Kyuhwan Shim
Washington University in St. Louis
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Featured researches published by Kyuhwan Shim.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Gaurav Swarnkar; Kyuhwan Shim; Amjad M. Nasir; Kuljeet Seehra; Hung Po Chen; Gabriel Mbalaviele; Yousef Abu-Amer
The transcription factor NF-κB is central to numerous physiologic processes including bone development, and its activation is controlled by IKKγ (also called NEMO), the regulatory subunit of IKK complex. NEMO is X-linked, and mutations in this gene result in Incontinentia Pigmenti in human hemizygous females. In mice, global deficiency causes embryonic lethality. In addition, certain point mutations in the NEMO (IKBKG) human gene manifest skeletal defects implicating NEMO in the regulation of bone homeostasis. To specifically investigate such role, we conditionally deleted Nemo from osteoclast and myeloid progenitors. Morphometric, histologic, and molecular analyses demonstrate that myeloid NEMO deletion causes osteopetrosis in mice. Mechanistically, NEMO deficiency hampered activation of IKK complex in osteoclast precursors, causing arrest of osteoclastogenesis and apoptosis. Interestingly, inhibiting apoptosis by genetic ablation of TNFr1 significantly increased cell survival, but failed to rescue osteoclastogenesis or reverse osteopetrosis. Based on this observation, we analyzed the expression of different regulators of osteoclastogenesis and discovered that NEMO deletion leads to increased RBPJ expression, resulting in a decrease of Blimp1 expression. Consequently, expression of IRF8 and Bcl6 which are targets of Blimp1 and potent osteoclastogenic transcriptional repressors, is increased. Thus, NEMO governs survival and osteoclast differentiation programs through serial regulation of multiple transcription factors.
American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2018
Josephine F. Trott; Vicki J. Hwang; Tatsuto Ishimaru; Kenneth J. Chmiel; Xia Zhou; Kyuhwan Shim; Benjamin Stewart; Moe R. Mahjoub; Kyuang-Yu Jen; Dinesh K. Barupal; Xiaogang Li; Robert H. Weiss
Research into metabolic reprogramming in cancer has become commonplace, yet this area of research has only recently come of age in nephrology. In light of the parallels between cancer and autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD), the latter is currently being studied as a metabolic disease. In clear cell renal cell carcinoma (RCC), which is now considered a metabolic disease, we and others have shown derangements in the enzyme arginosuccinate synthase 1 (ASS1), resulting in RCC cells becoming auxotrophic for arginine and leading to a new therapeutic paradigm involving reducing extracellular arginine. Based on our earlier finding that glutamine pathways are reprogrammed in ARPKD, and given the connection between arginine and glutamine synthetic pathways via citrulline, we investigated the possibility of arginine reprogramming in ADPKD. We now show that, in a remarkable parallel to RCC, ASS1 expression is reduced in murine and human ADPKD, and arginine depletion results in a dose-dependent compensatory increase in ASS1 levels as well as decreased cystogenesis in vitro and ex vivo with minimal toxicity to normal cells. Nontargeted metabolomics analysis of mouse kidney cell lines grown in arginine-deficient versus arginine-replete media suggests arginine-dependent alterations in the glutamine and proline pathways. Thus, depletion of this conditionally essential amino acid by dietary or pharmacological means, such as with arginine-degrading enzymes, may be a novel treatment for this disease.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2018
Lai Kuan Dionne; Kyuhwan Shim; Masato Hoshi; Tao Cheng; Jinzhi Wang; Véronique Marthiens; Amanda Knoten; Renata Basto; Sanjay Jain; Moe R. Mahjoub
Centrosome number is tightly controlled to ensure proper ciliogenesis, mitotic spindle assembly, and cellular homeostasis. Centrosome amplification (the formation of excess centrosomes) has been noted in renal cells of patients and animal models of various types of cystic kidney disease. Whether this defect plays a causal role in cystogenesis remains unknown. Here, we investigate the consequences of centrosome amplification during kidney development, homeostasis, and after injury. Increasing centrosome number in vivo perturbed proliferation and differentiation of renal progenitors, resulting in defective branching morphogenesis and renal hypoplasia. Centrosome amplification disrupted mitotic spindle morphology, ciliary assembly, and signaling pathways essential for the function of renal progenitors, highlighting the mechanisms underlying the developmental defects. Importantly, centrosome amplification was sufficient to induce rapid cystogenesis shortly after birth. Finally, we discovered that centrosome amplification sensitized kidneys in adult mice, causing cystogenesis after ischemic renal injury. Our study defines a new mechanism underlying the pathogenesis of renal cystogenesis, and identifies a potentially new cellular target for therapy.
Blood | 2008
Kyuhwan Shim; Patricia J. Anderson; Elodee A. Tuley; Erin Wiswall; J. Evan Sadler
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1998
Jiachun Xue; Qingyu Wu; Lisa A. Westfield; Elodee A. Tuley; Deshun Lu; Qing Zhang; Kyuhwan Shim; Xinglong Zheng; J. Evan Sadler
Blood | 2004
Kyuhwan Shim; Hongfa Zhu; Lisa A. Westfield; J. Evan Sadler
Matrix Biology | 2012
Audrey McAlinden; Kyuhwan Shim; Louisa Wirthlin; Soumya Ravindran; Thomas M. Hering
Archive | 2007
Kyuhwan Shim; Patricia J. Anderson; Elodee A. Tuley; Erin Wiswall; Jc Lee Evan
Kidney International | 2017
Vicki J. Hwang; Xia Zhou; Xiaonan Chen; Josephine F. Trott; Omran Abu Aboud; Kyuhwan Shim; Lai Kuan Dionne; Kenneth J. Chmiel; William Senapedis; Erkan Baloglu; Moe R. Mahjoub; Xiaogang Li; Robert H. Weiss
Matrix Biology | 2018
Audrey McAlinden; Kyuhwan Shim; Louisa Wirthlin; Soumya Ravindran; Thomas M. Hering