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Dive into the research topics where Kyeng Min Park is active.

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Featured researches published by Kyeng Min Park.


Chemical Society Reviews | 2007

Functionalized cucurbiturils and their applications

Kimoon Kim; Narayanan Selvapalam; Young Ho Ko; Kyeng Min Park; Dongwoo Kim; Jeeyeon Kim

Cucurbit[n]uril (CB[n], n = 5-10), a new family of molecular hosts comprising n glycoluril units, have gained much attention in the new millennium for their exceptional molecular recognition ability. The CB homologues have brought dynamism to CB chemistry, as witnessed by the heightened interest in the field for the last several years. Compared to the chemistry of cyclodextrins and calixarenes, however, that of CB[n] has developed slowly until recently, which may be attributed mainly to their poor solubility in common solvents, and inability to functionalize these molecules. The direct functionalization method of CB[n] propelled CB chemistry to a new height as this new method not only solved the solubility problem but also opened up the gateway to the generation of tailor-made CB[n] derivatives. The functionalization of CB[n] led us to investigate numerous applications including artificial ion channels, vesicles, stationary phases in chromatography, ISEs, polymers, nanomaterials, and many others. This tutorial review describes the recent advances and challenges in the functionalization of CBs along with the applications of functionalized CBs.


ACS Nano | 2012

In situ supramolecular assembly and modular modification of hyaluronic acid hydrogels for 3D cellular engineering.

Kyeng Min Park; Jeong-A Yang; Hyuntae Jung; Junseok Yeom; Ji Sun Park; Keun-Hong Park; Allan S. Hoffman; Sei Kwang Hahn; Kimoon Kim

A facile in situ supramolecular assembly and modular modification of biocompatible hydrogels were demonstrated using cucurbit[6]uril-conjugated hyaluronic acid (CB[6]-HA), diaminohexane-conjugated HA (DAH-HA), and tags-CB[6] for cellular engineering applications. The strong and selective host-guest interaction between CB[6] and DAH made possible the supramolecular assembly of CB[6]/DAH-HA hydrogels in the presence of cells. Then, the 3D environment of CB[6]/DAH-HA hydrogels was modularly modified by the simple treatment with various multifunctional tags-CB[6]. Furthermore, we could confirm in situ formation of CB[6]/DAH-HA hydrogels under the skin of nude mice by sequential subcutaneous injections of CB[6]-HA and DAH-HA solutions. The fluorescence of modularly modified fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-CB[6] in the hydrogels was maintained for up to 11 days, reflecting the feasibility to deliver the proper cues for cellular proliferation and differentiation in the body. Taken together, CB[6]/DAH-HA hydrogels might be successfully exploited as a 3D artificial extracellular matrix for various tissue engineering applications.


Nature Communications | 2013

A bio-inspired swellable microneedle adhesive for mechanical interlocking with tissue

Seung Yun Yang; Eoin D. O'Cearbhaill; Geoffroy C. Sisk; Kyeng Min Park; Woo Kyung Cho; Martin Villiger; Brett E. Bouma; Bohdan Pomahac; Jeffrey M. Karp

Achieving significant adhesion to soft tissues while minimizing tissue damage poses a considerable clinical challenge. Chemical-based adhesives require tissue-specific reactive chemistry, typically inducing a significant inflammatory response. Staples are fraught with limitations including high-localized tissue stress and increased risk of infection, and nerve and blood vessel damage. Here, inspired by the endoparasite Pomphorhynchus laevis which swells its proboscis to attach to its host’s intestinal wall, we have developed a biphasic microneedle array that mechanically interlocks with tissue through swellable microneedle tips, achieving ~ 3.5 fold increase in adhesion strength compared to staples in skin graft fixation, and removal force of ~ 4.5 N/cm2 from intestinal mucosal tissue. Comprising a poly(styrene)-block-poly(acrylic acid) swellable tip and non-swellable polystyrene core, conical microneedles penetrate tissue with minimal insertion force and depth, yet high adhesion strength in their swollen state. Uniquely, this design provides universal soft tissue adhesion with minimal damage, less traumatic removal, reduced risk of infection and delivery of bioactive therapeutics.


Small | 2010

Reduction‐Sensitive, Robust Vesicles with a Non‐covalently Modifiable Surface as a Multifunctional Drug‐Delivery Platform

Kyeng Min Park; Don-Wook Lee; Bijay Sarkar; Hyuntae Jung; Jeeyeon Kim; Young Ho Ko; Kyung Eun Lee; Hyesung Jeon; Kimoon Kim

The design and synthesis of a novel reduction-sensitive, robust, and biocompatible vesicle (SSCB[6]VC) are reported, which is self-assembled from an amphiphilic cucurbit[6]uril (CB[6]) derivative that contains disulfide bonds between hexaethylene glycol units and a CB[6] core. The remarkable features of SSCB[6]VC include: 1) facile, non-destructive, non-covalent, and modular surface modification using exceptionally strong host-guest chemistry; 2) high structural stability; 3) facile internalization into targeted cells by receptor-mediated endocytosis, and 4) efficient triggered release of entrapped drugs in a reducing environment such as cytoplasm. Furthermore, a significantly increased cytotoxicity of the anticancer drug doxorubicin to cancer cells is demonstrated using doxorubicin-loaded SSCB[6]VC, the surface of which is decorated with functional moieties such as a folate-spermidine conjugate and fluorescein isothiocyanate-spermidine conjugate as targeting ligand and fluorescence imaging probe, respectively. SSCB[6]VC with such unique features can be used as a highly versatile multifunctional platform for targeted drug delivery, which may find useful applications in cancer therapy. This novel strategy based on supramolecular chemistry and the unique properties of CB[6] can be extended to design smart multifunctional materials for biomedical applications including gene delivery.


Biofabrication | 2016

Three-dimensional bioprinting of multilayered constructs containing human mesenchymal stromal cells for osteochondral tissue regeneration in the rabbit knee joint

Jin Hyung Shim; Ki Mo Jang; Sei Kwang Hahn; Ju Young Park; Hyuntae Jung; Kyunghoon Oh; Kyeng Min Park; Junseok Yeom; Sun Hwa Park; Sung Won Kim; Joon Ho Wang; Kimoon Kim; Dong Woo Cho

The use of cell-rich hydrogels for three-dimensional (3D) cell culture has shown great potential for a variety of biomedical applications. However, the fabrication of appropriate constructs has been challenging. In this study, we describe a 3D printing process for the preparation of a multilayered 3D construct containing human mesenchymal stromal cells with a hydrogel comprised of atelocollagen and supramolecular hyaluronic acid (HA). This construct showed outstanding regenerative ability for the reconstruction of an osteochondral tissue in the knee joints of rabbits. We found that the use of a mechanically stable, host-guest chemistry-based hydrogel was essential and allowed two different types of extracellular matrix (ECM) hydrogels to be easily printed and stacked into one multilayered construct without requiring the use of potentially harmful chemical reagents or physical stimuli for post-crosslinking. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to validate the potential of a 3D printed multilayered construct consisting of two different ECM materials (atelocollagen and HA) for heterogeneous tissue regeneration using an in vivo animal model. We believe that this 3D printing-based platform technology can be effectively exploited for regeneration of various heterogeneous tissues as well as osteochondral tissue.


Biomacromolecules | 2014

3D Tissue Engineered Supramolecular Hydrogels for Controlled Chondrogenesis of Human Mesenchymal Stem Cells

Hyuntae Jung; Ji Sun Park; Junseok Yeom; Narayanan Selvapalam; Kyeng Min Park; Kyunghoon Oh; Jeong-A Yang; Keun Hong Park; Sei Kwang Hahn; Kimoon Kim

Despite a wide investigation of hydrogels as an artificial extracellular matrix, there are few scaffold systems for the facile spatiotemporal control of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). Here, we report 3D tissue engineered supramolecular hydrogels prepared with highly water-soluble monofunctionalized cucurbit[6]uril-hyaluronic acid (CB[6]-HA), diaminohexane conjugated HA (DAH-HA), and drug conjugated CB[6] (drug-CB[6]) for the controlled chondrogenesis of human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs). The mechanical property of supramolecular HA hydrogels was modulated by changing the cross-linking density for the spatial control of hMSCs. In addition, the differentiation of hMSCs was temporally controlled by changing the release profiles of transforming growth factor-β3 (TGF-β3) and/or dexamethasone (Dexa) from the hydrolyzable Dexa-CB[6]. The effective chondrogenic differentiation of hMSCs encapsulated in the monoCB[6]/DAH-HA hydrogel with TGF-β3 and Dexa-CB[6] was confirmed by biochemical glycosaminoglycan content analysis, real-time quantitative PCR, histological, and immunohistochemical analyses. Taken together, we could confirm the feasibility of cytocompatible monoCB[6]/DAH-HA hydrogels as a platform scaffold with controlled drug delivery for cartilage regeneration and other various tissue engineering applications.


Chemical Science | 2013

Self-assembled, covalently linked, hollow phthalocyanine nanospheres

Raghunandan Hota; Kangkyun Baek; Gyeongwon Yun; Youngkook Kim; Hyuntae Jung; Kyeng Min Park; Eunjin Yoon; Taiha Joo; J.S. Kang; Chan Gyung Park; Su Mi Bae; Woong Shick Ahn; Kimoon Kim

A rational design and synthesis of covalently linked Pc nanospheres with a very thin shell and hollow interior, composed of approximately 12 000 Pc units on average, was demonstrated through thiol–ene “click” chemistry without using any templates or emulsifiers. The ZnPc nanospheres allow post-synthetic modification to improve their dispersibility in aqueous solution without altering the morphology of the nanospheres or the properties of ZnPc cores. More importantly, the ZnPc nanospheres showed higher singlet oxygen generation efficiency and in vitro phototoxicity than monomeric Pc molecules, suggesting that ZnPc nanospheres are potentially useful as a PS for PDT. We anticipate that the ZnPc nanospheres would allow other post-synthetic modifications such as the introduction of targeting ligands to deliver the nanospheres to specific target sites and perform a dual chemo- and photodynamic therapy by the encapsulation of therapeutic agents. The easy synthesis of a hollow spherical framework with a high Pc content, coupled with facile post-synthetic modification may allow Pc nanospheres to be a versatile platform for a diverse range of medical and non-medical applications.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2010

Glyco-pseudopolyrotaxanes: Carbohydrate Wheels Threaded on a Polymer String and Their Inhibition of Bacterial Adhesion

Jeeyeon Kim; Youngjoo Ahn; Kyeng Min Park; Don-Wook Lee; Kimoon Kim

We report glyco-pseudopolyrotaxanes composed of cucurbit[6]uril-based mannose wheels (ManCB[6]) threaded on polyviologen (PV), which not only effectively induce bacterial aggregation, but also exhibit high inhibitory activity against bacterial binding to host cells. Three glyco-pseudopolyrotaxanes (1-3), which have 10, 5, and 3 ManCB[6] wheels, respectively, on a PV string, were prepared and characterized. Bacterial aggregation assays and hemagglutination inhibition assays illustrated the specific and multivalent interaction between the glyco-pseudopolyrotaxanes and E. coli ORN178. Compound 3 was especially effective at inducing bacterial aggregation and showed 300 times higher inhibitory potency than monomeric methyl-α-mannoside (Me-αMan) for ORN178-induced hemagglutination. Furthermore, we demonstrated their inhibitory activities for the adhesion of ORN178 bacteria to urinary epithelial cells as a model of urinary tract infection. Our findings suggest that these supramolecular carbohydrate clusters are potentially useful in antiadhesion therapy.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2017

Ultrastable Artificial Binding Pairs as a Supramolecular Latching System: A Next Generation Chemical Tool for Proteomics

Kyeng Min Park; James K. Murray; Kimoon Kim

In this Commentary, we discuss cucurbit[7]uril-based ultrastable artificial binding pairs as a supramolecular latching system and how we envision this becoming important tools in proteomics. The limitations of current proteomic techniques are described with an emphasis on the lack of tools to answer questions about the complex and dynamic nature of the proteome. Our thoughts as to how artificial ultrastable binding pairs may be able to address these questions are given especially when they are combined with existing methods.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Reversible Morphological Transformation between Polymer Nanocapsules and Thin Films through Dynamic Covalent Self‐Assembly

Jeehong Kim; Kangkyun Baek; Dinesh Shetty; Narayanan Selvapalam; Gyeongwon Yun; Nam Hoon Kim; Young Ho Ko; Kyeng Min Park; Ilha Hwang; Kimoon Kim

A facile method has been developed for synthesizing polymer nanocapsules and thin films using multiple in-plane stitching of monomers by the formation of reversible disulfide linkages. Owing to the reversibility of the disulfide linkages, the nanostructured materials readily transform their structures in response to environmental changes at room temperature. For example, in reducing environments, the polymer nanocapsules release loaded cargo molecules. Moreover, reversible morphological transformations between these structures can be achieved by simple solvent exchanges. This work is a novel approach for the formation of robust nano/microstructured materials that dynamically respond to environmental stimuli.

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Kimoon Kim

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Hyuntae Jung

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Kangkyun Baek

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Young Ho Ko

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Jeeyeon Kim

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Narayanan Selvapalam

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Don-Wook Lee

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Sei Kwang Hahn

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Dongwoo Kim

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Gyeongwon Yun

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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