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Featured researches published by Yoo-Jin Shin.


Journal of Neuroimmunology | 2010

Induction of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-3 mRNA in glial cells following focal cerebral ischemia in rats

Yoo-Jin Shin; Jeong-Sun Choi; Jae-Youn Choi; Yun Hou; Jung-Ho Cha; Myung-Hoon Chun; Mun-Yong Lee

To identify whether vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR)-3, a receptor for VEGF-C and VEGF-D, is involved in pathophysiology of stroke, we investigated the spatiotemporal regulation of VEGFR-3 mRNA after transient focal cerebral ischemia. Most of the increase in VEGFR-3 expression in the ischemic core could be attributed to brain macrophages, whereas VEGFR-3 in the peri-infarct penumbra region was predominantly expressed in reactive astrocytes. A subpopulation of VEGFR-3-expressing brain macrophages was positive for NG2 proteoglycan and showed proliferative activity. In addition, in vitro model of stroke revealed no significant induction of VEGFR-3 in activated microglial cells, indicating that infiltrating exogenous macrophages expressed VEGFR-3 after focal ischemia. These data suggest that VEGFR-3 may be involved in the glial reaction and possibly in the recruitment of monocytic macrophages during ischemic insults.


Brain Research | 2008

Differential regulation of osteopontin receptors, CD44 and the αv and β3 integrin subunits, in the rat hippocampus following transient forebrain ischemia

Wha-Sun Kang; Jeong-Sun Choi; Yoo-Jin Shin; Ha-Young Kim; Jung-Ho Cha; Ji-Yeon Lee; Myung-Hoon Chun; Mun-Yong Lee

We have examined the spatiotemporal regulation of CD44 and the alpha(v)beta(3) integrin subunits, which have been identified as receptors for osteopontin (OPN), in the rat hippocampus following transient forebrain ischemia. Immunoreactivity for CD44 and the integrin subunits, alpha(v) and beta(3), showed characteristic time- and cell-dependent patterns in the ischemic hippocampus. CD44 immunoreactivity was induced at day 1 after reperfusion, reached a peak at day 3, and returned to basal levels by day 7. CD44 was induced in a subset of activated microglial cells within sites of intense neural damage, and the concomitant induction of OPN and CD44 was observed in the same cells in the ischemic hippocampus. In contrast, increased immunoreactivity for alpha(v) and beta(3), which shared overlapping expression patterns in the ischemic hippocampus, occurred in the majority of reactive astrocytes and only a few microglia at day 3 after reperfusion, and was sustained for more than 2 weeks. Immunoreactivity for both integrin subunits colocalized with OPN immunoreactivity in reactive astrocytes, and OPN immunoreactivity was also diffusely localized over the extracellular matrix around the reactive astrocytes. These data indicated that the rapid and transient induction of CD44 and OPN occurred in activated microglia/macrophages, whereas the long-lasting induction of alpha(v) and beta(3) integrin subunits and OPN occurred in reactive astrocytes, suggesting that the multifunctional role of OPN in the ischemic brain may be attributed, in part, to a time- and cell-dependent interaction with CD44 or integrin alpha(v)beta(3).


Neuroscience Letters | 2010

Enhanced expression of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-3 in the subventricular zone of stroke-lesioned rats ☆

Yoo-Jin Shin; Jeong-Sun Choi; Jae-Youn Choi; Jung-Ho Cha; Myung-Hoon Chun; Mun-Yong Lee

Vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR)-3, a receptor for VEGF-C and VEGF-D, has recently been proposed to be involved in adult hippocampal neurogenesis in response to cerebral ischemia. To identify whether VEGFR-3 is involved in poststroke neurogenesis, we investigated the temporal regulation of VEGFR-3 mRNA expression in the subventricular zone (SVZ) of rats with transient focal cerebral ischemia by in situ hybridization analysis, and identified the phenotypes of cells expressing VEGFR-3 by double- and triple-labeling techniques. In sham-operated rats, hybridization signals for VEGFR-3 mRNA were evident at a weaker intensity in the SVZ of the lateral ventricle. VEGFR-3 was transiently increased in the dorsolateral SVZ of the infarcted hemisphere on days 3-7 after reperfusion. Almost all VEGFR-3-expressing cells in the ipsilateral SVZ were colabeled with glial fibrillary acidic protein and the neural progenitor marker nestin, and were highly proliferative. In addition, a subset of VEGFR-3-labeled cells in the ipsilateral SVZ expressed the immature neuronal marker, polysialic acid-neural cell adhesion molecule. These data indicate that VEGFR-3 is upregulated in SVZ astrocytes and immature neurons after focal ischemia, suggesting that VEGFR-3 might mediate the adult neurogenesis after ischemic stroke.


Glia | 2011

Osteopontin: correlation with phagocytosis by brain macrophages in a rat model of stroke.

Yoo-Jin Shin; Hong Lim Kim; Jeong-Sun Choi; Jae-Youn Choi; Jung-Ho Cha; Mun-Yong Lee

Osteopontin (OPN) is an adhesive glycoprotein linked to a variety of pathophysiological processes. We investigated whether OPN might act as an opsonin in the diseased brain by studying the postischemic expression and localization of OPN mRNA and protein in a rat model of ischemic stroke. In addition, we characterized the subcellular localization of OPN protein in the ischemic brain core. Induction of OPN mRNA occurred in activated microglia/macrophages in the ischemic core on days 3–7 after reperfusion and this was sustained up to day 28, at least. OPN protein was synthesized and secreted by brain macrophages, which first surrounded damaged striatal white matter tracts and then infiltrated into them. Punctate OPN‐immunoreactive profiles were scattered throughout the infarction core except in white matter bundles. Electron microscopy showed the localization of OPN protein along the membranes lining what appeared to be the debris of dead neurons. These were located in the extracellular space and within the cytoplasm of brain macrophages, indicating that the OPN protein accumulated selectively on the surface of dead cells, most of which were phagocytosed subsequently by brain macrophages. However, no significant induction of OPN occurred in degenerating striatal white matter tracts or in brain macrophage‐engulfed axonic or myelin debris. These data suggest that OPN secreted by brain macrophages in this rat model of stroke might be involved in the phagocytosis of fragmented cell debris and possibly not in the phagocytosis of axonic or myelin debris.


Neurochemical Research | 2010

Enhanced Expression of the Sweet Taste Receptors and Alpha-gustducin in Reactive Astrocytes of the Rat Hippocampus Following Ischemic Injury

Yoo-Jin Shin; Joo-Hee Park; Jeong-Sun Choi; Myung-Hoon Chun; Young Wha Moon; Mun-Yong Lee

The heterodimeric sweet taste receptors, T1R2 and T1R3, have recently been proposed to be associated with the brain glucose sensor. To identify whether sweet taste signaling is regulated in response to an ischemic injury inducing acute impairment of glucose metabolism, we investigated the spatiotemporal expression of the sweet taste receptors and their associated taste-specific G-protein α-gustducin in the rat hippocampus after ischemia. The expression profiles of both receptor subunits and α-gustducin shared overlapping expression patterns in sham-operated and ischemic hippocampi. Constitutive expression of both receptors and α-gustducin was localized in neurons of the pyramidal cell and granule cell layers, but their upregulation was detected in reactive astrocytes in ischemic hippocampi. Immunoblot analysis confirmed the immmunohistochemically determined temporal patterns of sweet-taste signaling proteins. These results suggest that the expression of sweet taste signaling proteins in astrocytes might be regulated in response to altered extracellular levels of glucose following an ischemic insult.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2010

Expression of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-3 mRNA in the rat developing forebrain and retina

Jeong-Sun Choi; Yoo-Jin Shin; Ji-Yeon Lee; Hou Yun; Jung-Ho Cha; Jae-Youn Choi; Myung-Hoon Chun; Mun-Yong Lee

Vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR)‐3, a receptor for VEGF‐C and VEGF‐D, is expressed in neural progenitor cells, but there has been no comprehensive study of its distribution in the developing brain. Here, the temporal and cell‐specific expression of VEGFR‐3 mRNA was studied in the developing rat forebrain and eye. Expression appeared along the ventricular and subventricular zones of the lateral and third ventricles showing ongoing neurogenesis as early as embryonic day 13 but was progressively down‐regulated during development and remained in the subventricular zone and rostral migratory stream of the adult forebrain. VEGFR‐3 expression was also detectable in some differentiating and postmitotic neurons in the developing cerebral cortex, including Cajal‐Retzius cells, cortical plate neurons, and subplate neurons. Expression in the subplate increased significantly during the early postnatal period but was absent by postnatal day 14. It was also highly expressed in nonneural tissues of the eye during development, including the retinal pigment epithelium, the retinal ciliary margin, and the lens, but persisted in a subset of cells in the pigmented ciliary epithelium of the adult eye. In contrast, there was weak or undetectable expression in the early neural retina, but a subset of retinal neurons in the postnatal and mature retina showed intense signals. These unique spatiotemporal mRNA expression patterns suggest that VEGFR‐3 might mediate the regulation of both neurogenesis and adult neuronal function in the rat forebrain and eye. J. Comp. Neurol. 518:1064–1081, 2010.


Anatomy & Cell Biology | 2013

Characterization of nestin expression in astrocytes in the rat hippocampal CA1 region following transient forebrain ischemia.

Jeong Min Cho; Yoo-Jin Shin; Jang-Mi Park; Jin Kim; Mun-Yong Lee

Recent studies have suggested that nestin facilitates cellular structural remodeling in vasculature-associated cells in response to ischemic injury. The current study was designed to investigate the potential role of post-ischemic nestin expression in parenchymal astrocytes. With this aim, we characterized ischemia-induced nestin expression in the CA1 hippocampal region, an area that undergoes a delayed neuronal death, followed by a lack of neuronal generation after transient forebrain ischemia. Virtually all of the nestin-positive cells in the ischemic CA1 hippocampus were reactive astrocytes. However, induction of nestin expression did not correlate simply with astrogliosis, but rather showed characteristic time- and strata-dependent expression patterns. Nestin induction in astrocytes of the pyramidal cell layer was rapid and transient, while a long-lasting induction of nestin was observed in astrocytes located in the CA1 dendritic subfields, such as the stratum oriens and radiatum, until at least day 28 after ischemia. There was no detectable expression in the stratum lacunosum moleculare despite the evident astroglial reaction. Almost all of the nestin-positive cells also expressed a transcription factor for neural/glial progenitors, i.e., Sox-2 or Sox-9, and some cells were also positive for Ki-67. However, all of the nestin-positive astrocytes expressed the calcium-binding protein S100β, which is known to be expressed in a distinct, post-mitotic astrocyte population. Thus, our data indicate that in the ischemic CA1 hippocampus, nestin expression was induced in astroglia that were becoming reactive, but not in a progenitor/stem cell population, suggesting that nestin may allow for the structural remodeling of these cells in response to ischemic injury.


Journal of Neurotrauma | 2012

Overlapping Distribution of Osteopontin and Calcium in the Ischemic Core of Rat Brain after Transient Focal Ischemia

Yoo-Jin Shin; Hong Lim Kim; Jang-Mi Park; Jeong Min Cho; Chang-Yeon Kim; Ki-Ju Choi; Hee-Seok Kweon; Jungho Cha; Mun-Yong Lee

Osteopontin (OPN), an adhesive glycoprotein, has recently been proposed to act as an opsonin that facilitates phagocytosis of neuronal debris by macrophages in the ischemic brain. The present study was designed to elucidate the process whereby OPN binds to neuronal cell debris in a rat model of ischemic stroke. Significant co-localization of the OPN protein and calcium deposits in the ischemic core were observed by combining alizarin red staining and OPN immunohistochemistry. In addition, electron microscopy (EM) using the osmium/potassium dichromate method revealed that electron-dense precipitates, typical of calcium deposits, were localized mainly along the periphery of putative degenerating neurites. This topical pattern of calcium precipitates resembled the distribution of OPN as detected by immunogold-silver EM. Combining immunogold-silver EM and electron probe microanalysis further demonstrated that the OPN protein was localized at the periphery of cell debris or degenerating neurites, corresponding with locally higher concentrations of calcium and phosphorus, and that the relative magnitude of OPN accumulation was comparable to that of calcium and phosphorus. These data suggest that calcium precipitation provides a matrix for the binding of the OPN protein within the debris or degenerating neurites induced by ischemic injury. Therefore, OPN binding to calcium deposits may be involved in phagocytosis of such debris, and may participate in the regulation of ectopic calcification in the ischemic brain.


Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology | 2011

Expression of Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor-3 mRNA in the Developing Rat Cerebellum

Yun Hou; Jeong-Sun Choi; Yoo-Jin Shin; Jung-Ho Cha; Jae-Youn Choi; Myung-Hoon Chun; Mun-Yong Lee

Vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR)-3, a receptor for VEGF-C and VEGF-D, has recently been suggested to play an important role during neuronal development. To characterize its potential role in CNS ontogenesis, we investigated the spatiotemporal and cellular expression of VEGFR-3 in developing and mature rat cerebellum using in situ hybridization. VEGFR-3 expression appeared as early as E15, and was restricted to the ventricular zone of the cerebellar primordium, the germinative neuroepithelium, but was absent by E20. Instead, the expression area of VEGFR-3 in the cerebellum grew in parallel with cerebellar development. From E20 on, two populations of VEGFR-3-expressing cells can be clearly distinguished in the developing cerebellum: a population of differentiating and postmitotic neurons and the Bergmann glia. VEGFR-3 expression in neurons occurred during the period of neuronal differentiation, and increased with maturation. In particular, the expression of VEGFR-3 mRNA revealed different temporal patterns in different neuronal populations. Neurons generated early, Purkinje cells, and deep nuclear neurons expressed VEGFR-3 mRNA during late embryonic stages, whereas VEGFR-3 transcription in local interneurons appeared by P14 with weaker expression. In addition, Bergmann glia expressed VEGFR-3 throughout cerebellar maturation into adulthood. However, receptor expression was absent in the progenitors in the external granular layer and during further migration. The results of this study suggest that VEGFR-3 has even broader functions than previously thought, regulating both developmental processes and adult neuronal function in the cerebellum.


Journal of Chemical Neuroanatomy | 2011

Distribution of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor-3/Flt4 mRNA in adult rat central nervous system.

Yun Hou; Yoo-Jin Shin; Esther Jiwon Han; Jeong-Sun Choi; Jang-Mi Park; Jung-Ho Cha; Jae-Youn Choi; Mun-Yong Lee

Vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR)-3/Flt4 binds VEGF-C and VEGF-D with high affinity. It has been suggested to be involved in neurogenesis and adult neuronal function. However, little is known about the localization of VEGFR-3 in the adult central nervous system (CNS). The present study presents, to our knowledge, the first detailed mapping of VEGFR-3 mRNA expression in adult rat brain and spinal cord by using in situ hybridization and reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction analysis (RT-PCR). Varying VEGFR-3 expression intensity was detected in functionally diverse nuclei, with the highest levels in the mitral cells of the olfactory bulb, piriform cortex, anterodorsal thalamic nucleus, several nuclei of the hypothalamus, and the brainstem cranial nerve nuclei. VEGFR-3 mRNA was abundantly expressed in the ventral motor neurons of the spinal cord and in some circumventricular organs such as the median eminence and the area postrema. Moreover, the locus coeruleus and some of the nuclei of the reticular formation showed moderate-to-high hybridization signals. VEGFR-3 expression appeared to be localized mostly within neurons, but weak labeling was also found in some astrocytes. In particular, VEGFR-3 was highly expressed in ependymal cells of the ventral third ventricle and the median eminence, which were co-labeled with vimentin but not with glial fibrillary acidic protein, suggesting that these cells are tanycytes. RT-PCR analysis revealed similar levels of VEGFR-3 expression in all regions of the adult rat CNS. The specific but widespread distribution of VEGFR-3 mRNA in the adult rat CNS suggests that VEGFR-3 functions more broadly than expected, regulating adult neuronal function playing important roles in tanycyte function.

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Mun-Yong Lee

Catholic University of Korea

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Jeong-Sun Choi

Catholic University of Korea

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Jung-Ho Cha

Catholic University of Korea

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Myung-Hoon Chun

Catholic University of Korea

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Tae-Ryong Riew

Catholic University of Korea

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Jae-Youn Choi

Catholic University of Korea

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Joo-Hee Park

Catholic University of Korea

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Jang-Mi Park

Catholic University of Korea

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Ha-Jin Pak

Catholic University of Korea

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Jeong Min Cho

Catholic University of Korea

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