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Dive into the research topics where Namhee Kim is active.

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Featured researches published by Namhee Kim.


Experimental Neurology | 2015

Slit and Semaphorin signaling governed by Islet transcription factors positions motor neuron somata within the neural tube

Hojae Lee; Minkyung Kim; Namhee Kim; Todd S. Macfarlan; Samuel L. Pfaff; Grant S. Mastick; Mi-Ryoung Song

Motor neurons send out axons to peripheral muscles while their cell bodies remain in the ventral spinal cord. The unique configuration of motor neurons spanning the border between the CNS and PNS has been explained by structural barriers such as boundary cap (BC) cells, basal lamina and radial glia. However, mechanisms in motor neurons that retain their position have not been addressed yet. Here we demonstrate that the Islet1 (Isl1) and Islet2 (Isl2) transcription factors, which are essential for acquisition of motor neuron identity, also contribute to restrict motor neurons within the neural tube. In mice that lack both Isl1 and Isl2, large numbers of motor neurons exited the neural tube, even prior to the appearance of BC cells at the ventral exit points. Transcriptional profiling of motor neurons derived from Isl1 null embryonic stem cells revealed that transcripts of major genes involved in repulsive mechanisms were misregulated. Particularly, expression of Neuropilin1 (Npr1) and Slit2 mRNA was diminished in Islet mutant mice, and these could be target genes of the Islet proteins. Consistent with this mechanism, Robo and Slit mutations in mice and knockdown of Npr1 and Slit2 in chick embryos caused motor neurons to migrate to the periphery. Together, our study suggests that Islet genes engage Robo-Slit and Neuropilin-Semaphorin signaling in motor neurons to retain motor somata within the CNS.


PLOS Genetics | 2015

Functional Diversification of Motor Neuron-specific Isl1 Enhancers during Evolution

Namhee Kim; Chungoo Park; Yongsu Jeong; Mi-Ryoung Song

Functional diversification of motor neurons has occurred in order to selectively control the movements of different body parts including head, trunk and limbs. Here we report that transcription of Isl1, a major gene necessary for motor neuron identity, is controlled by two enhancers, CREST1 (E1) and CREST2 (E2) that allow selective gene expression of Isl1 in motor neurons. Introduction of GFP reporters into the chick neural tube revealed that E1 is active in hindbrain motor neurons and spinal cord motor neurons, whereas E2 is active in the lateral motor column (LMC) of the spinal cord, which controls the limb muscles. Genome-wide ChIP-Seq analysis combined with reporter assays showed that Phox2 and the Isl1-Lhx3 complex bind to E1 and drive hindbrain and spinal cord-specific expression of Isl1, respectively. Interestingly, Lhx3 alone was sufficient to activate E1, and this may contribute to the initiation of Isl1 expression when progenitors have just developed into motor neurons. E2 was induced by onecut 1 (OC-1) factor that permits Isl1 expression in LMCm neurons. Interestingly, the core region of E1 has been conserved in evolution, even in the lamprey, a jawless vertebrate with primitive motor neurons. All E1 sequences from lamprey to mouse responded equally well to Phox2a and the Isl1-Lhx3 complex. Conversely, E2, the enhancer for limb-innervating motor neurons, was only found in tetrapod animals. This suggests that evolutionarily-conserved enhancers permit the diversification of motor neurons.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Epigenetic regulation of Kcna3-encoding Kv1.3 potassium channel by cereblon contributes to regulation of CD4+ T-cell activation.

Jung-Ah Kang; Sang-Heon Park; Sang Phil Jeong; Min-Hee Han; Cho-Rong Lee; Kwang Min Lee; Namhee Kim; Mi-Ryoung Song; Murim Choi; Michael Ye; Guhung Jung; Won Woo Lee; Soo Hyun Eom; Chul-Seung Park; Sung-Gyoo Park

Significance In resting T cells, CRBN normally represses expression of the Kv1.3 potassium channel by regulating histone modifications to prevent hyperactivation of T cells. It does this by controlling recruitment of EZH1 to the potassium channel region of the Kcna3 gene (or locus). However, lack of CRBN causes up-regulation of Kv1.3 expression, which in turn increases potassium flux, thereby triggering increased calcium flux during T-cell activation. The role of cereblon (CRBN) in T cells is not well understood. We generated mice with a deletion in Crbn and found cereblon to be an important antagonist of T-cell activation. In mice lacking CRBN, CD4+ T cells show increased activation and IL-2 production on T-cell receptor stimulation, ultimately resulting in increased potassium flux and calcium-mediated signaling. CRBN restricts T-cell activation via epigenetic modification of Kcna3, which encodes the Kv1.3 potassium channel required for robust calcium influx in T cells. CRBN binds directly to conserved DNA elements adjacent to Kcna3 via a previously uncharacterized DNA-binding motif. Consequently, in the absence of CRBN, the expression of Kv1.3 is derepressed, resulting in increased Kv1.3 expression, potassium flux, and CD4+ T-cell hyperactivation. In addition, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in T-cell–specific Crbn-deficient mice was exacerbated by increased T-cell activation via Kv1.3. Thus, CRBN limits CD4+ T-cell activation via epigenetic regulation of Kv1.3 expression.


Scientific Reports | 2016

ISL1-based LIM complexes control Slit2 transcription in developing cranial motor neurons

Kyung Tai Kim; Namhee Kim; Hwan Ki Kim; Hojae Lee; Hannah N. Gruner; Peter Gergics; Chungoo Park; Grant S. Mastick; Hae Chul Park; Mi Ryoung Song

LIM-homeodomain (HD) transcription factors form a multimeric complex and assign neuronal subtype identities, as demonstrated by the hexameric ISL1-LHX3 complex which gives rise to somatic motor (SM) neurons. However, the roles of combinatorial LIM code in motor neuron diversification and their subsequent differentiation is much less well understood. In the present study, we demonstrate that the ISL1 controls postmitotic cranial branchiomotor (BM) neurons including the positioning of the cell bodies and peripheral axon pathfinding. Unlike SM neurons, which transform into interneurons, BM neurons are normal in number and in marker expression in Isl1 mutant mice. Nevertheless, the movement of trigeminal and facial BM somata is stalled, and their peripheral axons are fewer or misrouted, with ectopic branches. Among genes whose expression level changes in previous ChIP-seq and microarray analyses in Isl1-deficient cell lines, we found that Slit2 transcript was almost absent from BM neurons of Isl1 mutants. Both ISL1-LHX3 and ISL1-LHX4 bound to the Slit2 enhancer and drove endogenous Slit2 expression in SM and BM neurons. Our findings suggest that combinations of ISL1 and LHX factors establish cell-type specificity and functional diversity in terms of motor neuron identities and/or axon development.


European Journal of Endocrinology | 2017

Contact system activation and high thrombin generation in hyperthyroidism

Namhee Kim; Ja-Yoon Gu; Hyun Ju Yoo; Se Eun Han; Young Il Kim; Il Sung Nam-Goong; Eun Sook Kim; Hyun Kyung Kim

BACKGROUND Hyperthyroidism is associated with increased thrombotic risk. As contact system activation through formation of neutrophil extracellular traps (NET) has emerged as an important trigger of thrombosis, we hypothesized that the contact system is activated along with active NET formation in hyperthyroidism and that their markers correlate with disease severity. SUBJECTS AND METHODS In 61 patients with hyperthyroidism and 40 normal controls, the levels of coagulation factors (fibrinogen, and factor VII, VIII, IX, XI and XII), D-dimer, thrombin generation assay (TGA) markers, NET formation markers (histone-DNA complex, double-stranded DNA and neutrophil elastase) and contact system markers (activated factor XII (XIIa), high-molecular-weight kininogen (HMWK), prekallikrein and bradykinin) were measured. RESULTS Patients with hyperthyroidism showed higher levels of fibrinogen (median (interquartile range), 315 (280-344) vs 262 (223-300), P = 0.001), D-dimer (103.8 (64.8-151.5) vs 50.7 (37.4-76.0), P < 0.001), peak thrombin (131.9 (102.2-159.4) vs 31.6 (14.8-83.7), P < 0.001) and endogenous thrombin potential (649 (538-736) vs 367 (197-1147), P = 0.021) in TGA with 1 pM tissue factor, neutrophil elastase (1.10 (0.39-2.18) vs 0.23 (0.20-0.35), P < 0.001), factor XIIa (66.9 (52.8-87.0) vs 73.0 (57.1-86.6), P < 0.001), HMWK (6.11 (4.95-7.98) vs 3.83 (2.60-5.68), P < 0.001), prekallikrein (2.15 (1.00-6.36) vs 1.41 (0.63-2.22), P = 0.026) and bradykinin (152.4 (137.6-180.4) vs 118.3 (97.1-137.9), P < 0.001) than did normal controls. In age- and sex-adjusted logistic regression analysis, fibrinogen, factor VIII, IX and XIIa, D-dimer, peak thrombin, neutrophil elastase, HMWK and bradykinin showed significant odds ratios representing hyperthyroidisms contribution to coagulation and contact system activation. Free T4 was significantly correlated with factors VIII and IX, D-dimer, double-stranded DNA and bradykinin. CONCLUSION This study demonstrated that contact system activation and abundant NET formation occurred in the high thrombin generation state in hyperthyroidism and were correlated with free T4 level.


Scientific Reports | 2018

BrainFilm, a novel technique for physical compression of 3D brain slices for efficient image acquisition and post-processing

Joo Yeon Kim; Hyun Jung Kim; Min Jee Jang; June Hoan Kim; Ju Hyun Lee; Eunsoo Lee; Kyerl Park; Hyuncheol Kim; Jaedong Lee; Jeehyun Kwag; Namhee Kim; Mi Ryoung Song; Hyun Kim; Woong Sun

Tissue clearing enables us to observe thick tissue at a single cell resolution by reducing light scattering and refractive index matching. However, imaging of a large volume of tissue for 3D reconstruction requires a great deal of time, cost, and efforts. Few methods have been developed to transcend these limitations by mechanical compression or isotropic tissue shrinkage. Tissue shrinkage significantly lessens the imaging burden; however, there is an inevitable trade-off with image resolution. Here, we have developed the “BrainFilm” technique to compress cleared tissue at Z-axis by dehydration, without alteration of the XY-axis. The Z-axis compression was approximately 90%, and resulted in substantial reduction in image acquisition time and data size. The BrainFilm technique was successfully used to trace and characterize the morphology of thick biocytin-labelled neurons following electrophysiological recording and trace the GFP-labelled long nerve projections in irregular tissues such as the limb of mouse embryo. Thus, BrainFilm is a versatile tool that can be applied in diverse studies of 3D tissues in which spatial information of the Z-axis is dispensable.


Journal of Soil and Groundwater Environment | 2012

Monitoring Anaerobic Reductive Dechlorination of TCE by Biofilm-Type Culture in Continuous-Flow System

Sun Hwa Park; Kyungjin Han; Uijeon Hong; Hongil Ahn; Namhee Kim; Hyun-Koo Kim; Tae-Seung Kim; Young Hae Kim

A 1.28 L-batch reactor and continuous-flow stirred tank reactor (CFSTR) fed with formate and trichloroethene (TCE) were operated for 120 days and 56 days, respectively, to study the effect of formate as electron donor on anaerobic reductive dechlorination (ARD) of TCE to cis-1,2-dichloroethylene (c-DCE), vinyl chloride (VC), and ethylene (ETH). In batch reactor, injected 60 µmol TCE was completely degraded in the presence of 20% hydrogen gas (H2) in less than 8 days by anaerobic dechlorination mixed-culture (300 mg-soluble protein), Evanite Culture with ability to completely degrade tetrachloroethene (PCE) and -TCE to ETH under anaerobic conditions. Once the formate was used as electron donor instead of hydrogen gas in batch or chemostat system, the TCE-dechlorination rate decreased and acetate production rate increased. It indicates that the concentration of hydrogen produced in both systems is possibly more close to threshold for homoacetogenesis process. Soluble protein concentration of Evanite culture during the batch test increased from 300 mg to 688 mg for 120 days. Through the protein monitoring, we confirmed an increase of microbial population during the reactor operation. In CFSTR test, TCE was fed continuously at 9.9 ppm (75.38 µmol/L) and the influent formate feed concentration increased stepwise from 1.3 mmol/L to 14.3 mmol/L. Injected TCE was accumulated at 18 days of HRT, but TCE was completely degraded at 36 days of HRT without accumulation of the injected-TCE during the left of experiment period, getting H2 from fermentative hydrogen production of injected formate. Although c-DCE was also accumulated for 23 days after beginning of CFSTR operation, it reached steady-state in the presence of excessive formate. We also evaluated microbial dynamic of the culture at different chemical state in the reactor by DGGE (denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis).


arXiv: Superconductivity | 2018

Fabrication and Characterization of Superconducting Quantum Interference Device using (Bi_{1-x}Sb_x)_2Se_3 Topological Insulator Nanoribbons

Namhee Kim; Hong-Seok Kim; Yiming Yang; Xingyue Peng; Dong Yu; Yong-Joo Doh


Current Applied Physics | 2018

Zero bias conductance peak in InAs nanowire coupled to superconducting electrodes

Namhee Kim; Yun-Sok Shin; Hong-Seok Kim; Jin-Dong Song; Yong-Joo Doh


Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2018

Quantum electronic transport in InAs semiconductor nanowire

Rak-Hee Kim; Namhee Kim; Hong-Seok Kim; Jin-Dong Song; Yong-Joo Doh

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Hong-Seok Kim

Kyungpook National University

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Yong-Joo Doh

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Mi-Ryoung Song

Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology

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Dong Yu

University of California

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Chungoo Park

Chonnam National University

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Hojae Lee

Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology

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Jin-Dong Song

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

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Mi Ryoung Song

Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology

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Young Hae Kim

Pusan National University

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