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3. KSMCB Presidential Lecture Award

 
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Dr. Inhwan Hwang has been studying how nascent organellar proteins are delivered to various organelles and subsequently regulated for the purpose of understanding organellar biogenesis and function using Arabidopsis as a model system. Because organelles in eukaryotic cells have no or limited ability to synthesize proteins, they have to import proteins from the cytosol. His group identified a large number of factors, such as ADL6, PI3K, AtRMR1, Rha1, EpsinR1, EpsinR2 and actin, involved in trafficking through endomembrane compartments, thereby contributing greatly to deciphering the trafficking process in plants. While studying the organellar functions, his group elucidated that ABA is rapidly produced by AtBG1 and AtBG2 localized to the ER and vacuole, respectively, and ABA levels are fine-tuned by endocytosis, leading to proper adaptation responses to abiotic stresses. Another important topic is protein targeting to chloroplasts and mitochondria. His group elucidated the design principle and evolution of the transit peptide and presequence of chloroplast and mitochondrial proteins, respectively, and identified and dissected the mechanism and evolutionary process of AKR2s, the targeting factor of chloroplast outer membrane proteins. Now, his group is trying to understand the evolution of chloroplasts and mitochondria by analyzing the design principle and action mechanism of protein import into and targeting to chloroplasts and mitochondria.
Dr Inhwan Hwang is a professor at the Division of Integrative Biosciences and Biotechnology/Department of Life Sciences, POSTECH. He obtained BS and MS degrees at Chemistry Department, Seoul National University, and a PhD degree at University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, and got postdoctoral training at Genetics Department, Harvard Medical School. As a PI, he published a large number of papers in journals such as Cell, Nature Cell Biology, Developmental Cell, Nature Communicatons, PNAS, Plant Cell, EMBO J, JCB, and now serves as editors in journals such as Plant Cell. He received awards and honors including Ilmac cultural foundation award (Science) in 2005, Inchon foundation award (Science) in 2008 and best scientist award of Korean Society of Plant Biologists in 2015.

Representative papers
- Cytosolic targeting factor AKR2A captures chloroplast outer membrane-localized client proteins at the ribosome during translation (2015). Nat. Commun. 6; 6843.
- AKR2A-mediated import of chloroplast outer membrane proteins is essential for chloroplast biogenesis (2008). Nat. Cell Biol. 10; 220-227.
- Activation of glucosidase via dehydration-induced polymerization rapidly increases active pools of abscisic acid (2006). Cell 126; 1109-1120.
- A New Dynamin-Like Protein, ADL6, Is Involved in Trafficking from the trans-Golgi Network to the Central Vacuole in Arabidopsis (2001). Plant Cell 13;1511-1526.
- Trafficking of Phosphatidylinositol 3-Phosphate from the trans-Golgi Network to the Lumen of the Central Vacuole in Plant Cells (2001). Plant Cell 13; 287-301.

   

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