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Dive into the research topics where Hong-Wei Wu is active.

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Featured researches published by Hong-Wei Wu.


Journal of Immunology | 2001

Human NKT Cells Mediate Antitumor Cytotoxicity Directly by Recognizing Target Cell CD1d with Bound Ligand or Indirectly by Producing IL-2 to Activate NK Cells

Leonid S. Metelitsa; Olga V. Naidenko; Anita Kant; Hong-Wei Wu; Matthew J. Loza; Bice Perussia; Mitchell Kronenberg; Robert C. Seeger

α-Galactosylceramide (αGalCer) stimulates NKT cells and has antitumor activity in mice. Murine NKT cells may directly kill tumor cells and induce NK cell cytotoxicity, but the mechanisms are not well defined. Newly developed human CD1d/αGalCer tetrameric complexes were used to obtain highly purified human αGalCer-reactive NKT cell lines (>99%), and the mechanisms of NKT cell cytotoxicity and activation of NK cells were investigated. Human NKT cells were cytotoxic against CD1d− neuroblastoma cells only when they were rendered CD1d+ by transfection and pulsed with αGalCer. Four other CD1d− tumor cell lines of diverse origin were resistant to NKT cells, whereas Jurkat and U937 leukemia cell lines, which are constitutively CD1d+, were killed. Killing of the latter was greatly augmented in the presence of αGalCer. Upon human CD1d/αGalCer recognition, NKT cells induced potent cytotoxicity of NK cells against CD1d− neuroblastoma cell lines that were not killed directly by NKT cells. NK cell activation depended upon NKT cell production of IL-2, and was enhanced by secretion of IFN-γ. These data demonstrate that cytotoxicity of human NKT cells can be CD1d and ligand dependent, and that TCR-stimulated NKT cells produce IL-2 that is required to induce NK cell cytotoxicity. Thus, NKT cells can mediate potent antitumor activity both directly by targeting CD1d and indirectly by activating NK cells.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2009

Vα24-invariant NKT cells mediate antitumor activity via killing of tumor-associated macrophages

Liping Song; Shahab Asgharzadeh; Jill Salo; Kelly Engell; Hong-Wei Wu; Richard Sposto; Tasnim Ara; Ayaka M. Silverman; Yves A. DeClerck; Robert C. Seeger; Leonid S. Metelitsa

Tumor infiltration with Valpha24-invariant NKT cells (NKTs) associates with favorable outcome in neuroblastoma and other cancers. Although NKTs can be directly cytotoxic against CD1d+ cells, the majority of human tumors are CD1d-. Therefore, the role of NKTs in cancer remains largely unknown. Here, we demonstrate that CD68+ tumor-associated monocytes/macrophages (TAMs) represented the majority of CD1d-expressing cells in primary human neuroblastomas. TAMs stimulated neuroblastoma growth in human cell lines and their xenografts in NOD/SCID mice via IL-6 production. Indeed, TAMs produced IL-6 in primary tumors and in the BM of patients with metastatic neuroblastoma. Gene expression analysis using TaqMan low-density arrays of 129 primary human neuroblastomas without MYCN amplification revealed that high-level expression of TAM-specific genes (CD14, CD16, IL6, IL6R, and TGFB1) was associated with poor 5-year event-free survival. While NKTs were not cytotoxic against neuroblastoma cells, they effectively killed monocytes pulsed with tumor cell lysate. The killing of monocytes was CD1d restricted because it was inhibited by a CD1d-specific mAb. Cotransfer of human monocytes and NKTs to tumor-bearing NOD/SCID mice decreased monocyte number at the tumor site and suppressed tumor growth compared with mice transferred with monocytes alone. Thus, killing of TAMs reveals what we believe to be a novel mechanism of NKT antitumor activity that relates to the disease outcome.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2004

Natural killer T cells infiltrate neuroblastomas expressing the chemokine CCL2.

Leonid S. Metelitsa; Hong-Wei Wu; Hong Wang; Yujun Yang; Zamir Warsi; Shahab Asgharzadeh; Susan Groshen; S. Brian Wilson; Robert C. Seeger

CD1d-restricted Vα24-Jα18–invariant natural killer T cells (iNKTs) are potentially important in tumor immunity. However, little is known about their localization to tumors. We analyzed 98 untreated primary neuroblastomas from patients with metastatic disease (stage 4) for tumor-infiltrating iNKTs using TaqMan® reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction and immunofluorescent microscopy. 52 tumors (53%) contained iNKTs, and oligonucleotide microarray analysis of the iNKT+ and iNKT− tumors revealed that the former expressed higher levels of CCL2/MCP-1, CXCL12/SDF-1, CCL5/RANTES, and CCL21/SLC. Eight tested neuroblastoma cell lines secreted a range of CCL2 (0–21.6 ng/ml), little CXCL12 (≤0.1 ng/ml), and no detectable CCL5 or CCL21. CCR2, the receptor for CCL2, was more frequently expressed by iNKT compared with natural killer and T cells from blood (P < 0.001). Supernatants of neuroblastoma cell lines that produced CCL2 induced in vitro migration of iNKTs from blood of patients and normal adults; this was abrogated by an anti-CCL2 monoclonal antibody. CCL2 expression by tumors was found to inversely correlate with MYCN proto-oncogene amplification and expression (r = 0.5, P < 0.001), and MYCN-high/CCL2-low expression accurately predicted the absence of iNKTs (P < 0.001). In summary, iNKTs migrate toward neuroblastoma cells in a CCL2-dependent manner, preferentially infiltrating MYCN nonamplified tumors that express CCL2.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2007

Oncogene MYCN regulates localization of NKT cells to the site of disease in neuroblastoma

Liping Song; Tasnim Ara; Hong-Wei Wu; Chan-Wook Woo; C. Patrick Reynolds; Robert C. Seeger; Yves A. DeClerck; Carol J. Thiele; Richard Sposto; Leonid S. Metelitsa

Valpha24-invariant natural killer T (NKT) cells are potentially important for antitumor immunity. We and others have previously demonstrated positive associations between NKT cell presence in primary tumors and long-term survival in distinct human cancers. However, the mechanism by which aggressive tumors avoid infiltration with NKT and other T cells remains poorly understood. Here, we report that the v-myc myelocytomatosis viral related oncogene, neuroblastoma derived (MYCN), the hallmark of aggressive neuroblastoma, repressed expression of monocyte chemoattractant protein-1/CC chemokine ligand 2 (MCP-1/CCL2), a chemokine required for NKT cell chemoattraction. MYCN knockdown in MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma cell lines restored CCL2 production and NKT cell chemoattraction. Unlike other oncogenes, MYCN repressed chemokine expression in a STAT3-independent manner, requiring an E-box element in the CCL2 promoter to mediate transcriptional repression. MYCN overexpression in neuroblastoma xenografts in NOD/SCID mice severely inhibited their ability to attract human NKT cells, T cells, and monocytes. Patients with MYCN-amplified neuroblastoma metastatic to bone marrow had 4-fold fewer NKT cells in their bone marrow than did their nonamplified counterparts, indicating that the MYCN-mediated immune escape mechanism, which we believe to be novel, is operative in metastatic cancer and should be considered in tumor immunobiology and for the development of new therapeutic strategies.


Archive | 2007

Oncogene MYCN regulates localization of NKT cells to the site of disease

Liping Song; Tasnim Ara; Hong-Wei Wu; Chan-Wook Woo; C. Patrick Reynolds; Robert C. Seeger; Yves A. DeClerck; Carol J. Thiele; Richard Sposto; Leonid S. Metelitsa


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2017

Effective Reduction of Metastasis and Improved Survival by Combining Activated Natural Killer Cells and Anti-GD2 Antibody in Chemo-Resistant Neuroblastoma

Wesley E. Barry; Jeremy R. Jackson; Grace E. Asuelime; Zesheng Wan; Hong-Wei Wu; Jianping Sun; Larry Wang; Robert C. Seeger; Eugene S. Kim


Journal of The American College of Surgeons | 2016

Increased Survival and Decreased Metastasis in a Mouse Neuroblastoma Model of Minimal Residual Disease after Treatment with Anti-GD2 Antibody and Activated Natural Killer Cells

Jeremy R. Jackson; Hong-Wei Wu; Grace E. Asuelime; Jianping Sun; Robert C. Seeger; Eugene S. Kim


Journal of Immunology | 2009

Natural Killer T (NKT) cells mediate anti-tumor activity via killing of tumor-associated macrophages

Leonid S. Metelitsa; Liping Song; Jill Salo; Kelly Engell; Hong-Wei Wu; Richard Sposto; Robert C. Seeger; Shahab Asgharzadeh


Cancer Research | 2006

TRAIL-R2 expression correlates with the sensitivity of neuroblastoma cells to activated NK cells, but high TRAIL-R2 expression correlates with poor prognosis

Michael A. Sheard; Shahab Asgharzadeh; Hong-Wei Wu; Wei Ye; Susan Groshen; Nino Keshelava; Patrick Reynolds; Robert C. Seeger


Journal of Immunotherapy | 2005

Expression of TRAIL on Activated Human NK Cells Contributes to Cytotoxicity Against Human Neuroblastoma Cell Lines

Michael A. Sheard; Hong-Wei Wu; Shahab Asgharzadeh; Nino Keshelava; C. Patrick Reynolds; Wei Ye; Susan Groshen; Leonid S. Metelitsa; Robert C. Seeger

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Robert C. Seeger

University of Southern California

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Shahab Asgharzadeh

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

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C. Patrick Reynolds

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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Liping Song

Center for Cell and Gene Therapy

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Richard Sposto

University of Southern California

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Susan Groshen

University of Southern California

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Nino Keshelava

University of Southern California

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Tasnim Ara

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

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Wei Ye

University of Southern California

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