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Park, Pyong

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Park

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Pyong

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Park, Pyong

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Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
  • Publication

    Cell surface‐anchored syndecan‐1 ameliorates intestinal inflammation and neutrophil transmigration in ulcerative colitis

    (John Wiley and Sons Inc., 2016) Zhang, Yan; Wang, Zhongqiu; Liu, Jun; Zhang, Shaoheng; Fei, Jiaxi; Li, Jing; Zhang, Ting; Wang, Jide; Park, Pyong; Chen, Ye

    Abstract Syndecan‐1 (SDC1), with a variable ectodomain carrying heparan sulphate (HS) chains between different Syndecans, participates in many steps of inflammatory responses. In the process of proteolysis, the HS chains of the complete extracellular domain can be shed from the cell surface, by which they can mediate most of SDC1's function. However, the exact impact on SDC1 which anchored on the cell surface has not been clearly reported. In our study, we established the models by transfection with the cleavable resistant SDC1 mutant plasmid, in which SDC1 shedding can be suppressed during stimulation. Role of membrane SDC1 in inflammatory pathway, pro‐inflammatory cytokine secretion as well as neutrophil transmigration, and how suppressing its shedding will benefit colitis were further investigated. We found that the patients suffered ulcerative colitis had high serum SDC1 levels,presented with increased levels of P65, tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF‐α) and IL‐1β and higher circulating neutrophils. NF‐κB pathway was activated, and secretion of TNF‐α, interleukin‐1beta (IL‐1β), IL‐6 and IL‐8 were increased upon lipopolysaccharide stimuli in intestinal epithelial cells. Syndecan‐1, via its anchored ectodomain, significantly lessened these up‐regulation extents. It also functioned in inhibiting transmigration of neutrophils by decreasing CXCL‐1 secretion. Moreover, SDC1 ameliorated colitis activity and improved histological disturbances of colon in mice. Taken together, we conclude that suppression of SDC1 shedding from intestinal epithelial cells relieves severity of intestinal inflammation and neutrophil transmigration by inactivating key inflammatory regulators NF‐κB, and down‐regulating pro‐inflammatory cytokine expressions. These indicated that compenstion and shedding suppression of cytomembrane SDC1 might be the optional therapy for intestinal inflammation.

  • Publication

    Transmembrane proteoglycans control stretch-activated channels to set cytosolic calcium levels

    (The Rockefeller University Press, 2015) Gopal, Sandeep; Søgaard, Pernille; Multhaupt, Hinke A.B.; Pataki, Csilla; Okina, Elena; Xian, Xiaojie; Pedersen, Mikael E.; Stevens, Troy; Griesbeck, Oliver; Park, Pyong; Pocock, Roger; Couchman, John R.

    Transmembrane heparan sulfate proteoglycans regulate multiple aspects of cell behavior, but the molecular basis of their signaling is unresolved. The major family of transmembrane proteoglycans is the syndecans, present in virtually all nucleated cells, but with mostly unknown functions. Here, we show that syndecans regulate transient receptor potential canonical (TRPCs) channels to control cytosolic calcium equilibria and consequent cell behavior. In fibroblasts, ligand interactions with heparan sulfate of syndecan-4 recruit cytoplasmic protein kinase C to target serine714 of TRPC7 with subsequent control of the cytoskeleton and the myofibroblast phenotype. In epidermal keratinocytes a syndecan–TRPC4 complex controls adhesion, adherens junction composition, and early differentiation in vivo and in vitro. In Caenorhabditis elegans, the TRPC orthologues TRP-1 and -2 genetically complement the loss of syndecan by suppressing neuronal guidance and locomotory defects related to increases in neuronal calcium levels. The widespread and conserved syndecan–TRPC axis therefore fine tunes cytoskeletal organization and cell behavior.

  • Publication

    EXTL3 mutations cause skeletal dysplasia, immune deficiency, and developmental delay

    (The Rockefeller University Press, 2017) Volpi, Stefano; Yamazaki, Yasuhiro; Brauer, Patrick M.; van Rooijen, Ellen; Hayashida, Atsuko; Slavotinek, Anne; Sun Kuehn, Hye; Di Rocco, Maja; Rivolta, Carlo; Bortolomai, Ileana; Du, Likun; Felgentreff, Kerstin; Ott de Bruin, Lisa; Hayashida, Kazutaka; Freedman, George; Marcovecchio, Genni Enza; Capuder, Kelly; Rath, Prisni; Luche, Nicole; Hagedorn, Elliott; Buoncompagni, Antonella; Royer-Bertrand, Beryl; Giliani, Silvia; Poliani, Pietro Luigi; Imberti, Luisa; Dobbs, Kerry; Poulain, Fabienne E.; Martini, Alberto; Manis, John; Linhardt, Robert J.; Bosticardo, Marita; Rosenzweig, Sergio Damian; Lee, Hane; Puck, Jennifer M.; Zúñiga-Pflücker, Juan Carlos; Zon, Leonard; Park, Pyong; Superti-Furga, Andrea; Notarangelo, Luigi D.

    We studied three patients with severe skeletal dysplasia, T cell immunodeficiency, and developmental delay. Whole-exome sequencing revealed homozygous missense mutations affecting exostosin-like 3 (EXTL3), a glycosyltransferase involved in heparan sulfate (HS) biosynthesis. Patient-derived fibroblasts showed abnormal HS composition and altered fibroblast growth factor 2 signaling, which was rescued by overexpression of wild-type EXTL3 cDNA. Interleukin-2–mediated STAT5 phosphorylation in patients’ lymphocytes was markedly reduced. Interbreeding of the extl3-mutant zebrafish (box) with Tg(rag2:green fluorescent protein) transgenic zebrafish revealed defective thymopoiesis, which was rescued by injection of wild-type human EXTL3 RNA. Targeted differentiation of patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells showed a reduced expansion of lymphohematopoietic progenitor cells and defects of thymic epithelial progenitor cell differentiation. These data identify EXTL3 mutations as a novel cause of severe immune deficiency with skeletal dysplasia and developmental delay and underline a crucial role of HS in thymopoiesis and skeletal and brain development.