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Dive into the research topics where Clifford G. Tepper is active.

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Featured researches published by Clifford G. Tepper.


Cancer Research | 2009

A Novel Androgen Receptor Splice Variant Is Up-regulated during Prostate Cancer Progression and Promotes Androgen Depletion–Resistant Growth

Zhiyong Guo; Xi Yang; Feng Sun; Douglas E. Linn; Hege Chen; Hegang Chen; Xiangtian Kong; Jonathan Melamed; Clifford G. Tepper; Hsing Jien Kung; Angela Brodie; Joanne Edwards; Yun Qiu

The androgen receptor (AR) plays a key role in progression to incurable androgen ablation-resistant prostate cancer (PCA). We have identified three novel AR splice variants lacking the ligand-binding domain (designated as AR3, AR4, and AR5) in hormone-insensitive PCA cells. AR3, one of the major splice variants expressed in human prostate tissues, is constitutively active, and its transcriptional activity is not regulated by androgens or antiandrogens. Immunohistochemistry analysis on tissue microarrays containing 429 human prostate tissue samples shows that AR3 is significantly up-regulated during PCA progression and AR3 expression level is correlated with the risk of tumor recurrence after radical prostatectomy. Overexpression of AR3 confers ablation-independent growth of PCA cells, whereas specific knockdown of AR3 expression (without altering AR level) in hormone-resistant PCA cells attenuates their growth under androgen-depleted conditions in both cell culture and xenograft models, suggesting an indispensable role of AR3 in ablation-independent growth of PCA cells. Furthermore, AR3 may play a distinct, yet essential, role in ablation-independent growth through the regulation of a unique set of genes, including AKT1, which are not regulated by the prototype AR. Our data suggest that aberrant expression of AR splice variants may be a novel mechanism underlying ablation independence during PCA progression, and AR3 may serve as a prognostic marker to predict patient outcome in response to hormonal therapy. Given that these novel AR splice variants are not inhibited by currently available antiandrogen drugs, development of new drugs targeting these AR isoforms may potentially be effective for treatment of ablation-resistant PCA.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

An androgen-regulated miRNA suppresses Bak1 expression and induces androgen-independent growth of prostate cancer cells

Xu Bao Shi; Lingru Xue; Joy C. Yang; Ai Hong Ma; Jianjun Zhao; Ma Xu; Clifford G. Tepper; Christopher P. Evans; Hsing Jien Kung; Ralph W. deVere White

Although prostate cancer (CaP) is the most frequently diagnosed malignant tumor and the second leading cause of cancer deaths in American men, the mechanisms explaining the development and progression of CaP remain largely unknown. Recent studies have shown that some aberrantly expressed microRNAs (miRNAs) are involved in tumorigenesis. Although aberrant expression of certain miRNAs has been discovered in CaP, their function in this disease has not yet been defined. In this study, we found differential expression of miR-125b in androgen-dependent and independent CaP cells, as well as in benign and malignant prostate tissues. Furthermore, androgen signaling was able to up-regulate the expression of miR-125b. In addition, transfection of synthetic miR-125b stimulated androgen-independent growth of CaP cells and down-regulated the expression of Bak1. Our results suggest that miR-125b acts as an oncogene, contributing to the pathogenesis of CaP.


Science | 2011

Recombinant Origin of the Retrovirus XMRV

Tobias Paprotka; Krista A. Delviks-Frankenberry; Oya Cingöz; Anthony Martinez; Hsing Jien Kung; Clifford G. Tepper; Wei Shau Hu; Matthew J. Fivash; John M. Coffin; Vinay K. Pathak

Analysis of the origin of XMRV suggests that links between the virus and human disease are due to laboratory contamination. The retrovirus XMRV (xenotropic murine leukemia virus–related virus) has been detected in human prostate tumors and in blood samples from patients with chronic fatigue syndrome, but these findings have not been replicated. We hypothesized that an understanding of when and how XMRV first arose might help explain the discrepant results. We studied human prostate cancer cell lines CWR22Rv1 and CWR-R1, which produce XMRV virtually identical to the viruses recently found in patient samples, as well as their progenitor human prostate tumor xenograft (CWR22) that had been passaged in mice. We detected XMRV infection in the two cell lines and in the later passage xenografts, but not in the early passages. In particular, we found that the host mice contained two proviruses, PreXMRV-1 and PreXMRV-2, which share 99.92% identity with XMRV over >3.2-kilobase stretches of their genomes. We conclude that XMRV was not present in the original CWR22 tumor but was generated by recombination of two proviruses during tumor passaging in mice. The probability that an identical recombinant was generated independently is negligible (~10−12); our results suggest that the association of XMRV with human disease is due to contamination of human samples with virus originating from this recombination event.


The Prostate | 2011

miR-125b promotes growth of prostate cancer xenograft tumor through targeting pro-apoptotic genes.

Xu Bao Shi; Lingru Xue; Ai Hong Ma; Clifford G. Tepper; Hsing Jien Kung; Ralph W. deVere White

Increasing evidence demonstrates that aberrantly regulated microRNAs (miRNAs) contribute to the initiation and progression of human cancer. We previously have demonstrated that miR‐125b stimulated the growth of prostate cancer (CaP) cells. In this study, we further determined the influence of miR‐125b on the pathogenesis of CaP.


Clinical & Experimental Metastasis | 2005

Syngeneic mouse mammary carcinoma cell lines: Two closely related cell lines with divergent metastatic behavior

Alexander D. Borowsky; Ruria Namba; Lawrence J. T. Young; Kent W. Hunter; J. Graeme Hodgson; Clifford G. Tepper; Erik T. McGoldrick; William J. Muller; Robert D. Cardiff; Jeffrey P. Gregg

Two cell lines, Met-1fvb2 and DB-7fvb2, with different metastatic potential, were derived from mammary carcinomas in FVB/N-Tg(MMTV-PyVmT) and FVB/N-Tg(MMTV-PyVmTY315F/Y322F) mice, transplanted into syngeneic FVB/N hosts and characterized. The lines maintain a stable morphological and biological phenotype after multiple rounds of in vitro culture and in vivo transplantation. The Met-1fvb2 line derived from a FVB/N-Tg(MMTV-PyVmT) tumor exhibits invasive growth and 100% metastases when transplanted into the females FVB/N mammary fat pad. The DB-7fvb2 line derived from the FVB/N-Tg(MMTV-PyVmTY315F/Y322F) with a “double base” modification at Y315F/Y322F exhibits more rapid growth when transplanted into the mammary fat pad, but a lower rate of metastasis (17%). The Met1fvb2 cells show high activation of AKT, while DB-7fvb2 cells show very low levels of AKT activation. The DNA content and gene expression levels of both cell lines are stable over multiple generations. Therefore, these two cell lines provide a stable, reproducible resource for the study of metastasis modulators, AKT molecular pathway interactions, and gene target and marker discovery.


Cancer Research | 2007

Evidence for Calpain-Mediated Androgen Receptor Cleavage as a Mechanism for Androgen Independence

Stephen J. Libertini; Clifford G. Tepper; Veronica Rodriguez; David M. Asmuth; Hsing Jien Kung; Maria Mudryj

Prostate carcinoma is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in men and the second leading cause of death due to cancer in Western civilization. Androgen ablation therapy is effective in treating androgen-dependent tumors, but eventually, androgen-independent tumors recur and are refractory to conventional chemotherapeutics. Hence, the emergence of androgen independence is the most challenging problem in managing prostate tumors. We report a novel mechanism of androgen independence: calpain cleaves the androgen receptor (AR) into an androgen-independent isoform. In vitro and in vivo analyses show that calpain removes the COOH-terminal ligand binding domain generating a constitutively active molecule. Analysis of human prostate tumors indicates that several tumors express higher levels of this truncated AR than noncancerous prostate tissue. In transient transfection studies, the truncated AR is three to five times more potent than the full-length receptor in transactivating transcription. The androgen-independent Rv1 cells express high levels of the truncated AR, and treatment of these cells with a calpain inhibitor reduces truncated AR expression. In the absence of androgen, inhibition of calpain activity induces apoptosis. The HIV protease inhibitor amprenavir inhibits calpain activity and is also effective in inducing apoptosis in the Rv1 cell line. The cell culture studies were reproduced in a mouse xenograft model, where, in the absence of androgens, amprenavir significantly reduces tumor growth. Together, these studies indicate that calpain-dependent proteolysis of the AR may be a mechanism of androgen independence. The calpain inhibition studies suggest that inhibiting this activity may be a potential treatment for some androgen-independent prostate tumors.


Cancer Research | 2009

Androgen-induced coactivator ANCCA mediates specific androgen receptor signaling in prostate cancer.

June X. Zou; Linlang Guo; Alexey S. Revenko; Clifford G. Tepper; Abigael T. Gemo; Hsing Jien Kung; Hong Wu Chen

Androgen receptor (AR) plays a pivotal role in prostate cancer, primarily by regulating different gene expression programs elicited by androgen, which is important for cancer cell proliferation, survival, and differentiation. It is believed that the transcriptional function of AR is mediated largely by distinct nuclear coregulators. We report here the identification of ANCCA (also known as ATAD2), a new member of the AAA+ ATPase family proteins, as a novel AR coactivator. ANCCA interacts directly with AR and enhances its transcriptional activity, and is required for androgen-stimulated expression of a specific subgroup of genes including IGF1R, IRS-2, SGK1, and survivin. Upon androgen stimulation, ANCCA together with AR is recruited to the specific AR target genes. Suppression of ANCCA expression strongly inhibited the proliferation of androgen-responsive or androgen-independent, AR-positive prostate cancer cells and caused a significant increase of cellular apoptosis. Strikingly, the ANCCA gene itself, located at chromosome 8q24, is highly induced by androgen in androgen-dependent prostate cancer cells and xenograft tumors. Although ANCCA is hardly detected in normal human prostate tissue, high levels of ANCCA are found in hormone-independent prostate cancer cell lines, xenograft tumor, and a subset of prostate cancers with high Gleason scores. Together, these findings suggest that ANCCA plays an important role in prostate cancer by mediating specific AR functions in cancer cell survival and proliferation. The possession of ATPase and bromodomain by ANCCA makes it an attractive target for the development of therapeutics for the disease.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

KDM8, a H3K36me2 histone demethylase that acts in the cyclin A1 coding region to regulate cancer cell proliferation

Datsun A. Hsia; Clifford G. Tepper; Mamata Pochampalli; Elaine Y C Hsia; Chie Izumiya; Steve B. Huerta; Michael Wright; Hong Wu Chen; Hsing Jien Kung; Yoshihiro Izumiya

Localized chromatin modifications of histone tails play an important role in regulating gene transcription, and aberration of these processes leads to carcinogenesis. Methylated histone lysine residues, a key player in chromatin remodeling, are demethylated by the JmjC class of enzymes. Here we show that JMJD5 (now renamed KDM8), a JmjC family member, demethylates H3K36me2 and is required for cell cycle progression. Chromatin immunoprecipitation assays applied to human genome tiling arrays in conjunction with RNA microarray revealed that KDM8 occupies the coding region of cyclin A1 and directly regulates transcription. Mechanistic analyses showed that KDM8 functioned as a transcriptional activator by inhibiting HDAC recruitment via demethylation of H3K36me2, an epigenetic repressive mark. Tumor array experiments revealed KDM8 is overexpressed in several types of cancer. In addition, loss-of-function studies in MCF7 cells leads to cell cycle arrest. These studies identified KDM8 as an important cell cycle regulator.


Cell Cycle | 2008

Cancerous miRNAs and their regulation

Xu Bao Shi; Clifford G. Tepper; Ralph W. deVere White

Although they account for only a very minor fraction of the expressed genome, microRNAs (miRNAs) are pivotal regulators of development and cellular homeostasis through their control of diverse cellular processes including proliferation, differentiation, apoptosis, survival, motility, and morphogenesis. Accordingly, several miRNAs have been functionally classified as proto-oncogenes or tumor suppressors and are aberrantly expressed in different cancer types. Deregulation (e.g., overexpression or loss of expression) of these so-called “cancerous” miRNAs can figure prominently in tumor initiation and progression by elaborating an inappropriate cellular program promoting uncontrolled proliferation, favoring survival, inhibiting differentiation, and/or promoting invasive behavior. These features would certainly promote tumor dissemination and persistence by favoring metastasis and therapy resistance. Cancerous miRNAs therefore represent attractive molecules for exploitation as biomarkers and therapeutic targets. In this review, we highlight recently characterized cancerous miRNAs and the mechanisms through which they contribute to the pathogenesis of human cancers. We also discuss the signal transduction pathways that regulate the expression of these miRNAs with particular attention to several essential transcription factors such as Myc, p53, and the androgen receptor.


Cancer Research | 2010

ANCCA/ATAD2 Overexpression Identifies Breast Cancer Patients with Poor Prognosis, Acting to Drive Proliferation and Survival of Triple-Negative Cells through Control of B-Myb and EZH2

Ekaterina V. Kalashnikova; Alexey S. Revenko; Abigael T. Gemo; Nicholas P Andrews; Clifford G. Tepper; June X. Zou; Robert D. Cardiff; Alexander D. Borowsky; Hong Wu Chen

Chromatin coregulators are important factors in tumorigenesis and cancer progression. ANCCA is an AAA+ ATPase and a bromodomain-containing nuclear coactivator for the estrogen and androgen receptors that is crucial for assembly of chromatin-modifying complexes and proliferation of hormone-responsive cancer cells. In this study, we show that ANCCA is overexpressed in >70% of breast tumors and that its high protein level correlates well with tumor histologic grades (P<0.0001), highlighting ANCCA as a prognostic factor for poor overall survival and disease recurrence. Strikingly, high-level ANCCA correlated with triple-negative tumors that represent highly aggressive disease. Analysis of ANCCA transcript levels in multiple expression profiles of breast cancer identified ANCCA as a common signature gene, indicating that elevated transcripts also strongly correlate with tumor metastasis and poor survival. Biological and mechanistic investigations revealed that ANCCA is crucial for proliferation and survival of triple-negative/basal-like cancer cells and that it controls the expression of B-Myb, histone methyltransferase EZH2, and an Rb-E2F core program for proliferation, along with a subset of key mitotic kinesins and cell survival genes (IRS2, VEGF, and Akt1). In particular, ANCCA overexpression correlated strongly with EZH2 in tumors. Our results suggest that ANCCA may integrate multiple oncogenic programs in breast cancer, serving in particular as a prognostic marker and a therapeutic target for triple-negative cancers.

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Ruth L. Vinall

University of California

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Xu Bao Shi

University of California

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Ryan R. Davis

University of California

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Hong Wu Chen

University of California

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