26 results on '"Huasong Tian"'
Search Results
2. Arf6 controls retromer traffic and intracellular cholesterol distribution via a phosphoinositide-based mechanism
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Catherine Marquer, Huasong Tian, Julie Yi, Jayson Bastien, Claudia Dall'Armi, YoungJoo Yang-Klingler, Bowen Zhou, Robin Barry Chan, and Gilbert Di Paolo
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Science - Abstract
The small GTPase Arf6 regulates intracellular transport, phosphoinositide signalling and cholesterol homeostasis. Here, Marquer et al. show that loss of Arf6 causes cholesterol accumulation in endosomes due to defects in phosphoinositide-dependent retromer-mediated trafficking of CI-M6PR and NPC2.
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- 2016
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3. Expression of the Carboxy-Terminal Portion of MUC16/CA125 Induces Transformation and Tumor Invasion.
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Thapi D Rao, Huasong Tian, Xun Ma, Xiujun Yan, Sahityasri Thapi, Nikolaus Schultz, Nestor Rosales, Sebastien Monette, Amy Wang, David M Hyman, Douglas A Levine, David Solit, and David R Spriggs
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The CA125 antigen is found in the serum of many patients with serous ovarian cancer and has been widely used as a disease marker. CA125 has been shown to be an independent factor for clinical outcome in this disease. In The Cancer Genome Atlas ovarian cancer project, MUC16 expression levels are frequently increased, and the highest levels of MUC16 expression are linked to a significantly worse survival. To examine the biologic effect of the proximal portion of MUC16/CA125, NIH/3T3 (3T3) fibroblast cell lines were stably transfected with the carboxy elements of MUC16. As few as 114 amino acids from the carboxy-terminal portion of MUC16 were sufficient to increase soft agar growth, promote matrigel invasion, and increase the rate of tumor growth in athymic nude mice. Transformation with carboxy elements of MUC16 was associated with activation of the AKT and ERK pathways. MUC16 transformation was associated with up-regulation of a number of metastases and invasion gene transcripts, including IL-1β, MMP2, and MMP9. All observed oncogenic changes were exclusively dependent on the extracellular "ectodomain" of MUC16. The biologic impact of MUC16 was also explored through the creation of a transgenic mouse model expressing 354 amino acids of the carboxy-terminal portion of MUC16 (MUC16c354). Under a CMV, early enhancer plus chicken β actin promoter (CAG) MUC16c354 was well expressed in many organs, including the brain, colon, heart, kidney, liver, lung, ovary, and spleen. MUC16c354 transgenic animals appear to be viable, fertile, and have a normal lifespan. However, when crossed with p53-deficient mice, the MUC16c354:p53+/- progeny displayed a higher frequency of spontaneous tumor development compared to p53+/- mice alone. We conclude that the carboxy-terminal portion of the MUC16/CA125 protein is oncogenic in NIH/3T3 cells, increases invasive tumor properties, activates the AKT and ERK pathways, and contributes to the biologic properties of ovarian cancer.
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- 2015
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4. Deficiencies of the lipid-signaling enzymes phospholipase D1 and D2 alter cytoskeletal organization, macrophage phagocytosis, and cytokine-stimulated neutrophil recruitment.
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Wahida H Ali, Qin Chen, Kathleen E Delgiorno, Wenjuan Su, Jason C Hall, Tsunaki Hongu, Huasong Tian, Yasunori Kanaho, Gilbert Di Paolo, Howard C Crawford, and Michael A Frohman
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Cell migration and phagocytosis ensue from extracellular-initiated signaling cascades that orchestrate dynamic reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton. The reorganization is mediated by effector proteins recruited to the site of activity by locally-generated lipid second messengers. Phosphatidic acid (PA), a membrane phospholipid generated by multiple enzyme families including Phospholipase D (PLD), has been proposed to function in this role. Here, we show that macrophages prepared from mice lacking either of the classical PLD isoforms PLD1 or PLD2, or wild-type macrophages whose PLD activity has been pharmacologically inhibited, display isoform-specific actin cytoskeleton abnormalities that likely underlie decreases observed in phagocytic capacity. Unexpectedly, PA continued to be detected on the phagosome in the absence of either isoform and even when all PLD activity was eliminated. However, a disorganized phagocytic cup was observed as visualized by imaging PA, F-actin, Rac1, an organizer of the F-actin network, and DOCK2, a Rac1 activator, suggesting that PLD-mediated PA production during phagocytosis is specifically critical for the integrity of the process. The abnormal F-actin reorganization additionally impacted neutrophil migration and extravasation from the vasculature into interstitial tissues. Although both PLD1 and PLD2 were important in these processes, we also observed isoform-specific functions. PLD1-driven processes in particular were observed to be critical in transmigration of macrophages exiting the vasculature during immune responses such as those seen in acute pancreatitis or irritant-induced skin vascularization.
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- 2013
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5. Genomic signature of Fanconi anaemia DNA repair pathway deficiency in cancer
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Andrew L. H. Webster, Mathijs A. Sanders, Krupa Patel, Ralf Dietrich, Raymond J. Noonan, Francis P. Lach, Ryan R. White, Audrey Goldfarb, Kevin Hadi, Matthew M. Edwards, Frank X. Donovan, Remco M. Hoogenboezem, Moonjung Jung, Sunandini Sridhar, Tom F. Wiley, Olivier Fedrigo, Huasong Tian, Joel Rosiene, Thomas Heineman, Jennifer A. Kennedy, Lorenzo Bean, Rasim O. Rosti, Rebecca Tryon, Ashlyn-Maree Gonzalez, Allana Rosenberg, Ji-Dung Luo, Thomas S. Carroll, Sanjana Shroff, Michael Beaumont, Eunike Velleuer, Jeff C. Rastatter, Susanne I. Wells, Jordi Surrallés, Grover Bagby, Margaret L. MacMillan, John E. Wagner, Maria Cancio, Farid Boulad, Theresa Scognamiglio, Roger Vaughan, Kristin G. Beaumont, Amnon Koren, Marcin Imielinski, Settara C. Chandrasekharappa, Arleen D. Auerbach, Bhuvanesh Singh, David I. Kutler, Peter J. Campbell, Agata Smogorzewska, and Hematology
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Multidisciplinary ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Article - Abstract
Fanconi anaemia (FA), a model syndrome of genome instability, is caused by a deficiency in DNA interstrand crosslink repair resulting in chromosome breakage1–3. The FA repair pathway protects against endogenous and exogenous carcinogenic aldehydes4–7. Individuals with FA are hundreds to thousands fold more likely to develop head and neck (HNSCC), oesophageal and anogenital squamous cell carcinomas8 (SCCs). Molecular studies of SCCs from individuals with FA (FA SCCs) are limited, and it is unclear how FA SCCs relate to sporadic HNSCCs primarily driven by tobacco and alcohol exposure or infection with human papillomavirus9 (HPV). Here, by sequencing genomes and exomes of FA SCCs, we demonstrate that the primary genomic signature of FA repair deficiency is the presence of high numbers of structural variants. Structural variants are enriched for small deletions, unbalanced translocations and fold-back inversions, and are often connected, thereby forming complex rearrangements. They arise in the context of TP53 loss, but not in the context of HPV infection, and lead to somatic copy-number alterations of HNSCC driver genes. We further show that FA pathway deficiency may lead to epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition and enhanced keratinocyte-intrinsic inflammatory signalling, which would contribute to the aggressive nature of FA SCCs. We propose that the genomic instability in sporadic HPV-negative HNSCC may arise as a result of the FA repair pathway being overwhelmed by DNA interstrand crosslink damage caused by alcohol and tobacco-derived aldehydes, making FA SCC a powerful model to study tumorigenesis resulting from DNA-crosslinking damage.
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- 2022
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6. Identifying synergistic high-order 3D chromatin conformations from genome-scale nanopore concatemer sequencing
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Aditya S. Deshpande, Netha Ulahannan, Matthew Pendleton, Xiaoguang Dai, Lynn Ly, Julie M. Behr, Stefan Schwenk, Will Liao, Michael A. Augello, Carly Tyer, Priyesh Rughani, Sarah Kudman, Huasong Tian, Hannah G. Otis, Emily Adney, David Wilkes, Juan Miguel Mosquera, Christopher E. Barbieri, Ari Melnick, David Stoddart, Daniel J. Turner, Sissel Juul, Eoghan Harrington, and Marcin Imieliński
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Nanopore Sequencing ,Nanopores ,Androgens ,Biomedical Engineering ,Humans ,Molecular Medicine ,Bioengineering ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Chromatin ,Transcription Factors ,Biotechnology - Abstract
High-order three-dimensional (3D) interactions between more than two genomic loci are common in human chromatin, but their role in gene regulation is unclear. Previous high-order 3D chromatin assays either measure distant interactions across the genome or proximal interactions at selected targets. To address this gap, we developed Pore-C, which combines chromatin conformation capture with nanopore sequencing of concatemers to profile proximal high-order chromatin contacts at the genome scale. We also developed the statistical method Chromunity to identify sets of genomic loci with frequencies of high-order contacts significantly higher than background ('synergies'). Applying these methods to human cell lines, we found that synergies were enriched in enhancers and promoters in active chromatin and in highly transcribed and lineage-defining genes. In prostate cancer cells, these included binding sites of androgen-driven transcription factors and the promoters of androgen-regulated genes. Concatemers of high-order contacts in highly expressed genes were demethylated relative to pairwise contacts at the same loci. Synergies in breast cancer cells were associated with tyfonas, a class of complex DNA amplicons. These results rigorously link genome-wide high-order 3D interactions to lineage-defining transcriptional programs and establish Pore-C and Chromunity as scalable approaches to assess high-order genome structure.
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- 2022
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7. Abstract P2-06-04: Pathognomonic long molecule footprints of backup repair pathways in homologous recombination deficient cancers
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Jeremy Setton, Kevin Hadi, Huasong Tian, Arnaud Da Cruz Paula, Joel Rosiene, Zi-Ning Choo, Julie Behr, Xiaotong Yao, Olivier Elemento, Britta Weigelt, Nadeem Riaz, Jorge S Reis-Filho, Marcin Imielinski, and Simon N Powell
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Cancer Research ,Oncology - Abstract
Background: Cancer genomes provide a durable record of the genetic alterations that are acquired during normal cell development and carcinogenesis from DNA damage and DNA repair defects. As DNA repair-deficient tumors often become dependent on backup repair pathways, mutational signatures found in such tumors are thought to reflect the absence of a particular repair pathway as well as the activity of the backup repair mechanism responsible for maintaining genome integrity. While homologous recombination (HR) deficiency is primarily a disorder of double-strand break (DSB) repair, the mutation classes most specifically associated with HR-deficiency in cancer are paradoxically small variants, namely single nucleotide variants and short deletions. Mechanistic and cytogenetic studies, however, indicate that HR-deficiency should compromise structural genomic integrity and yield complex rearrangements. Here we elucidate complex structural variants that are specific for HR-deficient cancers and identify rearrangements that differentiate BRCA1 from BRCA2 loss and illuminate divergent backup DNA repair mechanisms. Methods: To investigate the role of complex SVs in HR-deficient cancers, we assembled a cohort of 2,367 WGS profiles from four tumor types (breast, ovarian, prostate, and pancreatic cancer) known to be associated with HR-deficiency. We identified 48 BRCA1-/- and 87 BRCA2-/- cases and called samples lacking (mono- or biallelic) mutations in BRCA1, BRCA2, or any other HR associated gene (e.g. PALB2, RAD51C) as wild-type. To validate observed structural variant patterns associated with homologous recombination deficiency from this larger dataset, a new cohort of 49 cases of invasive breast cancer with known BRCA1 (N = 29) or BRCA2 (N = 20) deficiency was collected as part of a prospective research study at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and sequenced with 10X-linked read WGS in addition to standard Illumina short-read WGS. Results: Analysis of nearly 2,400 short-read whole genomes revealed distinct quasi-reciprocal structural variants (SVs) highly enriched in BRCA1-/- versus BRCA2-/- cancers. Applying high physical coverage (>150X) long molecule WGS to 49 tumor-normal pairs from breast cancer patients with inherited BRCA1 or BRCA2 loss-of-function mutations, we show that these SVs are associated with distinct cis or trans somatic allelic phases despite having nearly identical short read WGS footprints. Trans (crossover) outcomes were found to give rise to large-scale chromosomal variants that mediate the loss-of-heterozygosity patterns previously described as a cardinal feature of HR-deficient cancers. We find that these quasi-reciprocal SVs can be explained as distinct template switching outcomes from a shared intermediate arising after replication fork stalling in HR-deficient cancers. Furthermore, our WGS analyses reveal that BRCA2 genomes are highly enriched in deletions that harbor long (50-1000bp) tracts of inexact microhomology. These events, validated by long molecule WGS, indicate that single-stranded annealing serves as an active backup repair pathway in BRCA2-/- but not BRCA1-/- cancers. Conclusions: These results provide direct genomic evidence linking large-scale structural changes in HR-deficient tumors with specific backup repair pathways that suggest novel, therapeutically targetable dependencies. Our findings elucidate backup repair mechanisms responsible for generating structural variation in HR-deficient tumors, demonstrate the genotype-specific divergence of such compensatory DNA repair, and provide genomic features that improve the detection accuracy of HR-deficiency with utility for the optimal selection of treatment. Citation Format: Jeremy Setton, Kevin Hadi, Huasong Tian, Arnaud Da Cruz Paula, Joel Rosiene, Zi-Ning Choo, Julie Behr, Xiaotong Yao, Olivier Elemento, Britta Weigelt, Nadeem Riaz, Jorge S Reis-Filho, Marcin Imielinski, Simon N Powell. Pathognomonic long molecule footprints of backup repair pathways in homologous recombination deficient cancers [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 2021 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium; 2021 Dec 7-10; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2022;82(4 Suppl):Abstract nr P2-06-04.
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- 2022
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8. Fanconi Anemia Pathway Deficiency Drives Copy Number Variation in Squamous Cell Carcinomas
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Sunandini Sridhar, David I. Kutler, Bhuvanesh Singh, Susanne I. Wells, Ji-Dung Luo, Mathijs A. Sanders, Margaret L. MacMillan, Ashlyn-Maree Gonzalez, Lorenzo Bean, Rebecca Tryon, Huasong Tian, Jordi Surrallés, Arleen D. Auerbach, Kevin Hadi, Moonjung Jung, Ralf Dietrich, Matthew M. Edwards, Eunike Velleuer, Krupa R. Patel, Frank X. Donovan, Amnon Koren, Marcin Imielinski, Audrey Goldfarb, Ozgur Rosti, Jeffrey C. Rastatter, Theresa Scognamiglio, John E. Wagner, Andrew L.H. Webster, Maria Cancio, Olivier Fedrigo, Agata Smogorzewska, Jennifer A. Kennedy, Thomas Carrol, Grover C. Bagby, Joel Rosiene, Allana Rosenberg, Thomas Heineman, Ryan R. White, Raymond J. Noonan, Farid Boulad, Francis P. Lach, Settara C. Chandrasekharappa, Peter J. Campbell, and Roger D. Vaughan
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YAP1 ,Genome instability ,Fanconi anemia ,Chromosomal fragile site ,medicine ,Cancer research ,Context (language use) ,Copy-number variation ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Carcinogenesis ,medicine.disease_cause ,FANC proteins - Abstract
Fanconi anemia (FA), a model syndrome of genome instability, is caused by a deficiency in DNA interstrand crosslink (ICL) repair resulting in chromosome breakage1–3. The FA repair pathway comprises at least 22 FANC proteins including BRCA1 and BRCA24–6, and protects against carcinogenic endogenous and exogenous aldehydes7–10. Individuals with FA are hundreds to thousands-fold more likely to develop head and neck (HNSCC), esophageal and anogenital squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) with a median onset age of 31 years11. The aggressive nature of these tumors and poor patient tolerance of platinum and radiation-based therapy have been associated with short survival in FA11–16. Molecular studies of SCCs from individuals with FA (FA SCCs) have been limited, and it is unclear how they relate to sporadic HNSCCs primarily driven by tobacco and alcohol exposure or human papillomavirus (HPV) infection17. Here, by sequencing FA SCCs, we demonstrate that the primary genomic signature of FA-deficiency is the presence of a high number of structural variants (SVs). SVs are enriched for small deletions, unbalanced translocations, and fold-back inversions that arise in the context of TP53 loss. The SV breakpoints preferentially localize to early replicating regions, common fragile sites, tandem repeats, and SINE elements. SVs are often connected forming complex rearrangements. Resultant genomic instability underlies elevated copy number alteration (CNA) rates of key HNSCC-associated genes, including PIK3CA, MYC, CSMD1, PTPRD, YAP1, MXD4, and EGFR. In contrast to sporadic HNSCC, we find no evidence of HPV infection in FA HNSCC, although positive cases were identified in gynecologic tumors. A murine allograft model of FA pathway-deficient SCC was enriched in SVs, exhibited dramatic tumor growth advantage, more rapid epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), and enhanced autonomous inflammatory signaling when compared to an FA pathway-proficient model. In light of the protective role of the FA pathway against SV formation uncovered here, and recent findings of FA pathway insufficiency in the setting of increased formaldehyde load resulting in hematopoietic stem cell failure and carcinogenesis18–20, we propose that high copy-number instability in sporadic HNSCC may result from functional overload of the FA pathway by endogenous and exogenous DNA crosslinking agents. Our work lays the foundation for improved FA patient treatment and demonstrates that FA SCC is a powerful model to study tumorigenesis resulting from DNA crosslinking damage.
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- 2021
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- View/download PDF
9. Loose ends in cancer genome structure
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Marcin Imielinski, Aditya Deshpande, Xiaotong Yao, Joel Rosiene, Julie M. Behr, Lange Td, Huasong Tian, and Kevin Hadi
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Whole genome sequencing ,Structural variation ,Telomerase ,Computational biology ,Biology ,Homologous recombination ,Phenotype ,Genome ,FANCA ,Telomere - Abstract
SummaryRecent pan-cancer studies have delineated patterns of structural genomic variation across thousands of tumor whole genome sequences. It is not known to what extent the shortcomings of short read (≤ 150 bp) whole genome sequencing (WGS) used for structural variant analysis has limited our understanding of cancer genome structure. To formally address this, we introduce the concept of “loose ends” - copy number alterations that cannot be mapped to a rearrangement by WGS but can be indirectly detected through the analysis of junction-balanced genome graphs. Analyzing 2,319 pan-cancer WGS cases across 31 tumor types, we found loose ends were enriched in reference repeats and fusions of the mappable genome to repetitive or foreign sequences. Among these we found genomic footprints of neotelomeres, which were surprisingly enriched in cancers with low telomerase expression and alternate lengthening of telomeres phenotype. Our results also provide a rigorous upper bound on the role of non-allelic homologous recombination (NAHR) in large-scale cancer structural variation, while nominatingINO80,FANCA, andARID1Aas positive modulators of somatic NAHR. Taken together, we estimate that short read WGS maps >97% of all large-scale (>10 kbp) cancer structural variation; the rest represent loose ends that require long molecule profiling to unambiguously resolve. Our results have broad relevance for future research and clinical applications of short read WGS and delineate precise directions where long molecule studies might provide transformative insight into cancer genome structure.
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- 2021
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10. Structural variant evolution after telomere crisis
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Joel Rosiene, Kaori K. Takai, Sally M. Dewhurst, Huasong Tian, Julie M. Behr, Xiaotong M Yao, Nazario Bosco, Titia de Lange, and Marcin Imielinski
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0301 basic medicine ,Genome instability ,Telomerase ,Science ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Biology ,Models, Biological ,Genome ,Article ,Genomic Instability ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Cell Line ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cancer genome ,Chromosomal Instability ,Neoplasms ,Chromosome instability ,Cancer genomics ,Humans ,Allele ,Lung ,Metaphase ,Genetics ,Chromothripsis ,Multidisciplinary ,Structural variant ,Chromosome ,General Chemistry ,Fibroblasts ,Telomere ,Telomeres ,030104 developmental biology ,Chromosome 21 ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Telomere crisis contributes to cancer genome evolution, yet only a subset of cancers display breakage-fusion-bridge (BFB) cycles and chromothripsis, hallmarks of experimental telomere crisis identified in previous studies. We examine the spectrum of structural variants (SVs) instigated by natural telomere crisis. Eight spontaneous post-crisis clones did not show prominent patterns of BFB cycles or chromothripsis. Their crisis-induced genome rearrangements varied from infrequent simple SVs to more frequent and complex SVs. In contrast, BFB cycles and chromothripsis occurred in MRC5 fibroblast clones that escaped telomere crisis after CRISPR-controlled telomerase activation. This system revealed convergent evolutionary lineages altering one allele of chromosome 12p, where a short telomere likely predisposed to fusion. Remarkably, the 12p chromothripsis and BFB events were stabilized by independent fusions to chromosome 21. The data establish that telomere crisis can generate a wide spectrum of SVs implying that a lack of BFB patterns and chromothripsis in cancer genomes does not indicate absence of past telomere crisis., Telomere crisis has been shown to induce chromothripsis and breakage fusion bridge (BFB) cycles in vitro. Here, the authors show that telomere crisis generates a much broader spectrum of structural variations, implying that cancers without chromothripsis and BFB cycles could have emerged from telomere crisis.
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- 2021
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11. Abstract 6196: Fanconi anemia pathway deficiency drives copy number variation in squamous cell carcinoma
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Andrew L. Webster, Mathijs A. Sanders, Krupa Patel, Ralf Dietrich, Raymond J. Noonan, Francis P. Lach, Ryan R. White, Audrey M. Goldfarb, Kevin Hadi, Matthew M. Edwards, Frank X. Donovan, Moonjung Jung, Sunandini Sridhar, Olivier Fedrigo, Huasong Tian, Joel Rosiene, Thomas Heineman, Jennifer Kennedy, Lorenzo Bean, Rasim O. Rosti, Rebecca Tryon, Ashlyn-Maree Gonzalez, Allana Rosenberg, Ji-Dung Luo, Thomas Carrol, Eunike Velleuer, Jeff C. Rastatter, Susanne I. Wells, Jordi Surrallés, Grover Bagby, Margaret L. MacMillan, John E. Wagner, Maria Cancio, Farid Boulad, Theresa Scognamiglio, Roger Vaughan, Amnon Koren, Marcin Imielinski, Settara Chandrasekharappa, Arleen D. Auerbach, Bhuvanesh Singh, David Kutler, Peter J. Campbell, and Agata Smogorzewska
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Cancer Research ,Oncology - Abstract
Fanconi anemia (FA), a model syndrome of genome instability, is caused by a deficiency in DNA interstrand crosslink (ICL) repair resulting in chromosome breakage. The FA repair pathway comprises at least 22 FANC proteins including BRCA1 and BRCA2 and protects against carcinogenic endogenous and exogenous aldehydes. Individuals with FA are hundreds to thousands-fold more likely to develop head and neck (HNSCC), esophageal and anogenital squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) with a median onset age of 31 years. The aggressive nature of these tumors and poor patient tolerance of platinum and radiation-based therapy have been associated with short survival in FA. Molecular studies of SCCs from individuals with FA (FA SCCs) have been limited, and it is unclear how they relate to sporadic HNSCCs primarily driven by tobacco and alcohol exposure or human papillomavirus (HPV) infection. Here, by sequencing FA SCCs, we demonstrate that the primary genomic signature of FA-deficiency is the presence of a high number of structural variants (SVs). SVs are enriched for small deletions, unbalanced translocations, and fold-back inversions that arise in the context of TP53 loss. The SV breakpoints preferentially localize to early replicating regions, common fragile sites, tandem repeats, and SINE elements. SVs are often connected forming complex rearrangements. Resultant genomic instability underlies elevated copy number alteration (CNA) rates of key HNSCC-associated genes, including PIK3CA, MYC, CSMD1, PTPRD, YAP1, MXD4, and EGFR. In contrast to sporadic HNSCC, we find no evidence of HPV infection in FA HNSCC, although positive cases were identified in gynecologic tumors. A murine allograft model of FA pathway-deficient SCC was enriched in SVs, exhibited dramatic tumor growth advantage, more rapid epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, and enhanced autonomous inflammatory signaling when compared to an FA pathway-proficient model. In light of the protective role of the FA pathway against SV formation uncovered here, and recent findings of FA pathway insufficiency in the setting of increased formaldehyde load resulting in hematopoietic stem cell failure and carcinogenesis, we propose that high copy-number instability in sporadic HNSCC may result from functional overload of the FA pathway by endogenous and exogenous DNA crosslinking agents. Our work lays the foundation for improved FA patient treatment and demonstrates that FA SCC is a powerful model to study tumorigenesis resulting from DNA crosslinking damage. Citation Format: Andrew L. Webster, Mathijs A. Sanders, Krupa Patel, Ralf Dietrich, Raymond J. Noonan, Francis P. Lach, Ryan R. White, Audrey M. Goldfarb, Kevin Hadi, Matthew M. Edwards, Frank X. Donovan, Moonjung Jung, Sunandini Sridhar, Olivier Fedrigo, Huasong Tian, Joel Rosiene, Thomas Heineman, Jennifer Kennedy, Lorenzo Bean, Rasim O. Rosti, Rebecca Tryon, Ashlyn-Maree Gonzalez, Allana Rosenberg, Ji-Dung Luo, Thomas Carrol, Eunike Velleuer, Jeff C. Rastatter, Susanne I. Wells, Jordi Surrallés, Grover Bagby, Margaret L. MacMillan, John E. Wagner, Maria Cancio, Farid Boulad, Theresa Scognamiglio, Roger Vaughan, Amnon Koren, Marcin Imielinski, Settara Chandrasekharappa, Arleen D. Auerbach, Bhuvanesh Singh, David Kutler, Peter J. Campbell, Agata Smogorzewska. Fanconi anemia pathway deficiency drives copy number variation in squamous cell carcinoma [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2022; 2022 Apr 8-13. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2022;82(12_Suppl):Abstract nr 6196.
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- 2022
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12. Nanopore sequencing of DNA concatemers reveals higher-order features of chromatin structure
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Marcin Imielinski, Daniel J. Turner, Matthew Pendleton, Priyesh Rughani, Stefan Schwenk, Netha Ulahannan, David Wilkes, Sarah Kudman, Huasong Tian, Xiaoguang Dai, Sissel Juul, Julie M. Behr, Aditya Deshpande, Juan Miguel Mosquera, David Stoddart, Eoghan D. Harrington, Carly Tyer, and Emily M. Adney
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Chromosome conformation capture ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Histone ,chemistry ,biology ,biology.protein ,Chromosome ,Sequence assembly ,Nanopore sequencing ,Computational biology ,Genome ,DNA ,Chromatin - Abstract
Higher-order chromatin structure arises from the combinatorial physical interactions of many genomic loci. To investigate this aspect of genome architecture we developed Pore-C, which couples chromatin conformation capture with Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT) long reads to directly sequence multi-way chromatin contacts without amplification. In GM12878, we demonstrate that the pairwise interaction patterns implicit in Pore-C multi-way contacts are consistent with gold standard Hi-C pairwise contact maps at the compartment, TAD, and loop scales. In addition, Pore-C also detects higher-order chromatin structure at 18.5-fold higher efficiency and greater fidelity than SPRITE, a previously published higher-order chromatin profiling technology. We demonstrate Pore-C’s ability to detect and visualize multi-locus hubs associated with histone locus bodies and active / inactive nuclear compartments in GM12878. In the breast cancer cell line HCC1954, Pore-C contacts enable the reconstruction of complex and aneuploid rearranged alleles spanning multiple megabases and chromosomes. Finally, we apply Pore-C to generate a chromosome scalede novoassembly of the HG002 genome. Our results establish Pore-C as the most simple and scalable assay for the genome-wide assessment of combinatorial chromatin interactions, with additional applications for cancer rearrangement reconstruction andde novogenome assembly.
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- 2019
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13. Distinct Classes of Complex Structural Variation Uncovered across Thousands of Cancer Genome Graphs
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Ed Reznik, Julie M. Behr, Mayu O. Frank, Madison Darmofal, David A. Knowles, Mahmoud Ghandi, Huasong Tian, Thomas G. Paulson, Sally M. Dewhurst, Kanika Arora, Zoran Gajic, Olivier Elemento, Marcin Imielinski, Sarah Kudman, Nicolas Robine, Alon Shaiber, Xiaotong Yao, Robert B. Darnell, Jorge S. Reis-Filho, Juan Miguel Mosquera, John Maciejowski, Charalampos Xanthopoulakis, Michael Sigouros, Rick Mortensen, David Wilkes, Franklin W. Huang, Emily M. Adney, Vanessa Felice, Jeremy Setton, Jeremiah Wala, Mary K. Kuhner, Nadeem Riaz, Anne-Katrin Emde, Andrea Sboner, Patricia C. Galipeau, Aditya Deshpande, Carissa A. Sanchez, Simon N. Powell, Brian J. Reid, Joel Rosiene, Kenji Oman, Minita Shah, Bud Mishra, Rameen Beroukhim, Joseph DeRose, Kazimierz O. Wrzeszczynski, Titia de Lange, Xiaohong Li, Kenneth Eng, Lucian P. Smith, Michael C. Zody, and Kevin Hadi
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DNA Copy Number Variations ,Somatic cell ,DNA repair ,Somatic hypermutation ,Computational biology ,Biology ,Genome ,Article ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Structural variation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Neoplasms ,Humans ,030304 developmental biology ,Gene Rearrangement ,Chromothripsis ,0303 health sciences ,Whole Genome Sequencing ,Genome, Human ,Chromosomal fragile site ,Genomics ,Graph ,Chromosome Inversion ,Genomic Structural Variation ,Mutation ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Cancer genomes often harbor hundreds of somatic DNA rearrangement junctions, many of which cannot be easily classified into simple (e.g. deletion) or complex (e.g. chromothripsis) structural variant classes. Applying a novel genome graph computational paradigm to analyze the topology of junction copy number (JCN) across 2,778 tumor whole genome sequences, we uncovered three novel complex rearrangement phenomena: pyrgo, rigma, and tyfonas. Pyrgo are “towers” of low-JCN duplications associated with early replicating regions and superenhancers, enriched in breast and ovarian cancers. Rigma comprise “chasms” of low-JCN deletions at late-replicating fragile sites, enriched in gastrointestinal carcinomas. Tyfonas are “typhoons” of high-JCN junctions and fold-back inversions enriched in expressed protein-coding fusions and breakend hypermutation, frequently found in acral, but not cutaneous, melanomas. Clustering of tumors according to genome graph-derived features identified subgroups associated with DNA repair defects and poor prognosis.
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- 2020
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14. Pivotal Role of Phospholipase D1 in Tumor Necrosis Factor-α–Mediated Inflammation and Scar Formation after Myocardial Ischemia and Reperfusion in Mice
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Tobias Jürgens, Huasong Tian, Simone Gorressen, Jürgen Scheller, Julia Müller, Tanja Schönberger, Margitta Elvers, Nicole Armbruster, Jens W. Fischer, Jan Sommer, Christina Niermann, Gilbert Di Paolo, and Meinrad Gawaz
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Ischemia ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Myocardial Reperfusion Injury ,Inflammation ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Monocytes ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Cicatrix ,Mice ,Cell Movement ,Internal medicine ,Phospholipase D ,medicine ,Animals ,cardiovascular diseases ,Myocardial infarction ,Ventricular remodeling ,Mice, Knockout ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Disease Models, Animal ,Cardiology ,Tumor necrosis factor alpha ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Myofibroblast ,Reperfusion injury ,Transforming growth factor - Abstract
Myocardial inflammation is critical for ventricular remodeling after ischemia. Phospholipid mediators play an important role in inflammatory processes. In the plasma membrane they are degraded by phospholipase D1 (PLD1). PLD1 was shown to be critically involved in ischemic cardiovascular events. Moreover, PLD1 is coupled to tumor necrosis factor-α signaling and inflammatory processes. However, the impact of PLD1 in inflammatory cardiovascular disease remains elusive. Here, we analyzed the impact of PLD1 in tumor necrosis factor-α-mediated activation of monocytes after myocardial ischemia and reperfusion using a mouse model of myocardial infarction. PLD1 expression was highly up-regulated in the myocardium after ischemia/reperfusion. Genetic ablation of PLD1 led to defective cell adhesion and migration of inflammatory cells into the infarct border zone 24 hours after ischemia/reperfusion injury, likely owing to reduced tumor necrosis factor-α expression and release, followed by impaired nuclear factor-κB activation and interleukin-1 release. Moreover, PLD1 was found to be important for transforming growth factor-β secretion and smooth muscle α-actin expression of cardiac fibroblasts because myofibroblast differentiation and interstitial collagen deposition were altered in Pld1(-/-) mice. Consequently, infarct size was increased and left ventricular function was impaired 28 days after myocardial infarction in Pld1(-/-) mice. Our results indicate that PLD1 is crucial for tumor necrosis factor-α-mediated inflammation and transforming growth factor-β-mediated collagen scar formation, thereby augmenting cardiac left ventricular function after ischemia/reperfusion.
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- 2014
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15. Abstract 909: Single-cell transcriptomic profiling of non-small cell lung cancer uncovers inter- and intracell population structure across TCGA lung adenocarcinoma and lung squamous cancer subtypes
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Juan Miguel Mosquera, Kofi Ennu Gyan, Marlon Stoeckius, Shaham Beg, Peter Smibert, Aditya Deshpande, Marcin Imielinski, Davide Risso, Huasong Tian, and Joel Rosiene
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Untranslated region ,Cancer Research ,Tumor microenvironment ,Stromal cell ,Cell ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Transcriptome ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oncology ,medicine ,Cancer research ,Adenocarcinoma ,Immunohistochemistry ,Lung cancer - Abstract
Lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD) and squamous cell carcinoma (LUSC) are the most prevalent types of non-all cell lung cancer (NSCLC), a leading cause of cancer death worldwide. In this study, we analyzed the transcriptomes of ~45,000 single cells (scRNA) from 13 NSCLC patients, including 5 LUAD cases which were collected and profiled at our institution. To correlate genomes and transcriptomes we performed Whole-Genome Sequencing (WGS) on 3 of these 5 LUAD cases. By comparing tumor tissue with matched adjacent non-malignant lung tissue we are able to confidently distinguish 13 cell-type specific clusters that unambiguously match previously characterized lineages. We developed algorithms for the identification of malignant cells derived from tumor tissue through scRNA analysis of copy number alterations and single nucleotide variants (SNV). Joint analysis of WGS and scRNA confirmed an enrichment of tobacco-associated SNVs among malignant cells of the tumor. Stromal cell types demonstrated consistent expression patterns across cases, while malignant cells demonstrated both inter- and intra-tumoral heterogeneity in their expression of signatures related to GPCR signaling, 3’ UTR mediated translational regulation, and cell-cell junction organization. In particular, one case displayed a unique pattern of intra-tumoral heterogeneity, as a subset of malignant cells robustly express a marker of pulmonary neuroendocrine cells, CGRP. Employing immunohistochemistry, the spatial organization of these malignant cells is revealed to be mutually exclusive within the tumor microenvironment and overlapping in expression of clinical markers of small-cell lung cancer. Finally, we deconvolved bulk TCGA LUAD and LUSC gene expression samples and analyzed the relationship between cell type specific gene expression in cell types of the lung and passenger mutation topographies. Our results provide insight into the molecular and clinical correlates of deconvolved NSCLC transcriptomes and provide a novel methodology with which to explore genomic variation at a single cell resolution. Furthermore, our dataset provides a resource for illuminating cancer-cell transcriptional changes and revealing key molecular drivers of tumor-stromal interactions in lung cancer. Citation Format: Kofi E. Gyan, Aditya Deshpande, Shaham Beg, Huasong Tian, Joel Rosiene, Marlon Stoeckius, Peter Smibert, Davide Risso, Juan Miguel Mosquera, Marcin Imielinski. Single-cell transcriptomic profiling of non-small cell lung cancer uncovers inter- and intracell population structure across TCGA lung adenocarcinoma and lung squamous cancer subtypes [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2019; 2019 Mar 29-Apr 3; Atlanta, GA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2019;79(13 Suppl):Abstract nr 909.
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- 2019
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16. Arf6 controls retromer traffic and intracellular cholesterol distribution via a phosphoinositide-based mechanism
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Julie Yi, Bowen Zhou, Catherine Marquer, Claudia Dall'Armi, YoungJoo Yang-Klingler, Gilbert Di Paolo, Jayson Bastien, Robin B. Chan, and Huasong Tian
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0301 basic medicine ,Retromer ,ADP ribosylation factor ,Endosome ,Sorting Nexins ,Science ,Vesicular Transport Proteins ,General Physics and Astronomy ,GTPase ,Endosomes ,Biology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Article ,Receptor, IGF Type 2 ,03 medical and health sciences ,Phosphatidylinositol Phosphates ,Animals ,Humans ,Guanosine triphosphatase ,Receptor ,Phospholipids ,Mice, Knockout ,Multidisciplinary ,Effector ,ADP-Ribosylation Factors ,General Chemistry ,Phosphoinositides--Physiological effect ,Fibroblasts ,Cell biology ,030104 developmental biology ,Cholesterol ,ADP-Ribosylation Factor 6 ,Biological transport ,Lysosomes ,Cytology ,HeLa Cells - Abstract
Small GTPases play a critical role in membrane traffic. Among them, Arf6 mediates transport to and from the plasma membrane, as well as phosphoinositide signalling and cholesterol homeostasis. Here we delineate the molecular basis for the link between Arf6 and cholesterol homeostasis using an inducible knockout (KO) model of mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs). We find that accumulation of free cholesterol in the late endosomes/lysosomes of Arf6 KO MEFs results from mistrafficking of Niemann–Pick type C protein NPC2, a cargo of the cation-independent mannose-6-phosphate receptor (CI-M6PR). This is caused by a selective increase in an endosomal pool of phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate (PI4P) and a perturbation of retromer, which controls the retrograde transport of CI-M6PR via sorting nexins, including the PI4P effector SNX6. Finally, reducing PI4P levels in KO MEFs through independent mechanisms rescues aberrant retromer tubulation and cholesterol mistrafficking. Our study highlights a phosphoinositide-based mechanism for control of cholesterol distribution via retromer., The small GTPase Arf6 regulates intracellular transport, phosphoinositide signalling and cholesterol homeostasis. Here, Marquer et al. show that loss of Arf6 causes cholesterol accumulation in endosomes due to defects in phosphoinositide-dependent retromer-mediated trafficking of CI-M6PR and NPC2.
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- 2016
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17. A novel role for phospholipase D as an endogenous negative regulator of platelet sensitivity
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Magnus Grenegård, Florian Lang, Gilbert Di Paolo, Margitta Elvers, Oliver Borst, Meinrad Gawaz, Knut Fälker, Hanieh Khoshjabinzadeh, Patrick Münzer, Tomas L. Lindahl, and Huasong Tian
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Blood Platelets ,Medicin och hälsovetenskap ,Indoles ,Phosphatidic Acids ,Biology ,Phospholipase ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Collagen receptor ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Phospholipase D ,Animals ,Humans ,Platelet ,Platelet activation ,PLD ,Platelets ,Secretion ,Aggregation ,Regulation ,Mice, Knockout ,Hydrolysis ,PLD2 ,Cell Biology ,Phosphatidic acid ,Domperidone ,Cell biology ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Second messenger system ,Biocatalysis ,Phosphatidylcholines - Abstract
Platelet aggregation, secretion and thrombus formation play a critical role in primary hemostasis to prevent excessive blood loss. On the other hand, uncontrolled platelet activation leads to pathological thrombus formation resulting in myocardial infarction or stroke. Stimulation of heterotrimeric G-proteins by soluble agonists or immunoreceptor tyrosine based activation motif-coupled receptors that interact with immobilized ligands such as the collagen receptor glycoprotein (GP) VI lead to the activation of phospholipases that cleave membrane phospholipids to generate soluble second messengers. Platelets contain the phospholipases (PL) D1 and D2 which catalyze the hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine to generate the second messenger phosphatidic acid (PA). The production of PA is abrogated by primary alcohols that have been widely used for the analysis of PLD-mediated processes. However, it is not clear if primary alcohols effectively reduce PA generation or if they induce PLD-independent cellular effects. In the present study we made use of the specific PLD inhibitor 5-fluoro-2-indolyl des-chlorohalopemide (FIPI) and show for the first time, that FIPI enhances platelet dense granule secretion and aggregation of human platelets. Further, FIPI has no effect on cytosolic Ca(2+) activity but needs proper Rho kinase signaling to mediate FIPI-induced effects on platelet activation. Upon FIPI treatment the phosphorylation of the PKC substrate pleckstrin was prominently enhanced suggesting that FIPI affects PKC-mediated secretion and aggregation in platelets. Similar effects of FIPI were observed in platelets from mouse wild-type and Pld1(-/-) mice pointing to a new role for PLD2 as a negative regulator of platelet sensitivity.
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- 2012
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18. Deficiencies of the Lipid-Signaling Enzymes Phospholipase D1 and D2 Alter Cytoskeletal Organization, Macrophage Phagocytosis, and Cytokine-Stimulated Neutrophil Recruitment
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Michael A. Frohman, Kathleen E. DelGiorno, Howard C. Crawford, Yasunori Kanaho, Tsunaki Hongu, Wahida H. Ali, Huasong Tian, Jason C. Hall, Gilbert Di Paolo, Qin Chen, and Wenjuan Su
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Phagocytic cup ,rac1 GTP-Binding Protein ,Mouse ,lcsh:Medicine ,Actin Filaments ,Mice ,Molecular Cell Biology ,Pathology ,Signaling in Cellular Processes ,Cytoskeleton ,lcsh:Science ,Immune Response ,Phagosome ,Multidisciplinary ,PLD2 ,Animal Models ,Cellular Structures ,Signaling Cascades ,Cell biology ,rac GTP-Binding Proteins ,Cell Motility ,Neutrophil Infiltration ,Lipid Signaling ,Medicine ,Phospholipase D1 ,Research Article ,Signal Transduction ,Phagocytosis ,Immune Cells ,Immunology ,Blotting, Western ,Biophysics ,Antigen-Presenting Cells ,Phosphatidic Acids ,Biology ,Model Organisms ,Phospholipase D ,Animals ,Macrophages ,Neuropeptides ,lcsh:R ,Actin cytoskeleton ,Pancreatitis ,Phospholipid Signaling Cascade ,lcsh:Q ,Cytology - Abstract
Cell migration and phagocytosis ensue from extracellular-initiated signaling cascades that orchestrate dynamic reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton. The reorganization is mediated by effector proteins recruited to the site of activity by locally-generated lipid second messengers. Phosphatidic acid (PA), a membrane phospholipid generated by multiple enzyme families including Phospholipase D (PLD), has been proposed to function in this role. Here, we show that macrophages prepared from mice lacking either of the classical PLD isoforms PLD1 or PLD2, or wild-type macrophages whose PLD activity has been pharmacologically inhibited, display isoform-specific actin cytoskeleton abnormalities that likely underlie decreases observed in phagocytic capacity. Unexpectedly, PA continued to be detected on the phagosome in the absence of either isoform and even when all PLD activity was eliminated. However, a disorganized phagocytic cup was observed as visualized by imaging PA, F-actin, Rac1, an organizer of the F-actin network, and DOCK2, a Rac1 activator, suggesting that PLD-mediated PA production during phagocytosis is specifically critical for the integrity of the process. The abnormal F-actin reorganization additionally impacted neutrophil migration and extravasation from the vasculature into interstitial tissues. Although both PLD1 and PLD2 were important in these processes, we also observed isoform-specific functions. PLD1-driven processes in particular were observed to be critical in transmigration of macrophages exiting the vasculature during immune responses such as those seen in acute pancreatitis or irritant-induced skin vascularization.
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- 2013
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19. Key Roles for the Lipid Signaling Enzyme Phospholipase D1 in the Tumor Microenvironment During Tumor Angiogenesis and Metastasis
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Michael A. Frohman, Huasong Tian, Julie-Ann Cavallo, Yi Zhang, Tsunaki Hongu, Yasunori Kanaho, Adrianus W. M. van der Velden, Wahida H. Ali, Gilbert Di Paolo, Bernhard Nieswandt, Takanobu Sato, and Qin Chen
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Lung Neoplasms ,Angiogenesis ,Transplantation, Heterologous ,Breast Neoplasms ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Metastasis ,Neovascularization ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Phospholipase D ,Tumor Microenvironment ,medicine ,Animals ,Neoplasm Metastasis ,Molecular Biology ,Protein kinase B ,Mice, Knockout ,Tumor microenvironment ,Neovascularization, Pathologic ,Endothelial Cells ,Cell Biology ,Lipid signaling ,medicine.disease ,Vascular endothelial growth factor ,chemistry ,Cancer research ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Neoplasm Transplantation ,Phospholipase D1 ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Angiogenesis inhibitors, which target tumor cells, confer only short-term benefits on tumor growth. We report that ablation of the lipid signaling enzyme phospholipase D1 (PLD1) in the tumor environment compromised the neovascularization and growth of tumors. PLD1 deficiency suppressed the activation of Akt and mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling pathways by vascular endothelial growth factor in vascular endothelial cells, resulting in decreased integrin-dependent cell adhesion to, and migration on, extracellular matrices, as well as reduced tumor angiogenesis in a xenograft model. In addition, mice lacking PLD1 incurred fewer lung metastases than did wild-type mice. Bone marrow transplantation and binding studies identified a platelet-derived mechanism involving decreased tumor cell–platelet interactions, in part because of impaired activation of α IIb β 3 integrin in platelets, which decreased the seeding of tumor cells into the lung parenchyma. Treatment with a small-molecule inhibitor of PLD1 phenocopied PLD1 deficiency, efficiently suppressing both tumor growth and metastasis in mice. These findings reveal that PLD1 in the tumor environment promotes tumor growth and metastasis and, taken together with previous reports on the roles of PLD in tumor cell–intrinsic adaptations to stress, suggest the potential use of PLD inhibitors as cancer therapeutics.
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- 2012
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20. Phospholipase d2 ablation ameliorates Alzheimer's disease-linked synaptic dysfunction and cognitive deficits
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Markus R. Wenk, Robin B. Chan, Gilbert Di Paolo, Huasong Tian, Hong Zhang, Karen Duff, Guanghou Shui, Lili Wang, Agnieszka Staniszewski, Mikael Laredo, Tae-Wan Kim, Ottavio Arancio, Tiago Gil Oliveira, and Universidade do Minho
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Time Factors ,Long-Term Potentiation ,Phospholipase ,Hippocampus ,PC12 Cells ,Mass Spectrometry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Amyloid beta-Protein Precursor ,Mice ,0302 clinical medicine ,Conditioning, Psychological ,Drug Interactions ,Enzyme Inhibitors ,Estrenes ,Cell Line, Transformed ,Neurons ,0303 health sciences ,Behavior, Animal ,General Neuroscience ,PLD2 ,Age Factors ,Long-term potentiation ,Phosphatidic acid ,Fear ,Pyrrolidinones ,3. Good health ,Cell biology ,Arachidonic acid ,Genetically modified mouse ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Green Fluorescent Proteins ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Mice, Transgenic ,Biology ,In Vitro Techniques ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Alzheimer Disease ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Phospholipase D ,Animals ,Humans ,Maze Learning ,030304 developmental biology ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,Science & Technology ,Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials ,Lipid signaling ,Peptide Fragments ,Rats ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Disease Models, Animal ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Mutation ,Synapses ,Cognition Disorders ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Growing evidence implicates aberrant lipid signaling in Alzheimer's disease (AD). While phospholipases A2 and C have been recently shown to mediate key actions of amyloid ß-peptide (Aß) through a dysregulation of arachidonic acid and phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate metabolism, respectively, the role of phospholipase D (PLD) has so far remained elusive. PLD produces phosphatidic acid (PA), a bioactive lipid involved in multiple aspects of cell physiology, including signaling and membrane trafficking processes. Here we show that oligomeric Aß enhances PLD activity in cultured neurons and that this stimulatory effect does not occur upon ablation of PLD2 via gene targeting. Aß fails to suppress long-term potentiation in PLD2-deficient hippocampal slices, suggesting that PLD2 is required for the synaptotoxic action of this peptide. In vivo PLD activity, as assessed by detection of phosphatidylethanol levels using mass spectrometry (MS) following ethanol injection, is also increased in the brain of a transgenic mouse model of AD (SwAPP). Furthermore, Pld2 ablation rescues memory deficits and confers synaptic protection in SwAPP mice despite a significant Aß load. MS-based lipid analysis of Pld2 mutant brains in the presence or absence of the SwAPP transgene unmasks striking crosstalks between different PA species. This lipid analysis shows an exquisite acyl chain specificity and plasticity in the perturbation of PA metabolism. Collectively, our results point to specific molecular species of PA as key modulators of AD pathogenesis and identify PLD2 as a novel potential target for therapeutics., This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants R01 NS056049 and P50 AG008702 (G.D.P.), and R01 NS049442 (O.A.), by the Singapore National Research Foundation under Competitive Research Programme Award No. 2007-04, the Biomedical Research Council of Singapore (R-183-000-211-305), and the National Medical Research Council (R-183-000-224-213) (M. R. W.); as well as from the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology SFRH/BD/33237/2007 and the Luso-American Development Foundation (T.G.O.). We thank Sung Ho Ryu and Pietro De Camilli for providing the PLD and synaptophysin antibodies, respectively; Min Suk Kang and Nuno Sousa for critical input; Elizabeta Micevska for technical help with the animals; Sergey Voronov for help with the pilot PLD assays; and Claudia Dall'Armi for the help with confocal microscopy and image analysis. We thank Diego Berman, Kimberly Robinson, Zachary Freyberg, and Scott Small for critical reading of this manuscript. We also thank Michael Frohman for the kind gift of the GFP-hPLD1 and GFP-mPLD2 constructs. Anti-A beta antibodies were a kind gift from Dr. Sonia Jung (Centocor).
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- 2010
21. P2‐338: Phospholipase D2 ablation ameliorates Alzheimer‐linked synaptic dysfunction and cognitive deficits: Mechanistic insights from lipidomic analysis
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Tae-Wan Kim, Lili Wang, Gilbert Di Paolo, Ottavio Arancio, Markus R. Wenk, Hong Zhang, Robin B. Chan, Tiago Gil Oliveira, Huasong Tian, Karen Duff, and Agnieszka Staniszewski
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Epidemiology ,Health Policy ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Cognition ,Phospholipase ,Ablation ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,Developmental Neuroscience ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Psychology ,Neuroscience - Published
- 2010
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22. The Phospholipase D1 Pathway Modulates Macroautophagy
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Claudia Dall'Armi, Akiko Nezu, Robin B. Chan, Michael A. Frohman, Markus R. Wenk, Kimberly S. Robinson, Gilbert Di Paolo, Huasong Tian, Karen Duff, Andrés Hurtado-Lorenzo, Scott A. Small, Etienne Morel, W. Haung Yu, Oladapo Yeku, and Akitsugu Yamamoto
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Endosome ,Blotting, Western ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,tau Proteins ,CHO Cells ,Biology ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Article ,Wortmannin ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mice ,Cricetulus ,Cricetinae ,Sequestosome-1 Protein ,Autophagy ,Phospholipase D ,Animals ,Humans ,Phosphatidylinositol ,Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing ,Mice, Knockout ,Multidisciplinary ,Microscopy, Confocal ,General Chemistry ,Class III Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinases ,Cell biology ,Androstadienes ,Microscopy, Electron ,chemistry ,Signal transduction ,Bacterial outer membrane ,Microtubule-Associated Proteins ,Phospholipase D1 ,HeLa Cells ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Although macroautophagy is known to be an essential degradative process whereby autophagosomes mediate the engulfment and delivery of cytoplasmic components into lysosomes, the lipid changes underlying autophagosomal membrane dynamics are undetermined. Here, we show that phospholipase D1 (PLD1), which is primarily associated with the endosomal system, partially relocalizes to the outer membrane of autophagosome-like structures upon nutrient starvation. The localization of PLD1, as well as the starvation-induced increase in PLD activity, are altered by wortmannin, a phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitor, suggesting PLD1 may act downstream of Vps34. Pharmacological inhibition of PLD and genetic ablation of PLD1 in mouse cells decreased the starvation-induced expansion of LC3-positive compartments, consistent with a role of PLD1 in the regulation of autophagy. Furthermore, inhibition of PLD results in higher levels of Tau and p62 aggregates in organotypic brain slices. Our in vitro and in vivo findings establish a role for PLD1 in autophagy.
- Published
- 2010
23. Abstract 326: Overexpression of the carboxyl-terminus of MUC16 can accelerate the occurrence of phenotypes in p53 heterozygous mouse model
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Huasong Tian, Spriggs David, Alexia Iasonos, and Qin Zhou
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Genetically modified mouse ,Cancer Research ,Cancer ,Heterozygote advantage ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,medicine.disease_cause ,Phenotype ,Oncology ,Immunology ,Knockout mouse ,Cancer research ,medicine ,Sarcoma ,Carcinogenesis ,Ovarian cancer - Abstract
Ovarian cancer is the fifth leading cause of cancer death in women. Cancer antigen 125 (CA125), also known as MUC16, is a high molecular weight glycoprotein overexpressed in sera of women with epithelial ovarian cancer, but not in normal epithelial ovarian tissue. As a biomarker, CA125 is widely used to screen, diagnose and monitor the epithelial ovarian cancer. To further understand the roles of MUC16 in tumorigenesis, recently, some mouse models related Muc16 and MUC16 were created. There is no phenotype for the Muc16 knockout mice (Cheon et al., PLoS ONE, 2009). We built a MUC16 carboxyl-terminus transgenic mouse (MUC16ΔC354) and found out that the transgenic mice appear to be viable, fertile, and develop normally through the more than two years of life. In order to investigate the relationship of p53 mutation and MUC16 overexpression in tumorigensis, we generated mice in which MUC16ΔC354 can be overxepressed with p53 heterozygote. Like the MUC16ΔC354 transgenic mice, the MUC16ΔC354; p53+/- mice develop normally. Both mouse strains are susceptible to spontaneous tumors, including sarcoma and lymphoma. However, comparing p53+/- mice, overexpression of MUC16ΔC354 significantly accelerates the occurrence of phenotypes in MUC16ΔC354; p53+/- mice. Out of a study population of 94 MUC16ΔC354; p53+/- mice, 22 (23.4%) developed obvious neoplasms by 18 months of age, 13 (11.9%) out of 109 for p53+/- mice (ρ Citation Format: Huasong Tian, Qin Zhou, Alexia Iasonos, Spriggs David. Overexpression of the carboxyl-terminus of MUC16 can accelerate the occurrence of phenotypes in p53 heterozygous mouse model. [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 104th Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2013 Apr 6-10; Washington, DC. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2013;73(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 326. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2013-326
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- 2013
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24. Abstract 4332: Conditional transgenic mice for the carboxyl-terminus of MUC16
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Huasong Tian and David R. Spriggs
- Subjects
Genetics ,Genetically modified mouse ,Cancer Research ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Molecular biology ,Phenotype ,Oncology ,Antigen ,Knockout mouse ,medicine ,HA-tag ,Ovarian cancer ,Gene ,PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway - Abstract
The cancer antigen 125 (CA125) is encoded by the MUC16 gene, which is present in sera of women with ovarian cancer. Currently, CA125 is widely used to diagnose the epithelial ovarian cancer and monitor the effects of treatment. Despite the widespread use of CA125, the biochemical and molecular functions of this antigen is poorly understood. There is no phenotype for MUC16 knockout mice (Cheon et al., PLoS ONE, 2009). Our previous data have demonstrated that the carboxyl-terminus of MUC16 has at least the partial functions of MUC16 since CA125 protein is too big (up to 2.5 MDa). To better understanding of the biological functions and characterizations of MUC16, we made a construct to create a conditional transgenic mouse model for the carboxyl-terminus of MUC16 using the Cre-loxP system. This mouse model encodes for the specific portion of MUC16, we named as MUC16ΔC354 mouse, which includes 354 amino acids of carboxyl-terminus of MUC16 with a HA tag. The CMV early enhancer plus chicken β actin (CAG) promoter is used to drive hGFP between two loxPs and the carboxyl-terminus of MUC16 after removing hGFP. After mating with EIIa-Cre transgenic mice, we found two founders which highly express MUC16ΔC354 in many organs, for example, brain, colon, heart, kidney, liver, lung, ovary and spleen. Lung and heart have higher expression level of MUC16ΔC354, and ovary has a middle level. MUC16ΔC354 heterozygous animals appear to be viable, fertile, and develop normally through the first four months of life. However, MUC16ΔC354 transgenic mice regulate PI3K/AKT and MAPK/ERK signaling pathways in some organs. Additional MUC16ΔC354 mice are being bred and selected for phenotypes. Cross breeding with N-Myc transgenic mice, or Rb-1 and p53 knockout mice is planned based on the preliminary results of The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). Citation Format: {Authors}. {Abstract title} [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 102nd Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2011 Apr 2-6; Orlando, FL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2011;71(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 4332. doi:10.1158/1538-7445.AM2011-4332
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- 2011
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25. Key Roles for the Lipid Signaling Enzyme Phospholipase D1 in the Tumor Microenvironment During Tumor Angiogenesis and Metastasis.
- Author
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Qin Chen, Tsunaki Hongu, Takanobu Sato, Yi Zhang, Ali, Wahida, Cavallo, Julie-Ann, van der Velden, Adrianus, Huasong Tian, Di Paolo, Gilbert, Nieswandt, Bernhard, Yasunori Kanaho, and Frohman, Michael A.
- Published
- 2012
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26. Phospholipase D2 Ablation Ameliorates Alzheimer's Disease-Linked Synaptic Dysfunction and Cognitive Deficits.
- Author
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Oliveira, Tiago Gil, Chan, Robin B., Huasong Tian, Laredo, Mikael, Guanghou Shui, Staniszewski, Agnieszka, Hong Zhang, Lili Wang, Tae-Wan Kim, Duff, Karen E., Wenk, Markus R., Arancio, Ottavio, and Paolo, Gilbert Di
- Subjects
PHOSPHOLIPASES ,COGNITION disorders ,SYNAPSES ,ALZHEIMER'S disease ,AMYLOID ,ARACHIDONIC acid ,LIPID metabolism ,MASS spectrometry - Abstract
Growing evidence implicates aberrant lipid signaling in Alzheimer's disease (AD). While phospholipases A2 and C have been recently shown to mediate key actions of amyloid 13-peptide (Aβ) through a dysregulation of arachidonic acid and phosphatidylinositol-4,5bisphosphate metabolism, respectively, the role of phospholipase D (PLD) has so far remained elusive. PLD produces phosphatidic acid (PA), a bioactive lipid involved in multiple aspects of cell physiology, including signaling and membrane trafficking processes. Here we show that oligomeric Aβ enhances PLD activity in cultured neurons and that this stimulatory effect does not occur upon ablation of PLD2 via gene targeting. Aβ fails to suppress long-term potentiation in PLD2-deficient hippocampal slices, suggesting that PLD2 is required for the synaptotoxic action of this peptide. In vivo PLD activity, as assessed by detection of phosphatidylethanol levels using mass spectrometry (MS) following ethanol injection, is also increased in the brain of a transgenic mouse model of AD (SwAPP). Furthermore, P1d2 ablation rescues memory deficits and confers synaptic protection in SwAPP mice despite a significant Aβ load. MS-based lipid analysis of P1d2 mutant brains in the presence or absence of the SwAPP transgene unmasks striking crosstalks between different PA species. This lipid analysis shows an exquisite acyl chain specificity and plasticity in the perturbation of PA metabolism. Collectively, our results point to specific molecular species of PA as key modulators of AD pathogenesis and identify PLD2 as a novel potential target for therapeutics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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