Publications by authors named "Whasil Lee"

Chondrocytes in adult joints are mechanosensitive post-mitotic quiescent cells with robustly expressed both Piezo1 and Piezo2 ion channels. Here, we examined the mechano-adaptation and Piezo modulations in articular chondrocytes using a mouse exercise model. We first found differential expression patterns of PIEZO1 and PIEZO2 in articular chondrocytes of healthy knee joints; chondrocytes in tibial cartilage (T) exhibit significantly higher PIEZO1 and PIEZO2 than femoral chondrocytes (F).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Tendon impingement creates a multiaxial strain environment leading to fibrocartilage changes, including increased glycosaminoglycan (GAG) matrix and altered collagen structure, which are linked to tendinopathy.
  • Although fibrocartilage is normal in areas of healthy tendons, excessive GAG and collagen disorganization indicate tendinopathy, and impingement is recognized as a key factor in its development.
  • The research introduces a new murine hind limb model that replicates the conditions of tendon impingement in its natural anatomy, allowing for more accurate studies of how mechanical strains influence tendon health over time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A massive rotator cuff tear (RCT) leads to glenohumeral joint destabilization and characteristic degenerative changes, termed cuff tear arthropathy (CTA). Understanding the response of articular cartilage to a massive RCT will elucidate opportunities to promote homeostasis following restoration of joint biomechanics with rotator cuff repair. Mechanically activated calcium-permeating channels, in part, modulate the response of distal femoral chondrocytes in the knee against injurious loading and inflammation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: The objective of this study is to understand the role of altered mechanical environments in knee joints post anterior cruciate ligament (ACL)-injury in chondrocyte vulnerability against mechanical stimuli and in the progression of post-traumatic osteoarthritis (PT-OA).

Methods: Differential mechanical environments were induced by unilateral ACL-injury (uni-ACL-I) and bilateral ACL-injury (bi-ACL-I) in 8-week-old female C57BL/6 mice. The gait parameters, the mechano-vulnerability of chondrocytes, Young's moduli of cartilage extracellular matrix (ECM), and the histological assessment of OA severity (OARSI score) were compared between control and experimental groups at 0∼8-weeks post-ACL-injury.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Periodontal tissues, crucial for dental health, require proper cell and tissue alignment, which can be facilitated by developing specialized scaffolds.
  • Researchers tested poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG)-based hydrogels to guide the alignment of periodontal ligament cells (PDLCs) in relation to dentin surfaces.
  • Their findings showed that when PDLCs were exposed to swelling PEG hydrogels, they aligned perpendicularly to the dentin, demonstrating that this alignment is driven by mechanical strain from the hydrogel swelling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Mechanical factors play critical roles in the pathogenesis of joint disorders like osteoarthritis (OA), a prevalent progressive degenerative joint disease that causes debilitating pain. Chondrocytes in the cartilage are responsible for extracellular matrix (ECM) turnover, and mechanical stimuli heavily influence cartilage maintenance, degeneration, and regeneration via mechanotransduction of chondrocytes. Thus, understanding the disease-associated mechanotransduction mechanisms can shed light on developing effective therapeutic strategies for OA through targeting mechanotransducers to halt progressive cartilage degeneration.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a painful and debilitating condition of synovial joints without any disease-modifying therapies [A. M. Valdes, T.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

TRPV4 ion channels represent osmo-mechano-TRP channels with pleiotropic function and wide-spread expression. One of the critical functions of TRPV4 in this spectrum is its involvement in pain and inflammation. However, few small-molecule inhibitors of TRPV4 are available.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Diarthrodial joints are essential for load bearing and locomotion. Physiologically, articular cartilage sustains millions of cycles of mechanical loading. Chondrocytes, the cells in cartilage, regulate their metabolic activities in response to mechanical loading.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Detection of external irritants by head nociceptor neurons has deep evolutionary roots. Irritant-induced aversive behavior is a popular pain model in laboratory animals. It is used widely in the formalin model, where formaldehyde is injected into the rodent paw, eliciting quantifiable nocifensive behavior that has a direct, tissue-injury-evoked phase, and a subsequent tonic phase caused by neural maladaptation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The conserved TPLH tetrapeptide motif of ankyrin repeats (ARs) plays an important role in stabilizing AR proteins, and histidine (TPLH)-to-arginine (TPLR) mutations in this motif have been associated with a hereditary human anemia, spherocytosis. Here, we used a combination of atomic force microscopy-based single-molecule force spectroscopy and molecular dynamics simulations to examine the mechanical effects of His → Arg substitutions in TPLH motifs in a model AR protein, NI6C. Our molecular dynamics results show that the mutant protein is less mechanically stable than the WT protein.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * This study uses simulations and atomic force spectroscopy to analyze the mechanical response of ankyrin repeats in both a synthetic protein and a fragment of native ankyrin-R under different stretching conditions.
  • * Findings reveal that ankyrin repeats show greater mechanical stability when unfolding goes from the N-terminus to the C-terminus, leading to unique refolding behaviors that may influence ankyrin-R functionality in living cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

During co-translational folding, the nascent polypeptide chain is extruded sequentially from the ribosome exit tunnel and is [corrected] under severe conformational constraints [corrected] dictated by the one-dimensional geometry of the tunnel. [corrected] How do such vectorial constraints impact the folding pathway? Here, we combine single-molecule atomic force spectroscopy and steered molecular dynamics simulations to examine protein folding in the presence of one-dimensional constraints that are similar to those imposed on the nascent polypeptide chain. The simulations exquisitely reproduced the experimental unfolding and refolding force extension relationships and led to the full reconstruction of the vectorial folding pathway of a large polypeptide, the 253-residue consensus ankyrin repeat protein, NI6C.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Anfinsen's thermodynamic hypothesis implies that proteins can encode for stretching through reversible loss of structure. However, large in vitro extensions of proteins that occur through a progressive unfolding of their domains typically dissipate a significant amount of energy, and therefore are not thermodynamically reversible. Some coiled-coil proteins have been found to stretch nearly reversibly, although their extension is typically limited to 2.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ankryin repeat proteins comprise tandem arrays of a 33-residue, predominantly alpha-helical motif that stacks roughly linearly to produce elongated and superhelical structures. They function as scaffolds mediating a diverse range of protein-protein interactions, and some have been proposed to play a role in mechanical signal transduction processes in the cell. Here we use atomic force microscopy and molecular-dynamics simulations to investigate the natural 7-ankyrin repeat protein gankyrin.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

There is increasing evidence that UVA radiation, which makes up approximately 95% of the solar UV light reaching the Earth's surface and is also commonly used for cosmetic purposes, is genotoxic. However, in contrast to UVC and UVB, the mechanisms by which UVA produces various DNA lesions are still unclear. In addition, the relative amounts of various types of UVA lesions and their mutagenic significance are also a subject of debate.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In atomic force microscopy-based single molecule force spectroscopy (AFM-SMFS), it is assumed that the pulling angle is negligible and that the force applied to the molecule is equivalent to the force measured by the instrument. Recent studies, however, have indicated that the pulling geometry errors can drastically alter the measured force-extension relationship of molecules. Here we describe a software-based alignment method that repositions the cantilever such that it is located directly above the molecule's substrate attachment site.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF