19 results on '"Chang Jae Choi"'
Search Results
2. Viruses infecting a warm water picoeukaryote shed light on spatial co-occurrence dynamics of marine viruses and their hosts
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Simon Roux, Charmaine C. M. Yung, Danielle M. Jorgens, David M. Needham, Charles Bachy, Alexander J. Limardo, Alexandra Z. Worden, Matthew B. Sullivan, Maria Consuelo Gazitúa, and Chang Jae Choi
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Technology ,Zoology ,Bathycoccus prasinos ,Microbiology ,Article ,Bathycoccus ,03 medical and health sciences ,Marine bacteriophage ,Chlorophyta ,14. Life underwater ,Clade ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Ecosystem ,Phylogeny ,Microbial biooceanography ,030304 developmental biology ,Infectivity ,0303 health sciences ,Picoeukaryote ,biology ,Ecotype ,030306 microbiology ,Host (biology) ,Water ,Biological Sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,Phylogenetics ,Infectious Diseases ,Viruses ,Infection ,Environmental Sciences - Abstract
The marine picoeukaryote Bathycoccus prasinos has been considered a cosmopolitan alga, although recent studies indicate two ecotypes exist, Clade BI (B. prasinos) and Clade BII. Viruses that infect Bathycoccus Clade BI are known (BpVs), but not that infect BII. We isolated three dsDNA prasinoviruses from the Sargasso Sea against Clade BII isolate RCC716. The BII-Vs do not infect BI, and two (BII-V2 and BII-V3) have larger genomes (~210 kb) than BI-Viruses and BII-V1. BII-Vs share ~90% of their proteins, and between 65% to 83% of their proteins with sequenced BpVs. Phylogenomic reconstructions and PolB analyses establish close-relatedness of BII-V2 and BII-V3, yet BII-V2 has 10-fold higher infectivity and induces greater mortality on host isolate RCC716. BII-V1 is more distant, has a shorter latent period, and infects both available BII isolates, RCC716 and RCC715, while BII-V2 and BII-V3 do not exhibit productive infection of the latter in our experiments. Global metagenome analyses show Clade BI and BII algal relative abundances correlate positively with their respective viruses. The distributions delineate BI/BpVs as occupying lower temperature mesotrophic and coastal systems, whereas BII/BII-Vs occupy warmer temperature, higher salinity ecosystems. Accordingly, with molecular diagnostic support, we name Clade BII Bathycoccus calidus sp. nov. and propose that molecular diversity within this new species likely connects to the differentiated host-virus dynamics observed in our time course experiments. Overall, the tightly linked biogeography of Bathycoccus host and virus clades observed herein supports species-level host specificity, with strain-level variations in infection parameters.
- Published
- 2020
3. The Lack of Knowledge on the Microbiome of Golf Turfgrasses Impedes the Development of Successful Microbial Products
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Uli Stingl, Chang Jae Choi, Braham Dhillon, and Marco Schiavon
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agricultural_sciences_agronomy ,turfgrasses ,microbiome ,microbial communities ,endophytes ,Agriculture ,biocontrol ,golf turf ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Golf courses have a significant environmental impact. High water demands and the intensive use of agricultural chemicals have been a concern for decades and are therefore in the focus of efforts to make golf courses more environmentally sustainable. Products based on modifying or using plant-associated microbiota are one of the fastest growing sectors in agriculture, but their application on turfgrasses on golf courses is so far negligible. In this review, we summarize the limited knowledge on microbiomes of golf turf ecosystems and show that the lack of holistic studies addressing structure and function of golf turf microbiomes, including their responses to intense turf management procedures, is currently the main bottleneck for development and improvement of reliable, well-functioning microbial products. We further highlight the endosphere of turfgrasses, which is easily accessible for microbial cultivation through constant mowing, as the most stable and protected micro-environment. Many grass species do possess endophytic bacteria and fungi that have shown to improve the plants’ resistance towards microbial pathogens and insect pests, and several products using endophyte-enhanced grass varieties are commercially successful. We anticipated that this trend would tee-off on golf courses, too, once a more comprehensive understanding of golf turf microbiomes is available.
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- 2021
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4. Insights into the loss factors of phytoplankton blooms: The role of cell mortality in the decline of two inshore Alexandrium blooms
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Deana L. Erdner, Chang Jae Choi, Taylor R. Sehein, Donald M. Anderson, and Michael L. Brosnahan
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0106 biological sciences ,congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,biology ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,education ,fungi ,Cell ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Aquatic Science ,Plankton ,Oceanography ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Algal bloom ,Article ,Cell loss ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Alexandrium fundyense ,Phytoplankton ,medicine ,Eutrophication ,Bloom ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
While considerable effort has been devoted to understanding the factors regulating the development of phytoplankton blooms, the mechanisms leading to bloom decline and termination have received less attention. Grazing and sedimentation have been invoked as the main routes for the loss of phytoplankton biomass, and more recently, viral lysis, parasitism, and programmed cell death (PCD) have been recognized as additional removal factors. Despite the importance of bloom declines to phytoplankton dynamics, the incidence and significance of various loss factors in regulating phytoplankton populations have not been widely characterized in natural blooms. To understand mechanisms controlling bloom decline, we studied two independent, inshore blooms of Alexandrium fundyense, paying special attention to cell mortality as a loss pathway. We observed increases in the number of dead cells with PCD features after the peak of both blooms, demonstrating a role for cell mortality in their terminations. In both blooms, sexual cyst formation appears to have been the dominant process leading to bloom termination, as both blooms were dominated by small-sized gamete cells near their peaks. Cell death and parasitism became more significant as sources of cell loss several days after the onset of bloom decline. Our findings show two distinct phases of bloom decline, characterized by sexual fusion as the initial dominant cell removal processes followed by elimination of remaining cells by cell death and parasitism.
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- 2017
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5. Specialized proteomic responses and an ancient photoprotection mechanism sustain marine green algal growth during phosphate limitation
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Jian, Guo, Susanne, Wilken, Valeria, Jimenez, Chang Jae, Choi, Charles, Ansong, Richard, Dannebaum, Lisa, Sudek, David S, Milner, Charles, Bachy, Emily Nahas, Reistetter, Virginia A, Elrod, Denis, Klimov, Samuel O, Purvine, Chia-Lin, Wei, Govindarajan, Kunde-Ramamoorthy, Thomas A, Richards, Ursula, Goodenough, Richard D, Smith, Stephen J, Callister, and Alexandra Z, Worden
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Proteomics ,Bioreactors ,Bacterial Proteins ,Chlorophyta ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Phytoplankton ,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ,Photosynthesis ,Phylogeny ,Phosphates - Abstract
Marine algae perform approximately half of global carbon fixation, but their growth is often limited by the availability of phosphate or other nutrients
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- 2017
6. Quantitative biogeography of picoprasinophytes establishes ecotype distributions and significant contributions to marine phytoplankton
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Marguerite Blum, Alexandra Z. Worden, Sebastian Sudek, Ursula Goodenough, Matthew J. Church, Robyn Roth, Yoshimi M. Rii, Camille Poirier, Alexander J. Limardo, and Chang Jae Choi
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Chlorophyll ,Oceans and Seas ,Tropical Atlantic ,Environment ,Bathycoccus prasinos ,01 natural sciences ,Microbiology ,Bathycoccus ,Ostreococcus ,03 medical and health sciences ,Algae ,Chlorophyta ,Phytoplankton ,Seawater ,14. Life underwater ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Phylogeny ,Ecotype ,Deep chlorophyll maximum ,biology ,Geography ,Ecology ,010604 marine biology & hydrobiology ,biology.organism_classification ,030104 developmental biology ,13. Climate action ,Upwelling ,Seasons - Abstract
Bathycoccus and Ostreococcus are broadly distributed marine picoprasinophyte algae. We enumerated small phytoplankton using flow cytometry and qPCR assays for phylogenetically distinct Bathycoccus clades BI and BII and Ostreococcus clades OI and OII. Among 259 photic-zone samples from transects and time-series, Ostreococcus maxima occurred in the North Pacific coastal upwelling for OI (36 713 ± 1485 copies ml−1) and the Kuroshio Front for OII (50 189 ± 561 copies ml−1) and the two overlapped only in frontal regions. The Bathycoccus overlapped more often with maxima along Line-P for BI (10 667 ± 1299 copies ml−1) and the tropical Atlantic for BII (4125 ± 339 copies ml−1). Only BII and OII were detected at warm oligotrophic sites, accounting for 34 ± 13 of 1589 ± 448 eukaryotic phytoplankton cells ml−1 (annual average) at Station ALOHA's deep chlorophyll maximum. Significant distributional and molecular differences lead us to propose that Bathycoccus clade BII represents a separate species which tolerates higher temperature oceanic conditions than Bathycoccus prasinos (BI). Morphological differences were not evident, but quick-freeze deep-etch electron microscopy provided insight into Bathycoccus scale formation. Our results highlight the importance of quantitative seasonal abundance data for inferring ecological distributions and demonstrate significant, differential picoprasinophyte contributions in mesotrophic and open-ocean waters. © 2017 The Authors. Environmental Microbiology published by Society for Applied Microbiology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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- 2017
7. Newly discovered deep-branching marine plastid lineages are numerically rare but globally distributed
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Stephen J. Giovannoni, Gualtiero Spiro Jaeger, Chang Jae Choi, Camille Poirier, V.V.S.S. Sarma, Amala Mahadevan, Alexandra Z. Worden, Lisa Sudek, and Charles Bachy
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0301 basic medicine ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Climate Change ,Oceans and Seas ,030106 microbiology ,Photosynthesis ,Deep sea ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Food chain ,Algae ,RNA, Ribosomal, 16S ,Phytoplankton ,Ecosystem ,14. Life underwater ,Plastids ,Plastid ,media_common ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences(all) ,biology ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology(all) ,Ecology ,fungi ,15. Life on land ,biology.organism_classification ,Biological Evolution ,Carbon ,030104 developmental biology ,Desertification ,13. Climate action ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences - Abstract
Ocean surface warming is resulting in an expansion of stratified, low-nutrient environments, a process referred to as ocean desertification 1. A challenge for assessing the impact of these changes is the lack of robust baseline information on the biological communities that carry out marine photosynthesis. Phytoplankton perform half of global biological CO2 uptake, fuel marine food chains, and include diverse eukaryotic algae that have photosynthetic organelles (plastids) acquired through multiple evolutionary events 1–3. While amassing data from ocean ecosystems for the Baselines Initiative (6,177 near full-length 16S rRNA gene sequences and 9.4 million high-quality 16S V1-V2 amplicons) we identified two deep-branching plastid lineages based on 16S rRNA gene data. The two lineages have global distributions, but do not correspond to known phytoplankton. How the newly discovered phytoplankton lineages contribute to food chains and vertical carbon export to the deep sea remains unknown, but their prevalence in expanding, low nutrient surface waters suggests they will have a role in future oceans. © 2017 The Author(s)
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- 2017
8. Cell death in algae: physiological processes and relationships with stress
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John A. Berges and Chang Jae Choi
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Programmed cell death ,Algae ,biology ,Apoptosis ,Phytoplankton ,Botany ,biology.organism_classification ,Cell biology - Published
- 2014
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9. Effects of intensity and seasonal timing of disturbances on a rocky intertidal benthic community on the southern coast of Korea
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Sangil Kim, Chang Jae Choi, Sang Rul Park, In-Soo Seo, Nam-Il Won, Sukgeun Jung, Hyuk Je Lee, and Yun Hee Kang
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Disturbance (geology) ,Algae ,biology ,Benthic zone ,Ecology ,fungi ,Intertidal zone ,Species diversity ,Species richness ,biology.organism_classification ,Algal bloom ,Bay ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The effects of intensity and timing of disturbances on recovery of marine benthic organisms were investigated on a rocky intertidal shore in Gwangyang Bay, Korea. We hypothesized that the recovery pattern of the benthic community structure would be affected by disturbance intensity and season. Twenty-eight permanent plots were set up, with disturbance intensity (cleared plots and sterile plots) and seasonal disturbance (fall 1999 and spring 2000) incorporated into the experimental design. To monitor natural seasonal variation in benthic community abundances, we established seven permanent unmanipulated plots. Turf-forming algae were observed in the unmanipulated plots throughout the experimental period, whereas green algae and invertebrate presence varied with season. In the disturbance-intensity experiment, turf-forming and green algae were dominant in cleared plots. The highest coverage of sessile organisms was observed in sterile plots, which exhibited the highest species richness because of their relatively low macroalgal coverage. Seasonal effects of disturbance were an important factor in the recovery pattern of benthic organisms under high disturbance intensity. Coverage of green algae was higher in sterile spring plots than in sterile fall plots; this result was attributed to low spatial competition, as the disturbances occurred just before green algal blooms. On the other hand, the abundances of barnacles and bivalves were highest on sterile fall plots, as these organisms were suppressed by green algal blooms in other periods. These results indicate that the effects of disturbance intensity on benthic community recovery patterns can be influenced by season of disturbance.
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- 2014
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10. Rapid effects of diverse toxic water pollutants on chlorophyll a fluorescence: Variable responses among freshwater microalgae
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Erica B. Young, John A. Berges, and Chang Jae Choi
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Chlorophyll ,Chlorophyll a ,Time Factors ,Environmental Engineering ,Photosystem II ,Fresh Water ,Biology ,Photosynthesis ,Fluorescence ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Species Specificity ,Botany ,Microalgae ,Parathion methyl ,Atrazine ,Waste Management and Disposal ,Water Science and Technology ,Civil and Structural Engineering ,Chlorophyll A ,Ecological Modeling ,Terbuthylazine ,Pollution ,chemistry ,Environmental chemistry ,Carbofuran ,Water Pollutants, Chemical - Abstract
Chlorophyll a fluorescence of microalgae is a compelling indicator of toxicity of dissolved water contaminants, because it is easily measured and responds rapidly. While different chl a fluorescence parameters have been examined, most studies have focused on single species and/or a narrow range of toxins. We assessed the utility of one chl a fluorescence parameter, the maximum quantum yield of PSII (F(v)/F(m)), for detecting effects of nine environmental pollutants from a range of toxin classes on 5 commonly found freshwater algal species, as well as the USEPA model species, Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata. F(v)/F(m) declined rapidly over
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- 2012
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11. Dentigerous Cysts Involving Maxillary Sinuses
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Sang Hag Lee, Tae Hoon Kim, Chang Jae Choi, Il Ho Park, Hak Chun Lee, Seung Hoon Lee, Hyuck Sung Kwon, and Heung Man Lee
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business.industry ,Medicine ,business - Published
- 2009
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12. Effect of dead phytoplankton cells on the apparent efficiency of photosystem II
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John A. Berges, Chang Jae Choi, Gill Malin, Daniel J. Franklin, and Claire Hughes
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Photoinhibition ,Ecology ,Photosystem II ,Productivity (ecology) ,Surface ocean ,Phytoplankton ,Botany ,Aquatic Science ,Biology ,Chlorophyll fluorescence ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Primary productivity ,Photosystem - Abstract
Measurements of the efficiency of photosystem (PS) II have become widespread in bio- logical oceanography, and various forms are used to assess the 'health' of marine phytoplankton and to help estimate primary productivity. Absolute values of PS II efficiency depend to some extent on the measuring system, but changes in PS II efficiency are most commonly interpreted in terms of cel- lular acclimations to changing irradiance (including photoacclimation and photoinhibition) and nutri- ent availability (especially N and Fe). Recent measurements of phytoplankton viability in the surface ocean have revealed that in many regions phytoplankton assemblages may contain large proportions of dead cells. The effect of these dead cells on apparent PS II efficiency is largely unknown. By mix- ing live and dead cells and measuring PS II efficiency, we show that the presence of photosyntheti- cally non-functional (dead) cells has surprisingly little effect; in a number of species, mixtures in which 50% of the cells were dead had values of 0.5, similar to values often found in natural assem- blages. A simple model indicates that the non-linear nature of the fluorescence ratio is responsible for this unexpected result. We conclude that relatively high values of PS II efficiency cannot be used as evidence of low mortality. Our findings highlight the need for more information on the physiological status of both eukaryotic and prokaryotic microalgae in nature.
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- 2009
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13. The Helicobacter Pylori Infection in Upper Aerodigetive Tract Mucosal Disease by Urea Breath Test(UBT)
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Jeong-Soo Woo, Hyung Jin Jun, Seung-Kuk Baek, Kwang-Yoon Jung, Chang Jae Choi, Sung Won Chae, Hyuck Sung Kwon, Jae Gu Cho, and Soon-Young Kwon
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Helicobacter pylori infection ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Urea breath test ,Medicine ,Mucosal disease ,business ,Gastroenterology - Published
- 2008
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14. Dynamic Regulation of GacA in Type III Secretion, Pectinase Gene Expression, Pellicle Formation, and Pathogenicity of Dickeya dadantii (Erwinia chrysanthemi 3937)
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Amy O. Charkowski, Chang Jae Choi, Qiu Zhang, Xuan Yi, Ralph M. Reedy, Shihui Yang, Quan Peng, and Ching-Hong Yang
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Physiology ,Bacterial Toxins ,Microbiology ,Cell wall ,Magnoliopsida ,Bacterial Proteins ,Gene expression ,Gene Regulatory Networks ,Secretion ,RNA, Messenger ,Pectinase ,Plant Diseases ,Polysaccharide-Lyases ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Dickeya chrysanthemi ,Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial ,General Medicine ,Pathogenicity ,biology.organism_classification ,Dickeya dadantii ,Polygalacturonase ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Genes, Bacterial ,Spectrophotometry ,Biofilms ,Erwinia chrysanthemi ,Mutation ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Dickeya dadantii (Erwinia chrysanthemi 3937) secretes exoenzymes, including pectin-degrading enzymes, leading to the loss of structural integrity of plant cell walls. A type III secretion system (T3SS) is essential for full virulence of this bacterium within plant hosts. The GacS/GacA two-component signal transduction system participates in important biological roles in several gram-negative bacteria. In this study, a gacA deletion mutant (Ech137) of D. dadantii was constructed to investigate the effect of this mutation on pathogenesis and other phenotypes. Compared with wild-type D. dadantii, Ech137 had a delayed biofilm-pellicle formation. The production of pectate lyase (Pel), protease, and cellulase was diminished in Ech137 compared with the wild-type cells. Reduced transcription of two endo-Pel genes, pelD and pelL, was found in Ech137 using a green fluorescence protein-based fluorescence-activated cell sorter promoter activity assay. In addition, the transcription of T3SS genes dspE (an effector), hrpA (a structural protein of the T3SS pilus), and hrpN (a T3SS harpin) was reduced in Ech137. A lower amount of rsmB regulatory RNA was found in gacA mutant Ech137 compared with the wild-type bacterium by quantitative reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction. Compared with wild-type D. dadantii, a lower amount of hrpL mRNA was observed in Ech137 at 12 h grown in medium. Although the role of RsmA, rsmB, and RsmC in D. dadantii is not clear, from the regulatory pathway revealed in E. carotovora, the lower expression of dspE, hrpA, and hrpN in Ech137 may be due to a posttranscriptional regulation of hrpL through the Gac-Rsm regulatory pathway. Consequently, the reduced exoenzyme production and Pel gene expression in the mutant may be partially due to the regulatory role of rsmB-RsmA on exoenzyme expression. Similar to in vitro results, a lower expression of T3SS and pectinase genes of Ech137 also was observed in bacterial cells inoculated into Saintpaulia ionantha leaves, perhaps accounting for the observed reduction in local maceration. Interestingly, compared with the wild-type D. dadantii, although a lower concentration of Ech137 was observed at day 3 and 4 postinoculation, there is no significant difference in bacterial concentration between the wild-type bacterium and Ech137 in the early stage of infection. Finally, the nearly abolished systemic invasion ability of Ech137 suggests that GacA of D. dadantii is essential for the pathogenicity and systemic movement of the bacterium in S. ionantha.
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- 2008
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15. Bilateral Lymphoepithelial Cysts of the Thyroid Gland
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Sung Woong Choi, Chang Jae Choi, Jeong Soo Woo, and Jae Gu Cho
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Endocrinology ,Text mining ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,business.industry ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Thyroid ,Medicine ,business - Published
- 2010
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16. New types of metacaspases in phytoplankton reveal diverse origins of cell death proteases
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Chang Jae Choi and John A. Berges
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Cancer Research ,Proteases ,Programmed cell death ,Databases, Factual ,Immunology ,Apoptosis ,Evolution, Molecular ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,unicellular organism ,Transcription (biology) ,Phylogenetics ,evolution ,Plastid ,bacteria ,Gene ,Caspase ,Phylogeny ,Genetics ,biology ,fungi ,Cell Biology ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,biology.organism_classification ,Protein Structure, Tertiary ,Caspases ,Phytoplankton ,metacaspase ,biology.protein ,Original Article ,Bacteria ,Peptide Hydrolases - Abstract
Metacaspases are evolutionarily distant homologs of caspases that are found outside the metazoan and are known to have key roles in programmed cell death (PCD). Two types of metacaspases (types I and II) have been defined in plants based on their domain structures; these have similarities to metazoan 'initiator' and 'executioner' caspases. However, we know little about metacaspases in unicellular organisms and even less about their roles in cell death. We identified a novel group of metacaspases in sequenced phytoplanktonic protists that show domain architectures distinct from either type I or II enzymes; we designate them as type III. Type III metacaspases exhibit a rearrangement of domain structures between N- and C-terminus. In addition, we found a group of metacaspase-like proteases in phytoplankton that show sequence homology with other metacaspases, but defy classification in conventional schemes. These metacaspase-like proteases exist in bacteria alongside a variant of type I metacaspases and we propose these bacterial metacaspases are the origins of eukaryotic metacaspases. Type II and III metacaspases were not detected in bacteria and they might be variants of bacterial type I metacaspases that evolved in plants and phytoplanktonic protists, respectively, during the establishment of plastids through the primary and secondary endosymbiotic events. A complete absence of metacaspases in protists that lost plastids, such as oomycetes and ciliates indicates the gene loss during the plastid-to-nucleus gene transfer. Taken together, our findings suggest endosymbiotic gene transfer (EGT) is a key mechanism resulting in the evolutionary diversity of cell death proteases.
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- 2013
17. A head shake sensory organization test to improve the sensitivity of the sensory organization test in the elderly
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Soon Jae Hwang, Moo Kyun Park, Jae-Gu Cho, Chang Jae Choi, Hyun Woo Lim, and Sung Won Chae
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Aging ,Sensory system ,Body Mass Index ,Young Adult ,Reference Values ,medicine ,Humans ,Young adult ,Postural Balance ,Aged ,Vestibular system ,Head shake ,business.industry ,Healthy population ,Healthy subjects ,Middle Aged ,Vestibular Function Tests ,Sensory Systems ,Test (assessment) ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Data Interpretation, Statistical ,Head Movements ,Sensation Disorders ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Body mass index - Abstract
Objective The head shake sensory organization test (HS-SOT) is an expansion of the sensory organization test (SOT), which evaluates impairment of the patient's ability to apply vestibular input while actively moving the head. HS-SOTs has been proposed to increase the sensitivity of SOTs. The purpose of this study was to investigate the value of HS-SOTs in a healthy population with respect to age and compare the sensitivity of HS-SOTs with that of SOTs in the elderly population. Methods One hundred two (n = 102) healthy subjects were divided into 3 age groups: the young adult group (between 20 and 39 yr), the adult group (between 40 and 59 yr), and the elderly group (between 60 and 79 yr). The subjects underwent SOTs and HS-SOTs. Results The equilibrium scores of HS-SOTs underwent more significant change than those of SOTs in the elderly group. The equilibrium score ratio SOT2/HS-SOT2 (HS-SOT during SOT condition 2) decreased by 4% more in the elderly group compared with that of the young adult group. The ratio of SOT5/HS-SOT5 decreased by 54% more in the elderly group compared with that of the young adult group. Conclusion In the elderly, equilibrium scores of HS-SOTs changed more than those of SOTs. In addition, SOT5/HS-SOT5 demonstrated more sensitive changes in the elderly than SOT2/HS-SOT2 did.
- Published
- 2011
18. Does the kyphotic change decrease the risk of fall?
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Hyun Woo Lim, Gi Jung Im, Moo Kyun Park, Sung Won Chae, Chang Jae Choi, and Jae-Gu Cho
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Dynamic posturography ,business.industry ,Posturography ,lcsh:R ,Kyphosis ,Poison control ,Motor control ,lcsh:Medicine ,medicine.disease ,lcsh:Otorhinolaryngology ,Gait ,lcsh:RF1-547 ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,medicine ,Physical therapy ,Surgery ,Original Article ,Ankle ,Latency (engineering) ,business ,Accidental falls ,Balance (ability) - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Falls are a major problem in the elderly. Age-related degeneration of the human balance system increases the risk of falls. Kyphosis is a common condition of curvature of the upper spine in the elderly and its development occurs through degenerative change. However, relatively little is known about the effect of kyphotic changes on balance in the elderly. The aim of this study is to investigate the influence of kyphosis on the balance strategy through use of the motor control test (MCT) in computerized dynamic posturography. METHODS: Fifty healthy subjects who were not affected by other medical disorders that could affect gait or balance were enrolled in the study. By simulation of kyphotic condition through change of the angles of the line connecting the shoulder to the hip and the ankle axis by approximately 30°, the latency and amplitude of the MCT were measured in upright and kyphotic condition. RESULTS: In the kyphotic condition, latency was shortened in backward movement. In forward movement, latency was shortened only in large stimulation. The amplitude in forward movement was decreased in kyphotic condition. However, the change of amplitude was not significant in large intensity backward movement in the same condition. CONCLUSION: Kyphotic condition decreases the latency of MCT, especially in backward movement. These findings imply that kyphotic condition may serve as a protective factor against falls. Language: en
- Published
- 2010
19. Inflammatory Myofibroblastic Tumor of the Nasal Cavity
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Jeong-Soo Woo, Jin Ho Jung, Chang Jae Choi, and Jae-Gu Cho
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Nasal cavity ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Fatal outcome ,Lung ,business.industry ,macromolecular substances ,Malignant transformation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,medicine ,Surgery ,Mesentery ,Head and neck ,business ,Myofibroblast ,Sinus (anatomy) - Abstract
Inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor is an uncommon tumor composed of myofibroblasts and various types of inflammatory infiltrates that rarely undergoes malignant transformation. It commonly involves the lung, liver, mesentery but rarely affects the head and neck region. Although inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor is generally considered a benign reactive inflammatory process, it may present clinically and radiologically as an invasive mass destructing the surrounding structures. Therefore, it should be considered as one of several differential diagnoses from malignant tumors. We present a case of inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor involving the nasal cavity, maxillary, ethmoid, and sphenoid sinus with a fatal outcome. Korean J Otorhinolaryngol-Head Neck Surg 2009;52:1005-8 Key WordsZZInflammatory myofibroblastic tumor·Nasal cavity·Steroids.
- Published
- 2009
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