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Dive into the research topics where Yoon Jong Choi is active.

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Featured researches published by Yoon Jong Choi.


Cancer Cell | 2011

A Systematic Screen for CDK4/6 Substrates Links FOXM1 Phosphorylation to Senescence Suppression in Cancer Cells

Lars Anders; Nan Ke; Per Hydbring; Yoon Jong Choi; Hans R. Widlund; Joel M. Chick; Huili Zhai; Marc Vidal; Stephen Gygi; Pascal Braun; Piotr Sicinski

Cyclin D-dependent kinases (CDK4 and CDK6) are positive regulators of cell cycle entry and they are overactive in the majority of human cancers. However, it is currently not completely understood by which cellular mechanisms CDK4/6 promote tumorigenesis, largely due to the limited number of identified substrates. Here we performed a systematic screen for substrates of cyclin D1-CDK4 and cyclin D3-CDK6. We identified the Forkhead Box M1 (FOXM1) transcription factor as a common critical phosphorylation target. CDK4/6 stabilize and activate FOXM1, thereby maintain expression of G1/S phase genes, suppress the levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS), and protect cancer cells from senescence. Melanoma cells, unlike melanocytes, are highly reliant on CDK4/6-mediated senescence suppression, which makes them particularly susceptible to CDK4/6 inhibition.


Cell | 2009

Cyclin A Is Redundant in Fibroblasts but Essential in Hematopoietic and Embryonic Stem Cells

Ilona Kalaszczynska; Yan Geng; Tadafumi Iino; Shin-ichi Mizuno; Yoon Jong Choi; Ilona Kondratiuk; Daniel P. Silver; Debra J. Wolgemuth; Koichi Akashi; Piotr Sicinski

Cyclins are regulatory subunits of cyclin-dependent kinases. Cyclin A, the first cyclin ever cloned, is thought to be an essential component of the cell-cycle engine. Mammalian cells encode two A-type cyclins, testis-specific cyclin A1 and ubiquitously expressed cyclin A2. Here, we tested the requirement for cyclin A function using conditional knockout mice lacking both A-type cyclins. We found that acute ablation of cyclin A in fibroblasts did not affect cell proliferation, but led to prolonged expression of another cyclin, cyclin E, across the cell cycle. However, combined ablation of all A- and E-type cyclins extinguished cell division. In contrast, cyclin A function was essential for cell-cycle progression of hematopoietic and embryonic stem cells. Expression of cyclin A is particularly high in these compartments, which might render stem cells dependent on cyclin A, whereas in fibroblasts cyclins A and E play redundant roles in cell proliferation.


Nature | 2014

Cyclin D1–Cdk4 controls glucose metabolism independently of cell cycle progression

Yoonjin Lee; John E. Dominy; Yoon Jong Choi; Michael J. Jurczak; Nicola Tolliday; Joao Paulo Camporez; Helen Chim; Ji Hong Lim; Hai Bin Ruan; Xiaoyong Yang; Francisca Vazquez; Piotr Sicinski; Gerald I. Shulman; Pere Puigserver

Insulin constitutes a principal evolutionarily conserved hormonal axis for maintaining glucose homeostasis; dysregulation of this axis causes diabetes. PGC-1α (peroxisome-proliferator-activated receptor-γ coactivator-1α) links insulin signalling to the expression of glucose and lipid metabolic genes. The histone acetyltransferase GCN5 (general control non-repressed protein 5) acetylates PGC-1α and suppresses its transcriptional activity, whereas sirtuin 1 deacetylates and activates PGC-1α. Although insulin is a mitogenic signal in proliferative cells, whether components of the cell cycle machinery contribute to its metabolic action is poorly understood. Here we report that in mice insulin activates cyclin D1–cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (Cdk4), which, in turn, increases GCN5 acetyltransferase activity and suppresses hepatic glucose production independently of cell cycle progression. Through a cell-based high-throughput chemical screen, we identify a Cdk4 inhibitor that potently decreases PGC-1α acetylation. Insulin/GSK-3β (glycogen synthase kinase 3-beta) signalling induces cyclin D1 protein stability by sequestering cyclin D1 in the nucleus. In parallel, dietary amino acids increase hepatic cyclin D1 messenger RNA transcripts. Activated cyclin D1–Cdk4 kinase phosphorylates and activates GCN5, which then acetylates and inhibits PGC-1α activity on gluconeogenic genes. Loss of hepatic cyclin D1 results in increased gluconeogenesis and hyperglycaemia. In diabetic models, cyclin D1–Cdk4 is chronically elevated and refractory to fasting/feeding transitions; nevertheless further activation of this kinase normalizes glycaemia. Our findings show that insulin uses components of the cell cycle machinery in post-mitotic cells to control glucose homeostasis independently of cell division.


eLife | 2014

Cyclin D activates the Rb tumor suppressor by mono-phosphorylation

Anil M Narasimha; Manuel Kaulich; Gary S Shapiro; Yoon Jong Choi; Piotr Sicinski; Steven F. Dowdy

The widely accepted model of G1 cell cycle progression proposes that cyclin D:Cdk4/6 inactivates the Rb tumor suppressor during early G1 phase by progressive multi-phosphorylation, termed hypo-phosphorylation, to release E2F transcription factors. However, this model remains unproven biochemically and the biologically active form(s) of Rb remains unknown. In this study, we find that Rb is exclusively mono-phosphorylated in early G1 phase by cyclin D:Cdk4/6. Mono-phosphorylated Rb is composed of 14 independent isoforms that are all targeted by the E1a oncoprotein, but show preferential E2F binding patterns. At the late G1 Restriction Point, cyclin E:Cdk2 inactivates Rb by quantum hyper-phosphorylation. Cells undergoing a DNA damage response activate cyclin D:Cdk4/6 to generate mono-phosphorylated Rb that regulates global transcription, whereas cells undergoing differentiation utilize un-phosphorylated Rb. These observations fundamentally change our understanding of G1 cell cycle progression and show that mono-phosphorylated Rb, generated by cyclin D:Cdk4/6, is the only Rb isoform in early G1 phase. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.02872.001


Neural Development | 2009

Cyclin D1 fine-tunes the neurogenic output of embryonic retinal progenitor cells

Gaurav Das; Yoon Jong Choi; Piotr Sicinski; Edward M. Levine

BackgroundMaintaining the correct balance of proliferation versus differentiation in retinal progenitor cells (RPCs) is essential for proper development of the retina. The cell cycle regulator cyclin D1 is expressed in RPCs, and mice with a targeted null allele at the cyclin D1 locus (Ccnd1-/-) have microphthalmia and hypocellular retinas, the latter phenotype attributed to reduced RPC proliferation and increased photoreceptor cell death during the postnatal period. How cyclin D1 influences RPC behavior, especially during the embryonic period, is unclear.ResultsIn this study, we show that embryonic RPCs lacking cyclin D1 progress through the cell cycle at a slower rate and exit the cell cycle at a faster rate. Consistent with enhanced cell cycle exit, the relative proportions of cell types born in the embryonic period, such as retinal ganglion cells and photoreceptor cells, are increased. Unexpectedly, cyclin D1 deficiency decreases the proportions of other early born retinal neurons, namely horizontal cells and specific amacrine cell types. We also found that the laminar positioning of horizontal cells and other cell types is altered in the absence of cyclin D1. Genetically replacing cyclin D1 with cyclin D2 is not efficient at correcting the phenotypes due to the cyclin D1 deficiency, which suggests the D-cyclins are not fully redundant. Replacement with cyclin E or inactivation of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27Kip1 restores the balance of RPCs and retinal cell types to more normal distributions, which suggests that regulation of the retinoblastoma pathway is an important function for cyclin D1 during embryonic retinal development.ConclusionOur findings show that cyclin D1 has important roles in RPC cell cycle regulation and retinal histogenesis. The reduction in the RPC population due to a longer cell cycle time and to an enhanced rate of cell cycle exit are likely to be the primary factors driving retinal hypocellularity and altered output of precursor populations in the embryonic Ccnd1-/- retina.


Immunity | 2012

β-Selection-Induced Proliferation Is Required for αβ T Cell Differentiation

Taras Kreslavsky; Michael Gleimer; Masaki Miyazaki; Yoon Jong Choi; Etienne Gagnon; Cornelis Murre; Piotr Sicinski; Harald von Boehmer

Proliferation and differentiation are tightly coordinated to produce an appropriate number of differentiated cells and often exhibit an antagonistic relationship. Developing T cells, which arise in the thymus from a minute number of bone-marrow-derived progenitors, undergo a major expansion upon pre-T cell receptor (TCR) expression. The burst of proliferation coincides with differentiation toward the αβ T cell lineage-but the two processes were previously thought to be independent from one another, although both were driven by signaling from pre-TCR and Notch receptors. Here we report that proliferation at this step was not only absolutely required for differentiation but also that its ectopic activation was sufficient to substantially rescue differentiation in the absence of Notch signaling. Consistently, pharmacological inhibition of the cell cycle machinery also blocked differentiation in vivo. Thus the proliferation step is strictly required prior to differentiation of immature thymocytes.


Molecular Cancer Research | 2014

NF-κB activation-induced anti-apoptosis renders HER2-positive cells drug resistant and accelerates tumor growth

Shannon T. Bailey; Penelope Miron; Yoon Jong Choi; Bose S. Kochupurakkal; Gautam Maulik; Scott J. Rodig; Ruiyang Tian; Kathleen M. Foley; Teresa V. Bowman; Alexander Miron; Myles Brown; J. Dirk Iglehart; Debajit K. Biswas

Breast cancers with HER2 overexpression are sensitive to drugs targeting the receptor or its kinase activity. HER2-targeting drugs are initially effective against HER2-positive breast cancer, but resistance inevitably occurs. We previously found that NF-κB is hyperactivated in a subset of HER2-positive breast cancer cells and tissue specimens. In this study, we report that constitutively active NF-κB rendered HER2-positive cancer cells resistant to anti-HER2 drugs and cells selected for lapatinib resistance upregulated NF-κB. In both circumstances, cells were antiapoptotic and grew rapidly as xenografts. Lapatinib-resistant cells were refractory to HER2 and NF-κB inhibitors alone but were sensitive to their combination, suggesting a novel therapeutic strategy. A subset of NF-κB–responsive genes was overexpressed in HER2-positive and triple-negative breast cancers, and patients with this NF-κB signature had poor clinical outcome. Anti-HER2 drug resistance may be a consequence of NF-κB activation, and selection for resistance results in NF-κB activation, suggesting that this transcription factor is central to oncogenesis and drug resistance. Clinically, the combined targeting of HER2 and NF-κB suggests a potential treatment paradigm for patients who relapse after anti-HER2 therapy. Patients with these cancers may be treated by simultaneously suppressing HER2 signaling and NF-κB activation. Implications: The combination of an inhibitor of IκB kinase (IKK) inhibitor and anti-HER2 drugs may be a novel treatment strategy for drug-resistant human breast cancers. Mol Cancer Res; 12(3); 408–20. ©2013 AACR.


Cancer Cell | 2012

The requirement for cyclin D function in tumor maintenance.

Yoon Jong Choi; Xiaoyu Li; Per Hydbring; Takaomi Sanda; Joanna Stefano; Amanda L. Christie; Sabina Signoretti; A. Thomas Look; Andrew L. Kung; Harald von Boehmer; Piotr Sicinski


Developmental Cell | 2014

D-Cyclins Repress Apoptosis in Hematopoietic Cells by Controlling Death Receptor Fas and Its Ligand FasL

Yoon Jong Choi; Borja Saez; Lars Anders; Per Hydbring; Joanna Stefano; Nickolas A. Bacon; Colleen Cook; Ilona Kalaszczynska; Sabina Signoretti; Richard A. Young; David T. Scadden; Piotr Sicinski


Cancer Cell | 2017

Cell-Cycle-Targeting MicroRNAs as Therapeutic Tools against Refractory Cancers

Per Hydbring; Yinan Wang; Anne Fassl; Xiaoting Li; Veronica Matia; Tobias Otto; Yoon Jong Choi; Katharine E. Sweeney; Jan M. Suski; Hao Yin; Roman L. Bogorad; Shom Goel; Haluk Yuzugullu; Kevin J. Kauffman; Junghoon Yang; Chong Jin; Yingxiang Li; Davide Floris; Richard Swanson; Kimmie Ng; Ewa Sicinska; Lars Anders; Jean Zhao; Kornelia Polyak; Daniel G. Anderson; Cheng Li; Piotr Sicinski

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Lars Anders

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Sabina Signoretti

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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