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Dive into the research topics where Sekyu Hwang is active.

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Featured researches published by Sekyu Hwang.


ACS Nano | 2013

pH-responsive assembly of gold nanoparticles and "spatiotemporally concerted" drug release for synergistic cancer therapy.

Jutaek Nam; Wan-Geun La; Sekyu Hwang; Yeong Su Ha; Nokyoung Park; Nayoun Won; Sungwook Jung; Suk Ho Bhang; Yoonji Ma; Yong-Min Cho; Min Jin; Jin Han; Jung-Youn Shin; Eun Kyung Wang; Sang Geol Kim; So-Hye Cho; Jeongsoo Yoo; Byung-Soo Kim; Sungjee Kim

A challenge in using plasmonic nanostructure-drug conjugates for thermo-chemo combination cancer therapy lies in the huge size discrepancy; the size difference can critically differentiate their biodistributions and hamper the synergistic effect. Properly tuning the plasmonic wavelength for photothermal therapy typically results in the nanostructure size reaching ∼100 nm. We report a new combination cancer therapy platform that consists of relatively small 10 nm pH-responsive spherical gold nanoparticles and conjugated doxorubicins. They are designed to form aggregates in mild acidic environment such as in a tumor. The aggregates serve as a photothermal agent that can selectively exploit external light by their collective plasmon modes. Simultaneously, the conjugated doxorubicins are released. The spatiotemporal concertion is confirmed at the subcellular, cellular, and organ levels. Both agents colocalize in the cell nuclei. The conjugates accumulate in cancer cells by the rapid phagocytic actions and effective blockage of exocytosis by the increased aggregate size. They also effectively accumulate in tumors up to 17 times over the control because of the enhanced permeation and retention. The conjugates exhibit a synergistic effect enhanced by nearly an order of magnitude in cellular level. The synergistic effect is demonstrated by the remarkable reductions in both the therapeutically effective drug dosage and the photothermal laser threshold. Using an animal model, effective tumor growth suppression is demonstrated. The conjugates induce apoptosis to tumors without any noticeable damage to other organs. The synergistic effect in vivo is confirmed by qRT-PCR analysis over the thermal stress and drug-induced growth arrest.


Nanomedicine: Nanotechnology, Biology and Medicine | 2014

Gold nanoparticle-mediated photothermal therapy: current status and future perspective

Sekyu Hwang; Jutaek Nam; Sungwook Jung; Jaejung Song; Hyunmi Doh; Sungjee Kim

Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) are attractive photothermal agents for cancer therapy because they show efficient local heating upon excitation of surface plasmon oscillations. The strong absorption, efficient heat conversion, high photostability, inherent low toxicity and well-defined surface chemistry of AuNPs contribute to the growing interest in their photothermal therapy (PTT) applications. The facile tunability of gold nanostructures enables engineering of AuNPs for superior near-infrared photothermal efficacy and target selectivity, which guarantee efficient and deep tissue-penetrating PTT with mitigated concerns regarding side effects by nonspecific distributions. This article discusses the current research findings with representative near-infrared-active AuNPs, which include nanoshell, nanorod, nanocage, nanostar, nanopopcorn and nanoparticle assembly systems. AuNPs successfully demonstrate potential for use in PTT, but several hurdles to clinical applications remain, including long-term toxicity and a need for sophisticated control over biodistribution and clearance. Future research directions are discussed, especially regarding the clinical translation of AuNP photosensitizers.


Scientific Reports | 2013

DNA hydrogel-based supercapacitors operating in physiological fluids

Jaehyun Hur; Kyuhyun Im; Sekyu Hwang; ByoungLyong Choi; Sungjee Kim; Sungwoo Hwang; Nokyoung Park; Kinam Kim

DNA nanostructures have been attractive due to their structural properties resulting in many important breakthroughs especially in controlled assemblies and many biological applications. Here, we report a unique energy storage device which is a supercapacitor that uses nanostructured DNA hydrogel (Dgel) as a template and layer-by-layer (LBL)-deposited polyelectrolyte multilayers (PEMs) as conductors. Our device, named as PEM-Dgel supercapacitor, showed excellent performance in direct contact with physiological fluids such as artificial urine and phosphate buffered saline without any need of additional electrolytes, and exhibited almost no cytotoxicity during cycling tests in cell culture medium. Moreover, we demonstrated that the PEM-Dgel supercapacitor has greater charge-discharge cycling stability in physiological fluids than highly concentrated acid electrolyte solution which is normally used for supercapacitor operation. These conceptually new supercapacitors have the potential to be a platform technology for the creation of implantable energy storage devices for packageless applications directly utilizing biofluids.


Organic Letters | 2012

Reaction-Based Two-Photon Probes for Mercury Ions: Fluorescence Imaging with Dual Optical Windows

Alla Sreenivasa Rao; Dokyoung Kim; Taejun Wang; Ki Hean Kim; Sekyu Hwang; Kyo Han Ahn

For fluorescent imaging of mercury ions in living species, two-photon probes with dual optical windows are in high demand but remain unexplored. Several dithioacetals were evaluated, and a probe was found, which, upon reaction with mercury species, yielded a two-photon dye; this conversion accompanies ratiometric emission changes with a 97-nm shift, enabling fluorescent imaging of both the probe and mercury ions in cells by one- and two-photon microscopy for the first time.


ACS Nano | 2015

Mesenchymal Stem Cells Aggregate and Deliver Gold Nanoparticles to Tumors for Photothermal Therapy

Seokyung Kang; Suk Ho Bhang; Sekyu Hwang; Jeong-Kee Yoon; Jaejung Song; Hyeon-Ki Jang; Sungjee Kim; Byung-Soo Kim

Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) have been extensively studied for photothermal cancer therapy because AuNPs can generate heat upon near-infrared irradiation. However, improving their tumor-targeting efficiency and optimizing the nanoparticle size for maximizing the photothermal effect remain challenging. We demonstrate that mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) can aggregate pH-sensitive gold nanoparticles (PSAuNPs) in mildly acidic endosomes, target tumors, and be used for photothermal therapy. These aggregated structures had a higher cellular retention in comparison to pH-insensitive, control AuNPs (cAuNPs), which is important for the cell-based delivery process. PSAuNP-laden MSCs (MSC-PSAuNPs) injected intravenously to tumor-bearing mice show a 37-fold higher tumor-targeting efficiency (5.6% of the injected dose) and 8.3 °C higher heat generation compared to injections of cAuNPs after irradiation, which results in a significantly enhanced anticancer effect.


ACS Nano | 2014

Spraying Quantum Dot Conjugates in the Colon of Live Animals Enabled Rapid and Multiplex Cancer Diagnosis Using Endoscopy

Youngrong Park; Yeon-Mi Ryu; Yebin Jung; Taejun Wang; Yeonggyeong Baek; Yeoreum Yoon; Sang Mun Bae; Joonhyuck Park; Sekyu Hwang; Jaeil Kim; Eun-ju Do; Sang-Yeob Kim; Euiheon Chung; Ki Hean Kim; Sungjee Kim; Seung-Jae Myung

The detection of colon cancer using endoscopy is widely used, but the interpretation of the diagnosis is based on the clinicians naked eye. This is subjective and can lead to false detection. Here we developed a rapid and accurate molecular fluorescence imaging technique using antibody-coated quantum dots (Ab-QDs) sprayed and washed simultaneously on colon tumor tissues inside live animals, subsequently excited and imaged by endoscopy. QDs were conjugated to matrix metalloproteinases (MMP) 9, MMP 14, or carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) Abs with zwitterionic surface coating to reduce nonspecific bindings. The Ab-QD probes can diagnose tumors on sectioned mouse tissues, fresh mouse colons stained ex vivo and also in vivo as well as fresh human colon adenoma tissues in 30 min and can be imaged with a depth of 100 μm. The probes successfully detected not only cancers that are readily discernible by bare eyes but also hyperplasia and adenoma regions. Sum and cross signal operations provided postprocessed images that can show complementary information or regions of high priority. This multiplexed quantum dot, spray-and-wash, and endoscopy approach provides a significant advantage for detecting small or flat tumors that may be missed by conventional endoscopic examinations and bestows a strategy for the improvement of cancer diagnosis.


Journal of Materials Chemistry B | 2015

Light-responsible DNA hydrogel–gold nanoparticle assembly for synergistic cancer therapy

Jaejung Song; Sekyu Hwang; Kyuhyun Im; Jaehyun Hur; Jutaek Nam; Sungwoo Hwang; G-One Ahn; Sungjee Kim; Nokyoung Park

Assembled AuNPs in a DNA hydrogel (Dgel) showed strongly coupled plasmon modes, and the Dgel vehicle can co-load anticancer drugs such as doxorubicin (Dox) as a light-controlled releasing cargo by DNA intercalations. Upon laser excitation, local heat shock generation was accompanied by the release of Dox. A highly synergistic combination of thermo- and chemotherapy was demonstrated in cellular and animal models. Our Dgel vehicle can be fragmented after the excitation-induced heat generations, which subsequently causes the dispersion of the AuNPs. Our system may be less toxic because it uses small sizes of AuNPs, and the inherently biocompatible scaffold may reduce the long-term toxicity by rapid clearance.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2013

DNA hydrogel templated carbon nanotube and polyaniline assembly and its applications for electrochemical energy storage devices

Jaehyun Hur; Kyuhyun Im; Sang Won Kim; Un Jeong Kim; Junho Lee; Sekyu Hwang; Jaejung Song; Sungjee Kim; Sungwoo Hwang; Nokyoung Park

Functional nanocomposites comprising of biomaterials and non-biomaterials are one of the main subjects of recent research due to their wide range of potential applications. Here, we demonstrate that the porous DNA hydrogel (Dgel) can be an excellent template for combining carbon nanotubes (CNTs) and polyaniline (PANI) resulting in high performance supercapacitor electrodes. These hybrid supercapacitors have been constructed by electrostatic deposition of conductive CNTs on DNA hydrogel followed by coating of PANI pseudocapacitor. Performances of supercapacitors in terms of specific capacitance, cycling stability, power density, and energy density have been systematically investigated. The specific capacitance of these DNA hydrogel based supercapacitors has reached up to 146.4 F g−1 with a power density of 23.3 kW kg−1 and an energy density of 13.0 Wh kg−1 in acidic media which is higher than commercially available products. In addition, the cytotoxicity of our supercapacitors was evaluated in vitro in cell culture media during the charge–discharge processes. In both human and mouse skin cell culture media, our devices exhibited zero cytotoxicity. Our novel biological hybrid electrodes can be a platform towards biocompatible and implantable energy storage devices for in vivo applications.


New Journal of Chemistry | 2014

A sub 6 nanometer plasmonic gold nanoparticle for pH-responsive near-infrared photothermal cancer therapy

Sekyu Hwang; Jutaek Nam; Jaejung Song; Sungwook Jung; Jaehyun Hur; Kyuhyun Im; Nokyoung Park; Sungjee Kim

A small (sub 6 nm hydrodynamic size) and pH-responsive gold nanoparticle photothermal agent is reported, which can respond to changes in pH and form aggregates. The coupled plasmon mode of aggregates can be efficiently exploited for photothermal cancer therapy using longer excitation wavelength.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Moxifloxacin: Clinically compatible contrast agent for multiphoton imaging

Taejun Wang; Won Hyuk Jang; Seunghun Lee; Calvin J. Yoon; Jun Ho Lee; Bumju Kim; Sekyu Hwang; Chun-Pyo Hong; Yeoreum Yoon; Gilgu Lee; Viet-Hoan Le; Seoyeon Bok; G-One Ahn; Jaewook Lee; Yong Song Gho; Euiheon Chung; Sungjee Kim; Myoung Ho Jang; Seung-Jae Myung; Myoung Joon Kim; Peter T. C. So; Ki Hean Kim

Multiphoton microscopy (MPM) is a nonlinear fluorescence microscopic technique widely used for cellular imaging of thick tissues and live animals in biological studies. However, MPM application to human tissues is limited by weak endogenous fluorescence in tissue and cytotoxicity of exogenous probes. Herein, we describe the applications of moxifloxacin, an FDA-approved antibiotic, as a cell-labeling agent for MPM. Moxifloxacin has bright intrinsic multiphoton fluorescence, good tissue penetration and high intracellular concentration. MPM with moxifloxacin was demonstrated in various cell lines, and animal tissues of cornea, skin, small intestine and bladder. Clinical application is promising since imaging based on moxifloxacin labeling could be 10 times faster than imaging based on endogenous fluorescence.

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Sungjee Kim

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Jutaek Nam

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Jaejung Song

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Ki Hean Kim

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Taejun Wang

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Sungwook Jung

Pohang University of Science and Technology

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Euiheon Chung

Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology

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