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Featured researches published by Sung Ha Ryu.


Analytical Chemistry | 2013

Pattern Recognition Analysis for Hepatotoxicity Induced by Acetaminophen Using Plasma and Urinary 1H NMR-Based Metabolomics in Humans

Ji Won Kim; Sung Ha Ryu; Siwon Kim; Hae Won Lee; Mi-sun Lim; Sook Jin Seong; Suhkmann Kim; Young-Ran Yoon; Kyu-Bong Kim

Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is currently an increasingly relevant health issue. However, available biomarkers do not reliably detect or quantify DILI risk. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to comparatively evaluate plasma and urinary biomarkers obtained from humans treated with acetaminophen (APAP) using a metabolomics approach and a proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) platform. APAP (3 g/day, two 500 mg tablets every 8 h) was administered to 20 healthy Korean males (age, 20-29 years) for 7 days. Urine was collected daily before and during dosing and 6 days after the final dose. NMR spectra of these urine samples were analyzed using principal component analysis (PCA) and partial least-squares-discrimination analysis. Although the activities of aspartate aminotransferase and lactate dehydrogenase were significantly increased 7 days post-APAP treatment, serum biochemical parameters of aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, alkaline phosphatase, total bilirubin, γ-glutamyl transpeptidase, and lactate dehydrogenase were within normal range of hepatic function. However, urine and plasma (1)H NMR spectroscopy revealed different clustering between predosing and after APAP treatment for global metabolomic profiling through PCA. Urinary endogenous metabolites of trimethylamine-N-oxide, citrate, 3-chlorotyrosine, phenylalanine, glycine, hippurate, and glutarate as well as plasma endogenous metabolites such as lactate, glucose, 3-hydroxyisovalerate, isoleucine, acetylglycine, acetone, acetate, glutamine, ethanol, and isobutyrate responded significantly to APAP dosing in humans. Urinary and plasma endogenous metabolites were more sensitive than serum biochemical parameters. These results might be applied to predict or screen potential hepatotoxicity caused by other drugs using urinary and plasma (1)H NMR analyses.


Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health | 2014

Negligible Pharmacokinetic Interaction of Red Ginseng and Antihypertensive Agent Amlodipine in Sprague-Dawley Rats

Sung Ha Ryu; Ji Won Kim; Yong Soon Kim; Seung-Ho Lee; Yong-Baik Cho; Hyo Keun Lee; Yoon Gyoon Kim; Woo-Sik Jeong; Kyu-Bong Kim

Red ginseng (RG) is the top-selling functional food in Korea, but is not recommended for use in hypertensive patients. This study was performed to determine the pharmacokinetic (PK) interaction between RG and amlodipine, an antihypertensive drug. RG (0, 0.5, 1, or 2 g/kg/d) was administered orally for 2 wk, and then amlodipine (10 mg/kg) was given orally, to Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats. Blood was collected at 0.08, 0.25, 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 6, 12, and 24 h after amlodipine administration. In intravenous (iv) study, RG (0, 1, or 2 g/kg/d) was administered orally to SD rats for 2 wk, followed by amlodipine (2 mg/kg) intravenously (iv). Plasma concentrations of amlodipine were analyzed using a high-pressure liquid chromatography–tandem mass system (LC-MS/MS). Oral administration of amlodipine produced an increase of time to maximum plasma concentration (tmax: 2.6, 4.1, 8.3, and 8.9 h at 0, 0.5, 1, and 2 g/kg/d, respectively), and a decrease of maximum plasma concentration (Cmax: 278.5, 212.4, 232.1, and 238.7 ng/ml at 0, 0.5, 1, and 2 g/kg/d, respectively.). However, the area under the concentration–time curve from time 0 to 24 h measurable concentration (AUC0-24 h was 3487.4, 2895.4, 3158.2, and 3495 ng/h/ml at 0, 0.5, 1, and 2 g/kg/d respectively) was not significantly changed among the different dose groups. Administration of amlodipine iv produced no significant changes in the apparent terminal half-life, volume of distribution, and AUC0-24 hr among the different dose groups. These results suggest that RG induced negligible influence on amlodipine pharmacokinetically in rats.


Toxicological research | 2011

Four-Week Repeated Oral Toxicity Study of AIP1, a Water-soluble Carbohydrate Fraction from Artemisia iwayomogi in Mice

Sung Ha Ryu; Haeran Jo; Ji Won Kim; Hyun-Joo Youn; Kyu-Bong Kim

Artemisia iwayomogi, a member of the Compositae, is a perennial herb easily found in Korea and used as a traditional medicine to treat liver disease. AIP1, a water-soluble carbohydrate fraction from Artemisia iwayomogi, showed anti-tumor and immuno-modulating activities in animal studies. A subacute toxicological evaluation of AIP1 was performed for 4 weeks in ICR mice. After administration of AIP1 (0, 20, 100, 500 mg/kg/day), the clinical signs, mortalities, body weight changes, hematology, blood clinical biochemistry, urinalysis, organ histopathology, organ weights and gross finding were examined. The results showed that there were no significant differences in body weight changes, food intakes, water consumptions, or organ weights among different dose groups. Also we observed no death and abnormal clinical signs during the experimental period. Between the groups orally treated with AIP1 and the control group, there was no statistical significance in hematological test or serum biochemical values. Histopathological examination showed no abnormal changes in AIP1 groups. These results suggest that no observed adverse effect level (NOAEL) of the oral administration of AIP1 for 4 weeks was considered to be more than 500 mg/kg/ day in mice under the condition investigated in current study.


Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health | 2015

Negligible Pharmacokinetic Interaction of Red Ginseng and Losartan, an Antihypertensive Agent, in Sprague-Dawley Rats

Sung Ha Ryu; Yong Soon Kim; Hyun-Jun Jang; Kyu-Bong Kim

Red ginseng (RG) is one of the top selling herbal medicines in Korea, but is not recommended in hypertensive patients. In this study, the pharmacokinetic (PK) interaction between RG and losartan, an antihypertensive drug, was examined. RG was orally administered for 2 wk to male Sprague-Dawley (S-D) rats at either control (0), 0.5, 1, or 2 g/kg/d for 2 wk. After the last administration of RG and 30 min later, all animals were treated with 10 mg/kg losartan by oral route. In addition, some S-D rats were administered RG orally for 21 d at 2 g/kg followed by losartan intravenously (iv) at 10 mg/kg/d. Post losartan administration, plasma samples were collected at 5, 15, and 30 min and 1, 1.5, 2, 3, 6, 12, and 24 h. Plasma concentrations of losartan and E-3174, the active metabolite of losartan, were analyzed by a high-pressure liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometer system (LC-MS/MS). Oral losartan administration showed dose-dependent pharmacokinetics (PK) increase with time to maximum plasma, but this was not significant between different groups. There was no significant change in tmax with E-3174 PK. With iv losartan, pharmacokinetics showed elevation of area under the plasma concentration–time curve from time zero extrapolated to infinitity. There was not a significant change in AUCinf with E-3174 PK. Therefore, RG appeared to interfere with biotransformation of losartan, as RG exerted no marked effect on E-3174 PK in S-D rats. Data demonstrated that oral or iv treatment with losartan in rats pretreated with RG for 2 wk showed that losartan PK was affected but E-3174 PK remained unchanged among different dose groups. These results suggested that RG induces negligible influence on losartan and E-3174 PK in rats.


Nutrients | 2017

Integration of Traditional and Metabolomics Biomarkers Identifies Prognostic Metabolites for Predicting Responsiveness to Nutritional Intervention against Oxidative Stress and Inflammation

You Jin Kim; Iksoo Huh; Ji Yeon Kim; Saejong Park; Sung Ha Ryu; Kyu-Bong Kim; Suhkmann Kim; Taesung Park; Oran Kwon

Various statistical approaches can be applied to integrate traditional and omics biomarkers, allowing the discovery of prognostic markers to classify subjects into poor and good prognosis groups in terms of responses to nutritional interventions. Here, we performed a prototype study to identify metabolites that predict responses to an intervention against oxidative stress and inflammation, using a data set from a randomized controlled trial evaluating Korean black raspberry (KBR) in sedentary overweight/obese subjects. First, a linear mixed-effects model analysis with multiple testing correction showed that four-week consumption of KBR significantly changed oxidized glutathione (GSSG, q = 0.027) level, the ratio of reduced glutathione (GSH) to GSSG (q = 0.039) in erythrocytes, malondialdehyde (MDA, q = 0.006) and interleukin-6 (q = 0.006) levels in plasma, and seventeen NMR metabolites in urine compared with those in the placebo group. A subsequent generalized linear mixed model analysis showed linear correlations between baseline urinary glycine and N-phenylacetylglycine (PAG) and changes in the GSH:GSSG ratio (p = 0.008 and 0.004) as well as between baseline urinary adenine and changes in MDA (p = 0.018). Then, receiver operating characteristic analysis revealed that a two-metabolite set (glycine and PAG) had the strongest prognostic relevance for future interventions against oxidative stress (the area under the curve (AUC) = 0.778). Leave-one-out cross-validation confirmed the accuracy of prediction (AUC = 0.683). The current findings suggest that a higher level of this two-metabolite set at baseline is useful for predicting responders to dietary interventions in subjects with oxidative stress and inflammation, contributing to the emergence of personalized nutrition.


Journal of Toxicology and Environmental Health | 2018

Serum and urine toxicometabolomics following gentamicin-induced nephrotoxicity in male Sprague-Dawley rats

Sung Ha Ryu; Ji Won Kim; Dahye Yoon; Suhkmann Kim; Kyu-Bong Kim

ABSTRACT Gentamicin (GM) is an aminoglycoside antibiotic used in treatment of various types of bacterial infections, but the major adverse effect is drug-induced nephrotoxicity. This study aimed to determine biomarkers that might predict nephrotoxicity initiated by GM using serum or urinary proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) spectral data in male Sprague-Dawley rats. GM (0, 30, or 300 mg/kg/d) was intraperitoneally administered for 3 consecutive days. Animals were sacrificed 2 d (D2) or 8 d (D8) after last administration of GM in order to perform analysis of serum biochemistries and histopathologic examination. Urine samples were collected every 24 h from prior to treatment until sacrifice. Serum and urinary 1H NMR spectral data revealed apparent differential clustering between control and GM-treated groups as evidenced by principal component analysis (PCA) and orthogonal projections to latent structure-discriminant analysis (OPLS-DA) in global and targeted profiling. The concentrations of endogenous serum metabolites including 3-hydroxybutyrate, alanine, citrate, creatine, glucose, and glycine were increased significantly on D2 or D8. Urinary levels of glucose, glycine, and succinate were significantly elevated on D2 or D8, whereas the concentration of hippurate was significantly decreased on D2 and D8. Correlation of serum and urinary 1H NMR OPLS-DA with serum biochemistry and renal histopathologic changes suggests that 1H NMR urinalysis may be used to reliably predict or screen for GM-induced nephrotoxicity. In contrast, Western blot analysis of kidney injury molecule-1 (KIM-1) demonstrated that protein expression was not markedly altered indicating this biomarker was not sensitive to detect GM-mediated renal damage. Data suggest that these altered metabolites might serve as specific and sensitive biomarkers for GM-mediated renal damage.


Toxicological research | 2013

Mutagenic Assessment of Olmesartan Cilexetil by Bacterial Mutation Assay

Ji Won Kim; Ilyoung Ahn; Sung Ha Ryu; Hong Ryeol Jeon; Bong Sang Lee; Kyu-Bong Kim

Hypertension is a serious health problem due to high frequency and concomitant other diseases including cardiovascular and renal dysfunction. Olmesartan cilexetil is a new antihypertensive drug associated with angiotensin II receptor antagonist. This study was conducted to evaluate the mutagenicity of olmesartan cilexetil by bacterial reverse mutation test using Salmonella typhimurium (TA100, TA1535, TA98, and TA1537) and Escherichia coli (WP2 uvrA). At the concentrations of 0, 62, 185, 556, 1667, and 5000 μg/ plate, olmesartan cilexetil was negative in both Salmonella typhimurium and Escherichia coli regardless of presence or absence of metabolic activation system (S9 mix). These results demonstrate that olmesartan cilexetil does not induce bacterial reverse mutation.


Journal of Functional Foods | 2016

Metabolic profiling of antioxidant supplement with phytochemicals using plasma 1H NMR-based metabolomics in humans

Hyun-Jun Jang; Ji Won Kim; Sung Ha Ryu; You Jin Kim; Oran Kwon; Siwon Kim; Suhkmann Kim; Kyu-Bong Kim


환경독성보건학회 심포지엄 및 학술대회 | 2016

Metabolic analysis of antioxidant phytochemicals using ¹H NMR-based metabolomics in human plasma

Hyun-Jun Jang; JiWon Kim; Sung Ha Ryu; You Jin Kim; Oran Kwon; Siwon Kim; Suhkmann Kim; Kyu-Bong Kim


한국실험동물학회 학술발표대회 논문집 | 2013

Toxicometabolomics Study for Prediction og Hepatotoxicity by Trogitazone IN Rats

Ji Won Kim; Sung Ha Ryu; Siwon Kim; Suhkmann Kim; Kyu-Bong Kim

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Suhkmann Kim

Pusan National University

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Siwon Kim

Pusan National University

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Oran Kwon

Ewha Womans University

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You Jin Kim

Ewha Womans University

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Sun Dong Yoo

Sungkyunkwan University

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Tae Hwan Kim

Sungkyunkwan University

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