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Dive into the research topics where Guang Hu is active.

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Featured researches published by Guang Hu.


Nature Genetics | 2005

Second-generation shRNA libraries covering the mouse and human genomes

Jose M. Silva; Mamie Z. Li; Ken Chang; Wei Ge; Michael C. Golding; Richard J. Rickles; Despina Siolas; Guang Hu; Patrick J. Paddison; Michael R. Schlabach; Nihar Sheth; Jeff Bradshaw; Julia Burchard; Amit A. Kulkarni; Guy Cavet; Ravi Sachidanandam; W. Richard McCombie; Michele A. Cleary; Stephen J. Elledge; Gregory J. Hannon

Loss-of-function phenotypes often hold the key to understanding the connections and biological functions of biochemical pathways. We and others previously constructed libraries of short hairpin RNAs that allow systematic analysis of RNA interference–induced phenotypes in mammalian cells. Here we report the construction and validation of second-generation short hairpin RNA expression libraries designed using an increased knowledge of RNA interference biochemistry. These constructs include silencing triggers designed to mimic a natural microRNA primary transcript, and each target sequence was selected on the basis of thermodynamic criteria for optimal small RNA performance. Biochemical and phenotypic assays indicate that the new libraries are substantially improved over first-generation reagents. We generated large-scale-arrayed, sequence-verified libraries comprising more than 140,000 second-generation short hairpin RNA expression plasmids, covering a substantial fraction of all predicted genes in the human and mouse genomes. These libraries are available to the scientific community.


Science | 2008

Cancer Proliferation Gene Discovery Through Functional Genomics

Michael R. Schlabach; Ji Luo; Nicole L. Solimini; Guang Hu; Qikai Xu; Mamie Z. Li; Zhenming Zhao; Agata Smogorzewska; Mathew E. Sowa; Xiaolu L. Ang; Thomas F. Westbrook; Anthony C. Liang; Kenneth Chang; Jennifer A. Hackett; J. Wade Harper; Gregory J. Hannon; Stephen J. Elledge

Retroviral short hairpin RNA (shRNA)–mediated genetic screens in mammalian cells are powerful tools for discovering loss-of-function phenotypes. We describe a highly parallel multiplex methodology for screening large pools of shRNAs using half-hairpin barcodes for microarray deconvolution. We carried out dropout screens for shRNAs that affect cell proliferation and viability in cancer cells and normal cells. We identified many shRNAs to be antiproliferative that target core cellular processes, such as the cell cycle and protein translation, in all cells examined. Moreover, we identified genes that are selectively required for proliferation and survival in different cell lines. Our platform enables rapid and cost-effective genome-wide screens to identify cancer proliferation and survival genes for target discovery. Such efforts are complementary to the Cancer Genome Atlas and provide an alternative functional view of cancer cells.


Genes & Development | 2009

A genome-wide RNAi screen identifies a new transcriptional module required for self-renewal

Guang Hu; Jonghwan Kim; Qikai Xu; Yumei Leng; Stuart H. Orkin; Stephen J. Elledge

We performed a genome-wide siRNA screen in mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells to identify genes essential for self-renewal, and found 148 genes whose down-regulation caused differentiation. Many of the identified genes function in gene regulation and/or development, and are highly expressed in ES cells and embryonic tissues. We further identified target genes of two transcription regulators Cnot3 and Trim28. We discovered that Cnot3 and Trim28 co-occupy many putative gene promoters with c-Myc and Zfx, but not other pluripotency-associated transcription factors. They form a unique module in the self-renewal transcription network, separate from the core module formed by Nanog, Oct4, and Sox2. The transcriptional targets of this module are enriched for genes involved in cell cycle, cell death, and cancer. This supports the idea that regulatory networks controlling self-renewal in stem cells may also be active in certain cancers and may represent novel anti-cancer targets. Our screen has implicated over 100 new genes in ES cell self-renewal, and illustrates the power of RNAi and forward genetics for the systematic study of self-renewal.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

The pINDUCER lentiviral toolkit for inducible RNA interference in vitro and in vivo.

Kristen L. Meerbrey; Guang Hu; Jessica D. Kessler; Kevin Roarty; Mamie Z. Li; Justin E. Fang; Jason I. Herschkowitz; Anna E. Burrows; Alberto Ciccia; Tingting Sun; Earlene M. Schmitt; Ronald J. Bernardi; Xiaoyong Fu; Christopher S. Bland; Thomas A. Cooper; Rachel Schiff; Jeffrey M. Rosen; Thomas F. Westbrook; Stephen J. Elledge

The discovery of RNAi has revolutionized loss-of-function genetic studies in mammalian systems. However, significant challenges still remain to fully exploit RNAi for mammalian genetics. For instance, genetic screens and in vivo studies could be broadly improved by methods that allow inducible and uniform gene expression control. To achieve this, we built the lentiviral pINDUCER series of expression vehicles for inducible RNAi in vivo. Using a multicistronic design, pINDUCER vehicles enable tracking of viral transduction and shRNA or cDNA induction in a broad spectrum of mammalian cell types in vivo. They achieve this uniform temporal, dose-dependent, and reversible control of gene expression across heterogenous cell populations via fluorescence-based quantification of reverse tet-transactivator expression. This feature allows isolation of cell populations that exhibit a potent, inducible target knockdown in vitro and in vivo that can be used in human xenotransplantation models to examine cancer drug targets.


Nature | 2008

SCFbeta-TRCP controls oncogenic transformation and neural differentiation through REST degradation.

Thomas F. Westbrook; Guang Hu; Xiaolu L. Ang; Peter Mulligan; Natalya N. Pavlova; Anthony C. Liang; Yumei Leng; René Maehr; Yang Shi; J. Wade Harper; Stephen J. Elledge

The RE1-silencing transcription factor (REST, also known as NRSF) is a master repressor of neuronal gene expression and neuronal programmes in non-neuronal lineages. Recently, REST was identified as a human tumour suppressor in epithelial tissues, suggesting that its regulation may have important physiological and pathological consequences. However, the pathways controlling REST have yet to be elucidated. Here we show that REST is regulated by ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis, and use an RNA interference (RNAi) screen to identify a Skp1-Cul1-F-box protein complex containing the F-box protein β-TRCP (SCFβ-TRCP) as an E3 ubiquitin ligase responsible for REST degradation. β-TRCP binds and ubiquitinates REST and controls its stability through a conserved phospho-degron. During neural differentiation, REST is degraded in a β-TRCP-dependent manner. β-TRCP is required for proper neural differentiation only in the presence of REST, indicating that β-TRCP facilitates this process through degradation of REST. Conversely, failure to degrade REST attenuates differentiation. Furthermore, we find that β-TRCP overexpression, which is common in human epithelial cancers, causes oncogenic transformation of human mammary epithelial cells and that this pathogenic function requires REST degradation. Thus, REST is a key target in β-TRCP-driven transformation and the β-TRCP–REST axis is a new regulatory pathway controlling neurogenesis.


Cell | 2011

Activation of Multiple Proto-oncogenic Tyrosine Kinases in Breast Cancer via Loss of the PTPN12 Phosphatase

Tingting Sun; Nicola Aceto; Kristen L. Meerbrey; Jessica D. Kessler; Chunshui Zhou; Ilenia Migliaccio; Don X. Nguyen; Natalya N. Pavlova; Maria F. Botero; Jian Huang; Ronald J. Bernardi; Earlene M. Schmitt; Guang Hu; Mamie Z. Li; Noah Dephoure; Steven P. Gygi; Mitchell Rao; Chad J. Creighton; Susan G. Hilsenbeck; Chad A. Shaw; Donna M. Muzny; Richard A. Gibbs; David A. Wheeler; C. Kent Osborne; Rachel Schiff; Mohamed Bentires-Alj; Stephen J. Elledge; Thomas F. Westbrook

Among breast cancers, triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is the most poorly understood and is refractory to current targeted therapies. Using a genetic screen, we identify the PTPN12 tyrosine phosphatase as a tumor suppressor in TNBC. PTPN12 potently suppresses mammary epithelial cell proliferation and transformation. PTPN12 is frequently compromised in human TNBCs, and we identify an upstream tumor-suppressor network that posttranscriptionally controls PTPN12. PTPN12 suppresses transformation by interacting with and inhibiting multiple oncogenic tyrosine kinases, including HER2 and EGFR. The tumorigenic and metastatic potential of PTPN12-deficient TNBC cells is severely impaired upon restoration of PTPN12 function or combined inhibition of PTPN12-regulated tyrosine kinases, suggesting that TNBCs are dependent on the proto-oncogenic tyrosine kinases constrained by PTPN12. Collectively, these data identify PTPN12 as a commonly inactivated tumor suppressor and provide a rationale for combinatorially targeting proto-oncogenic tyrosine kinases in TNBC and other cancers based on their profile of tyrosine-phosphatase activity.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

Acute depletion of Tet1-dependent 5-hydroxymethylcytosine levels impairs LIF/Stat3 signaling and results in loss of embryonic stem cell identity

Johannes M. Freudenberg; Swati Ghosh; Brad Lackford; Sailu Yellaboina; Xiaofeng Zheng; Ruifang Li; Suresh Cuddapah; Paul A. Wade; Guang Hu; Raja Jothi

The TET family of FE(II) and 2-oxoglutarate-dependent enzymes (Tet1/2/3) promote DNA demethylation by converting 5-methylcytosine to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC), which they further oxidize into 5-formylcytosine and 5-carboxylcytosine. Tet1 is robustly expressed in mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs) and has been implicated in mESC maintenance. Here we demonstrate that, unlike genetic deletion, RNAi-mediated depletion of Tet1 in mESCs led to a significant reduction in 5hmC and loss of mESC identity. The differentiation phenotype due to Tet1 depletion positively correlated with the extent of 5hmC loss. Meta-analyses of genomic data sets suggested interaction between Tet1 and leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF) signaling. LIF signaling is known to promote self-renewal and pluripotency in mESCs partly by opposing MAPK/ERK-mediated differentiation. Withdrawal of LIF leads to differentiation of mESCs. We discovered that Tet1 depletion impaired LIF-dependent Stat3-mediated gene activation by affecting Stat3s ability to bind to its target sites on chromatin. Nanog overexpression or inhibition of MAPK/ERK signaling, both known to maintain mESCs in the absence of LIF, rescued Tet1 depletion, further supporting the dependence of LIF/Stat3 signaling on Tet1. These data support the conclusion that analysis of mESCs in the hours/days immediately following efficient Tet1 depletion reveals Tet1s normal physiological role in maintaining the pluripotent state that may be subject to homeostatic compensation in genetic models.


Cell Stem Cell | 2014

INO80 Facilitates Pluripotency Gene Activation in Embryonic Stem Cell Self-Renewal, Reprogramming, and Blastocyst Development

Wang L; Ying Du; James M. Ward; Takashi Shimbo; Brad Lackford; Xiaofeng Zheng; Yi Liang Miao; Bingying Zhou; Leng Han; David C. Fargo; Raja Jothi; Carmen J. Williams; Paul A. Wade; Guang Hu

The master transcription factors play integral roles in the pluripotency transcription circuitry of embryonic stem cells (ESCs). How they selectively activate expression of the pluripotency network while simultaneously repressing genes involved in differentiation is not fully understood. Here, we define a requirement for the INO80 complex, a SWI/SNF family chromatin remodeler, in ESC self-renewal, somatic cell reprogramming, and blastocyst development. We show that Ino80, the chromatin remodeling ATPase, co-occupies pluripotency gene promoters with the master transcription factors, and its occupancy is dependent on OCT4 and WDR5. At the pluripotency genes, Ino80 maintains an open chromatin architecture and licenses recruitment of Mediator and RNA polymerase II for gene activation. Our data reveal an essential role for INO80 in the expression of the pluripotency network and illustrate the coordination among chromatin remodeler, transcription factor, and histone-modifying enzyme in the regulation of the pluripotent state.


Cell Stem Cell | 2012

NuRD and Pluripotency: A Complex Balancing Act

Guang Hu; Paul A. Wade

Embryonic stem cells (ESCs) are defined by two essential features--pluripotency and self-renewal--whose balance requires the concerted action of signal transduction pathways, transcription factor networks, and epigenetic regulators. Recent findings have implicated the NuRD chromatin remodeling complex in the sophisticated choreography of ESC regulatory pathways.


Molecular Cell | 2015

Pausing of RNA polymerase II Regulates Mammalian Developmental Potential Through Control of Signaling Networks

Lucy H. Williams; George Fromm; Nolan G. Gokey; Telmo Henriques; Ginger W. Muse; Adam Burkholder; David C. Fargo; Guang Hu; Karen Adelman

The remarkable capacity for pluripotency and self-renewal in embryonic stem cells (ESCs) requires a finely tuned transcriptional circuitry wherein the pathways and genes that initiate differentiation are suppressed, but poised to respond rapidly to developmental signals. To elucidate transcriptional control in mouse ESCs in the naive, ground state, we defined the distribution of engaged RNA polymerase II (Pol II) at high resolution. We find that promoter-proximal pausing of Pol II is most enriched at genes regulating cell cycle and signal transduction and not, as expected, at developmental or bivalent genes. Accordingly, ablation of the primary pause-inducing factor NELF does not increase expression of lineage markers, but instead causes proliferation defects, embryonic lethality, and dysregulation of ESC signaling pathways. Indeed, ESCs lacking NELF have dramatically attenuated FGF/ERK activity, rendering them resistant to differentiation. This work thus uncovers a key role for NELF-mediated pausing in establishing the responsiveness of stem cells to developmental cues.

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Stephen J. Elledge

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Xiaofeng Zheng

National Institutes of Health

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David C. Fargo

National Institutes of Health

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Brad Lackford

National Institutes of Health

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Wang L

Peking Union Medical College

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Raja Jothi

National Institutes of Health

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Brian D. Bennett

National Institutes of Health

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Adam Burkholder

National Institutes of Health

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Bingying Zhou

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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