Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Won Jae Huh is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Won Jae Huh.


Gastroenterology | 2012

Tamoxifen Induces Rapid, Reversible Atrophy, and Metaplasia in Mouse Stomach

Won Jae Huh; Shradha S. Khurana; Jessica H. Geahlen; Kavita Kohli; Rachel A. Waller; Jason C. Mills

Tamoxifen, a selective estrogen receptor modulator, is widely used in research and clinically in patients. We find that treatment of normal mice with a single ≥3 mg/20 g body weight dose of tamoxifen leads to apoptosis of >90% of all gastric parietal cells (PCs) and metaplasia of zymogenic chief cells within 3 days. Remarkably, gastric histology returns to nearly normal by 3 weeks. Tamoxifen toxicity occurs by oral and intraperitoneal administration, in both sexes, in multiple strains, and does not depend on estrogen, though acid secretion inhibition is partially protective. Thus, substantial gastric toxicity is a heretofore unappreciated tamoxifen side effect.


Developmental Biology | 2009

The gastric epithelial progenitor cell niche and differentiation of the zymogenic (chief) cell lineage

Andrew J. Bredemeyer; Jessica H. Geahlen; Victoria G. Weis; Won Jae Huh; Bernd H. Zinselmeyer; Subhashini Srivatsan; Mark J. Miller; Andrey S. Shaw; Jason C. Mills

In the mammalian gastrointestinal tract, the cell fate decisions that specify the development of multiple, diverse lineages are governed in large part by interactions of stem and early lineage progenitor cells with their microenvironment, or niche. Here, we show that the gastric parietal cell (PC) is a key cellular component of the previously undescribed niche for the gastric epithelial neck cell, the progenitor of the digestive enzyme secreting zymogenic (chief) cell (ZC). Genetic ablation of PCs led to failed patterning of the entire zymogenic lineage: progenitors showed premature expression of differentiated cell markers, and fully differentiated ZCs failed to develop. We developed a separate mouse model in which PCs localized not only to the progenitor niche, but also ectopically to the gastric unit base, which is normally occupied by terminally differentiated ZCs. Surprisingly, these mislocalized PCs did not maintain adjacent zymogenic lineage cells in the progenitor state, demonstrating that PCs, though necessary, are not sufficient to define the progenitor niche. We induced this PC mislocalization by knocking out the cytoskeleton-regulating gene Cd2ap in Mist1(-/-) mice, which led to aberrant E-cadherin localization in ZCs, irregular ZC-ZC junctions, and disruption of the ZC monolayer by PCs. Thus, the characteristic histology of the gastric unit, with PCs in the middle and ZCs in the base, may depend on establishment of an ordered adherens junction network in ZCs as they migrate into the base.


Gastroenterology | 2010

XBP1 Controls Maturation of Gastric Zymogenic Cells by Induction of MIST1 and Expansion of the Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum

Won Jae Huh; Emel Esen; Jessica H. Geahlen; Andrew J. Bredemeyer; Ann–Hwee Lee; Guanglu Shi; Stephen F. Konieczny; Laurie H. Glimcher; Jason C. Mills

BACKGROUND & AIMS The transition of gastric epithelial mucous neck cells (NCs) to digestive enzyme-secreting zymogenic cells (ZCs) involves an increase in rough endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and formation of many large secretory vesicles. The transcription factor MIST1 is required for granulogenesis of ZCs. The transcription factor XBP1 binds the Mist1 promoter and induces its expression in vitro and expands the ER in other cell types. We investigated whether XBP1 activates Mist1 to regulate ZC differentiation. METHODS Xbp1 was inducibly deleted in mice using a tamoxifen/Cre-loxP system; effects on ZC size and structure (ER and granule formation) and gastric differentiation were studied and quantified for up to 13 months after deletion using morphologic, immunofluorescence, quantitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, and immunoblot analyses. Interactions between XBP1 and the Mist1 promoter were studied by chromatin immunoprecipitation from mouse stomach and in XBP1-transfected gastric cell lines. RESULTS Tamoxifen-induced deletion of Xbp1 (Xbp1Δ) did not affect survival of ZCs but prevented formation of their structure. Xbp1Δ ZCs shrank 4-fold, compared with those of wild-type mice, with granulogenesis and cell shape abnormalities and disrupted rough ER. XBP1 was required and sufficient for transcriptional activation of MIST1. ZCs that developed in the absence of XBP1 induced ZC markers (intrinsic factor, pepsinogen C) but showed abnormal retention of progenitor NC markers. CONCLUSIONS XBP1 controls the transcriptional regulation of ZC structural development; it expands the lamellar rough ER and induces MIST1 expression to regulate formation of large granules. XBP1 is also required for loss of mucous NC markers as ZCs form.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2010

Inducible activation of Cre recombinase in adult mice causes gastric epithelial atrophy, metaplasia, and regenerative changes in the absence of “floxed” alleles

Won Jae Huh; Indira U. Mysorekar; Jason C. Mills

The epithelium of the mammalian gastric body comprises multiple cell types replenished by a single stem cell. The adult conformation of cell lineages occurs well after birth; hence, study of genes regulating stem cell activity is facilitated by inducible systems for gene deletion. However, there is a potential pitfall involving the commonly used inducible Cre recombinase system to delete genes: we report here that induction of Cre using standard doses of tamoxifen led to marked spasmolytic polypeptide-expressing metaplasia of the stomach within days and profound atrophy of the entire epithelium with foci of hyperplasia by 2 wk even in the absence of loxP-flanked alleles. Cre induction caused genotoxicity with TdT-mediated dUTP nick-end labeling (TUNEL)-positive apoptosis (TUNEL-positive cells) and increased levels of DNA damage markers (gammaH2AX, p53, DDIT3, GADD45A). Although Cre was expressed globally by use of a chicken actin promoter, the effects were almost entirely stomach specific. Despite severe injury, a subset of mice showed near complete healing of the gastric mucosa 11-12 wk after Cre induction, suggesting substantial gastric regenerative capacity. Finally, we show that nongenotoxic doses of tamoxifen could be used to specifically delete loxP-flanked Bmpr1a, the receptor for bone morphogenetic protein 2, 4, and 7, causing antral polyps and marked antral-pyloric hyperplasia, consistent with previous reports on Bmpr1a. Together, the results show dose-dependent, potentially reversible sensitivity of the gastric mucosa to Cre genotoxicity. Thus we propose that tamoxifen induction of Cre could be used to induce genotoxic injury to study the regenerative capacity of the gastric epithelial stem cell.


Physiological Genomics | 2009

How form follows functional genomics: gene expression profiling gastric epithelial cells with a particular discourse on the parietal cell

Benjamin J. Capoccia; Won Jae Huh; Jason C. Mills

The cellular composition and morphology of the stomach epithelium have been described in detail; however, the molecular mechanisms that regulate the differentiation of the various cell lineages as well as the function of mature gastric cells are far less clear. Recently, dissection of the molecular anatomy of the stomach has been boosted by the advent of functional genomics, which allows investigators to determine patterns of gene expression across virtually the entire cellular transcriptome. In this review, we discuss the impact of functional genomic studies on the understanding of gastric epithelial physiology. We show how functional genomic studies have uncovered genes that are useful as new cell lineage-specific markers of differentiation and provide new insights into cell physiology. For example, vascular endothelial growth factor B (Vegfb) has been identified as a parietal cell-specific marker that may allow parietal cells to regulate the mucosal vascular network. We also discuss how functional genomics has identified aberrantly expressed genes in disease states. Human epididymis 4 (HE4), for example, was recently identified as a metaplasia-induced gene product in mice based on microarray analysis. Finally, we will examine how analysis of higher-order patterns of gene expression can go beyond simply identifying individual genes to show how cells work as integrated systems. Specifically, we show how application of a Gene Ontology (GO) analysis of gene expression patterns from multiple tissues identifies the gastric parietal cell as an outlier, unlike other differentiated cell lineages in the stomach or elsewhere in the body.


Physiological Genomics | 2013

Evolution of the human gastrokine locus and confounding factors regarding the pseudogenicity of GKN3

Jessica H. Geahlen; Carlo Lapid; Kaisa Thorell; Igor Nikolskiy; Won Jae Huh; Edward L. Oates; Jochen K. Lennerz; Xiaolin Tian; Victoria G. Weis; Shradha S. Khurana; Samuel Lundin; Alan R. Templeton; Jason C. Mills

In a screen for genes expressed specifically in gastric mucous neck cells, we identified GKN3, the recently discovered third member of the gastrokine family. We present confirmatory mouse data and novel porcine data showing that mouse GKN3 expression is confined to mucous cells of the corpus neck and antrum base and is prominently expressed in metaplastic lesions. GKN3 was proposed originally to be expressed in some human populations and a pseudogene in others. To investigate that hypothesis, we studied human GKN3 evolution in the context of its paralogous genomic neighbors, GKN1 and GKN2. Haplotype analysis revealed that GKN3 mimics GKN2 in patterns of exonic SNP allocation, whereas GKN1 appeared to be more stringently selected. GKN3 showed signatures of both directional selection and population based selective sweeps in humans. One such selective sweep includes SNP rs10187256, originally identified as an ancestral tryptophan to premature STOP codon mutation. The derived (nonancestral) allele went to fixation in Asia. We show that another SNP, rs75578132, identified 5 bp downstream of rs10187256, exhibits a second selective sweep in almost all Europeans, some Latinos, and some Africans, possibly resulting from a reintroduction of European genes during African colonization. Finally, we identify a mutation that would destroy the splice donor site in the putative exon3-intron3 boundary, which occurs in all human genomes examined to date. Our results highlight a stomach-specific human genetic locus, which has undergone various selective sweeps across European, Asian, and African populations and thus reflects geographic and ethnic patterns in genome evolution.


American Journal of Pathology | 2010

The transcription factor MIST1 is a novel human gastric chief cell marker whose expression is lost in metaplasia, dysplasia, and carcinoma.

Jochen K. Lennerz; Seok-Hyung Kim; Edward L. Oates; Won Jae Huh; Jason M. Doherty; Xiaolin Tian; Andrew J. Bredemeyer; James R. Goldenring; Gregory Y. Lauwers; Young-Kee Shin; Jason C. Mills


Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2006

Location, allocation, relocation: isolating adult tissue stem cells in three dimensions

Won Jae Huh; Xiaoou O. Pan; Indira U. Mysorekar; Jason C. Mills


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 2014

Chronic Tamoxifen Use Is Associated with a Decreased Risk of Intestinal Metaplasia in Human Gastric Epithelium

Chang Mo Moon; Seok Hyung Kim; Sang Kil Lee; Jiyeon Hyeon; Ja Seung Koo; Sangheun Lee; Jean S. Wang; Won Jae Huh; Shradha S. Khurana; Jason C. Mills


Gastroenterology | 2018

Su2036 - TNKS2 Promotes WNT/β-Catenin Signaling through Parylation of NKD2 in Colon Cancer Cells

Nicholas O. Markham; William H. Fry; Zheng Cao; Won Jae Huh; Robert J. Coffey

Collaboration


Dive into the Won Jae Huh's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jason C. Mills

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrew J. Bredemeyer

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jessica H. Geahlen

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert J. Coffey

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Indira U. Mysorekar

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Shradha S. Khurana

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Benjamin J. Capoccia

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Edward L. Oates

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Emel Esen

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge