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Featured researches published by Dingqing Feng.


Journal of Interferon and Cytokine Research | 2009

Down-regulation of GRIM-19 expression is associated with hyperactivation of STAT3-induced gene expression and tumor growth in human cervical cancers.

Ying Zhou; Min Li; Ying Wei; Dingqing Feng; Cheng Peng; Haiyan Weng; Yang Ma; Liang Bao; Shreeram C. Nallar; Sudhakar Kalakonda; Weihua Xiao; Dhananjaya V. Kalvakolanu; Bin Ling

Cervical cancer is the most common malignant disease responsible for the deaths of a large number of women in the developing world. Although certain strains of human papillomavirus (HPV) have been identified as the cause of this disease, events that lead to formation of malignant tumors are not fully clear. STAT3 is a major oncogenic transcription factor involved in the development and progression of a number of human tumors. However, the mechanisms that result in loss of control over STAT3 activity are not understood. Gene associated with Retinoid-Interferon-induced Mortality-19 (GRIM-19) is a tumor-suppressive protein identified using a genetic technique in the interferon/retinoid-induced cell death pathway. Here, we show that reduction in GRIM-19 protein levels occur in a number of primary human cervical cancers. Consequently, these tumors tend to express a high basal level of STAT3 and its downstream target genes. More importantly, using a surrogate model, we show that restoration of GRIM-19 levels reestablishes the control over STAT3-dependent gene expression and tumor growth in vivo. GRIM-19 suppressed the expression of tumor invasion- and angiogenesis-associated factors to limit tumor growth. This study identifies another major novel molecular pathway inactivated during the development of human cervical cancer.


Human Pathology | 2012

Significance of E-cadherin, β-catenin, and vimentin expression as postoperative prognosis indicators in cervical squamous cell carcinoma ☆,☆☆,★

Yong Cheng; Ying Zhou; Wenjing Jiang; Xia Yang; Jing Zhu; Dingqing Feng; Ying Wei; Min Li; Fengqiu Yao; Weiping Hu; Weihua Xiao; Bin Ling

Although early-stage cervical cancer can be treated by surgery, distant metastases can be life threatening. It has been a challenge to identify reliable biomarkers as indicators of metastasis or poor prognosis. We investigated the prognostic impact of vimentin, E-cadherin, and β-catenin expression measured by immunohistochemistry staining in samples from 135 patients with clinical stage I or II cervical squamous cell cancer and in normal cervical tissues from 55 patients who underwent hysterectomy for reasons other than neoplasia. Down-regulation of E-cadherin and β-catenin was positively related to histologic differentiation (P < .001), metastasis (P < .001), and recurrence (P < .001), whereas up-regulation of vimentin was inversely related to histologic differentiation, metastasis, and recurrence (P < .0001, .020, and .000, respectively). In univariate Cox regression analysis, high expression of E-cadherin or β-catenin was a positive prognostic indicator for overall survival (P < .001 and P < .001, respectively), whereas high expression of vimentin was a negative indicator (P < .001). In multivariate Cox regression analysis, high expression of E-cadherin was a positive prognostic indicator for overall survival (P = .002), whereas high expression of vimentin was a negative indicator (P = .034). The expression of E-cadherin and vimentin was associated with survival, and the 2 proteins were independent prognostic factors in univariate and multivariate analyses. The combination of a decrease of E-cadherin and an increase in vimentin might be a valuable survival indictor in cervical squamous cell cancer.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Targeting of Histone Deacetylases to Reactivate Tumour Suppressor Genes and Its Therapeutic Potential in a Human Cervical Cancer Xenograft Model

Dingqing Feng; Jiao Wu; Yuan Tian; Hu Zhou; Ying Zhou; Weiping Hu; Weidong Zhao; Haiming Wei; Bin Ling; Chunhong Ma

Aberrant histone acetylation plays an essential role in the neoplastic process via the epigenetic silencing of tumour suppressor genes (TSGs); therefore, the inhibition of histone deacetylases (HDAC) has become a promising target in cancer therapeutics. To investigate the correlation of histone acetylation with clinicopathological features and TSG expression, we examined the expression of acetylated H3 (AcH3), RARβ2, E-cadherin, and β-catenin by immunohistochemistry in 65 cervical squamous cell carcinoma patients. The results revealed that the absence of AcH3 was directly associated with poor histological differentiation and nodal metastasis as well as reduced/negative expression of RARβ2, E-cadherin, and β-catenin in clinical tumour samples. We further demonstrated that the clinically available HDAC inhibitors valproic acid (VPA) and suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA), in combination with all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA), can overcome the epigenetic barriers to transcription of RARβ2 in human cervical cancer cells. Chromatin immunoprecipitation analysis showed that the combination treatment increased the enrichment of acetylated histone in the RARβ2-RARE promoter region. In view of these findings, we evaluated the antitumor effects induced by combined VPA and ATRA treatment in a xenograft model implanted with poorly differentiated human squamous cell carcinoma. Notably, VPA restored RARβ2 expression via epigenetic modulation. Additive antitumour effects were produced in tumour xenografts by combining VPA with ATRA treatment. Mechanistically, the combination treatment reactivated the expression of TSGs RARβ2, E-cadherin, P21CIP1, and P53 and reduced the level of p-Stat3. Sequentially, upregulation of involucrin and loricrin, which indicate terminal differentiation, strongly contributed to tumour growth inhibition along with partial apoptosis. In conclusion, targeted therapy with HDAC inhibitors and RARβ2 agonists may represent a novel therapeutic approach for patients with cervical squamous cell carcinoma.


Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2008

Effect of conditioned medium of mesenchymal stem cells on the in vitro maturation and subsequent development of mouse oocyte

Bin Ling; Dingqing Feng; Ying Zhou; T. Gao; Haiming Wei; Zhigang Tian

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) secrete a variety of cytokines and growth factors in addition to self-renewal and multiple forms of differentiation. Some of these secreted bioactive factors could improve meiotic maturation in vitro and subsequent embryo developmental potential. The aim of the present study was to determine whether in vitro maturation (IVM) of mouse oocyte with or without cumulus cells could be improved by contact with conditioned medium (CM) of MSCs as well as the efficiency of CM to support follicular growth and oocyte maturation in the ovarian organ of mice cultured on soft agar. The developmental potential of matured oocyte was assessed by blastocyst formation after in vitro fertilization (IVF). Germinal vesicle stage oocytes with or without cumulus cells were subjected to IVM in either CM, Dulbeccos modified Eagles medium (DMEM), alpha-minimum essential medium (alpha-MEM) or human tubal fluid (HTF). Approximately 120 oocytes were studied for each medium. CM produced a higher maturation rate (91.2%) than DMEM (54.7%), alpha-MEM (63.5%) and HTF (27.1%). Moreover, CM improved embryo development to blastocyst stage significantly more than DMEM and HTF (85 vs 7% and 41.7%, respectively) but there was no significant difference compared with alpha-MEM (85 vs 80.3%). The behavior of cortical granules of IVM oocytes cultured in CM revealed cytoplasmic maturation. Moreover, CM also supported preantral follicles growth well in organotypic culture on soft agar resulting in the maturation of 60% of them to developmentally competent oocytes. The production of estrogen progressively increased approximately 1-fold every other day during organ culture, while a dramatic 10-fold increase in progesterone was observed 17 h after human chorionic gonadotropin stimulus at the end of culture. Thus, CM is an effective medium for preantral follicle growth, oocyte maturation, and sequential embryo development.


PLOS ONE | 2011

GRIM-19 Disrupts E6/E6AP Complex to Rescue p53 and Induce Apoptosis in Cervical Cancers

Ying Zhou; Ying Wei; Jing Zhu; Qingyuan Wang; Liang Bao; Yang Ma; Yu Chen; Dingqing Feng; Aijin Zhang; Jie Sun; Shreeram C. Nallar; Keng Shen; Dhananjaya V. Kalvakolanu; Weihua Xiao; Bin Ling

Background Our previous studies showed a down-regulation of GRIM-19 in primary human cervical cancers, and restoration of GRIM-19 induced tumor regression. The induction of tumor suppressor protein p53 ubiquitination and degradation by E6 oncoportein of high risk-HPV through forming a stable complex with E6AP is considered as a critical mechanism for cervical tumor development. The aims of this study were to determine the potential role of GRIM-19 in rescuing p53 protein and inducing cervical cancer cell apoptosis. Methodology/Principal Findings The protein levels of GRIM-19 and p53 were detected in normal cervical tissues from 45 patients who underwent hysterectomy for reasons other than neoplasias of either the cervix or endometrium, and cervical cancer tissues from 60 patients with non-metastatic squamous epithelial carcinomas. Coimmunoprecipitation and GST pull-down assay were performed to examine the interaction of GRIM-19 with 18E6 and E6AP in vivo and in vitro respectively. The competition of 18E6 with E6AP in binding GRIM-19 by performing competition pull-down assays was designed to examine the disruption of E6/E6AP complex by GRIM-19. The augment of E6AP ubiquitination by GRIM-19 was detected in vivo and in vitro ubiquitination assay. The effects of GRIM-19-dependent p53 accumulation on cell proliferation, cell cycle, apoptosis were explored by MTT, flow cytometry and transmission electron microscopy respectively. The tumor suppression was detected by xenograft mouse model. Conclusion/Significance The levels of GRIM-19 and p53 were concurrently down regulated in cervical cancers. The restoration of GRIM-19 can induce ubiquitination and degradation of E6AP, and disrupt the E6/E6AP complex through the interaction of N-terminus of GRIM-19 with both E6 and E6AP, which protected p53 from degradation and promoted cell apoptosis. Tumor xenograft studies also revealed the suppression of p53 degradation in presence of GRIM-19. These data suggest that GRIM-19 can block E6/E6AP complex; and synergistically suppress cervical tumor growth with p53.


Medical Hypotheses | 2011

Induction the cornification of squamous cancerous cells to eliminate tumor cells by promotion cell differentiation and stratum.

Ying Zhou; Yong Cheng; Dingqing Feng; Bin Ling; Peishu Liu

Cornification is a kind of apoptosis of squamous epithelial cell in the upper layer of the epithelial tissue. The basal cells away from cell-cycle embark on terminal differentiation, stratum, then die by apoptosis. The critical elements interference from the normal differentiation of squamous cells will lead to cell malignant transformation. We would like to put forward a hypothesis that initiation the cornification of squamous cancerous cells by promotion cell differentiation and stratum can promote squamous carcinoma cells death. Attempts of induction squamous cancerous cells terminal differentiation will add to our understanding of the connection between keratinocytes cornification and the death of squamous-cell carcinoma.


Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2009

Effects of the conditioned medium of mesenchymal stem cells on mouse oocyte activation and development

Dingqing Feng; Ying Zhou; Bin Ling; T. Gao; Y.Y. Shi; Haiming Wei; Zhigang Tian

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have been reported to secrete a variety of cytokines and growth factors acting as trophic suppliers, but little is known regarding the effects of conditioned medium (CM) of MSCs isolated from femurs and tibias of mouse on the artificial activation of mouse oocytes and on the developmental competence of the parthenotes. In the current study, we investigated the effect of CM on the events of mouse oocyte activation, namely oscillations of cytosolic calcium concentration ([Ca(2)+]i), meiosis resumption, pronucleus formation, and parthenogenetic development. The surface markers of MSCs were identified with a fluorescence-activated cell sorter. The dynamic changes of the spindle and formation of pronuclei were examined by laser-scanning confocal microscopy. Exposure of cumulus-oocyte complexes to CM for 40 min was optimal for inducing oocyte parthenogenetic activation and evoking [Ca(2)+]i oscillations similar to those evoked by sperm (95 vs 100%; P > 0.05). Parthenogenetically activated oocytes immediately treated with 7.5 microg/mL cytochalasin B (CB), which inhibited spindle rotation and second polar body extrusion, were mostly diploid (93 vs 6%, P < 0.01) while CB-untreated oocytes were mostly haploid (5 vs 83%, P < 0.01). Consequently, the blastocyst rate was higher in the CB-treated than in the CB-untreated oocytes. There was no significant difference in developmental rate between oocytes activated with CM and 7% ethanol (62 vs 62%, P > 0.05), but the developmental competence of the fertilized oocytes was superior to that of the parthenotes (88 vs 62%, P < 0.05). The present results demonstrate that CM can effectively activate mouse oocytes, as judged by the generation of [Ca(2)+]i oscillations, completion of meiosis and parthenogenetic development.


Oncology Reports | 2009

Identification and characterization of cancer stem-like cells from primary carcinoma of the cervix uteri

Dingqing Feng; Cheng Peng; Cairong Li; Ying Zhou; Min Li; Bin Ling; Haiming Wei; Zhigang Tian


Archive | 2009

Simple cell climbing film culture and experimental apparatus

Bin Ling; Ying Zhou; Ying Wei; Min Li; Dingqing Feng


Archive | 2011

Combination drug for treating cervical cancer

Bin Ling; Dingqing Feng; Zhenping Cao; Ying Zhou; Yuanyuan Zhu; Cairong Li; Min Li; Qiao Liu; Ran Liu

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Ying Zhou

Anhui Medical University

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Bin Ling

Anhui Medical University

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Min Li

Anhui Medical University

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Ying Wei

Anhui Medical University

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Haiming Wei

University of Science and Technology of China

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Jing Zhu

Anhui Medical University

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Weihua Xiao

University of Science and Technology of China

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Zhigang Tian

University of Science and Technology of China

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Fengqiu Yao

Anhui Medical University

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Liang Bao

University of Science and Technology of China

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