Frank Fuxiang Mao
Sun Yat-sen University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Frank Fuxiang Mao.
Stem Cells | 2010
Donghyun Park; Andy Peng Xiang; Frank Fuxiang Mao; Li Zhang; Chun-Guang Di; Xiao-Mei Liu; Yuan Shao; Bao-Feng Ma; Jae Hyun Lee; Kwon-Soo Ha; Noah M. Walton; Bruce T. Lahn
The intermediate filament protein, nestin, is a widely employed marker of multipotent neural stem cells (NSCs). Recent in vitro studies have implicated nestin in a number of cellular processes, but there is no data yet on its in vivo function. Here, we report the construction and functional characterization of Nestin knockout mice. We found that these mice show embryonic lethality, with neuroepithelium of the developing neural tube exhibiting significantly fewer NSCs and much higher levels of apoptosis. Consistent with this in vivo observation, NSC cultures derived from knockout embryos show dramatically reduced self‐renewal ability that is associated with elevated apoptosis but no overt defects in cell proliferation or differentiation. Unexpectedly, nestin deficiency has no detectable effect on the integrity of the cytoskeleton. Furthermore, the knockout of Vimentin, which abolishes nestins ability to polymerize into intermediate filaments in NSCs, does not lead to any apoptotic phenotype. These data demonstrate that nestin is important for the proper survival and self‐renewal of NSCs, and that this function is surprisingly uncoupled from nestins structural involvement in the cytoskeleton. STEM CELLS 2010;28:2162–2171
Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 2007
Ai-Xia Zhang; Weihua Yu; Bao-Feng Ma; Xinbing Yu; Frank Fuxiang Mao; Wei Liu; Jia-Qing Zhang; Xiuming Zhang; Shunong Li; Ming-Tao Li; Bruce T. Lahn; Andy Peng Xiang
Human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSC) are a population of multipotent cells that can differentiate into osteoblasts, chondrocytes, adipocytes, and other cells. The exact mechanism governing the differentiation of hMSC into osteoblasts remains largely unknown. Here, we analyzed protein expression profiles of undifferentiated as well as osteogenic induced hMSC using 2-D gel electrophoresis (2-DE), mass spectrometry (MS), and peptide mass fingerprinting (PMF) to investigate the early gene expression in osteoblast differentiation. We have generated proteome maps of undifferentiated hMSC and osteogenic induced hMSC on day 3 and day 7. 2-DE revealed 102 spots with at least 2.0-fold changes in expression and 52 differently expressed proteins were successfully identified by MALDI-TOF-MS. These proteins were classified into 7 functional categories: metabolism, signal transduction, transcription, calcium-binding protein, protein degradation, protein folding and others. The expression of some identified proteins was confirmed by further RT-PCR analyses. This study clarifies the global proteome during osteoblast differentiation. Our results will play an important role in better elucidating the underlying molecular mechanism in hMSC differentiation into osteoblasts.
Molecular Cell | 2012
Kara M. Foshay; Timothy J. Looney; Sheila Chari; Frank Fuxiang Mao; Jae Hyun Lee; Li Zhang; Croydon J. Fernandes; Samuel W. Baker; Kayla L. Clift; Jedidiah Gaetz; Chun-Guang Di; Andy Peng Xiang; Bruce T. Lahn
It is a long-held paradigm that cell fusion reprograms gene expression but the extent of reprogramming and whether it is affected by the cell types employed remain unknown. We recently showed that the silencing of somatic genes is attributable to either trans-acting cellular environment or cis-acting chromatin context. Here, we examine how trans- versus cis-silenced genes in a somatic cell type behave in fusions to another somatic cell type or to embryonic stem cells (ESCs). We demonstrate that while reprogramming of trans-silenced somatic genes occurs in both cases, reprogramming of cis-silenced somatic genes occurs only in somatic-ESC fusions. Importantly, ESCs reprogram the somatic genome in two distinct phases: trans-reprogramming occurs rapidly, independent of DNA replication, whereas cis-reprogramming occurs with slow kinetics requiring DNA replication. We also show that pluripotency genes Oct4 and Nanog are cis-silenced in somatic cells. We conclude that cis-reprogramming capacity is a fundamental feature distinguishing ESCs from somatic cells.
Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2009
Weiqiang Li; Ding Wang; Jie Qin; Chang Liu; Qi Zhang; Xiuming Zhang; Xinbing Yu; Bruce T. Lahn; Frank Fuxiang Mao; Andy Peng Xiang
Induced pluripotent stem cells are derived from somatic cells by forced expression of several transcriptional factors. Induced pluripotent stem cells resemble embryonic stem cells in many aspects, such as the expression of certain stem cell markers, chromatin methylation patterns, embryoid body formation and teratoma formation. Therefore, induced pluripotent stem cells provide a powerful tool for study of developmental biology and unlimited resources for transplantation therapy. Here we reported the successful induction of mouse induced pluripotent stem cells and a simple and efficient process for generation of functional hepatocytes from mouse induced pluripotent stem cells by sequential addition of inducing factors. These induced pluripotent stem cell‐derived hepatocytes, just as mouse embryonic stem cell‐derived hepatocytes, expressed hepatic lineage markers including CK7, CK8, CK18, CK19, alpha‐fetoprotein, albumin, Cyp7a1, and exhibited functional hepatic characteristics, including glycogen storage, indocyanine green (ICG) uptake and release, low‐density lipoprotein (LDL) uptake and urea secretion. Although we observed some variations in the efficiency of hepatic differentiation between induced pluripotent stem cells and common mouse embryonic stem cell lines, our results indicate that mouse induced pluripotent stem cells can efficiently differentiate into functional hepatocytes in vitro, which may be helpful for the study of liver development and regenerative medicine. J. Cell. Physiol. 222: 492–501, 2010.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2009
Donghyun Park; Andy Peng Xiang; Li Zhang; Frank Fuxiang Mao; Noah M. Walton; Sun Shim Choi; Bruce T. Lahn
The RC2 antibody is widely used to label mouse radial glial cells in the developing central nervous system. While the antibody is known to recognize a 295-kDa intermediate filament proximal protein, the gene encoding the RC2 antigen remains to be identified. Here, we present evidences clearly demonstrating that Nestin encodes the RC2 antigen. First, the RC2 antigen and nestin have the same molecular weight and very similar tissue distribution. Second, genetic manipulations altering nestin expression also exert the same effect on the expression of the RC2 antigen. In particular, Nestin null mutation completely abolishes the RC2 immunoreactivity. Third, the expression of a truncated mouse nestin in Nestin-/- cells produces a small RC2 antigen whose size is the same to that of the truncated nestin. Furthermore, our data suggest that the RC2 antibody recognizes the C-terminal domain of nestin with unidentified posttranslational modification(s).
Differentiation | 2009
Hui Ke; Peng Wang; Weihua Yu; Xiaoming Liu; Chang Liu; Fan Yang; Frank Fuxiang Mao; Liangming Zhang; Xiuming Zhang; Bruce T. Lahn; Andy Peng Xiang
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have received considerable attention in recent years. Particularly exciting is the prospect that MSCs could be differentiated into specialized cells of interest, which could then be used for cell therapy and tissue engineering. MSCs derived from nonhuman primates could be a powerful tool for investigating the differentiation potential in vitro and in vivo for preclinical research. The purpose of this study was to isolate cynomolgus mesenchymal stem cells (cMSCs) from adult bone marrow and characterize their growth properties and multipotency. Mononuclear cells were isolated from cynomolgus monkey bone marrow by density-gradient centrifugation, and adherent fibroblast-like cells grew well in the complete growth medium with 10 microM Tenofovir. cMSCs expressed mesenchymal markers, such as CD29, CD105, CD166 and were negative for hematopoietic markers such as CD34, CD45. Furthermore, the cells were capable of differentiating into osteogenic, chondrogenic, and adipogenic lineages under certain conditions, maintaining normal karyotype throughout extended culture. We also compared different methods (lipofection, nucleofection and lentivirus) for genetic modification of cMSCs and found lentivirus proved to be the most effective method with transduction efficiency of up to 44.6% and lowest level of cell death. The cells after transduction stably expressed green fluorescence protein (GFP) and maintained the abilities to differentiate down osteogenic and adipogenic lineages. In conclusion, these data showed that cMSCs isolated from cynomolgus bone marrow shared similar characteristics with human MSCs and might provide an attractive cell type for cell-based therapy in higher-order mammalian species disorder models.
Cell Biology International | 2008
Yanwen Peng; Zhenguang Chen; Weihua Yu; Qifeng Zhou; Lin Xu; Frank Fuxiang Mao; Gang Huang; Xiuming Zhang; Shunong Li; Bruce T. Lahn; Andy Peng Xiang
The thymus provides a unique cellular and hormonic microenvironment for the development of immunocompetent T cells. Thymic polypeptides have been widely used clinically for the treatment of tumors, infectious diseases and immune deficiency diseases. They have already shown the ability to stimulate the maturation of hematopoietic stem cells towards the CD3+CD4+ T cell lineage. However, their effects on the thymopoiesis of embryonic stem cells are still unexplored.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Jie Qin; Weiqiang Li; Li Zhang; Fei Chen; Wenhua Liang; Frank Fuxiang Mao; Xiuming Zhang; Bruce T. Lahn; Weihua Yu; Andy Peng Xiang
Techniques for small molecule screening are widely used in biological mechanism study and drug discovery. Here, we reported a novel adipocyte differentiation assay for small molecule selection, based on human mesenchymal stem cells (hMSCs) transduced with fluorescence reporter gene driven by adipogenic specific promoter - adipocyte Protein 2 (aP2; also namely Fatty Acid Binding Protein 4, FABP4). During normal adipogenic induction as well as adipogenic inhibition by Ly294002, we confirmed that the intensity of green fluorescence protein corresponded well to the expression level of aP2 gene. Furthermore, this variation of green fluorescence protein intensity can be read simply through fluorescence spectrophotometer. By testing another two small molecules in adipogenesis –Troglitazone and CHIR99021, we proved that this is a simple and sensitive method, which could be applied in adipocyte biology, drug discovery and toxicological study in the future.
Cell Research | 2016
Qiong Ke; Weiqiang Li; Xingqiang Lai; Hong Chen; Lihua Huang; Zhuang Kang; Kai Li; Jie Ren; Xiaofeng Lin; Haiqing Zheng; Weijun Huang; Yunhan Ma; Dongdong Xu; Zheng Chen; Xinming Song; Xinyi Lin; Min Zhuang; Tao Wang; Fengfeng Zhuang; Jianzhong Xi; Frank Fuxiang Mao; Huimin Xia; Bruce T. Lahn; Qi Zhou; Shihua Yang; Andy Peng Xiang
Gene editing in non-human primates may lead to valuable models for exploring the etiologies and therapeutic strategies of genetically based neurological disorders in humans. However, a monkey model of neurological disorders that closely mimics pathological and behavioral deficits in humans has not yet been successfully generated. Microcephalin 1 (MCPH1) is implicated in the evolution of the human brain, and MCPH1 mutation causes microcephaly accompanied by mental retardation. Here we generated a cynomolgus monkey (Macaca fascicularis) carrying biallelic MCPH1 mutations using transcription activator-like effector nucleases. The monkey recapitulated most of the important clinical features observed in patients, including marked reductions in head circumference, premature chromosome condensation (PCC), hypoplasia of the corpus callosum and upper limb spasticity. Moreover, overexpression of MCPH1 in mutated dermal fibroblasts rescued the PCC syndrome. This monkey model may help us elucidate the role of MCPH1 in the pathogenesis of human microcephaly and better understand the function of this protein in the evolution of primate brain size.
Cell Research | 2012
Jedidiah Gaetz; Kayla L. Clift; Croydon J. Fernandes; Frank Fuxiang Mao; Jae Hyun Lee; Li Zhang; Samuel W. Baker; Timothy J. Looney; Kara M. Foshay; Weihua Yu; Andy Peng Xiang; Bruce T. Lahn
The progressive restriction of cell fate during lineage differentiation is a poorly understood phenomenon despite its ubiquity in multicellular organisms. We recently used a cell fusion assay to define a mode of epigenetic silencing that we termed “occlusion”, wherein affected genes are silenced by cis-acting chromatin mechanisms irrespective of whether trans-acting transcriptional activators are present. We hypothesized that occlusion of lineage-inappropriate genes could contribute to cell fate restriction. Here, we test this hypothesis by introducing bacterial artificial chromosomes (BACs), which are devoid of chromatin modifications necessary for occlusion, into mouse fibroblasts. We found that BAC transgenes corresponding to occluded endogenous genes are expressed in most cases, whereas BAC transgenes corresponding to silent but non-occluded endogenous genes are not expressed. This indicates that the cellular milieu in trans supports the expression of most occluded genes in fibroblasts, and that the silent state of these genes is solely the consequence of occlusion in cis. For the BAC corresponding to the occluded myogenic master regulator Myf5, expression of the Myf5 transgene on the BAC triggered fibroblasts to acquire a muscle-like phenotype. These results provide compelling evidence for a critical role of gene occlusion in cell fate restriction.