Publications by authors named "Kieop Park"

Article Synopsis
  • The study explores how specific cells, during development and cancer, create lipid-rich structures to invade the basement membrane, focusing on the anchor cell in Caenorhabditis elegans.
  • It identifies the role of the transcription factor SBP-1 in regulating fatty acid synthesis enzymes POD-2 and FASN-1, crucial for this invasive process.
  • Additionally, it highlights the importance of enzymes like HMGR-1 and ICMT-1 in modifying lipids, which together contribute to the formation and localization of the invasive protrusions necessary for cell invasion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Separate tissues connect through adjoining basement membranes to carry out molecular barrier, exchange, and organ support functions. Cell adhesion at these connections must be robust and balanced to withstand independent tissue movement. Yet, how cells achieve synchronized adhesion to connect tissues is unknown.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Cell invasion through basement membrane (BM) barriers is important in development, immune function and cancer progression. As invasion through BM is often stochastic, capturing gene expression profiles of actively invading cells in vivo remains elusive. Using the stereotyped timing of Caenorhabditis elegans anchor cell (AC) invasion, we generated an AC transcriptome during BM breaching.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Separate tissues connect through adjoining basement membranes to carry out molecular barrier, exchange, and organ support functions. Cell adhesion at these connections must be robust and balanced to withstand independent tissue movement. Yet, how cells achieve synchronized adhesion to connect tissues is unknown.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Basement membrane (BM) matrices surround and separate most tissues. However, through poorly understood mechanisms, BMs of adjacent tissue can also stably link to support organ structure and function. Using endogenous knock-in fluorescent proteins, conditional RNAi, optogenetics, and quantitative live imaging, we identified extracellular matrix proteins mediating a BM linkage (B-LINK) between the uterine utse and epidermal seam cell BMs in Caenorhabditis elegans that supports the uterus during egg-laying.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Magnetotactic bacteria are a diverse group of microorganisms that use intracellular chains of ferrimagnetic nanocrystals, produced within magnetosome organelles, to align and navigate along the geomagnetic field. Several conserved genes for magnetosome formation have been described, but the mechanisms leading to distinct species-specific magnetosome chain configurations remain unclear. Here, we show that the fragmented nature of magnetosome chains in Magnetospirillum magneticum AMB-1 is controlled by genes mcaA and mcaB.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF