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Dive into the research topics where Elizabeth R. Smith is active.

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Featured researches published by Elizabeth R. Smith.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Loss of GATA4 and GATA6 expression specifies ovarian cancer histological subtypes and precedes neoplastic transformation of ovarian surface epithelia.

Kathy Q. Cai; Corrado Caslini; Callinice D. Capo-chichi; Carolyn M. Slater; Elizabeth R. Smith; Hong Wu; Andres J. Klein-Szanto; Andrew K. Godwin; Xiang Xi Xu

Background The family of zinc finger-containing GATA transcription factors plays critical roles in cell lineage specification during early embryonic development and organ formation. GATA4 and GATA6 were found to be frequently lost in ovarian cancer, and the loss is proposed to account for dedifferentiation of the cancer cells. Methodology/Principal Findings We further investigated the expression of GATA4 and GATA6 in ovarian surface epithelial lesions and histological subtypes of ovarian carcinomas by immunostaining. GATA4 and GATA6 were found to be absent in high percentages (80 to 90%) of serous, clear cell, and endometrioid ovarian cancer examined. In contrast, both were found positive in 11 out of 12 cases of mucinous carcinomas, suggesting the expression of the GATA factors can distinguish mucinous cancer from other histological subtypes. GATA4 was frequently lost in preneoplastic lesions such as morphologically normal inclusion cysts and epithelial hyperplasia adjacent to malignant cells. The loss of GATA6 correlates closely with neoplastic morphological transformation of ovarian surface epithelia. In culture, GATA4 expression was progressively reduced upon passaging primary ovarian surface epithelial cells, which correlated with changes in histone modification of the GATA4 locus. A reduced GATA6 gene dosage as in GATA6 (+/−) mice led to an increased pre-neoplastic changes and inclusion cysts in the ovaries, suggesting the loss of GATA6 contributes to ovarian cancer development. Conclusions/Significance This study suggests that the expression status of GATA4 and GATA6 may dictate distinct pathologic pathways leading to serous or mucinous ovarian carcinomas. The readily loss of GATA4 expression through changes in chromatin conformation suggests a potential non-phenotypic initiating event, leading to subsequent loss of GATA6, morphological transformation, and ultimate tumorigenesis.


Lancet Oncology | 2008

Ovarian ageing, follicle depletion, and cancer: a hypothesis for the aetiology of epithelial ovarian cancer involving follicle depletion

Elizabeth R. Smith; Xiang Xi Xu

The association between ovarian cancer risk and reproductive factors has been well established, and two main theories, incessant ovulation and gonadotropin stimulation, have been proposed to explain the mechanism. Recent studies using animal models of ovarian tumorigenesis, and analysis of ovarian tissues from prophylactic oophorectomies, suggest that depletion of ovarian follicles might underlie the epidemiological findings linking reproductive history and ovarian cancer risk.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Nuclear Entry of Activated MAPK Is Restricted in Primary Ovarian and Mammary Epithelial Cells

Elizabeth R. Smith; Kathy Q. Cai; Jennifer L. Smedberg; Melina M. Ribeiro; Malgorzata E. Rula; Carolyn M. Slater; Andrew K. Godwin; Xiang Xi Xu

Background The MAPK/ERK1/2 serine kinases are primary mediators of the Ras mitogenic signaling pathway. Phosphorylation by MEK activates MAPK/ERK in the cytoplasm, and phospho-ERK is thought to enter the nucleus readily to modulate transcription. Principal Findings Here, however, we observe that in primary cultures of breast and ovarian epithelial cells, phosphorylation and activation of ERK1/2 are disassociated from nuclear translocalization and transcription of downstream targets, such as c-Fos, suggesting that nuclear translocation is limited in primary cells. Accordingly, in import assays in vitro, primary cells showed a lower import activity for ERK1/2 than cancer cells, in which activated MAPK readily translocated into the nucleus and activated c-Fos expression. Primary cells express lower levels of nuclear pore complex proteins and the nuclear transport factors, importin B1 and importin 7, which may explain the limiting ERK1/2 import found in primary cells. Additionally, reduction in expression of nucleoporin 153 by siRNA targeting reduced ERK1/2 nuclear activity in cancer cells. Conclusion ERK1/2 activation is dissociated from nuclear entry, which is a rate limiting step in primary cells and in vivo, and the restriction of nuclear entry is disrupted in transformed cells by the increased expression of nuclear pores and/or nuclear transport factors.


BMC Developmental Biology | 2013

Differential requirement for Dab2 in the development of embryonic and extra-embryonic tissues

Robert Moore; Kathy Q. Cai; Wensi Tao; Elizabeth R. Smith; Xiang Xi Xu

BackgroundDisabled-2 (Dab2) is an endocytic adaptor protein involved in clathrin-mediated endocytosis and cargo trafficking. Since its expression is lost in several cancer types, Dab2 has been suggested to be a tumor suppressor. In vitro studies indicate that Dab2 establishes epithelial cell polarity and organization by directing endocytic trafficking of membrane glycoproteins. Dab2 also modulates cellular signaling pathways by mediating the endocytosis and recycling of surface receptors and associated signaling components. Previously, two independent gene knockout studies have been reported, with some discrepancies in the observed embryonic phenotypes. To further clarify the in vivo roles of Dab2 in development and physiology, we designed a new floxed allele to delete dab2 gene.ResultsThe constitutive dab2 deleted embryos showed a spectrum in the degree of endoderm disorganization in E5.5 and no mutant embryos persisted at E9.5. However, the mice were grossly normal when dab2 deletion was restricted to the embryo proper and the gene was retained in extraembryonic tissues using Meox2-Cre and Sox2-Cre. Adult Dab2-deficient mice had a small but statistically significant increase in serum cholesterol levels.ConclusionThe study of the new dab2 mutant allele in embryos and embryoid bodies confirms a role for Dab2 in extraembryonic endoderm development and epithelial organization. Experimental results with embryoid bodies suggest that additional endocytic adaptors such as Arh and Numb could partially compensate for Dab2 loss. Conditional deletion indicates that Dab2 is dispensable for organ development, when the vast majority of the embryonic cells are dab2 null. However, Dab2 has a physiological role in the endocytosis of lipoproteins and cholesterol metabolism.


Developmental Dynamics | 2011

Increased expression of Syne1/nesprin‐1 facilitates nuclear envelope structure changes in embryonic stem cell differentiation

Elizabeth R. Smith; Xiao Ying Zhang; Callinice D. Capo-chichi; Xiongwen Chen; Xiang Xi Xu

We found by electron microscopy that the inter‐membrane space of embryonic stem cells is irregular and generally wider than in differentiated cells. Among a panel of nuclear envelope structural proteins examined, the expression of Syne1/nesprin‐1 was found to be greatly induced upon differentiation. Down‐regulation of Syne1 by siRNA in differentiated embryonic stem cells caused the nuclear envelope to adopt a configuration resembling that found in undifferentiated embryonic stem cells. Suppression of Syne1 expression did not produce a detectable impact on the retinoic acid–induced differentiation of embryonic stem cells; however, forced expression of Syne1 enhanced the tendency of the cells to lose pluripotency. Thus, we found that low expression of Syne1 splicing isoforms accounts for the wider and irregular nuclear envelope inter‐membrane space in embryonic stem cells. We conclude that the nuclear envelope structural change accompanying differentiation likely participates in promoting the differential chromatin organization of the differentiated cells. Developmental Dynamics 240:2245–2255, 2011.


Menopause | 2012

White spotting variant mouse as an experimental model for ovarian aging and menopausal biology.

Elizabeth R. Smith; Toni M. Yeasky; Jain Qin Wei; Roberto A. Miki; Kathy Q. Cai; Jennifer L. Smedberg; Wan Lin Yang; Xiang Xi Xu

ObjectiveMenopause is a unique phenomenon in modern women, as most mammalian species possess a reproductive period comparable with their life span. Menopause is caused by the depletion of germ cell–containing ovarian follicles and in laboratory studies is usually modeled in animals in which the ovarian function is removed through ovariectomy or chemical poisoning of the germ cells. Our objective was to explore and characterize the white spotting variant (Wv) mice that have reduced ovarian germ cell abundance, a result of a point mutation in the c-kit gene that decreases kinase activity, as a genetic model for use in menopause studies. MethodsPhysiological and morphological features associated with menopause were determined in female Wv/Wv mice compared with age-matched wildtype controls. Immunohistochemistry was used to evaluate the presence and number of follicles in paraffin-embedded ovaries. Bone density and body composition were evaluated using the PIXImus x-ray densitometer, and lipids, calcium, and hormone levels were determined in serum using antigen-specific enzyme immunoassays. Heart and body weight were measured, and cardiac function was evaluated using transthoracic echocardiography. ResultsThe ovaries of the Wv/Wv females have a greatly reduced number of normal germ cells at birth compared with wildtype mice. The remaining follicles are depleted by around 2 months, and the ovaries develop benign epithelial lesions that resemble morphological changes that occur during ovarian aging, whereas a normal mouse ovary has numerous follicles at all stages of development and retains some follicles even in advanced age. Wv mice have elevated plasma gonadotropins and reduced estrogen and progesterone levels, a significant reduction in bone mass density, and elevated serum cholesterol and lipoprotein levels. Moreover, the Wv female mice have enlarged hearts and reduced cardiac function. ConclusionsThe reduction of c-kit activity in Wv mice leads to a substantially diminished follicular endowment in newborn mice and premature depletion of follicles in young mice, although mutant females have a normal life span after cessation of ovarian function. The Wv female mice exhibit consistent physiological changes that resemble common features of postmenopausal women. These alterations include follicle depletion, morphological aging of the ovary, altered serum levels of cholesterol, gonadotropins and steroid hormones, decreased bone density, and reduced cardiac function. These changes were not observed in male mice, either age-matched male Wv/Wv or wildtype mice, and are improbably caused by global loss of c-kit function. The Wv mouse may be a genetic, intact-ovary model that mimics closely the phenotypes of human menopause to be used for further studies to understand the mechanisms of menopausal biology.


Developmental Dynamics | 2009

c-fos elimination compensates for disabled-2 requirement in mouse extraembryonic endoderm development

Dong Hua Yang; Elizabeth R. Smith; Kathy Q. Cai; Xiang Xi Michael Xu

Disabled‐2 (Dab2) is expressed in primitive endoderm cells as they are differentiating from the inner cell mass and dab2 deficiency in mice results in lethality at E5.5–E6.5 due to the disorganization of the endoderm layers. Here we show that Dab2 suppresses c‐Fos expression in endoderm cells. A morphological normal primitive endoderm layer was observed in putative E5.5 dab2 (−/−):c‐fos (−/−) embryos, indicating that the primitive endoderm defect due to the loss of Dab2 is rescued by deletion of the c‐fos gene. The lethality of the double knockout embryos was delayed until E9.5–E10.5 and the defective embryos failed to undergo organogenesis. We conclude that Dab2 plays a role in epithelial organization by suppression of c‐Fos expression and suggest that unsuppressed c‐Fos can lead to disruption of primitive endoderm epithelial organization, yet an additional dab2 function is required for later organogenesis. Developmental Dynamics 238:514–523, 2009.


Frontiers in Oncology | 2014

Development of a Mouse Model of Menopausal Ovarian Cancer

Elizabeth R. Smith; Ying Wang; Xiang-Xi Mike Xu

Despite significant understanding of the genetic mutations involved in ovarian epithelial cancer and advances in genomic approaches for expression and mutation profiling of tumor tissues, several key questions in ovarian cancer biology remain enigmatic: the mechanism for the well-established impact of reproductive factors on ovarian cancer risk remains obscure; cell of origin of ovarian cancer continue to be debated; and the precursor lesion, sequence, or events in progression remain to be defined. Suitable mouse models should complement the analysis of human tumor tissues and may provide clues to these questions currently perplexing ovarian cancer biology. A potentially useful model is the germ cell-deficient Wv (white spotting variant) mutant mouse line, which may be used to study the impact of menopausal physiology on the increased risk of ovarian cancer. The Wv mice harbor a point mutation in c-Kit that reduces the receptor tyrosine kinase activity to about 1–5% (it is not a null mutation). Homozygous Wv mutant females have a reduced ovarian germ cell reservoir at birth and the follicles are rapidly depleted upon reaching reproductive maturity, but other biological phenotypes are minimal and the mice have a normal life span. The loss of ovarian function precipitates changes in hormonal and metabolic activity that model features of menopause in humans. As a consequence of follicle depletion, the Wv ovaries develop ovarian tubular adenomas, a benign epithelial tumor corresponding to surface epithelial invaginations and papillomatosis that mark human ovarian aging. Ongoing work will test the possibility of converting the benign epithelial tubular adenomas into neoplastic tumors by addition of an oncogenic mutation, such as of Tp53, to model the genotype and biology of serous ovarian cancer. Model based on the Wv mice may have the potential to gain biological and etiological insights into ovarian cancer development and prevention.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2014

The primitive endoderm segregates from the epiblast in β1 integrin-deficient early mouse embryos.

Robert Moore; Wensi Tao; Elizabeth R. Smith; Xiang Xi Xu

ABSTRACT We analyzed the mechanism of developmental failure in implanted β1 integrin-null blastocysts and found that primitive endoderm cells are present but segregate away from, instead of forming an epithelial layer covering, the inner cell mass. This cell segregation phenotype was also reproduced in β1 integrin-null embryoid bodies, in which primitive endoderm cells segregated and appeared as miniature aggregates detached from the core spheroids, and a primitive endoderm layer failed to form on the surface. Restricted β1 integrin gene deletion in embryos using Ttr-Cre or Sox2-Cre indicated that the loss of integrin function in the cells of the inner core rather than the outer layer is responsible for the failure to form a primitive endoderm layer. We conclude that β1 integrin is essential for the attachment of the primitive endoderm layer to the epiblast during the formation of a basement membrane, a process concurrent with the transition from cadherin- to integrin-mediated cell adhesion.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2016

Endocytic adaptors Arh and Dab2 control homeostasis of circulatory cholesterol

Wensi Tao; Robert Moore; Yue Meng; Elizabeth R. Smith; Xiang Xi Xu

High serum cholesterol (hypercholesterolemia) strongly associates with cardiovascular diseases as the atherogenic LDLs promote atheroma development in arteries (atherosclerosis). LDL clearance from the circulation by LDL receptor (LDLR)-mediated endocytosis by hepatic and peripheral tissues and subsequent feedback regulation of endogenous synthesis of cholesterol is a key determinant of serum LDL level. Human mutation analysis revealed that autosomal recessive hypercholesterolemia (ARH), an LDLR endocytic adaptor, perturbs LDLR function and thus impacts serum cholesterol levels. In our genetic analysis of mutant mice, we found that deletion of another LDLR endocytic adaptor, Disabled-2 (Dab2), only slightly affected serum cholesterol levels. However, elimination of both arh and dab2 genes in mice resulted in profound hypercholesterolemia similar to that resulting from ldlr homozygous deletion. In the liver, Dab2 is expressed in sinusoid endothelial cells but not in hepatocytes. When deleting both Dab2 and Arh, HMG-CoA reductase level increased to the level similar to that of ldlr knockout. Thus, in the absence of Arh, Dab2 in liver endothelial cells regulates cholesterol synthesis in hepatocytes. We conclude that the combination of Arh and Dab2 is responsible for the majority of adaptor function in LDLR endocytosis and LDLR-mediated cholesterol homeostasis.

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Kathy Q. Cai

Fox Chase Cancer Center

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