signature sequence, and FAD-binding and NADP-binding sequences. In addition, five genes were found with ~50% amino acid sequence identity to Arabidopsis tryptophan aminotransferases. Transgenic potato (Solanum tuberosum cv. Jowon) constitutively overexpressing Arabidopsis AtYUC6 displayed high-auxin phenotypes such as narrow downward-curled leaves, increased height, erect stature, and longevity. Transgenic potato plants overexpressing AtYUC6 showed enhanced drought tolerance based on reduced water loss. The phenotype was correlated with reduced levels of reactive oxygen species in leaves. The results suggest a functional YUCCA pathway of auxin biosynthesis in potato that may be exploited to alter plant responses to the environment.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

HSP90 functions in the circadian clock through stabilization of the client F-box protein ZEITLUPE

Tae-sung Kim; Woe Yeon Kim; Sumire Fujiwara; Jeongsik Kim; Joon-Yung Cha; Jin Ho Park; Sang Yeol Lee; David E. Somers

The autoregulatory loops of the circadian clock consist of feedback regulation of transcription/translation circuits but also require finely coordinated cytoplasmic and nuclear proteostasis. Although protein degradation is important to establish steady-state levels, maturation into their active conformation also factors into protein homeostasis. HSP90 facilitates the maturation of a wide range of client proteins, and studies in metazoan clocks implicate HSP90 as an integrator of input or output. Here we show that the Arabidopsis circadian clock-associated F-box protein ZEITLUPE (ZTL) is a unique client for cytoplasmic HSP90. The HSP90-specific inhibitor geldanamycin and RNAi-mediated depletion of cytoplasmic HSP90 reduces levels of ZTL and lengthens circadian period, consistent with ztl loss-of-function alleles. Transient transfection of artificial microRNA targeting cytoplasmic HSP90 genes similarly lengthens period. Proteolytic targets of SCFZTL, TOC1 and PRR5, are stabilized in geldanamycin-treated seedlings, whereas the levels of closely related clock proteins, PRR3 and PRR7, are unchanged. An in vitro holdase assay, typically used to demonstrate chaperone activity, shows that ZTL can be effectively bound, and aggregation prevented, by HSP90. GIGANTEA, a unique stabilizer of ZTL, may act in the same pathway as HSP90, possibly linking these two proteins to a similar mechanism. Our findings establish maturation of ZTL by HSP90 as essential for proper function of the Arabidopsis circadian clock. Unlike metazoan systems, HSP90 functions here within the core oscillator. Additionally, F-box proteins as clients may place HSP90 in a unique and more central role in proteostasis.


Nature Communications | 2015

A novel thiol-reductase activity of Arabidopsis YUC6 confers drought tolerance independently of auxin biosynthesis

Joon-Yung Cha; Woe-Yeon Kim; Sun Bin Kang; Jeong Im Kim; Dongwon Baek; In Jung Jung; Mi Ri Kim; Ning Li; Hyunjin Kim; Masatoshi Nakajima; Tadao Asami; Jamal S. M. Sabir; Hyeong Cheol Park; Sang Yeol Lee; Hans J. Bohnert; Ray A. Bressan; José M. Pardo; Dae-Jin Yun

YUCCA (YUC) proteins constitute a family of flavin monooxygenases (FMOs), with an important role in auxin (IAA) biosynthesis. Here we report that Arabidopsis plants overexpressing YUC6 display enhanced IAA-related phenotypes and exhibit improved drought stress tolerance, low rate of water loss and controlled ROS accumulation under drought and oxidative stresses. Co-overexpression of an IAA-conjugating enzyme reduces IAA levels but drought stress tolerance is unaffected, indicating that the stress-related phenotype is not based on IAA overproduction. YUC6 contains a previously unrecognized FAD- and NADPH-dependent thiol-reductase activity (TR) that overlaps with the FMO domain involved in IAA biosynthesis. Mutation of a conserved cysteine residue (Cys-85) preserves FMO but suppresses TR activity and stress tolerance, whereas mutating the FAD- and NADPH-binding sites, that are common to TR and FMO domains, abolishes all outputs. We provide a paradigm for a single protein playing a dual role, regulating plant development and conveying stress defence responses.


Developmental Cell | 2013

Balanced Nucleocytosolic Partitioning Defines a Spatial Network to Coordinate Circadian Physiology in Plants

Yumi Kim; Seungmin Han; Miji Yeom; Hyunmin Kim; Junhyun Lim; Joon-Yung Cha; Woe-Yeon Kim; David E. Somers; Joanna Putterill; Hong Gil Nam; Daehee Hwang

Biological networks consist of a defined set of regulatory motifs. Subcellular compartmentalization of regulatory molecules can provide a further dimension in implementing regulatory motifs. However, spatial regulatory motifs and their roles in biological networks have rarely been explored. Here we show, using experimentation and mathematical modeling, that spatial segregation of GIGANTEA (GI), a critical component of plant circadian systems, into nuclear and cytosolic compartments leads to differential functions as positive and negative regulators of the circadian core gene, LHY, forming an incoherent feedforward loop to regulate LHY. This regulatory motif formed by nucleocytoplasmic partitioning of GI confers, through the balanced operation of the nuclear and cytosolic GI, strong rhythmicity and robustness to external and internal noises to the circadian system. Our results show that spatial and functional segregation of a single molecule species into different cellular compartments provides a means for extending the regulatory capabilities of biological networks.


Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2014

NADPH-dependent thioredoxin reductase A (NTRA) confers elevated tolerance to oxidative stress and drought.

Joon-Yung Cha; Joo Yeon Kim; In Jung Jung; Mi Ri Kim; Andrew Melencion; Sadia Sabrina Alam; Dae-Jin Yun; Sang Yeol Lee; Min Gab Kim; Woe-Yeon Kim

NADPH-dependent thioredoxin reductases (NTRs) are key-regulatory enzymes determining the redox state of the thioredoxin (Trx) system that provides reducing power to peroxidases or oxidoreductases. Moreover, it also plays an essential function in the direct reduction of ROS and acquiring stress tolerance in plant. Cytoplasmic NTRA, mitochondrial NTRB, and chloroplastic NTRC are the three conserved NTRs which cooperate with specific sub-cellularly localized Trxs in Arabidopsis. However, cytosolic NTRs such as NTRA in Arabidopsis have not previously been identified in plants or mammals as a source of functional redundancy with mitochondrial NTRs. Here, we show the involvement of NTRA in the plant stress response counteracting oxidative and drought stresses. Methyl viologen (MV), an inducer of oxidative stress in plants, enhanced the NTRA transcripts. To identify the physiological role of NTRA influencing ROS homeostasis by stress, NTRA overexpression (NTRAOX) and knock-out mutants (ntra-ko) were generated. After exposure to oxidative stress, wild-type and ntra-ko plants were sensitive, but NTRAOX plants tolerant. ROS range was increased by MV in wild-type and ntra-ko plants, but not in NTRAOX. Investigating the involvement of Arabidopsis NTRA in drought, NTRAOX plants exhibited extreme drought tolerance with high survival rates, lower water loss and reduced ROS compared to wild-type and ntra-ko plants. Transcripts of drought-responsive genes, such as RD29A and DREB2A, were highly expressed under drought and antioxidant genes, namely CuZnSOD and APX1 were enhanced in the absence of drought in NTRAOX plants. The results suggest that NTRA overexpression confers oxidative and drought tolerance by regulation of ROS amounts.


Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2013

Roles of YUCCAs in auxin biosynthesis and drought stress responses in plants

Hyeong Cheol Park; Joon-Yung Cha; Dae-Jin Yun

Auxin, a plant hormone, plays crucial roles in diverse aspects of plant growth and development reacting to and integrating environmental stimuli. Indole-3-acetic acid (IAA) is the major plant auxin that is synthesized by members of the YUCCA (YUC) family of flavin monooxygenases that catalyse a rate-limiting step. Although the paths to IAA biosynthesis are characterized in Arabidopsis, little is known about the corresponding components in potato. Recently, we isolated eight putative StYUC (Solanum tuberosum YUCCA) genes and five putative tryptophan aminotransferase genes in comparison to those found in Arabidopsis.1 The specific domains of YUC proteins were well conserved in all StYUC amino acid sequences. Transgenic potato (Solanum tuberosum cv. Jowon) overexpressing AtYUC6 showed high-auxin and enhanced drought tolerance phenotypes. The transgenic potatoes also exhibited reduced levels of ROS (reactive oxygen species) compared to control plants. We therefore propose that YUCCA and TAA families in potato would function in the auxin biosynthesis. The overexpression of AtYUC6 in potato establishes enhanced drought tolerance through regulated ROS homeostasis.


Nature Communications | 2017

GIGANTEA is a co-chaperone which facilitates maturation of ZEITLUPE in the Arabidopsis circadian clock

Joon-Yung Cha; Jeongsik Kim; Tae-sung Kim; Qingning Zeng; Lei Wang; Sang Yeol Lee; Woe-Yeon Kim; David E. Somers

Circadian clock systems help establish the correct daily phasing of the behavioral, developmental, and molecular events needed for the proper coordination of physiology and metabolism. The circadian oscillator comprises transcription–translation feedback loops but also requires post-translational processes that regulate clock protein homeostasis. GIGANTEA is a unique plant protein involved in the maintenance and control of numerous facets of plant physiology and development. Through an unknown mechanism GIGANTEA stabilizes the F-box protein ZEITLUPE, a key regulator of the circadian clock. Here, we show that GIGANTEA has general protein chaperone activity and can act to specifically facilitate ZEITLUPE maturation into an active form in vitro and in planta. GIGANTEA forms a ternary complex with HSP90 and ZEITLUPE and its co-chaperone action synergistically enhances HSP90/HSP70 maturation of ZEITLUPE in vitro. These results identify a molecular mechanism for GIGANTEA activity that can explain its wide-ranging role in plant biology.The plant-specific GIGANTEA protein regulates the circadian clock by stabilizing the F-box protein ZEITLUPE via an unknown mechanism. Here Cha et al. show that GIGANTEA has intrinsic chaperone activity and can facilitate ZEITLUPE maturation by acting synergistically with HSP90.


Planta | 2012

Potential role of the rice OsCCS52A gene in endoreduplication

Mukhamad Su’udi; Joon-Yung Cha; Min Hee Jung; Netty Ermawati; Chang-deok Han; Min Gab Kim; Young-Min Woo; Daeyoung Son

In eukaryotes, the cell cycle consists of four distinct phases: G1, S, G2 and M. In certain condition, the cells skip M-phase and undergo endoreduplication. Endoreduplication, occurring during a modified cell cycle, duplicates the entire genome without being followed by M-phase. A cycle of endoreduplication is common in most of the differentiated cells of plant vegetative tissues and it occurs extensively in cereal endosperm cells. Endoreduplication occurs when CDK/Cyclin complex low or inactive caused by ubiquitin-mediated degradation by APC and their activators. In this study, rice cell cycle switch 52 A (OsCCS52A), an APC activator, is functionally characterized using the reverse genetic approach. In rice, OsCCS52A is highly expressed in seedlings, flowers, immature panicles and 15 DAP kernels. Localization studies revealed that OsCCS52A is a nuclear protein. OsCCS52A interacts with OsCdc16 in yeast. In addition, overexpression of OsCCS52A inhibits mitotic cell division and induces endoreduplication and cell elongation in fission yeast. The homozygous mutant exhibits dwarfism and smaller seeds. Further analysis demonstrated that endoreduplication cycles in the endosperm of mutant seeds were disturbed, evidenced by reduced nuclear and cell sizes. Taken together, these results suggest that OsCCS52A is involved in maintaining normal seed size formation by mediating the exit from mitotic cell division to enter the endoreduplication cycles in rice endosperm.


Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2012

Functional characterization of orchardgrass cytosolic Hsp70 (DgHsp70) and the negative regulation by Ca2+/AtCaM2 binding

Joon-Yung Cha; Mukhamad Su'udi; Woe-Yeon Kim; Deok Ryong Kim; Youn-Sig Kwak; Daeyoung Son

When plants are exposed to extreme temperature, stress-inducible proteins are highly induced and involved in subcellular defence mechanisms. Hsp70, one of stress-inducible proteins, functions as an ATP-dependent molecular chaperone in broad organisms to process such as the inhibition of protein denaturation, promotion of protein folding, and renaturation of denatured proteins. In this study, we isolated a heat-inducible orchardgrass Hsp70 (DgHsp70) that is a homolog of cytosolic Hsp70 that possesses a CaM-binding domain. Purified DgHsp70 protein displayed dose-dependent ATPase, holdase, and ATP-dependent foldase activities. To investigate functional roles of DgHsp70 by the association of Arabidopsis calmodulin-2 (AtCaM2), showing heat-sensitive reduction on transcription, we first characterized the binding activity by gel-overlay assay. DgHsp70 binds to AtCaM2 in the presence of Ca(2+) via a conserved CaM-binding domain. Ca(2+)/AtCaM2 binding decreased ATPase activity of DgHsp70, and concomitantly, reduced foldase activity. Based on the protein structure of bovine Hsc70, which is the closest structural homolog of DgHsp70, a CaM-binding domain is located near the ATP-binding site and CaM may span the ATP-binding pocket of Hsp70. Its decreased functional foldase activity may be caused by blocking ATP hydrolysis after Ca(2+)/AtCaM2 binding. It may associate with inhibition of functional activity of DgHsp70 in the absence of stress and/or de novo protein synthesis of DgHsp70 in the presence of thermal stress condition.

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Woe-Yeon Kim

Gyeongsang National University

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Daeyoung Son

Gyeongsang National University

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Sang Yeol Lee

Gyeongsang National University

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Dae-Jin Yun

Gyeongsang National University

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Mi Ri Kim

Gyeongsang National University

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Min Gab Kim

Gyeongsang National University

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Netty Ermawati

Gyeongsang National University

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Ki-Yong Kim

Rural Development Administration

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Min Hee Jung

Gyeongsang National University

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Laila Khaleda

Gyeongsang National University

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