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Dive into the research topics where Fong-Fong Chu is active.

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Featured researches published by Fong-Fong Chu.


Cancer Research | 2004

Bacteria-Induced Intestinal Cancer in Mice with Disrupted Gpx1 and Gpx2 Genes

Fong-Fong Chu; R. Steven Esworthy; Peiguo G. Chu; Jeffrey Longmate; Mark M. Huycke; Sharon P. Wilczynski; James H. Doroshow

Two glutathione peroxidase (GPX) isozymes, GPX-1 and GPX-2 (GPX-GI), are the major enzymes that reduce hydroperoxides in intestinal epithelium. We have previously demonstrated that targeted disruption of both the Gpx1 and Gpx2 genes (GPX-DKO) results in a high incidence of ileocolitis in mice raised under conventional conditions, which include the harboring of Helicobacter species [non-specific-pathogen-free (non-SPF) conditions]. In this study, we have characterized GPX-DKO mice that have microflora-associated intestinal cancers, which are correlated with increased intestinal pathology/inflammation. We found that GPX-DKO mice raised under germ-free conditions have virtually no pathology or tumors. After colonizing germ-free mice with commensal microflora without any known pathogens (SPF), <9% of GPX-DKO mice develop tumors in the ileum or the colon. However, about one-fourth of GPX-DKO mice raised under non-SPF conditions from birth or transferred from SPF conditions at weaning have predominantly ileal tumors. Nearly 30% of tumors are cancerous; most are invasive adenocarcinomas and a few signet-ring cell carcinomas. On the basis of these results, we conclude that GPX-DKO mice are highly susceptible to bacteria-associated inflammation and cancer. The sensitivity exhibited in these mice suggests that peroxidative stress plays an important role in ileal and colonic pathology and inflammation, which can lead to tumorigenesis.


Cancer Research | 2008

Methylation of Polycomb target genes in intestinal cancer is mediated by inflammation

Maria A. Hahn; Torsten Hahn; Dong-Hyun Lee; R. Steven Esworthy; Byung-Wook Kim; Arthur D. Riggs; Fong-Fong Chu; Gerd P. Pfeifer

Epigenetic changes are strongly associated with cancer development. DNA hypermethylation is associated with gene silencing and is often observed in CpG islands. Recently, it was suggested that aberrant CpG island methylation in tumors is directed by Polycomb (PcG) proteins. However, specific mechanisms responsible for methylation of PcG target genes in cancer are not known. Chronic infection and inflammation contribute to up to 25% of all cancers worldwide. Using glutathione peroxidase, Gpx1 and Gpx2, double knockout (Gpx1/2-KO) mice as a model of inflammatory bowel disease predisposing to intestinal cancer, we analyzed genome-wide DNA methylation in the mouse ileum during chronic inflammation, aging, and cancer. We found that inflammation leads to aberrant DNA methylation in PcG target genes, with 70% of the approximately 250 genes methylated in the inflamed tissue being PcG targets in embryonic stem cells and 59% of the methylated genes being marked by H3K27 trimethylation in the ileum of adult wild-type mice. Acquisition of DNA methylation at CpG islands in the ileum of Gpx1/2-KO mice frequently correlates with loss of H3K27 trimethylation at the same loci. Inflammation-associated DNA methylation occurs preferentially in tissue-specific silent genes and, importantly, is much more frequently represented in tumors than is age-dependent DNA methylation. Sixty percent of aberrant methylation found in tumors is also present in the inflamed tissue. In summary, inflammation creates a signature of aberrant DNA methylation, which is observed later in the malignant tissue and is directed by the PcG complex.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1998

Selenium-dependent glutathione peroxidase-GI is a major glutathione peroxidase activity in the mucosal epithelium of rodent intestine

R. Steven Esworthy; Kristine M. Swiderek; Ye-Shih Ho; Fong-Fong Chu

Gpx2 mRNA, encoding a selenium-dependent glutathione peroxidase (GPX-GI), has been found to be highly expressed in the gastrointestinal tract (GI) mucosal epithelium. In this study, we show that GPX-GI is produced in the mucosal epithelium of the adult rat GI tract and that the activity levels are comparable to that from GPX-1. Post-mitochondrial supernatant GPX activity from the mucosal epithelium of the complete length of the small intestine was partially purified. A sample enriched for putative GPX-GI was fractionated by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Polypeptides of 21 kDa and 22 kDa were digested with trypsin. After resolving the tryptic peptides by high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC), the major peaks were analyzed for their amino acid sequence by Microflow-HPLC-Tandem Mass Spectrometry and automated Edman degradation sequencing. Both methods revealed that the 21-kDa sample contained rat GPX-GI determined by the sequence homology with the deduced mouse GPX-GI polypeptide sequence. Rat GPX-1 was also detected in the samples. AntiGPX-GI and antiGPX-1 antibodies were used to determine the distribution of the respective isoenzyme activities along the length of the intestine and with respect to the crypt to villus axis in rats. GPX-GI and GPX-1 activities were uniformly distributed in the middle and lower GI tract and with respect to the crypt to villus axis. GPX-GI activity accounted nearly the same percentage of the total GPX activity as GPX-1 in all of the these compartments. Studies on the distal ileum segment of wildtype and Gpx1 gene knockout mice showed that GPX-GI activity was also at parity with GPX-1 in the mucosal epithelium of this segment.


Carcinogenesis | 2012

Glutathione peroxidase-2 and selenium decreased inflammation and tumors in a mouse model of inflammation-associated carcinogenesis whereas sulforaphane effects differed with selenium supply

Susanne Krehl; Maria Loewinger; Simone Florian; Anna P. Kipp; Antje Banning; Ludger A. Wessjohann; Martin N. Brauer; Renato Iori; Robert S. Esworthy; Fong-Fong Chu; Regina Brigelius-Flohé

Chronic inflammation and selenium deficiency are considered as risk factors for colon cancer. The protective effect of selenium might be mediated by specific selenoproteins, such as glutathione peroxidases (GPx). GPx-1 and -2 double knockout, but not single knockout mice, spontaneously develop ileocolitis and intestinal cancer. Since GPx2 is induced by the chemopreventive sulforaphane (SFN) via the nuclear factor E2-related factor 2 (Nrf2)/Keap1 system, the susceptibility of GPx2-KO and wild-type (WT) mice to azoxymethane and dextran sulfate sodium (AOM/DSS)-induced colon carcinogenesis was tested under different selenium states and SFN applications. WT and GPx2-KO mice were grown on a selenium-poor, -adequate or -supranutritional diet. SFN application started either 1 week before (SFN4) or along with (SFN3) a single AOM application followed by DSS treatment for 1 week. Mice were assessed 3 weeks after AOM for colitis and Nrf2 target gene expression and after 12 weeks for tumorigenesis. NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductases, thioredoxin reductases and glutathione-S-transferases were upregulated in the ileum and/or colon by SFN, as was GPx2 in WT mice. Inflammation scores were more severe in GPx2-KO mice and highest in selenium-poor groups. Inflammation was enhanced by SFN4 in both genotypes under selenium restriction but decreased in selenium adequacy. Total tumor numbers were higher in GPx2-KO mice but diminished by increasing selenium in both genotypes. SFN3 reduced inflammation and tumor multiplicity in both Se-adequate genotypes. Tumor size was smaller in Se-poor GPx2-KO mice. It is concluded that GPx2, although supporting tumor growth, inhibits inflammation-mediated tumorigenesis, but the protective effect of selenium does not strictly depend on GPx2 expression. Similarly, SFN requires selenium but not GPx2 for being protective.


Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 1990

Role of the glutathione-glutathione peroxidase cycle in the cytotoxicity of the anticancer quinones

James H. Doroshow; Steven A. Akman; Fong-Fong Chu; Steven Esworthy

Recent studies have suggested that the selenoenzyme glutathione peroxidase, in the presence of reducing equivalents from the tripeptide glutathione, is responsible for detoxifying hydrogen peroxide and lipid hydroperoxides generated as a consequence of the cyclic reduction and oxidation of quinone-containing anticancer agents including doxorubicin, daunorubicin, mitomycin C, diaziquone, and menadione. Alterations in the intracellular levels of glutathione peroxidase or glutathione can significantly affect the activity of these drugs against human tumor cells and the expression of their normal tissue toxicity, especially with respect to the heart. Furthermore, augmentation of the glutathione peroxidase pathway appears to render certain human tumor cells relatively resistant to the anticancer quinones; therefore, the glutathione peroxidase system may, at least in part, modulate certain forms of acquired drug resistance in man. Thus, the glutathione peroxidase cycle appears to play a central role in maintaining intracellular peroxide homeostasis during quinone-induced oxidative stress.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2010

Loss of GPx2 increases apoptosis, mitosis, and GPx1 expression in the intestine of mice.

Simone Florian; Susanne Krehl; Maria Loewinger; Anna P. Kipp; Antje Banning; Steven Esworthy; Fong-Fong Chu; Regina Brigelius-Flohé

Localization of glutathione peroxidase 2 (GPx2), the gastrointestinal form of GPxs, in the intestinal crypt epithelium points to a specific but so-far unknown function of this particular GPx. Therefore, the consequences of a GPx2 knockout were tested in mice fed a selenium-restricted, Se-adequate, or Se-supplemented diet. An unexpected increase in total GPx activity was found throughout the intestine in selenium-fed GPx2 knockout (KO) animals. Immunohistochemistry revealed a strong increase in GPx1 in the colon and ileum, especially in crypt bases where typically GPx2 is localized. GPx1 mRNA was not enhanced in GPx2 KO, indicating that up-regulation most probably occurs at the translational level. Loss of GPx2 was accompanied by an increase in apoptotic cells at colonic crypt bases, an area essential for the self-renewal of the intestinal epithelium, particularly under selenium restriction. Additionally, mitotic cells increased in the middle parts of the crypts, indicating an extension of the proliferative area. These findings corroborate a role for GPx2 in regulating mucosal homeostasis. In GPx2 KO mice, an increase in GPx1 can only partially compensate for GPx2, even under selenium supplementation, indicating that GPx2 is the major antiapoptotic GPx in the colon. These data explain why spontaneous ileocolitis becomes manifested only if both Gpx2 and Gpx1 are deleted.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2001

Hyperresistance to cholesterol hydroperoxide-induced peroxidative injury and apoptotic death in a tumor cell line that overexpresses glutathione peroxidase isotype-4.

Rachel Hurst; Witold Korytowski; Tamas Kriska; R. Steven Esworthy; Fong-Fong Chu; Albert W. Girotti

The selenoenzyme phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase (PHGPX; GPX4) plays a key role in eukaryotic defense against potentially lethal peroxidative injury and also regulation of physiological peroxide tone. In this work we focused on the cytoprotective antiperoxidant effects of GPX4, using a breast tumor epithelial cell line that over-expresses the enzyme. Wild-type COH-BR1 cells, which exhibit little (if any) GPX4 activity, were transfected with a construct encoding the mitochondrion-targeted long (L) form of the enzyme. Several transfectant clones were selected which expressed relatively large amounts of GPX4, as determined by both Northern and Western analysis. Enzyme activity ranged from 15-fold to 190-fold greater than that of wild-type or null-transfected cells. The functional ramifications of GPX4 overexpression were tested by challenging cells with photochemically generated cholesterol hydroperoxides (ChOOHs) in liposomal form. Compared with vector controls, overexpressing clones were found to be substantially more resistant to ChOOH-induced killing, as determined by annexin-V (early apoptotic) and thiazolyl blue (mitochondrial dehydrogenase) reactivity. Concomitantly, the clones exhibited a striking hyper-resistance to free radical-mediated lipid peroxidation, as assessed by labeling cell membranes with [(14)C]cholesterol and measuring a family of radiolabeled oxidation products (ChOX). L-form GPX4s antiperoxidant and cytoprotective effects could reflect its ability to detoxify ChOOHs as they enter cells and/or cell-derived lipid hydroperoxides arising from ChOOH one-electron turnover.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1991

Characterization and partial amino acid sequence of human plasma glutathione peroxidase

R. Steven Esworthy; Fong-Fong Chu; Steven A. Akman; James H. Doroshow; Raymond J. Paxton

Human plasma glutathione peroxidase was purified to homogeneity and partially sequenced. Overlapping peptide fragments from three endopeptidase digests permitted the determination of one sequence of 32 contiguous amino acids and one sequence of 23 contiguous amino acids. Five additional unique peptide sequences without obvious overlaps were obtained. The sequence of 32 amino acid residues aligns with positions 82-113 of human cytosolic glutathione peroxidase with nine mismatches without gaps or insertions. The sequence of 23 amino acid residues aligns with positions 157-178 with six mismatches and an insertion of one residue. Three additional peptide sequences with no obvious sequence homology to glutathione peroxidase can be aligned based on the sequence of a cDNA clone encoding plasma glutathione peroxidase that was isolated from a human placental library. The plasma enzyme is a homotetramer composed of 21-kDa subunits which cannot reduce phospholipid hydroperoxides. These results indicate that the plasma glutathione peroxidase is distinct from both the classical cytosolic enzyme and the monomeric phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase. Only a negligible amount of glutathione peroxidase activity was detected in bile, indicating that the liver exports plasma glutathione peroxidase exclusively to the circulation.


Cancer Research | 2006

Mutation Accumulation in the Intestine and Colon of Mice Deficient in Two Intracellular Glutathione Peroxidases

Dong-Hyun Lee; R. Steven Esworthy; Christy Chu; Gerd P. Pfeifer; Fong-Fong Chu

Mice deficient in two glutathione peroxidases (GPX), Gpx1 and Gpx2, [Gpx1/2-double knockout (DKO) mice] are prone to ileocolitis on a mixed C57BL/6 and 129S1/SvJ (B6.129) genetic background. We reported previously that approximately 25% of B6.129 Gpx1/2-DKO mice develop ileocolonic tumors by 6 to 9 months of age, when their non-DKO littermates [having at least one wild-type (WT) Gpx1 or Gpx2 allele] rarely have inflammation and none have tumors. Because genetic background affects tumor susceptibility, we have generated a B6 Gpx1/2-DKO colony and discovered that these mice have fewer inflammatory cells, milder ileocolitis, and low mortality, and only 2.5% of B6 mice developed tumors. The mutant frequency of a cII reporter gene was about 2- to 3-fold higher in 28-day-old Gpx1/2-DKO and 4-fold higher in 8-month-old Gpx1/2-DKO ileal mucosa than in controls in both genetic backgrounds. In contrast, mutant frequencies in the unaffected B6 liver were not significantly different between WT and Gpx1/2-DKO mice. The mutant frequency of 8-month-old B6.129 Gpx1/2-DKO ileum was 38.94 +/- 15.5(-5), which was not significantly higher than the age-matched B6 ileum, 25.54 +/- 10.33(-5). The mutation spectra analysis has shown that B6 Gpx1/2-DKO ileum had a 3-fold increase in small nucleotide deletions at mononucleotide repeats over control B6, which are a signature mutation associated with oxidative stress. Unexpectedly, B6 Gpx1/2-DKO mice had fewer C to T transitions at CpG dinucleotides than the WT B6 (18.0% versus 40.1%; P < 0.001). Our results suggest that inflammation drives gene mutations, which leads to neoplastic transformation of intestinal epithelium in the B6.129 Gpx1/2-DKO mice but rarely in the B6 Gpx1/2-DKO mice.


International Journal of Inflammation | 2010

A Strong Impact of Genetic Background on Gut Microflora in Mice

R. Steven Esworthy; David D. Smith; Fong-Fong Chu

Genetic background affects susceptibility to ileocolitis in mice deficient in two intracellular glutathione peroxidases, GPx1 and GPx2. The C57BL/6 (B6) GPx1/2 double-knockout (DKO) mice have mild ileocolitis, and 129S1/Sv (129) DKO mice have severe inflammation. We used diet to modulate ileocolitis; a casein-based defined diet with AIN76A micronutrients (AIN) attenuates inflammation compared to conventional LabDiets. Because luminal microbiota induce DKO ileocolitis, we assessed bacterial composition with automated ribosomal intergenic-spacer analysis (ARISA) on cecal DNA. We found that mouse strain had the strongest impact on the composition of microbiota than diet and GPx genotypes. In comparing AIN and LabDiet, DKO mice were more resistant to change than the non-DKO or WT mice. However, supplementing yeast and inulin to AIN diet greatly altered microflora profiles in the DKO mice. From 129 DKO strictly, we found overgrowth of Escherichia coli. We conclude that genetic background predisposes mice to colonization of potentially pathogenic E. coli.

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R. Steven Esworthy

City of Hope National Medical Center

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James H. Doroshow

National Institutes of Health

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Robert S. Esworthy

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Byung-Wook Kim

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Thomas L. Leto

National Institutes of Health

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Qiang Gao

Henan University of Science and Technology

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Binghui Shen

Beckman Research Institute

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Steven Esworthy

Beckman Research Institute

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David D. Smith

City of Hope National Medical Center

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