Publications by authors named "Seunggyu Kim"

Article Synopsis
  • Early detection of breast cancer is vital for preventing metastasis and late relapse, with exosomes serving as a promising target for liquid biopsies despite current diagnostic challenges.
  • This study highlights the development of a rapid, label-free method for detecting breast cancer-derived exosomes using Surface-enhanced Raman Scattering (SERS) spectroscopy, improving detection efficiency through the use of silver-nanoparticle-based substrates.
  • The process involves optimizing laser parameters for rapid substrate fabrication and demonstrates the method's potential for point-of-care testing, with implications for broader biomedical applications.
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Endothelial programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) expression is higher in tumors than in normal tissues. Also, tumoral vasculatures tend to be leakier than normal vessels leading to a higher trans-endothelial or transmural fluid flow. However, it is not clear whether such elevated transmural flow can control endothelial PD-L1 expression.

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vascularized cancer models utilizing microfluidics have emerged as a promising tool for mechanism study and drug screening. However, the lack of consideration and preparation methods for cancer cellular sources that are capable of adequately replicating the metastatic features of circulating tumor cells contributed to low relevancy with experimental results. Here, we show that the properties of cancer cellular sources have a considerable impact on the validity of the metastasis model.

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The effects of helical flow in a blood vessel are investigated in a dynamic flow generator using surface acoustic wave (SAW) in the microfluidic device. The SAW, generated by an interdigital transducer (IDT), induces acoustic streaming, resulting in a stable and consistent helical flow pattern in microscale channels. This approach allows rapid development of helical flow within the channel without directly contacting the medium.

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While two-dimensional (2D) materials possess the desirable future of neuromorphic computing platforms, unstable charging and de-trapping processes, which are inherited from uncontrollable states, such as the interface trap between nanocrystals and dielectric layers, can deteriorate the synaptic plasticity in field-effect transistors. Here, we report a facile and effective strategy to promote artificial synaptic devices by providing physical doping in 2D transition-metal dichalcogenide nanomaterials. Our experiments demonstrate that the introduction of niobium (Nb) into 2D WSe nanomaterials produces charge trap levels in the band gap and retards the decay of the trapped charges, thereby accelerating the artificial synaptic plasticity by encouraging improved short-/long-term plasticity, increased multilevel states, lower power consumption, and better symmetry and asymmetry ratios.

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Despite the advantages of microfluidic system in drug screening, vascular systems responsible for the transport of drugs and nutrients have been hardly considered in the microfluidic-based chemotherapeutic screening. Considering the physiological characteristics of highly vascularized urinary tumors, we here investigated the chemotherapeutic response of bladder tumor cells using a vascularized tumor on a chip. The microfluidic chip was designed to have open-top region for tumor sample introduction and hydrophilic rail for spontaneous hydrogel patterning, which contributed to the construction of tumor-hydrogel-endothelium interfaces in a spatiotemporal on-demand manner.

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A direct contact bioassay of thiosulfate utilizing denitrifying bacteria (TUDB) based on inhibition of gas production was deployed to assess the toxicity of naturally contaminated field soils and soils artificially contaminated with heavy metals. Test procedure producing optimal conditions responsible for maximum gas production was 0.5 mL test culture, 1 g soil sample, 80 RPM, and 48 h reaction time.

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Emerging microfluidic disease models have amply demonstrated their value in many fields of cancer research. These technologies recapitulate key aspects of metastatic cancer, including the process of tumor cell arrest and extravasation at the site of the metastatic tumor. To date, extensive efforts have been made to capture key features of the microvasculature to reconstitute the pre-metastatic niche and investigate dynamic extravasation behaviors using microfluidic systems.

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Benzene (B), toluene (T), ethylbenzene (E), and xylenes (X) are petrochemicals vital in various industrial and commercial processing but identified as priority pollutants due to their high toxicity. The objective of this study was to investigate the toxicological nature of BTEX mixtures under controlled laboratory aquatic conditions using sulfur-oxidizing bacteria (SOB). Results from individual BTEX tests demonstrated that the order of toxicity among BTEX was X ≥ E > T > B.

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Wet age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a severe ophthalmic disease that develops in the outer blood-retinal barrier (oBRB), involving two types of cells, the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and the choriocapillaris endothelium (CCE). Unfortunately, the pathogenesis of AMD is unclear, and the risk of the only effective therapy (Anti-VEGF injection) has been consistently argued. Also, since oBRB is hard to observe , an model for the pathological study is necessary.

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A tumor is composed of heterogeneous cell population, which is known as tumor stroma. In particular, blood vessels have an indispensable role in the tumor microenvironment acting as a key player in anti-cancer drug delivery. Recently, efforts have been made to accurately recapitulate the microenvironment by employing distinct cell types, however, the proper formation of perfusable tumor tissue is challenging.

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The cytotoxic response of natural killer (NK) cells in a microreactor to surface acoustic waves (SAWs) is investigated, where the SAWs produce an acoustic streaming flow. The Rayleigh-type SAWs form by an interdigital transducer propagated along the surface of a piezoelectric substrate in order to allow the dynamic stimulation of functional immune cells in a noncontact and rotor-free manner. The developed acoustofluidic microreactor enables a dynamic cell culture to be set up in a miniaturized system while maintaining the performance of agitating media.

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Gray mold disease caused by in onions ( L.) during growth and storage negatively affects their yield and quality. Exploring the genes related to gray mold resistance in onion and their application to the breeding of resistant onion lines will support effective and ecological control methods of the disease.

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An efficient and accurate antibiotic susceptibility test (AST) is indispensable for measuring the antimicrobial resistance of pathogenic bacteria. A minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) can be obtained without performing repeated dilutions of the antibiotic by forming a linear antibiotic concentration gradient in a microfluidic channel. We demonstrated a device designed to use travelling surface acoustic waves (TSAWs) to enable a rapid formation of an antibiotic gradient in a few seconds.

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Fas ligand (FasL, CD178) is known to bind to its receptor (Fas, CD95) and mediate cellular apoptosis to maintain immune homeostasis. Recently, it has been recognized that tumor cells and their microenvironments allow an adjacent vascular endothelium to express the FasL on its cell membrane, utilizing the endothelium as an immune barrier to kill antitumor cytotoxic T cells. Here, a microfluidic tumor vasculature model is presented, which enables the recapitulation of an endothelial immune barrier expressing FasL.

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Label-free, three-dimensional (3D) quantitative observations of on-chip vasculogenesis were achieved using optical diffraction tomography. Exploiting 3D refractive index maps as an intrinsic imaging contrast, the vascular structures, multicellular activities, and subcellular organelles of endothelial cells were imaged and analysed throughout vasculogenesis to characterise mature vascular networks without exogenous labelling.

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This study presents a novel algal-based toxicity test suitable for simple and rapid assessment of heavy metal (Hg2+, Cr6+, Cd2+, Pb2+, or As3+)-contaminated water. A closed-system kit-type algal assay was developed using Chlorella vulgaris. Toxicity was assessed by oxygen evolution in the gaseous phase of the assay kits, which was measured via a needle-type oxygen sensor.

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Background: Iron excess is a risk factor for cardiovascular diseases and it is important to understand the effect of iron on vascular permeability, particularly for the transport of large metabolic hormones such as adiponectin.

Methods: We used 2-dimensional monolayers of cultured human dermal microvascular endothelial cells (HDMEC) and human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) as well as 3-dimensional microvascular networks to measure transendothelial flux.

Results: Iron supplementation reduced transendothelial electric resistance (TEER).

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The objective of this study was development of a simple and reliable microbial toxicity test based on fermentative bacteria to assess heavy metal (Hg, Cu, Cr, Ni, As, or Pb)-contaminated water. The dominant species of test organisms used in this study was a spore-forming fermentative bacterium, Clostridium guangxiense. Toxicity of water was assessed based on inhibition of fermentative gas production of the test organisms, which was analyzed via a syringe method.

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Background: Sufficient blood supply through neo-vasculature is a major challenge in cell therapy and tissue engineering in order to support the growth, function, and viability of implanted cells. However, depending on the implant size and cell types, the natural process of angiogenesis may not provide enough blood supply for long term survival of the implants, requiring supplementary strategy to prevent local ischemia. Many researchers have reported the methodologies to form pre-vasculatures that mimic in vivo microvessels for implantation to promote angiogenesis.

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Inflammation is the initiation of defense of our body against harmful stimuli. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), originating from outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria, causes inflammation in the animal's body and can develop several diseases. In order to study the inflammatory response to LPS of blood vessels in vitro, 2D models have been mainly used previously.

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Three types of creep experiments of compression, tension, and bending were implemented to identify quantitative relations among the three types of creep under drying atmospheric conditions. In case of the bending creep experiment, two types of unreinforced concrete beams with similar dimensions were cast for use in the beam creep and shrinkage tests. The variations in the shrinkage strain within the beam depth were measured to evaluate the effect of the shrinkage variations on the bending creep strain.

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Adiponectin, a highly abundant polypeptide hormone in plasma, plays an important role in the regulation of energy metabolism in a wide variety of tissues, as well as providing important beneficial effects in diabetes, inflammation, and cardiovascular disease. To act on target tissues, adiponectin must move from the circulation to the interstitial space, suggesting that vascular permeability plays an important role in regulating adiponectin action. To test this hypothesis, fluorescently labeled adiponectin was used to monitor its biodistribution in mice with streptozotocin-induced diabetes (STZD).

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The need for accurate and efficient antibiotic susceptibility testing (AST) has been emphasized with respect to the emerging antimicrobial resistance of pathogenic bacteria which has increased over the recent decades. In this study, we introduce a microfluidic system that enables rapid formation of the antibiotic concentration gradient with convenient bacterial growth measurement based on color scales. Furthermore, we expanded the developed system to analyze combinatory effects of antibiotics and measured the collective antibiotic susceptibility of bacteria compared to single microfluidic AST methods.

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Combinatory therapy using two or more kinds of antibiotics is attracting considerable attention for inhibiting multi-drug resistant pathogenic bacteria. Although the therapy mostly leads to more powerful antimicrobial effects than using a single antibiotic (synergy), interference may arise from certain antibiotic combinations, resulting in the antimicrobial effect being suppressed (antagonism). Here, we present a microfluidic-based phenotypic screening chip to investigate combinatory antibiotic effects by automatically generating two orthogonal concentration gradients on a bacteria-trapping agarose gel.

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