1.Inhibition of Smooth Muscle Cell Proliferation and Migration by a Talin Modulator Attenuates Neointimal Formation after Femoral Arterial Injury
I-Rang LIM ; Chungho KIM ; Jong-Wha JUNG ; Jong-Ho KIM ; Soon Jun HONG
Korean Circulation Journal 2020;50(7):613-624
Background and Objectives:
Vascular smooth muscle cell (SMC) proliferation and migration play a critical role in neointimal formation. Focal adhesion is involved in cell proliferation and migration, and talin is known to be a key regulator of these processes. We synthesized a new talin modulator that binds to the talin protein, and investigated its effects on SMCs and neointimal formation after vascular injury.
Methods:
Human aortic SMCs (HAoSMCs) were treated with a newly synthesized talin modulator. Apolipoprotein E knockout (ApoE KO) mice were subjected to left femoral arterial injury and orally administered with the talin modulator daily. Laser Doppler imager was used to compare the blood flow, and injured femoral arteries and blood serum were analyzed after 28 days.
Results:
The talin modulator significantly inhibited cell proliferation in a concentration-dependent manner and suppressed the migration of HAoSMCs. Treatment with a talin modulator resulted in a significant reduction in the phosphorylation of focal adhesion molecules and downstream signaling molecules related to cell proliferation and migration. The effects of the talin modulator in HAoSMCs were found to be reversible, as evidenced by the reactivation of signaling pathways upon its removal. After 28 days of administration of the talin modulator, an improvement in the blood flow and reduction in neointimal formation in the injured femoral arteries were observed.
Conclusions
We demonstrated the inhibitory effects of a talin modulator on SMC proliferation and migration, and that were associated with downregulation of signaling pathways, resulting in the attenuation of neointimal formation in ApoE KO mice.
2.Burnout amongst Nurses in Cancer Wards: Impact of Nursing Professionalism, Perfectionism, and Resilience.
Eun KO ; Hye Young KIM ; Gwang Sook KIM ; Rang Soon KIM ; Hyang Sook SO
Asian Oncology Nursing 2018;18(4):214-223
PURPOSE: This study aimed to investigate the relationship among nursing professionalism, perfectionism, resilience, and burnout, amongst nurses in cancer wards, and to further identify factors influencing burnout. METHODS: Conducted in June 2018, this descriptive cross-sectional study included 157 cancer wards nurses. The survey employed structured questionnaires including the Koreannursing Professional Value Scale, Multidimensional Perfectionism Scale, Dispositional Resilience Scale-15, and burnout subscale of the Professional Quality of Life Scale. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, independent t-tests, one-way ANOVA, Pearson's correlation coefficient, and entered multiple regression. RESULTS: The total burnout score was 31.20±4.87, out of a maximum of 50. Nursing professionalism (r =−.40, p < .001) and resilience (r=−.68, p < .001) showed a negative correlation with burnout, while socially-oriented perfectionism showed a positive correlation with burnout (r=.19, p=.016). Entered multiple regression revealed that 49.3% of the total variance in burnout was the consequence of nursing professionalism and resilience. CONCLUSION: Resilience had the largest effect on burnout, followed by nursing professionalism. We believe that the results of this study provide basic data for developing nursing intervention programs aimed at reducing burnout amongst nurses in cancer wards.
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
Nursing*
;
Professionalism*
;
Quality of Life
3.API5 induces cisplatin resistance through FGFR signaling in human cancer cells.
Han Sol JANG ; Seon Rang WOO ; Kwon Ho SONG ; Hanbyoul CHO ; Doo Byung CHAY ; Soon Oh HONG ; Hyo Jung LEE ; Se Jin OH ; Joon Yong CHUNG ; Jae Hoon KIM ; Tae Woo KIM
Experimental & Molecular Medicine 2017;49(9):e374-
Most tumors frequently undergo initial treatment with a chemotherapeutic agent but ultimately develop resistance, which limits the success of chemotherapies. As cisplatin exerts a high therapeutic effect in a variety of cancer types, it is often used in diverse strategies, such as neoadjuvant, adjuvant and combination chemotherapies. However, cisplatin resistance has often manifested regardless of cancer type, and it represents an unmet clinical need. Since we found that API5 expression was positively correlated with chemotherapy resistance in several specimens from patients with cervical cancer, we decided to investigate whether API5 is involved in the development of resistance after chemotherapy and to explore whether targeting API5 or its downstream effectors can reverse chemo-resistance. For this purpose, cisplatin-resistant cells (CaSki P3 CR) were established using three rounds of in vivo selection with cisplatin in a xenografted mouse. In the CaSki P3 CR cells, we observed that API5 acted as a chemo-resistant factor by rendering cancer cells resistant to cisplatin-induced apoptosis. Mechanistic investigations revealed that API5 mediated chemo-resistance by activating FGFR1 signaling, which led to Bim degradation. Importantly, FGFR1 inhibition using either an siRNA or a specific inhibitor disrupted cisplatin resistance in various types of API5(high) cancer cells in an in vitro cell culture system as well as in an in vivo xenograft model. Thus, our results demonstrated that API5 promotes chemo-resistance and that targeting either API5 or its downstream FGFR1 effectors can sensitize chemo-refractory cancers.
Animals
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Apoptosis
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Cell Culture Techniques
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Cisplatin*
;
Drug Therapy
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Drug Therapy, Combination
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Heterografts
;
Humans*
;
In Vitro Techniques
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Mice
;
RNA, Small Interfering
;
Uterine Cervical Neoplasms
4.Anti-proliferative effects of ginsenosides extracted from mountain ginseng on lung cancer.
Dong Gyu LEE ; Sung-Il JANG ; Young-Rang KIM ; Kyeong Eun YANG ; So Jung YOON ; Zee-Won LEE ; Hyun Joo AN ; Ik-Soon JANG ; Jong-Soon CHOI ; Hwa-Seung YOO
Chinese journal of integrative medicine 2016;22(5):344-352
OBJECTIVETo investigate the effect of three major ginsenosides from mountain ginseng as anticancer substance and explore the underlying mechanism involved in lung cancer.
METHODSThe inhibitory proliferation of lung cancer by major five ginsenosides (Rb1, Rb2, Rg1, Rc, and Re) was examined using 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyl tetrazolium bromide assay. Calculated 50% inhibition (IC50) values of five ginsenosides were determined and compared each other. Apoptosis by the treatment of single ginsenoside was performed by fluorescence-assisted cytometric spectroscopy. The alterations of apoptosis-related proteins were evaluated by Western blot analysis.
RESULTSThe abundance of ginsenosides in butanol extract of mountain ginseng (BX-MG) was revealed in the order of Rb1, Rg1, Re, Rc and Rb2. Among them, Rb1 was the most effective to lung cancer cell, followed by Rb2 and Rg1 on the basis of relative IC50 values of IMR90 versus A549 cell. The alterations of apoptotic proteins were confirmed in lung cancer A549 cells according to the administration of Rb1, Rb2 and Rg1. The expression levels of caspase-3 and caspase-8 were increased upon the treatment of three ginsenosides, however, the levels of caspase-9 and anti-apoptotic protein Bax were not changed.
CONCLUSIONMajor ginsenosides such as Rb1, Rb2 and Rg1 comprising BX-MG induced apoptosis in lung cancer cells via extrinsic apoptotic pathway rather than intrinsic mitochondrial pathway.
A549 Cells ; Apoptosis ; drug effects ; Blotting, Western ; Butanols ; Cell Proliferation ; drug effects ; Cell Shape ; drug effects ; Cell Survival ; drug effects ; Flow Cytometry ; Ginsenosides ; chemistry ; isolation & purification ; pharmacology ; therapeutic use ; Humans ; Inhibitory Concentration 50 ; Lung Neoplasms ; drug therapy ; pathology ; Panax ; chemistry ; Plant Extracts ; pharmacology ; therapeutic use ; Staining and Labeling
5.Delayed Surgery for Parathyroid Adenoma Misdiagnosed as a Thyroid Nodule and Treated with Radiofrequency Ablation.
Ho Su KIM ; Bong Hoi CHOI ; Jung Rang PARK ; Jong Ryeal HAHM ; Jung Hwa JUNG ; Soo Kyoung KIM ; Sungsu KIM ; Kyong Young KIM ; Soon Il CHUNG ; Tae Sik JUNG
Endocrinology and Metabolism 2013;28(3):231-235
Primary hyperparathyroidism occurs as a result of isolated parathyroid adenoma in 80% to 85% of all cases. A 99mtechnetium (99mTc) sestamibi scan or neck ultrasonography is used to localize the neoplasm prior to surgical intervention. A 53-year-old female was referred for the exclusion of metabolic bone disease. She presented with low back pain that had persisted for the past 6 months and elevated serum alkaline phosphatase (1,253 IU/L). Four years previously, she had been diagnosed at a local hospital with a 2.3-cm thyroid nodule, which was determined to be pathologically benign. Radiofrequency ablation was performed at the same hospital because the nodule was still growing during the follow-up period 2 years before the visit to our hospital, and the procedure was unsuccessful in reducing the size of the nodule. The results of the laboratory tests in our hospital were as follows: serum calcium, 14.6 mg/dL; phosphorus, 3.5 mg/dL; and intact parathyroid hormone (iPTH), 1,911 pg/mL. Neck ultrasonography and 99mTc sestamibi scan detected a 5-cm parathyroid neoplasm in the left lower lobe of the patient's thyroid; left parathyroidectomy was performed. This case indicated that thyroid ultrasonographers and pathologists need to be experienced enough to differentiate a parathyroid neoplasm from a thyroid nodule; 99mTc sestamibi scan, serum calcium, and iPTH levels can help to establish the diagnosis of parathyroid neoplasm.
Alkaline Phosphatase
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Bone Diseases, Metabolic
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Calcium
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Female
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Follow-Up Studies
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Humans
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Hyperparathyroidism, Primary
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Low Back Pain
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Middle Aged
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Neck
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Parathyroid Hormone
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Parathyroid Neoplasms
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Parathyroidectomy
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Phosphorus
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Technetium Tc 99m Sestamibi
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Thyroid Gland
;
Thyroid Nodule
6.Production and evaluation of children's dietary life safety index data on metropolitan cities and provinces in Korea.
Young Sun CHOI ; Jung Sug LEE ; Hye Young KIM ; Tong Kyung KWAK ; Hae Rang CHUNG ; Sehyug KWON ; Youn Ju CHOI ; Soon Kyu LEE ; Myung Hee KANG
Nutrition Research and Practice 2012;6(6):542-550
This pilot study was performed to produce data of the Children's Dietary Life Safety (CDLS) Index which is required by the Special Act on Safety Management of Children's Dietary Life and to evaluate the CDLS Index for 7 metropolitan cities and 9 provinces in Korea. To calculate the CDLS Index score, data regarding the evaluation indicators in the children's food safety domain and children's nutrition safety domain were collected from the local governments in 2009. For data regarding the indicators in the children's perception & practice domain, a survey was conducted on 2,400 5th grade children selected by stratified sampling in 16 local areas. Relative scores of indicators in each domain were calculated using the data provided by local governments and the survey, the weights are applied on relative scores, and then the CDLS Index scores of local governments were produced by adding scores of the 3 domains. The national average scores of the food safety domain, the nutrition safety domain and the perception and practice domain were 23.74 (14.67-26.50 on a 40-point scale), 16.65 (12.25-19.60 on a 40-point scale), and 14.88 (14.16-15.30 on a 20-point scale), respectively. The national average score of the CDLS Index which was produced by adding the scores of the three domains was 55.27 ranging 46.44-58.94 among local governments. The CDLS Index scores produced in this study may provide the motivation for comparing relative accomplishment and for actively achieving the goals through establishment of the target value by local governments. Also, it can be used as useful data for the establishment and improvement of children's dietary life safety policy at the national level.
Child
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Food Safety
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Humans
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Korea
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Motivation
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Pilot Projects
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Safety Management
;
Weights and Measures
7.Meal skipping relates to food choice, understanding of nutrition labeling, and prevalence of obesity in Korean fifth grade children.
Hye Young KIM ; Na Rae LEE ; Jung Sug LEE ; Young Sun CHOI ; Tong Kyung KWAK ; Hae Rang CHUNG ; Sehyug KWON ; Youn Ju CHOI ; Soon Kyu LEE ; Myung Hee KANG
Nutrition Research and Practice 2012;6(4):328-333
This study was performed to investigate the differences in food choice, nutrition labeling perceptions, and prevalence of obesity due to meal skipping in Korean elementary school children. A national survey was performed in 2010 to collect data on food intake frequency, understanding of nutrition labeling, and body mass index from 2,335 fifth grade students in 118 elementary schools selected from 16 metropolitan local governments by stratified cluster sampling. The data were analyzed using the SAS 9.1 and SUDAAN 10.0 packages. Students who consumed three meals for 6-7 days during the past week were classified into the regular meal eating (RM) group (n = 1,476) and those who did not were placed into the meal skipping (MS) group (n = 859). The daily intake frequency of fruits, vegetables, kimchi, and milk was significantly lower in the MS group compared to that in the RM group (P < 0.001), whereas the daily intake frequency of soft drinks and instant noodles (ramyeon) was significantly higher in the MS group than that in the RM group (P < 0.05). The MS group demonstrated a significantly lower degree of understanding with regard to nutrition labeling and high calorie foods containing low nutritional value than that in the RM group. The distribution of obesity based on the percentile criteria using the Korean growth chart was different between the MS and RM groups. The MS group (8.97%) had a higher percentage of obese subjects than that in the RM group (5.38%). In conclusion, meal skipping was related to poor food choice, low perception of nutrition labeling, and a high prevalence of obesity in Korean fifth grade children.
Body Mass Index
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Carbonated Beverages
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Child
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Eating
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Food Labeling
;
Fruit
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Growth Charts
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Humans
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Meals
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Milk
;
Nutritive Value
;
Obesity
;
Phenothiazines
;
Prevalence
;
Vegetables
8.Comparison of Perception and Practice Levels of Dietary Life in Elementary School Children according to Gender and Obesity Status.
Jung Sug LEE ; Hye Young KIM ; Young Sun CHOI ; Tong Kyung KWAK ; Hae Rang CHUNG ; Sehyug KWON ; Youn Ju CHOI ; Soon Kyu LEE ; Myung Hee KANG
The Korean Journal of Nutrition 2011;44(6):527-536
This study was performed to analyze children's perceptions and practice levels according to gender and obesity status using a dietary life safety index. A national survey was conducted on fifth grade children (n = 2,400), who were selected using three-stage stratified cluster sampling from 16 provinces. The average height was 144.8 cm, and weight was 38.8 kg. The average body mass index was 18.4 kg/m2 and underweight, overweight, and obese children were identified using the 2009 KHNANES cutoff values, which were 5.3%, 10%, and 5.9%, respectively. The perception and practice scores for hand-washing prior to eating were high and the score for willing to buy at a clean store was also high. However, students answered that the hygiene level of food stores near the school was poor. More students skipped breakfast than lunch or dinner. The frequency scores for fruit and vegetables were significantly higher for girls than those for boys. Students had a good understanding of nutrition labeling but did not frequently check the label. Seventy-five percent of the students tried to avoid high calorie foods with low nutritional value, but only 40% had the appropriate knowledge about high calorie foods with low nutritional value. Girls had better dietary life perception and practice levels than those of boys. No differences in perception or practice levels were observed based on obesity status. Nutrition education on the importance of eating breakfast and having accurate knowledge on nutrition labeling and high calorie foods with low nutritional value is needed. Behavior-centered education should be implemented to improve the perceptions and practice level of student's dietary life.
Body Mass Index
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Breakfast
;
Child
;
Eating
;
Food Labeling
;
Fruit
;
Humans
;
Hygiene
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Lunch
;
Meals
;
Nutritive Value
;
Obesity
;
Overweight
;
Thinness
;
Vegetables
9.Development of Evaluation Indicators for a Children's Dietary Life Safety Index in Korea.
Hae Rang CHUNG ; Tong Kyung KWAK ; Young Sun CHOI ; Hye Young P KIM ; Jung Sug LEE ; Jung Hwa CHOI ; Na Young YI ; Sehyug KWON ; Youn Ju CHOI ; Soon Kyu LEE ; Myung Hee KANG
The Korean Journal of Nutrition 2011;44(1):49-60
This study was performed to develop a children's dietary life safety index required by the Special Act on Safety Management of Children's Dietary Life enacted in 2009. An analytical hierarchy process was used to obtain initial weights of dietary life safety evaluation indicators. The Delphi method was applied to develop the weights along with 98 food and nutrition professionals. Three representative policy indicators, nine strategy indicators, 11 main evaluation indicators, and 20 detailed evaluation indicators were selected for the children's dietary life safety assessment. Three policy indicators and nine strategy indicators were the following: children's food safety indicator (support level of children' safety, safety management level of children's favorite foods, and safety management level of institutional food service), children's nutrition safety indicator (management level of missing meals and obesity, nutrition management level of children's favorite foods, and nutrition management level of institutional food service), and children's perception and practice level indicator ("Dietary Life Law" perception level, perception, and practice level for dietary life safety management, perception, and practice level for nutrition management). Weights of 40%, 40%, and 20% were given for the three representative policy indicators. The relative importance of nine strategic indicators, which were determined by the Delphi method is as follows: For children's food safety, support level of children's safety, safety management level of children's favorite foods, and safety management level of institutional food service were given weights of 12%, 9%, and 19%, respectively. For children's nutrition safety, the missing meals and obesity management level, nutrition management level of children's favorite foods, and the nutrition management level of institutional food service were given weights of 13%, 11%, and 16%, respectively. The "Dietary Life Law" perception level, perception and practice level of dietary life safety management, and perception and practice level of nutrition management were given weights of 4%, 7%, and 9%, respectively.
Food Safety
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Food Services
;
Korea
;
Meals
;
Obesity
;
Safety Management
;
Weights and Measures
10.Expression Profiling of Calcium Induced Genes in Cultured Human Keratinocytes.
Jung Suk LEE ; Mi Rang KIM ; Nam Soon KIM ; Yong Sung KIM ; Jun Mo YANG ; Ah Young CHO ; Young LEE ; Chang Deok KIM ; Jeung Hoon LEE
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2010;25(4):619-625
Terminal differentiation of skin keratinocytes is a vertically directed multi-step process that is tightly controlled by the sequential expression of a variety of genes. To examine the gene expression profile in calcium-induced keratinocyte differentiation, we constructed a normalized cDNA library using mRNA isolated from these calcium-treated keratinocytes. After sequencing about 10,000 clones, we were able to obtain 4,104 independent genes. They consisted of 3,699 annotated genes and 405 expressed sequence tags (ESTs). Some were the genes involved in constituting epidermal structures and others were unknown genes that are probably associated with keratinocytes. In particular, we were able to identify genes located at the chromosome 1q21, the locus for the epidermal differentiation complex, and 19q13.1, another probable locus for epidermal differentiation-related gene clusters. One EST located at the chromosome 19q13.1 showed increased expression by calcium treatment, suggesting a novel candidate gene relevant to keratinocyte differentiation. These results demonstrate the complexity of the transcriptional profile of keratinocytes, providing important clues on which to base further investigations of the molecular events underlying keratinocyte differentiation.
Calcium/*metabolism
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Cells, Cultured
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Chromosome Mapping
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Chromosomes, Human
;
Expressed Sequence Tags
;
Gene Expression Profiling
;
*Gene Expression Regulation
;
Gene Library
;
Humans
;
Keratinocytes/cytology/*physiology
;
Molecular Sequence Data
;
Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis

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