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Featured researches published by Nami Kim.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Metformin Regulates Glucose Transporter 4 (GLUT4) Translocation through AMP-activated Protein Kinase (AMPK)-mediated Cbl/CAP Signaling in 3T3-L1 Preadipocyte Cells

Jung Ok Lee; Soo Kyung Lee; Ji Hae Kim; Nami Kim; Ga Young You; Ji Wook Moon; Su Jin Kim; Sun Hwa Park; Hyeon Soo Kim

Background: Previously we demonstrated that metformin stimulates GLUT4 through AMPK in skeletal muscle system. However, it was not clear how GLUT4 translocation is affected by metformin in adipocyte system. Results: Metformin stimulates AMPK to phosphorylate Cbl and induce CAP expression, thus modulating GLUT4 translocation. Conclusion: Cbl and CAP are involved in metformin-induced AMPK-mediated GLUT4 translocation. Significance: Cbl and CAP are downstream effectors of metformin on GLUT4 translocation. Metformin is a leading oral anti-diabetes mellitus medication and is known to stimulate GLUT4 translocation. However, the mechanism by which metformin acts is still largely unknown. Here, we showed that short time treatment with metformin rapidly increased phosphorylation of Cbl in an AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK)-dependent fashion in 3T3-L1 preadipocytes. Metformin also increased phosphorylation of Src in an AMPK-dependent manner. Src inhibition blocked metformin-mediated Cbl phosphorylation, suggesting that metformin stimulates AMPK-Src-Cbl axis pathway. In addition, long term treatment with metformin stimulated the expression of Cbl-associated protein (CAP) mRNA and protein. Long term treatment with metformin stimulated phosphorylation of c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) and its downstream molecule c-Jun, which is a critical molecule for CAP transcription. Knockdown of AMPK and JNK blocked metformin-induced expression of CAP, implying that metformin stimulates AMPK-JNK-CAP axis pathway. Moreover, AMPK knockdown attenuated metformin-induced Cbl/CAP multicomplex formation, which is critical for GLUT4 translocation. A colorimetric absorbance assay demonstrated that metformin-induced translocation of GLUT4 was suppressed in CAP or Cbl knockdown cells. Furthermore, the promoter activity of CAP was increased by metformin in an AMPK/JNK-dependent fashion. In summary, these results demonstrate that metformin modulates GLUT4 translocation by regulating Cbl and CAP signals via AMPK.


Molecular Endocrinology | 2015

Irisin, a Novel Myokine, Regulates Glucose Uptake in Skeletal Muscle Cells via AMPK

Hye Jeong Lee; Jung Ok Lee; Nami Kim; Joong Kwan Kim; Hyung Ip Kim; Yong Woo Lee; Su Jin Kim; Jong Il Choi; Yoonji Oh; Jeong Hyun Kim; Suyeon Hwang; Sun Hwa Park; Hyeon Soo Kim

Irisin is a novel myokine produced by skeletal muscle. However, its metabolic role is poorly understood. In the present study, irisin induced glucose uptake in differentiated skeletal muscle cells. It increased AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) phosphorylation and the inhibition of AMPK blocked glucose uptake. It also increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation. N-acetyl cysteine, a ROS scavenger, blocked irisin-induced AMPK phosphorylation. Moreover, irisin activated p38 MAPK in an AMPK-dependent manner. The inhibition and knockdown of p38 MAPK blocked irisin-induced glucose uptake. A colorimetric absorbance assay showed that irisin stimulated the translocation of glucose transporter type 4 to the plasma membrane and that this effect was suppressed in cells pretreated with a p38 MAPK inhibitor or p38 MAPK small interfering RNA. In primary cultured myoblast cells, irisin increased the concentration of intracellular calcium. STO-609, a calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase kinase inhibitor, blocked irisin-induced AMPK phosphorylation, implying that calcium is involved in irisin-mediated signaling. Our results suggest that irisin plays an important role in glucose metabolism via the ROS-mediated AMPK pathway in skeletal muscle cells.


Cellular Signalling | 2012

Coenzyme Q10 increases the fatty acid oxidation through AMPK-mediated PPARα induction in 3T3-L1 preadipocytes.

Soo Kyung Lee; Jung Ok Lee; Ji Hae Kim; Nami Kim; Ga Young You; Ji Wook Moon; Jie Sha; Su Jin Kim; Yong Woo Lee; Ho Jin Kang; Sun Hwa Park; Hyeon Soo Kim

Coenzyme Q10(CoQ10) is a known anti-adipogenic factor. However, the mechanism by which CoQ10 acts is unclear. In this study, we found that CoQ10 increased the phosphorylation of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) in 3T3-L1preadipocytes. CoQ10 induced an increase in cytoplasmic calcium concentrations, which is reflected by increased Fluo-3 intensity under confocal microscopy recording. Either inhibition of Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase kinase (CaMKK) or knock-down CaMKK blocked CoQ10-induced AMPK phosphorylation, suggesting the involvement of calcium in CoQ10-mediated AMPK signaling. CoQ10 also increased the expression of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARα) at both the mRNA and protein levels. Knock down of AMPK with siRNA or inhibition of AMPK using an AMPK inhibitor compound C blocked CoQ10-induced expression of PPARα, indicating that AMPK plays a critical role in PPARα induction. In addition, CoQ10 increased fatty acid oxidation in 3T3-L1preadipocytes. The promoter activity of PPARα was increased by CoQ10 in an AMPK-dependent fashion. Moreover, the induction of acyl-CoA oxidase (ACO), a target gene of PPARα, was blocked under the PPARα knock down condition. Furthermore, treatment with CoQ10 blocked differentiation-induced adipogenesis. This blockade was not observed under the PPARα knock-down condition. Collectively, these results demonstrate that CoQ10 induces PPARα expression via the calcium-mediated AMPK signal pathway and suppresses differentiation-induced adipogenesis.


Cellular Signalling | 2013

Celastrol suppresses breast cancer MCF-7 cell viability via the AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK)-induced p53-polo like kinase 2 (PLK-2) pathway.

Ji Hae Kim; Jung Ok Lee; Soo Kyung Lee; Nami Kim; Ga Young You; Ji Wook Moon; Jie Sha; Su Jin Kim; Sun Hwa Park; Hyeon Soo Kim

Celastrol, an anti-oxidant flavonoid that is widely distributed in the plant kingdom, has been suggested to have chemopreventive effects on cancer cells: however, the mechanism of this process is not completely understood. In this study, we found that celastrol suppressed the viability of breast cancer MCF-7 cells in an AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK)-dependent fashion. Celastrol also induced an increase in reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels, leading to AMPK phosphorylation. Protein kinase C (PKC) zeta was also shown to play a role in celastrol-induced ROS generation. In addition, celastrol increased phosphorylation of the pro-apoptotic effector, p53. Inhibition of AMPK blocked celastrol-mediated p53 phosphorylation. Moreover, celastrol increased the expression of tumor suppressor polo like kinase-2 (PLK-2) in a p53-dependent manner. Neither celastrol-induced PLK-2 induction nor celastrol-mediated apoptosis inducing factor poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-2 (PARP-2) induction was observed in p53 knock-out cells. Furthermore, add-back of PLK-2 resulted in an increase in both celastrol-mediated PARP-2 induction and celastrol-induced apoptotic index sub G1 population. Together, these results suggest that celastrol may have anti-tumor effects on MCF-7 cells via AMPK-induced p53 and PLK-2 pathways.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015

Endogenous ligand for GPR120, docosahexaenoic acid, exerts benign metabolic effects on the skeletal muscles via AMP-activated protein kinase pathway

Nami Kim; Jung Ok Lee; Hye Jeong Lee; Hyung Ip Kim; Joong Kwan Kim; Yong Woo Lee; Soo Kyung Lee; Su Jin Kim; Sun Hwa Park; Hyeon Soo Kim

Background: DHA is known as an endogenous ligand for GPR120. Results: DHA increased the phosphorylation of AMPK and induced glucose uptake in skeletal muscle cells. GPR120 is involved in DHA-mediated glucose uptake. Conclusion: DHA exerts a benign metabolic role through the AMPK pathway. Significance: DHA, a ligand for GPR120, is potential drug candidate for diabetes. Docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) is an endogenous ligand of G protein-coupled receptor 120 (GPR120). However, the mechanisms underlying DHA action are poorly understood. In this study, DHA stimulated glucose uptake in the skeletal muscles in an AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK)-dependent manner. GPR120-mediated increase in intracellular Ca2+ was critical for DHA-mediated AMPK phosphorylation and glucose uptake. In addition, DHA stimulated GLUT4 translocation AMPK-dependently. Inhibition of AMPK and Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase kinase blocked DHA-induced glucose uptake. DHA and GW9508, a GPR120 agonist, increased GPR120 expression. DHA-mediated glucose uptake was not observed in GPR120 knockdown conditions. DHA increased AMPK phosphorylation, glucose uptake, and intracellular Ca2+ concentration in primary cultured myoblasts. Taken together, these results indicated that the beneficial metabolic role of DHA was attributed to its ability to regulate glucose via the GPR120-mediated AMPK pathway in the skeletal muscles.


Journal of Experimental & Clinical Cancer Research | 2014

Identification of novel hypermethylated genes and demethylating effect of vincristine in colorectal cancer

Ji Wook Moon; Soo Kyung Lee; Jung Ok Lee; Nami Kim; Yong Woo Lee; Su Jin Kim; Ho Jin Kang; Jin Kim; Hyeon Soo Kim; Sun Hwa Park

BackgroundColorectal cancer (CRC) arises as a consequence of genetic events such as gene mutation and epigenetic alteration. The aim of this study was to identify new hypermethylated candidate genes and methylation-based therapeutic targets using vincristine in CRC.MethodsWe analyzed the methylation status of 27,578 CpG sites spanning more than 14,000 genes in CRC tissues compared with adjacent normal tissues and normal colon tissues using Illumina bead chip array. Twenty-one hypermethylated genes and 18 CpG island methylator phenotype markers were selected as candidate genes. The methylation status of 39 genes was validated by quantitative methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction in CRC tissues, adjacent normal tissues, normal colon cells, and three CRC cell lines. Of these, 29 hypermethylated candidate genes were investigated using the demethylating effects of 5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine (5-aza-dC) and vincristine in CRC cells.ResultsThirty-two out of 39 genes were hypermethylated in CRC tissues compared with adjacent normal tissues. Vincristine induced demethylation of methylated genes in CRC cells to the same extent as 5-aza-dC. The mRNA expression of AKR1B1, CHST10, ELOVL4, FLI1, SOX5, STK33, and ZNF304 was restored by treatment with 5-aza-dC and vincristine.ConclusionThese results suggest that these novel hypermethylated genes AKR1B1, CHST10, ELOVL4, SOX5, STK33, and ZNF304 may be potential methylation biomarkers and therapeutic targets of vincristine in CRC.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Resistin, a fat-derived secretory factor, promotes metastasis of MDA-MB-231 human breast cancer cells through ERM activation

Jung Ok Lee; Nami Kim; Hye Jeong Lee; Yong Woo Lee; Su Jin Kim; Sun Hwa Park; Hyeon Soo Kim

Resistin, an adipocyte-secreted factor, is known to be elevated in breast cancer patients. However, the molecular mechanism by which resistin acts is not fully understood. The aim of this study was to investigate whether resistin could stimulate invasion and migration of breast cancer cells. Here, we report that resistin stimulated invasion and migration of breast cancer cells as well as phosphorylation of c-Src. Inhibition of c-Src blocked resistin-induced breast cancer cell invasion. Resistin increased intracellular calcium concentration, and chelation of intracellular calcium blocked resistin-mediated activation of Src. Resistin also induced phosphorylation of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A). Inhibition of c-Src blocked resistin-mediated PP2A phosphorylation. In addition, resistin increased phosphorylation of PKCα. Inhibition of PP2A enhanced resistin-induced PKCα phosphorylation, demonstrating that PP2A activity is critical for PKCα phosphorylation. Resistin also increased phosphorylation of ezrin, radixin, and moesin (ERM). Additionally, ezrin interacted with PKCα, and resistin promoted co-localization of ezrin and PKCα. Either inhibition of c-Src and PKCα or knock-down of ezrin blocked resistin-induced breast cancer cells invasion. Moreover, resistin increased expression of vimentin, a key molecule for cancer cell invasion. Knock-down of ezrin abrogated resistin-induced vimentin expression. These results suggest that resistin play as a critical regulator of breast cancer metastasis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

E3 Ubiquitin Ligase, WWP1, Interacts with AMPKα2 and Down-regulates Its Expression in Skeletal Muscle C2C12 Cells

Jung Ok Lee; Soo Kyung Lee; Nami Kim; Ji Hae Kim; Ga Young You; Ji Wook Moon; Sha Jie; Su Jin Kim; Yong Woo Lee; Ho Jin Kang; Yongchul Lim; Sun Hwa Park; Hyeon Soo Kim

Background: The role of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway under high glucose conditions is unclear. Results: AMPKα2 interacts with WWP1, and its expression is down-regulated by the ubiquitin proteasome pathway in high glucose culture conditions in C2C12 cells. Conclusion: WWP1 down-regulates AMPKα2 expression through direct interaction in high glucose culture conditions of skeletal muscle C2C12 cells. Significance: The ubiquitin proteasome pathway may involve high glucose-induced AMPKα2 down-regulation. It is known that the activity of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPKα2) was depressed under high glucose conditions. However, whether protein expression of AMPKα2 is also down-regulated or not remains unclear. In this study, we showed that the expression of AMPKα2 was down-regulated in cells cultured under high glucose conditions. Treatment of proteasome inhibitor, MG132, blocked high glucose-induced AMPKα2 down-regulation. Endogenous AMPKα2 ubiquitination was detected by immunoprecipitation of AMPKα2 followed by immunoblotting detection of ubiquitin. The yeast-two hybrid (YTH) approach identified WWP1, an E3 ubiquitin ligase, as the AMPKα2-interacting protein in skeletal muscle cells. Interaction between AMPKα2 and WWP1 was validated by co-immunoprecipitation. Knockdown of WWP1 blocked high glucose-induced AMPKα2 down-regulation. The overexpression of WWP1 down-regulated AMPKα2. In addition, the expression of WWP1 is increased under high glucose culture conditions in both mRNA and protein levels. The level of AMPKα2 was down-regulated in the quadriceps muscle of diabetic animal model db/db mice. Expression of WWP1 blocked metformin-induced glucose uptake. Taken together, our results demonstrated that WWP1 down-regulated AMPKα2 under high glucose culture conditions via the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway.


Nature Communications | 2017

Snail reprograms glucose metabolism by repressing phosphofructokinase PFKP allowing cancer cell survival under metabolic stress

Nam Hee Kim; Yong Hoon Cha; Jueun Lee; Seon-Hyeong Lee; Ji Hye Yang; Jun Seop Yun; Eunae Sandra Cho; Xianglan Zhang; Miso Nam; Nami Kim; Young-Su Yuk; So Young Cha; Yoonmi Lee; Joo Kyung Ryu; Sunghyouk Park; Jae Ho Cheong; Sang Won Kang; Soo-Youl Kim; Geum-Sook Hwang; Jong In Yook; Hyun Sil Kim

Dynamic regulation of glucose flux between aerobic glycolysis and the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) during epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) is not well-understood. Here we show that Snail (SNAI1), a key transcriptional repressor of EMT, regulates glucose flux toward PPP, allowing cancer cell survival under metabolic stress. Mechanistically, Snail regulates glycolytic activity via repression of phosphofructokinase, platelet (PFKP), a major isoform of cancer-specific phosphofructokinase-1 (PFK-1), an enzyme involving the first rate-limiting step of glycolysis. The suppression of PFKP switches the glucose flux towards PPP, generating NADPH with increased metabolites of oxidative PPP. Functionally, dynamic regulation of PFKP significantly potentiates cancer cell survival under metabolic stress and increases metastatic capacities in vivo. Further, knockdown of PFKP rescues metabolic reprogramming and cell death induced by loss of Snail. Thus, the Snail-PFKP axis plays an important role in cancer cell survival via regulation of glucose flux between glycolysis and PPP.


BMC Cancer | 2014

Alcohol induces cell proliferation via hypermethylation of ADHFE1 in colorectal cancer cells

Ji Wook Moon; Soo Kyung Lee; Yong Woo Lee; Jung Ok Lee; Nami Kim; Hye Jeong Lee; Jung Seon Seo; Jin Kim; Hyeon Soo Kim; Sun Hwa Park

BackgroundThe hypermethylation of Alcohol dehydrogenase iron containing 1 (ADHFE1) was recently reported to be associated with colorectal cancer (CRC) differentiation. However, the effect of alcohol on ADHFE1 hypermethylation in CRC is still unclear.MethodsThe methylation status and expression levels of ADHFE1 were investigated in primary tumor tissues and adjacent normal tissues of 73 patients with CRC, one normal colon cell line, and 4 CRC cell lines (HT-29, SW480, DLD-1, and LoVo) by quantitative methylation-specific polymerase chain reaction (QMSP) and real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (real time PCR), respectively. The effect of alcohol on the methylation status of ADHFE1 was analyzed in HT-29, SW480, DLD-1, and CCD18Co cells using QMSP, real-time PCR, immunoblot, and cell proliferation assay.ResultsADHFE1 was hypermethylated in 69 of 73 CRC tissues (95%) compared to adjacent normal tissues (p < 0.05). The mRNA expression of ADHFE1 was significantly reduced in CRC compared to adjacent normal tissues (p < 0.05) and its expression was decreased in the alcohol consumption group (p < 0.05). ADHFE1 was hypermethylated and its expression was decreased in 4 CRC cell lines compared with normal colon cell line. Alcohol induced hypermethylation of ADHFE1, decreased its expression, and stimulated cell proliferation of HT-29, SW480, and DLD-1cells.ConclusionThese results demonstrate that the promoter hypermethylation of ADHFE1 is frequently present in CRC and alcohol induces methylation-mediated down expression of ADHFE1 and proliferation of CRC cells.

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