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Featured researches published by Seung-Yong Lee.


Food Chemistry | 2013

Increase in antioxidant and anticancer effects of ginsenoside Re–lysine mixture by Maillard reaction

Noriko Yamabe; Young-Joo Kim; Seung-Yong Lee; Eun-Ju Cho; Soon-Hye Park; Jungyeob Ham; Hyun Young Kim; Ki Sung Kang

Ginsenosides are the main active components of Panax ginseng. Structural changes in diol type ginsenosides along with generation of Maillard reaction products (MRPs) are strongly associated with increased free radical-scavenging activities. Ginsenoside Re, one of the major triol type ginsenosides of P. ginseng, possesses a hydrophobic four-ring steroid-like structure with hydrophilic sugar moieties at carbons-3 and -20. The aim of the present study was to identify changes in the structure, antioxidant and anticancer effects of ginsenoside Re upon Maillard reaction. Ginsenoside Re was transformed into less-polar ginsenosides, namely Rg(2), Rg(6) and F(4) by heat-processing. Free radical-scavenging activity of the ginsenoside Re-lysine mixture increased upon heat processing. This improved free radical-scavenging activity mediated by antioxidant MRPs, which were generated through Maillard reaction of a glucosyl moiety separated from carbon-20 of ginsenoside Re and lysine. The increased anticancer effect of ginsenoside Re-lysine mixture upon heat processing was mainly derived from the generation of less-polar ginsenosides through the regulation of Bcl-2 and Bax, as well as caspase-dependent apoptotic pathway. These results reported here have shed significant new lights on the mechanism of increased antioxidant and anticancer effects of P. ginseng upon heat processing.


Planta Medica | 2015

Protective Effect of Tetrahydrocurcumin against Cisplatin-Induced Renal Damage: In Vitro and In Vivo Studies

Kyung Il Song; Jun Yeon Park; Seung-Yong Lee; Dahae Lee; Hyuk-Jai Jang; Su-Nam Kim; Hyeonseok Ko; Hyun Young Kim; Jae Wook Lee; Gwi Seo Hwang; Ki Sung Kang; Noriko Yamabe

The adverse effects of anticancer drugs can prompt patients to end their treatment despite the efficacy. Cisplatin is a platinum-based molecule widely used to treat various forms of cancer, but frequent and long-term use of cisplatin is limited due to severe nephrotoxicity. In the present study, we investigated the protective effect and mechanism of tetrahydrocurcumin on cisplatin-induced kidney damage, oxidative stress, and inflammation to evaluate its possible use in renal damage. Cisplatin-induced LLC-PK1 renal cell damage was significantly reduced by tetrahydrocurcumin treatment. Additionally, the protective effect of tetrahydrocurcumin on cisplatin-induced oxidative renal damage was investigated in rats. Tetrahydrocurcumin was orally administered every day at a dose of 80u2009mg/kg body weight for ten days, and a single dose of cisplatin was administered intraperitoneally (7.5u2009mg/kg body weight) in 0.9u200a% saline on day four. The creatinine clearance levels, which were markers of renal dysfunction, in cisplatin-treated rats were recovered nearly back to normal levels after administration of tetrahydrocurcumin. Moreover, tetrahydrocurcumin exhibited protective effects against cisplatin-induced oxidative renal damage in rats by inhibiting cyclooxygenase-2 and caspase-3 activation. These results collectively provide therapeutic evidence that tetrahydrocurcumin ameliorates renal damage by regulating inflammation and apoptosis.


The American Journal of Chinese Medicine | 2012

Dendrobium moniliforme Attenuates High-Fat Diet-Induced Renal Damage in Mice through the Regulation of Lipid-Induced Oxidative Stress

Woojung Lee; Dae-Woon Eom; Yujung Jung; Noriko Yamabe; Seung-Yong Lee; Youngsic Jeon; Ye Ran Hwang; Ji Hwan Lee; Yong Kee Kim; Ki Sung Kang; Su-Nam Kim

Obesity is an important and preventable risk factor for renal disease. The administration of an antioxidant with a lipid-lowering effect is an important therapeutic approach for kidney disease in obese patients. The present study was conducted to examine whether methanolic extract of Dendrobium moniliforme (DM), one of the most famous traditional medicines used in many parts of the world, has an antioxidant effect in vitro and an ameliorative effect on high-fat diet (HFD)-induced alterations such as renal dysfunction and lipid accumulation in vivo. The 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl radical scavenging activity of DM extract (IC(50) = 29.6 μg/mL) was increased in a dose-dependent manner. The LLC-PK1 kidney cell damage induced by oxidative stress was significantly inhibited by the treatments with DM extract. In the animal study, DM extract (200 mg/kg) was orally administered every day for nine weeks to HFD-fed mice, and its effect was compared with that of metformin. The administration of DM extract decreased the elevated serum glucose, total cholesterol concentration and renal lipid accumulation in HFD-fed mice. It also ameliorated renal dysfunction biomarkers including serum creatinine and renal collagen IV deposition. Taken together, these results provide important evidence that DM extract exhibits a pleiotropic effect on obesity induced parameters and exerted a renoprotective effect in HFD-fed mice.


Food Chemistry | 2012

Increase in antioxidant effect of ginsenoside Re-alanine mixture by Maillard reaction.

Woojung Lee; Soon-Hye Park; Seung-Yong Lee; Bong Chul Chung; Min Ok Song; Kyung Il Song; Jungyeob Ham; Su-Nam Kim; Ki Sung Kang

Ginsenoside Re, one of the major triol type ginsenosides contained in Panax ginseng, has a hydrophobic four-ring steroid-like structure with hydrophilic sugar moieties at carbon-3 and -20. The aim of the present study was to identify the changes in structure and antioxidant activity of ginsenoside Re by the Maillard reaction, which has not been reported yet. The free radical-scavenging activity of ginsenoside Re-alanine mixture was increased by heat-processing. Ginsenoside Re was gradually changed into Rg(2), Rg(6) and F(4) by heat-processing, and the glucosyl moiety at carbon-20 was separated. The improved-free radical-scavenging activity by heat-processing was mediated by the generation of antioxidant Maillard reaction products (MRPs). Antioxidant MRPs were generated from the reaction of glucose and alanine. Based on the viability results of LLC-PK1 renal epithelial cells, MRPs and less-polar ginsenosides contributed to the combined renoprotective effect against oxidative renal damage. Maillard reaction is importantly involved in the increased antioxidant effect of ginsenoside by heat-processing.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2014

Protective effect of esculin on streptozotocin-induced diabetic renal damage in mice.

Ki Sung Kang; Woojung Lee; Yujung Jung; Ji Hwan Lee; Seung-Yong Lee; Dae-Woon Eom; Youngsic Jeon; Hye Hyun Yoo; Ming Ji Jin; Kyung Il Song; Won Jun Kim; Jungyeob Ham; Hyoung Ja Kim; Su-Nam Kim

The present study investigated the presence and mechanism of esculin-mediated renoprotection to assess its therapeutic potential. Esculin was orally administered at 20 mg/kg/day for 2 weeks to streptozotocin-induced diabetic mice, and its effects were compared with those of the vehicle in normal and diabetic mice. After oral administration of esculin to mice, the concentrations of esculin and esculetin in blood were 159.5 ± 29.8 and 9.7 ± 4.9 ng/mL at 30 min, respectively. Food and water intake were significantly increased in the diabetic mice compared to normal mice but attenuated in mice receiving esculin. The elevated blood glucose level and hepatic glucose-6-phosphatase expression were significantly reduced in esculin-treated diabetic mice, supporting the antidiabetic effect of esculin. Esculin also increased the uptake of glucose and induced the insulin-evoked phosphorylation of insulin receptor, Akt, and glycogen synthase kinase 3β in C2C12 myotubes, indicating a potential for improvement of insulin sensitivity. In addition, esculin lessened the elevated blood creatinine levels in diabetic mice and ameliorated diabetes-induced renal dysfunction by reducing caspase-3 activation in the kidney. Data support the beneficial effect of esculin against diabetes and oxidative stress-related inflammatory processes in the kidney.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Important role of Maillard reaction in the protective effect of heat-processed ginsenoside Re-serine mixture against cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity in LLC-PK1 cells

Ji Hwan Lee; Woojung Lee; Seung-Yong Lee; Yujung Jung; Soon-Hye Park; Pilju Choi; Su-Nam Kim; Jungyeob Ham; Ki Sung Kang

The aim of the present study was to verify the important role of Maillard reaction in the protective effect of heat-processed ginsenoside Re-serine mixture against oxidative stress-induced nephrotoxicity. The free radical-scavenging activity of ginsenoside Re-serine mixture was increased by heat-processing. Ginsenoside Re was transformed into less-polar ginsenosides such as Rg(2), Rg(6) and F(4) by heat-processing, and the glucose molecule at carbon-20 was separated. The improved-free radical-scavenging activity by heat-processing was mediated by the generation of antioxidant Maillard reaction products (MRPs) from the reaction of glucose with serine. Moreover, MRPs from ginsenoside Re-serine mixture showed protective effect against cisplatin-induced renal epithelial cell damage.


Korean Journal of Materials Research | 2016

변형률 속도에 따른 Fe-24.5Mn-4Cr-0.45C 합금의 인장 특성과 동적 변형시효

Seung-Yong Lee; Byoungchul Hwang

In the present study, the tensile properties and dynamic strain aging of an Fe-24.5Mn-4Cr-0.45C alloy were investigated in terms of strain rate. During tensile testing at room temperature, all the stress-strain curves exhibited serrated plastic flows related to dynamic strain aging, regardless of the strain rate. Serration appeared right after yield stress at lower strain rates, while it was hardly observed at high strain rates. On the other hand, strain-rate sensitivity, indicating a general relationship between flow stress and strain rate at constant strain and temperature, changed from positive to negative as the strain increased. The negative strain-rate sensitivity can be explained by the Portevin Le Chatelier effect, which is associated with dynamic strain aging and is dependent on the strain rate because it is very likely that the dynamic strain aging phenomenon in high-manganese steels is involved in the interaction between moving dislocations and point-defect complexes.


Journal of Korean Powder Metallurgy Institute | 2007

Fabrication of High-performance Carbon Counter Electrode for Dye-sensitized Solar Cells

Yeon-Ik Jang; Seung-Yong Lee; Dong-Hwan Kim; Jong-Ku Park

In the fabrication of dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs), carbon counter electrode has been tested for replacing the platinum counter electrode which has two drawbacks: limited surface area and high material cost. Poor mechanical stability of carbon layer due to weak bonding strength to electrically conductive TCO (transparent conducting oxide) glass substrate is a crucial barrier for practical application of carbon counter electrode. In the present study a carbon counter electrode with high conversion efficiency, comparable to Pt counter electrode, could be fabricated by adaption of a bonding layer between particulate carbon material and TCO substrate.


Archive | 2007

COUNTER ELECTRODE HAVING CARBON MATERIAL LAYER FOR DYE-SENSITIZED PHOTOVOLTAIC CELL AND METHOD OF PREPARING THE SAME

Jong-Ku Park; Seung-Yong Lee; Yeon-Ik Jang; Pyuck-Pa Choi; Donghwan Kim


Materials Characterization | 2017

Long-term evolution of σ phase in 304H austenitic stainless steel: Experimental and computational investigation

Youngsu Ji; Jihye Park; Seung-Yong Lee; Jaewoong Kim; Sangmo Lee; Jingak Nam; Byoungchul Hwang; Jin-Yoo Suh; Jae-Hyeok Shim

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Byoungchul Hwang

Seoul National University of Science and Technology

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Su-Nam Kim

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

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Woojung Lee

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

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Jungyeob Ham

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

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Soon-Hye Park

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

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Ji Hwan Lee

Korea Institute of Science and Technology

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