Yoojeong Kim
Worcester Polytechnic Institute
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Featured researches published by Yoojeong Kim.
In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology – Plant | 2002
Yoojeong Kim; Barbara E. Wyslouzil; Pamela J. Weathers
SummaryIn vitro cultures are being considered as an alternative to agricultural processes for producing valuable secondary metabolites. Most efforts that use differentiated cultures instead of cell suspension cultures have focused on transformed (hairy) roots. Bioreactors used to culture hairy roots can be roughly divided into three types: liquid-phase, gas-phase, or hybrid reactors that are a combination of both. The growth and productivity of hairy root cultures are reviewed with an emphasis on successful bioreactors and important culture considerations. The latter include strain selection, production of product in relation to growth phase, media composition, the gas regime, use of elicitors, the role of light, and apparent product loss. Together with genetic engineering and process optimization, proper reactor design plays a key role in the development of successful large scale production of secondary metabolites from plant cultures.
Plant Cell Reports | 2004
Pamela J. Weathers; L. DeJesus-Gonzalez; Yoojeong Kim; Frédéric F. Souret; Melissa J. Towler
Transformed root cultures of Artemisia annua grown in autoclaved medium show large variations in biomass and artemisinin production regardless of the culture conditions or clonal type. However, using filter-sterilized sugars singly or in combination while holding the carbon level in the medium constant resulted in an unexpected variability in biomass production and artemisinin yield. Autoclaving results in variable hydrolysis of sucrose in the culture medium. Subsequent experiments using combinations of filter-sterilized sugars at a constant total carbon level in the medium showed a stimulation of artemisinin production by glucose. Growth in sucrose was equivalent to growth in fructose and significantly better than in glucose. These results suggest that sugars may be affecting terpenoid metabolism not only as carbon sources, but also as signal molecules.
In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology – Plant | 1999
Pamela J. Weathers; Barbara E. Wyslouzil; Kristin K. Wobbe; Yoojeong Kim; E. Yigit
SummaryThe efficient exchange of gases between roots and their environment is one of the biggest challenges in bioreactor design for transformed root cultures. Gas-phase reactors can alleviate this problem as well as provide a new tool for studying the biological response of roots and other differentiated tissues to changes in the gas phase composition. In our comparison of liquid- and gas-phase reactors, roots grown in liquid (shake flasks or bubble column reactors) are shown to be under hypoxic stress. Roots grown in a gas-phase reactor (nutrient mist), while not hypoxic, produced 50% less biomass. These results suggest that the response of the tissues to gas phase composition are complex and need further study.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2005
Murad Gharibeh; Yoojeong Kim; Uta M. Dieregsweiler; Barbara E. Wyslouzil; David Ghosh; R. Strey
We have measured the nucleation conditions of n-propanol, n-butanol, and n-pentanol in a supersonic Laval nozzle, and estimated that the maximum nucleation rate J is 5 x 10(16) cm(-3) s(-1) with an uncertainty factor of 2. Plotting the vapor pressures p(J(max) ) and temperatures T(J(max) ) corresponding to the maximum nucleation rate as ln(p) versus 1T, produces a series of well separated straight lines. When these values are scaled by their respective critical parameters, p(c) and T(c), the data lie close to a single straight line. Comparing the experimental data to the predictions of classical nucleation theory reveals much higher experimental rates, and the deviation increases with increasing alcohol chain length and decreasing temperature. A scaling analysis in terms of Hales scaled nucleation model [Phys. Rev. A 33, 4156 (1986); Metall. Trans. A 23, 1863 (1992)], clearly shows that our data are consistent with experimental nucleation rates measured using other devices that have characteristic rates many orders of magnitude lower.
Aerosol Science and Technology | 2016
Yoojeong Kim; Glyn Wellum; Kerrianne Mello; Kenneth E. Strawhecker; Richard Thoms; Arjan Giaya; Barbara E. Wyslouzil
ABSTRACT Wind tunnel experiments examined the coupled effects of relative humidity (RH) and surface and particle properties on aerodynamically induced resuspension. Hydrophilic glass spheres and hydrophobic polyethylene spheres ∼20 μm in diameter, with nanoscale surface features, were resuspended from hydrophilic glass, hydrophobic chemical agent resistant coating (CARC), and gold surfaces. Roughness of the glass and gold surfaces was on the nanoscale, whereas CARC surfaces had microscale roughness. Different particle–surface combinations yielded van der Waals interactions that varied by a factor of 4, but these differences had a relatively minor effect on resuspension. Wind tunnel RH was varied between 7% and 78%. Overall, RH affected the resuspension of hydrophilic particles on hydrophilic surfaces most strongly and that of hydrophobic particles on hydrophobic surfaces the least. For each particle–surface combination there was a threshold RH value below which resuspension rates were essentially constant and in good agreement with a dimensionless model of particle resuspension. Copyright
Applied Biochemistry and Biotechnology | 2014
Harris Liu; Yoojeong Kim; Kerrianne Mello; John Lovaasen; Apoorva Shah; Norman Rice; Jacqueline H. Yim; Daphne D. Pappas; Alexander M. Klibanov
The currently used multistep chemical synthesis for making surfaces antimicrobial by attaching to them hydrophobic polycations is replaced herein by an aerosol-assisted plasma deposition procedure. To this end, N,N-hexyl,methyl-PEI (HMPEI) is directly plasma-coated onto a glass surface. The resultant immobilized HMPEI coating has been thoroughly characterized and shown to be robust, bactericidal against Escherichia coli, and virucidal against human influenza virus.
Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2003
Frédéric F. Souret; Yoojeong Kim; Barbara E. Wyslouzil; Kristin K. Wobbe; Pamela J. Weathers
Plant Cell Reports | 2001
Yoojeong Kim; Barbara E. Wyslouzil; Pamela J. Weathers
Archive | 2002
Yoojeong Kim; Barbara E. Wyslouzil; Pamela J. Weathers
Building and Environment | 2010
Yoojeong Kim; Ashok Gidwani; Barbara E. Wyslouzil; Chang W. Sohn