University of California San Francisco

Kim Jaejun
Jaejun Kim, PhD

Postdoctoral Fellow

Address

35 Medical Center Way, #902A
San Francisco, CA 94143
United States

Email: [email protected]
Phone: 415-476-2417

    Biography

    Jaejun Kim received his B.S. in Veterinary Medicine from Seoul National University. After that, he became a PhD student in College of Medicine at Seoul National University. His graduate research focused on the molecular mechanisms of direct reprogramming in the formation of induced stem cells. He is currently a member of the Willenbring lab in the Broad Center for Regenerative Medicine, where he is investigating AAV capsids for liver-targeted gene therapy.

    Education

    Institution Degree Dept or School End Date
    Seoul National University Ph.D. 08/2018
    Seoul National University B.S. & D.V.M. 02/2012

    Awards & Honors

    Award Conferred By Date
    California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM) Postdoctoral Fellowship UCSF 2022

    Research Interests

    Liver-targeted AAV

    Publications

    MOST RECENT PUBLICATIONS FROM A TOTAL OF 22
    1. MIS416 Enhances Therapeutic Functions of Human Umbilical Cord Blood-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cells Against Experimental Colitis by Modulating Systemic Immune Milieu.
      Lee BC, Shin N, Lee JY, Kang I, Kim JJ, Lee SE, Choi SW, Webster GA, Kang KS| | PubMed
    2. GATA4-dependent regulation of the secretory phenotype via MCP-1 underlies lamin A-mediated human mesenchymal stem cell aging.
      Lee JY, Yu KR, Lee BC, Kang I, Kim JJ, Jung EJ, Kim HS, Seo Y, Choi SW, Kang KS| | PubMed
    3. Donor-dependent variation of human umbilical cord blood mesenchymal stem cells in response to hypoxic preconditioning and amelioration of limb ischemia.
      Kang I, Lee BC, Choi SW, Lee JY, Kim JJ, Kim BE, Kim DH, Lee SE, Shin N, Seo Y, Kim HS, Kim DI, Kang KS| | PubMed
    4. Direct Conversion of Human Umbilical Cord Blood into Induced Neural Stem Cells with SOX2 and HMGA2.
      Kim JJ, Shin JH, Yu KR, Lee BC, Kang I, Lee JY, Kim DH, Seo Y, Kim HS, Choi SW, Kang KS| | PubMed
    5. Inhibition by miR-410 facilitates direct retinal pigment epithelium differentiation of umbilical cord blood-derived mesenchymal stem cells.
      Choi SW, Kim JJ, Seo MS, Park SB, Shin TH, Shin JH, Seo Y, Kim HS, Kang KS| | PubMed
    6. Cathepsin S contributes to microglia-mediated olfactory dysfunction through the regulation of Cx3cl1-Cx3cr1 axis in a Niemann-Pick disease type C1 model.
      Seo Y, Kim HS, Kang I, Choi SW, Shin TH, Shin JH, Lee BC, Lee JY, Kim JJ, Kook MG, Kang KS| | PubMed
    7. BMI1 inhibits senescence and enhances the immunomodulatory properties of human mesenchymal stem cells via the direct suppression of MKP-1/DUSP1.
      Lee JY, Yu KR, Kim HS, Kang I, Kim JJ, Lee BC, Choi SW, Shin JH, Seo Y, Kang KS| | PubMed
    8. PGE2 maintains self-renewal of human adult stem cells via EP2-mediated autocrine signaling and its production is regulated by cell-to-cell contact.
      Lee BC, Kim HS, Shin TH, Kang I, Lee JY, Kim JJ, Kang HK, Seo Y, Lee S, Yu KR, Choi SW, Kang KS| | PubMed
    9. miR-410 Inhibition Induces RPE Differentiation of Amniotic Epithelial Stem Cells via Overexpression of OTX2 and RPE65.
      Choi SW, Kim JJ, Seo MS, Park SB, Kang TW, Lee JY, Lee BC, Kang I, Shin TH, Kim HS, Yu KR, Kang KS| | PubMed
    10. Rapid and Efficient Direct Conversion of Human Adult Somatic Cells into Neural Stem Cells by HMGA2/let-7b.
      Yu KR, Shin JH, Kim JJ, Koog MG, Lee JY, Choi SW, Kim HS, Seo Y, Lee S, Shin TH, Jee MK, Kim DW, Jung SJ, Shin S, Han DW, Kang KS| | PubMed