Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
LanguageLanguage
-
SubjectSubject
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersIs Peer Reviewed
Done
Filters
Reset
17
result(s) for
"Wang, Chiou-Miin"
Sort by:
Phagocytosis-initiated tumor hybrid cells acquire a c-Myc-mediated quasi-polarization state for immunoevasion and distant dissemination
2023
While macrophage phagocytosis is an immune defense mechanism against invading cellular organisms, cancer cells expressing the CD47 ligand send forward signals to repel this engulfment. Here we report that the reverse signaling using CD47 as a receptor additionally enhances a pro-survival function of prostate cancer cells under phagocytic attack. Although low CD47-expressing cancer cells still allow phagocytosis, the reverse signaling delays the process, leading to incomplete digestion of the entrapped cells and subsequent tumor hybrid cell (THC) formation. Viable THCs acquire c-Myc from parental cancer cells to upregulate both M1- and M2-like macrophage polarization genes. Consequently, THCs imitating dual macrophage features can confound immunosurveillance, gaining survival advantage in the host. Furthermore, these cells intrinsically express low levels of androgen receptor and its targets, resembling an adenocarcinoma-immune subtype of metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer. Therefore, phagocytosis-generated THCs may represent a potential target for treating the disease.
The CD47/SIRPα axis is well known to mediate immune escape by promoting cancer resistance to phagocytosis. Here the authors show that low CD47-expressing prostate cancer cells still allow phagocytosis but the process is incomplete leading to the formation of macrophage:tumor hybrid cells with immune evasive and pro-metastatic properties.
Journal Article
Integration of DNA methylation and gene transcription across nineteen cell types reveals cell type-specific and genomic region-dependent regulatory patterns
by
Tang, Binhua
,
Wang, Chiou-Miin
,
Zhou, Yufan
in
3' Untranslated regions
,
631/114/2401
,
631/208/177
2017
Despite numerous studies done on understanding the role of DNA methylation, limited work has focused on systems integration of cell type-specific interplay between DNA methylation and gene transcription. Through a genome-wide analysis of DNA methylation across 19 cell types with T-47D as reference, we identified 106,252 cell type-specific differentially-methylated CpGs categorized into 7,537 differentially (46.6% hyper- and 53.4% hypo-) methylated regions. We found 44% promoter regions and 75% CpG islands were T-47D cell type-specific methylated. Pyrosequencing experiments validated the cell type-specific methylation across three benchmark cell lines. Interestingly, these DMRs overlapped with 1,145 known tumor suppressor genes. We then developed a Bayesian Gaussian Regression model to measure the relationship among DNA methylation, genomic segment distribution, differential gene expression and tumor suppressor gene status. The model uncovered that 3′UTR methylation has much less impact on transcriptional activity than other regions. Integration of DNA methylation and 82 transcription factor binding information across the 19 cell types suggested diverse interplay patterns between the two regulators. Our integrative analysis reveals cell type-specific and genomic region-dependent regulatory patterns and provides a perspective for integrating hundreds of various omics-seq data together.
Journal Article
ERα-related chromothripsis enhances concordant gene transcription on chromosome 17q11.1-q24.1 in luminal breast cancer
by
Chou, Chih-Wei
,
Lathrop, Kate I.
,
Chen, Meizhen
in
Antipsychotics
,
Binding sites
,
Biomarkers, Tumor - genetics
2020
Background
Chromothripsis is an event of genomic instability leading to complex chromosomal alterations in cancer. Frequent long-range chromatin interactions between transcription factors (TFs) and targets may promote extensive translocations and copy-number alterations in proximal contact regions through inappropriate DNA stitching. Although studies have proposed models to explain the initiation of chromothripsis, few discussed how TFs influence this process for tumor progression.
Methods
This study focused on genomic alterations in amplification associated regions within chromosome 17. Inter−/intra-chromosomal rearrangements were analyzed using whole genome sequencing data of breast tumors in the Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) cohort. Common ERα binding sites were defined based on MCF-7, T47D, and MDA-MB-134 breast cancer cell lines using univariate K-means clustering methods. Nanopore sequencing technology was applied to validate frequent rearrangements detected between ATC loci on 17q23 and an ERα hub on 20q13. The efficacy of pharmacological inhibition of a potentially druggable target gene on 17q23 was evaluated using breast cancer cell lines and patient-derived circulating breast tumor cells.
Results
There are five adjoining regions from 17q11.1 to 17q24.1 being hotspots of chromothripsis. Inter−/intra-chromosomal rearrangements of these regions occurred more frequently in ERα-positive tumors than in ERα-negative tumors. In addition, the locations of the rearrangements were often mapped within or close to dense ERα binding sites localized on these five 17q regions or other chromosomes. This chromothriptic event was linked to concordant upregulation of 96 loci that predominantly regulate cell-cycle machineries in advanced luminal tumors. Genome-editing analysis confirmed that an ERα hub localized on 20q13 coordinately regulates a subset of these loci localized on 17q23 through long-range chromosome interactions. One of these loci,
Tousled Like Kinase 2
(
TLK2
) known to participate in DNA damage checkpoint control, is an actionable target using phenothiazine antipsychotics (PTZs). The antiproliferative effect of PTZs was prominent in high TLK2-expressing cells, compared to low expressing cells.
Conclusion
This study demonstrates a new approach for identifying tumorigenic drivers from genomic regions highly susceptible to ERα-related chromothripsis. We found a group of luminal breast tumors displaying 17q-related chromothripsis for which antipsychotics can be repurposed as treatment adjuncts.
Journal Article
Beyond genotype: serotonin transporter epigenetic modification predicts human brain function
2014
The authors report that increased promoter methylation of the serotonin transporter gene predicts increased threat-related amygdala reactivity and decreased mRNA expression in postmortem amygdala tissue. This provides converging evidence for epigenetic regulation of behaviorally and clinically relevant human brain function.
We examined epigenetic regulation in regards to behaviorally and clinically relevant human brain function. Specifically, we found that increased promoter methylation of the serotonin transporter gene predicted increased threat-related amygdala reactivity and decreased mRNA expression in postmortem amygdala tissue. These patterns were independent of functional genetic variation in the same region. Furthermore, the association with amygdala reactivity was replicated in a second cohort and was robust to both sampling methods and age.
Journal Article
Aberrant enhancer hypomethylation contributes to hepatic carcinogenesis through global transcriptional reprogramming
2019
Hepatocellular carcinomas (HCC) exhibit distinct promoter hypermethylation patterns, but the epigenetic regulation and function of transcriptional enhancers remain unclear. Here, our affinity- and bisulfite-based whole-genome sequencing analyses reveal global enhancer hypomethylation in human HCCs. Integrative epigenomic characterization further pinpoints a recurrent hypomethylated enhancer of CCAAT/enhancer-binding protein-beta (C/EBPβ) which correlates with
C/EBPβ
over-expression and poorer prognosis of patients. Demethylation of
C/EBPβ
enhancer reactivates a self-reinforcing enhancer-target loop via direct transcriptional up-regulation of enhancer RNA. Conversely, deletion of this enhancer via CRISPR/Cas9 reduces C/EBPβ expression and its genome-wide co-occupancy with BRD4 at H3K27ac-marked enhancers and super-enhancers, leading to drastic suppression of driver oncogenes and HCC tumorigenicity. Hepatitis B X protein transgenic mouse model of HCC recapitulates this paradigm, as
C/ebpβ
enhancer hypomethylation associates with oncogenic activation in early tumorigenesis. These results support a causal link between aberrant enhancer hypomethylation and
C/EBPβ
over-expression, thereby contributing to hepatocarcinogenesis through global transcriptional reprogramming.
There are distinct hypermethylation patterns in gene promoters in hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs). Here, the authors show that the enhancer of
C/EBPβ
is recurrently hypomethylated in human HCCs, recapitulating this in a transgenic murine model and linking aberrant enhancer hypomethylation to hepatocarcinogenesis.
Journal Article
Molecular Pap smear: HPV genotype and DNA methylation of ADCY8, CDH8, and ZNF582 as an integrated biomarker for high-grade cervical cytology
by
Lin, Chun-Lin
,
Huang, Tim Hui-Ming
,
Poage, Graham M.
in
Adenylyl Cyclases - genetics
,
Adult
,
Analysis
2016
Background
The Pap smear has remained the foundation for cervical cancer screening for over 70 years. With advancements in molecular diagnostics, primary high-risk human papillomavirus (hrHPV) screening has recently become an accepted stand-alone or co-test with conventional cytology. However, both diagnostic tests have distinct limitations. The aim of this study was to determine the association between HPV genotypes and cellular epigenetic modifications in three grades of cervical cytology for screening biomarker discovery.
Methods
This prospective, cross-sectional study used residual liquid-based cytology samples for HPV genotyping and epigenetic analysis. Extracted DNA was subjected to parallel polymerase chain reactions using three primer sets (MY09/11, FAP59/64, E6-E7 F/B) for HPV DNA amplification. HPV+ samples were genotyped by DNA sequencing. Promoter methylation of four candidate tumor suppressor genes (adenylate cyclase 8 (
ADCY8
), cadherin 8, type 2 (
CDH8
),
MGMT
, and zinc finger protein 582 (
ZNF582
)) out of 48 genes screened was quantified by bisulfite-pyrosequencing of genomic DNA. Independent validation of methylation profiles was performed by analyzing data from cervical cancer cell lines and clinical samples from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA).
Results
Two hundred seventy-seven quality cytology samples were analyzed. HPV was detected in 31/100 (31 %) negative for intraepithelial lesion or malignancy (NILM), 95/100 (95 %) low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (LSIL), and 71/77 (92 %) high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion (HSIL) samples. The proportion of IARC-defined carcinogenic HPV types in sequenced samples correlated with worsening grade: NILM 7/29 (24 %), LSIL 53/92 (58 %), and HSIL 65/70 (93 %). Promoter methylation of
ADCY8
,
CDH8
, and
ZNF582
was measured in 170 samples: NILM (
N
= 33), LSIL (
N
= 70), and HSIL (
N
= 67) also correlated with worsening grade. Similar hypermethylation patterns were found in cancer cell lines and TCGA samples. The combination of four biomarkers, i.e., HPV genotype and three-gene promoter methylation, predicted HSIL (AUC 0.89) better than HPV alone (AUC 0.74) by logistic regression and probabilistic modeling.
Conclusions
HPV genotype and DNA methylation of
ADCY8
,
CDH8
, and
ZNF582
are correlated with cytological grade. Collectively, these biomarkers may serve as a molecular classifier of Pap smears.
Journal Article
Spatial EGFR Dynamics and Metastatic Phenotypes Modulated by Upregulated EphB2 and Src Pathways in Advanced Prostate Cancer
by
Perillo, Evan P.
,
Chou, Chih-Wei
,
Liss, Michael A.
in
Cytoskeleton
,
Dimerization
,
Epidermal growth factor
2019
Advanced prostate cancer is a very heterogeneous disease reflecting in diverse regulations of oncogenic signaling pathways. Aberrant spatial dynamics of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) promote their dimerization and clustering, leading to constitutive activation in oncogenesis. The EphB2 and Src signaling pathways are associated with the reorganization of the cytoskeleton leading to malignancy, but their roles in regulating EGFR dynamics and activation are scarcely reported. Using single-particle tracking techniques, we found that highly phosphorylated EGFR in the advanced prostate cancer cell line, PC3, was associated with higher EGFR diffusivity, as compared with LNCaP and less aggressive DU145. The increased EGFR activation and biophysical dynamics were consistent with high proliferation, migration, and invasion. After performing single-cell RNA-seq on prostate cancer cell lines and circulating tumor cells from patients, we identified that upregulated gene expression in the EphB2 and Src pathways are associated with advanced malignancy. After dasatinib treatment or siRNA knockdowns of EphB2 or Src, the PC3 cells exhibited significantly lower EGFR dynamics, cell motility, and invasion. Partial inhibitory effects were also found in DU145 cells. The upregulation of parts of the EphB2 and Src pathways also predicts poor prognosis in the prostate cancer patient cohort of The Cancer Genome Atlas. Our results provide evidence that overexpression of the EphB2 and Src signaling pathways regulate EGFR dynamics and cellular aggressiveness in some advanced prostate cancer cells.
Journal Article
A new member of the GM130 golgin subfamily is expressed in the optic lobe anlagen of the metamorphosing brain of Manduca sexta
by
Wang, Chiou-Miin
,
Robertson, Hugh M.
,
Chen, Chun-Liang
in
Amino Acid Sequence
,
amino acid sequences
,
animal proteins
2003
During metamorphosis of the insect brain, the optic lobe anlagen generate the proliferation centers for the visual cortices. We show here that, in the moth Manduca sexta, an 80 kDa Golgi complex protein (Ms-golgin80) is abundantly expressed in the cytoplasm of neuroblasts and ganglion mother cells in the optic lobe anlagen and proliferation centers. The predicted amino acid sequence for Ms-golgin80 is similar to that of several members of the GM130 subfamily of Golgi-associated proteins, including rat GM130 and human golgin-95. Homologs of Ms-golgin80 from Drosophila melanogaster, Caenorhabditis elegans, andBrugia malayi were identified through homology sequence search. Sequence similarities are present in three regions: the N-terminus, an internal domain of 89 amino acids, and another domain of 89 amino acids near the C-terminus. Structural similarities further suggest that these molecules play the same cellular role as GM130. GM130 is involved in the docking and fusion of coatomer (COP I) coated vesicles to the Golgi membranes; it also regulates the fragmentation and subsequent reassembly of the Golgi complex during mitosis. Abundant expression of Ms-golgin80 in neuroblasts and ganglion mother cells and its reduced expression in the neuronal progeny of these cells suggest that this protein may be involved in the maintenance of the proliferative state. BrdU 5-bromo-2′-deoxyuridine COP I, II coatomer proteins that coat vesicles and direct protein and membrane trafficking between early compartments of the secretory pathway in eukaryotic cells GM130 Peripheral membrane proteins associated with the Golgi bodies. GMC ganglion mother cell Ms-golgin80 The Manduca sexta homolog of the GM130 protein. Other homologs include Rn-GM130 (Rattus norvegicus); Hs-GM130 (Homo sapiens), Dm-golgin90 (Drosophila melanogaster), Ce-golgin107 (Caenorhabditis elegans) and Bm-golgin (Brugia malayi) PBS phosphate buffered saline PBST phosphate buffered saline containing 0.05% Tween-20 TBST Tris buffered saline containing 0.05% Tween-20 5-bromo-2′-deoxyuridine coatomer proteins that coat vesicles and direct protein and membrane trafficking between early compartments of the secretory pathway in eukaryotic cells Peripheral membrane proteins associated with the Golgi bodies. ganglion mother cell The Manduca sexta homolog of the GM130 protein. Other homologs include Rn-GM130 (Rattus norvegicus); Hs-GM130 (Homo sapiens), Dm-golgin90 (Drosophila melanogaster), Ce-golgin107 (Caenorhabditis elegans) and Bm-golgin (Brugia malayi) phosphate buffered saline phosphate buffered saline containing 0.05% Tween-20 Tris buffered saline containing 0.05% Tween-20
Journal Article
ERalpha-related chromothripsis enhances concordant gene transcription on chromosome 17q11.1-q24.1 in luminal breast cancer
by
Chou, Chih-Wei
,
Kaklamani, Virginia G
,
Chen, Meizhen
in
Analysis
,
Antipsychotic agents
,
Breast cancer
2020
Chromothripsis is an event of genomic instability leading to complex chromosomal alterations in cancer. Frequent long-range chromatin interactions between transcription factors (TFs) and targets may promote extensive translocations and copy-number alterations in proximal contact regions through inappropriate DNA stitching. Although studies have proposed models to explain the initiation of chromothripsis, few discussed how TFs influence this process for tumor progression. This study focused on genomic alterations in amplification associated regions within chromosome 17. Inter-/intra-chromosomal rearrangements were analyzed using whole genome sequencing data of breast tumors in the Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) cohort. Common ER[alpha] binding sites were defined based on MCF-7, T47D, and MDA-MB-134 breast cancer cell lines using univariate K-means clustering methods. Nanopore sequencing technology was applied to validate frequent rearrangements detected between ATC loci on 17q23 and an ER[alpha] hub on 20q13. The efficacy of pharmacological inhibition of a potentially druggable target gene on 17q23 was evaluated using breast cancer cell lines and patient-derived circulating breast tumor cells. There are five adjoining regions from 17q11.1 to 17q24.1 being hotspots of chromothripsis. Inter-/intra-chromosomal rearrangements of these regions occurred more frequently in ER[alpha]-positive tumors than in ER[alpha]-negative tumors. In addition, the locations of the rearrangements were often mapped within or close to dense ER[alpha] binding sites localized on these five 17q regions or other chromosomes. This chromothriptic event was linked to concordant upregulation of 96 loci that predominantly regulate cell-cycle machineries in advanced luminal tumors. Genome-editing analysis confirmed that an ER[alpha] hub localized on 20q13 coordinately regulates a subset of these loci localized on 17q23 through long-range chromosome interactions. One of these loci, Tousled Like Kinase 2 (TLK2) known to participate in DNA damage checkpoint control, is an actionable target using phenothiazine antipsychotics (PTZs). The antiproliferative effect of PTZs was prominent in high TLK2-expressing cells, compared to low expressing cells. This study demonstrates a new approach for identifying tumorigenic drivers from genomic regions highly susceptible to ER[alpha]-related chromothripsis. We found a group of luminal breast tumors displaying 17q-related chromothripsis for which antipsychotics can be repurposed as treatment adjuncts.
Journal Article