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

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Featured researches published by Hong-Wu Xin.


Gut | 2013

Label-retaining liver cancer cells are relatively resistant to sorafenib.

Hong-Wu Xin; Chenwi M. Ambe; Danielle M. Hari; Gordon Wiegand; Tyler C. Miller; Jin-Qiu Chen; Andrew J. Anderson; Satyajit Ray; John E. Mullinax; Tomotake Koizumi; Russell C. Langan; Douglas Burka; Michelle A. Herrmann; Paul Goldsmith; Alexander Stojadinovic; Udo Rudloff; Snorri S. Thorgeirsson; Itzhak Avital

Objective The standard therapy for advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is sorafenib, with most patients experiencing disease progression within 6 months. Label-retaining cancer cells (LRCC) represent a novel subpopulation of cancer stem cells (CSC). The objective was to test whether LRCC are resistant to sorafenib. Methods We tested human HCC derived LRCC and non-LRCC before and after treatment with sorafenib. Results LRCC derived from human HCC are relatively resistant to sorafenib. The proportion of LRCC in HCC cell lines is increased after sorafenib while the general population of cancer cells undergoes growth suppression. We show that LRCC demonstrate improved viability and toxicity profiles, and reduced apoptosis, over non-LRCC. We show that after treatment with sorafenib, LRCC upregulate the CSC marker aldehyde dehydrogenase 1 family, wingless-type MMTV-integration-site family, cell survival and proliferation genes, and downregulate apoptosis, cell cycle arrest, cell adhesion and stem cells differentiation genes. This phenomenon was accompanied by non-uniform activation of specific isoforms of the sorafenib target proteins extracellular-signal-regulated kinases and v-akt-murine-thymoma-viral-oncogene homologue (AKT) in LRCC but not in non-LRCC. A molecular pathway map for sorafenib treated LRCC is proposed. Conclusions Our results suggest that HCC derived LRCC are relatively resistant to sorafenib. Since LRCC can generate tumours with as few as 10 cells, our data suggest a potential role for these cells in disease recurrence. Further investigation of this phenomenon might provide novel insights into cancer biology, cancer recurrence and drug resistance with important implications for the development of novel cancer therapies based on targeting LRCC.


Stem Cells | 2012

Tumor‐Initiating Label‐Retaining Cancer Cells in Human Gastrointestinal Cancers Undergo Asymmetric Cell Division

Hong-Wu Xin; Danielle M. Hari; John E. Mullinax; Chenwi M. Ambe; Tomotake Koizumi; Satyajit Ray; Andrew J. Anderson; Gordon Wiegand; Susan Garfield; Snorri S. Thorgeirsson; Itzhak Avital

Label‐retaining cells (LRCs) have been proposed to represent adult tissue stem cells. LRCs are hypothesized to result from either slow cycling or asymmetric cell division (ACD). However, the stem cell nature and whether LRC undergo ACD remain controversial. Here, we demonstrate label‐retaining cancer cells (LRCCs) in several gastrointestinal (GI) cancers including fresh surgical specimens. Using a novel method for isolation of live LRCC, we demonstrate that a subpopulation of LRCC is actively dividing and exhibits stem cells and pluripotency gene expression profiles. Using real‐time confocal microscopic cinematography, we show live LRCC undergoing asymmetric nonrandom chromosomal cosegregation LRC division. Importantly, LRCCs have greater tumor‐initiating capacity than non‐LRCCs. Based on our data and that cancers develop in tissues that harbor normal‐LRC, we propose that LRCC might represent a novel population of GI stem‐like cancer cells. LRCC may provide novel mechanistic insights into the biology of cancer and regenerative medicine and present novel targets for cancer treatment. STEM CELLS 2012; 30:591–598


Journal of Cancer | 2012

A Pilot Study Assessing the Potential Role of non-CD133 Colorectal Cancer Stem Cells as Biomarkers

Russell C. Langan; John E. Mullinax; Satyajit Ray; Manish T. Raiji; Nicholas P. Schaub; Hong-Wu Xin; Tomotake Koizumi; Seth M. Steinberg; Andrew J. Anderson; Gordon Wiegand; Donna O. Butcher; Miriam R. Anver; Anton J. Bilchik; Alexander Stojadinovic; Udo Rudloff; Itzhak Avital

Introduction: Over 50% of patients with colorectal cancer (CRC) will progress and/or develop metastases. Biomarkers capable of predicting progression, risk stratification and therapeutic benefit are needed. Cancer stem cells are thought to be responsible for tumor initiation, dissemination and treatment failure. Therefore, we hypothesized that CRC cancer stem cell markers (CRCSC) will identify a group of patients at high risk for progression. Methods: Paraffin-embedded tissue cores of normal (n=8), and histopathologically well-defined primary (n= 30) and metastatic (n=10) CRC were arrayed in duplicate on tissue microarrays (TMAs). Expression profiles of non-CD133 CRCSC (CD29, CD44, ALDH1A1, ALDH1B1, EpCam, and CD166) were detected by immunohistochemistry and the association with clinicopathological data and patient outcomes was determined using standard statistical methodology. An independent pathologist, blinded to the clinical data scored the samples. Scoring included percent positive cells (0 to 4, 0 = <10%, 1 = 10 - 24%, 2 = 25 - 49%, 3 = 50 - 74%, 4 = 75 - 100%), and the intensity of positively stained cells (0 to 4; 0 = no staining, 1 = diminutive intensity, 2 = low intensity, 3 = intermediate intensity, 4 = high intensity). The pathologic score represents the sum of these two values, reported in this paper as a combined IHC staining score (CSS). Results: Of 30 patients 7 were AJCC stage IIA, 10 stage IIIB, 7 stage IIIC and 6 stage IV. Median follow-up was 113 months. DFI was 17 months. Median overall survival (OS) was not reached. Stage-specific OS was: II - not reached; III - not reached; IV - 11 months. In a univariate analysis, poor OS was associated with loss of CD29 expression; median OS, 32 months vs. not reached for CSS 3-7 vs. >7.5, respectively; p=0.052 comparing entire curves, after adjustment. In a Cox model analysis, loss of CD29 exhibited a trend toward association with survival (p=0.098) after adjusting for the effect of stage (p=0.0076). Greater expression of ALDH1A1 was associated with increasing stage (p=0.042 over stages 2, 3b, 3c, and 4) while loss of CD29 expression exhibited a trend toward being associated with stages 3 and 4 (p=0.08). Compared to normal colon tissue, primary tumors were associated with increased expression of ALDH1B1 (p=0.008). ALD1H1B1 expression level differed according to whether the tumor was moderately or poorly differentiated, well differentiated, or mucinous; the highest expression levels were associated with moderately or poorly differentiated tumors (p=0.011). Lymph node metastases were associated with a trend toward decreased expression of EpCAM (p = 0.06) when comparing 0 vs. 1 vs. 2+ positive lymph nodes, as was CD29 (p = 0.08) when comparing 0 vs. any positive lymph nodes. Compared to normal colon tissue metastatic colon cancers from different patients were associated with increased ALDH1B1 expression (p=0.001) whereas CD29 expression was higher in normal colonic tissue (p=0.014). Conclusion: CD29 may be associated with survival as well as clinical stage and number of lymph nodes. ALDH1B1 expression was associated with differentiation as well as type of tissue evaluated. ALDH1A1 was associated with clinical stage, and decreased EpCAM expression was found in patients with advanced lymph node stage. CRCSCs may be useful biomarkers to risk stratify, and estimate outcomes in CRC. Larger prospective studies are required to validate the current findings.


Stem Cells and Development | 2011

Isolation of live label-retaining cells and cells undergoing asymmetric cell division via nonrandom chromosomal cosegregation from human cancers.

Danielle M. Hari; Hong-Wu Xin; Kshama R. Jaiswal; Gordon Wiegand; Bo-Kyu Kim; Che Ambe; Douglas Burka; Tomotake Koizumi; Satyajit Ray; Susan Garfield; Snorri S. Thorgeirsson; Itzhak Avital

The ability to retain DNA labels over time is a property proposed to be associated with adult stem cells. Recently, label retaining cells (LRC) were indentified in cancer. LRC were suggested to be the result of either slow-cycling or asymmetric-cell-division with nonrandom-chromosomal-cosegregation (ACD-NRCC). ACD-NRCC is proposed to segregate the older template DNA strands into daughter stem cells and newly synthesized DNA into daughter cells destined for differentiation. The existence of cells undergoing ACD-NRCC and the stem-like nature of LRC remain controversial. Currently, to detect LRC and ACD-NRCC, cells need to undergo fixation. Therefore, testing the stem-cell nature and other functional traits of LRC and cells undergoing ACD-NRCC has been limited. Here, we show a method for labeling DNA with single and dual-color nucleotides in live human liver cancer cells avoiding the need for fixation. We describe a novel methodology for both the isolation of live LRC and cells undergoing ACD-NRCC via fluorescence-activated cell sorting with confocal microscopy validation. This has the potential to be a powerful adjunct to stem-cell and cancer research.


Stem Cell Research | 2012

Comparative Testing of Various Pancreatic Cancer Stem Cells Results in a Novel Class of Pancreatic-Cancer–Initiating Cells

Kshama R. Jaiswal; Hong-Wu Xin; Andrew J. Anderson; Gordon Wiegand; Bo Kim; Tyler C. Miller; Danielle M. Hari; Satyajit Ray; Tomotake Koizumi; Udo Rudloff; Snorri S. Thorgeirsson; Itzhak Avital

No systemic therapy is effective against pancreatic cancer (PC). Pancreatic cancer stem cells (PCSC) are hypothesized to account for therapeutic resistance. Several PCSC subpopulations were reported, each characterized by different markers. To be able to target PCSC, we sought to better define this putative heterogeneity. Therefore, we tested most of the known putative PCSC markers in established and fresh tumor cell lines. CD20, CD24, CD44, CD133, CD184 (CXCR4), CD326 (EpCam, ESA), Sox-2, OCT 3/4, and the side-population (SP) were tested in five PC cell lines, and the effects of confluency, hypoxia, radiation, and gemcitabine on the SP. The testing phase suggested several putative PCSC populations that were further tested and validated for their tumor-initiating capacity against known PCSC in 3 established and 1 fresh PC cell lines. Cell surface and intracellular markers showed significant variability among cell lines. SP was the only common marker in all cell lines and consistently less than 1%. SP response to confluence, hypoxia, radiation, and gemcitabine was inconsistent between cell lines. The initial testing phase suggested that SP/CD44-CD24-CD326+ cells might be a novel PCSC subpopulation. Tumor initiation capacity tests in nude mice confirmed their increased tumorigenicity over previously reported PCSC. Our data better define the heterogeneity of reported PCSC in cell lines tested in this study. We propose that prior to targeting PC via PCSC, one will need to gain more insight into this heterogeneity. Finally, we show that SP/CD44-CD24-CD326+ cells are a novel subpopulation of pancreatic cancer tumor initiating cells. Further mechanistic studies may lead to better targeting of PC via targeting this novel PCSC.


Journal of Cancer | 2012

Establishment of Human Ultra-Low Passage Colorectal Cancer Cell Lines Using Spheroids from Fresh Surgical Specimens Suitable for In Vitro and In Vivo Studies

Satyajit Ray; Russell C. Langan; John E. Mullinax; Tomotake Koizumi; Hong-Wu Xin; Gordon Wiegand; Andrew J. Anderson; Alexander Stojadinovic; Snorri S. Thorgeirsson; Udo Rudloff; Itzhak Avital

Colorectal cancer (CRC) holds the third highest incidence and cancer related mortality rate among men and women in the United States. Unfortunately, there has been little progression made in the treatment of this deadly disease once it has spread beyond the colon. It has been hypothesize that colon cancer stem cells are implicated in CRC carcinogenesis, metastasis, and therapeutic resistance. One of the difficulties in testing these hypotheses is the current use of established high-passage cancer cell lines. Long term, high-passage established cell lines have cells with stem like properties as they propagate almost indefinitely. These cells are thought to be different than the original cancer stem cells in fresh tumors. In order to investigate cancer stem cells, and molecularly profiling tumors with high fidelity to the original primary tumor, one needs to establish suitable primary ultra-low passage cell lines from fresh surgical specimens. Here we report the establishment of tumor initiating colon cancer ultra-low passage cell lines by a combination of gentle mechanical, enzymatic dissociation, spheroid formation, and followed by two generation xenografts from fresh tumors obtained at time of operation. Tumors generated were characterized by morphology, flow cytometry, immunofluorescence, and by gene expression. In the future, such a technology can be used to produce expeditiously enough material to test for mutations, genetic signatures and molecular subtyping readily available for clinical therapeutic decision making.


Journal of Cancer | 2013

Wnt and the Cancer Niche: Paracrine Interactions with Gastrointestinal Cancer Cells Undergoing Asymmetric Cell Division

Hong-Wu Xin; Chenwi M. Ambe; Satyajit Ray; Bo-Kyu Kim; Tomotake Koizumi; Gordon Wiegand; Danielle M. Hari; John E. Mullinax; Kshama R. Jaiswal; Susan Garfield; Alexander Stojadinovic; Udo Rudloff; Snorri S. Thorgeirsson; Itzhak Avital

Objective: Stem-like cancer cells contribute to cancer initiation and maintenance. Stem cells can self-renew by asymmetric cell division (ACD). ACD with non-random chromosomal cosegregation (ACD-NRCC) is one possible self-renewal mechanism. There is a paucity of evidence supporting ACD-NRCC in human cancer. Our aim was to investigate ACD-NRCC and its potential interactions with the cancer niche (microenvironment) in gastrointestinal cancers. Design: We used DNA double and single labeling approaches with FACS to isolate live cells undergoing ACD-NRCC. Results: Gastrointestinal cancers contain rare subpopulations of cells capable of ACD-NRCC. ACD-NRCC was detected preferentially in subpopulations of cells previously suggested to be stem-like/tumor-initiating cancer cells. ACD-NRCC was independent of cell-to-cell contact, and was regulated by the cancer niche in a heat-sensitive paracrine fashion. Wnt pathway genes and proteins are differentially expressed in cells undergoing ACD-NRCC vs. symmetric cell division. Blocking the Wnt pathway with IWP2 (WNT antagonist) or siRNA-TCF4 resulted in suppression of ACD-NRCC. However, using a Wnt-agonist did not increase the relative proportion of cells undergoing ACD-NRCC. Conclusion: Gastrointestinal cancers contain subpopulations of cells capable of ACD-NRCC. Here we show for the first time that ACD-NRCC can be regulated by the Wnt pathway, and by the cancer niche in a paracrine fashion. However, whether ACD-NRCC is exclusively associated with stem-like cancer cells remains to be determined. Further study of these findings might generate novel insights into stem cell and cancer biology. Targeting the mechanism of ACD-NRCC might engender novel approaches for cancer therapy.


Cancer Research | 2010

Abstract 11: Asymmetric division via nonrandom chromosomal cosegregation potentially defines a novel class of universal cancer stem cells

Hong-Wu Xin; Danielle M. Hari; Kshama R. Jaiswal; Bo-Kyu Kim; Satyajit Ray; Tomotake Koizumi; Gordon Wiegand; Seth M. Steinberg; Susan Garfield; Jesper B. Andersen; Valentina M. Factor; Snorri S. Thorgeirsson; Itzhak Avital

Cancer stem cells (CSC) are thought to be responsible for cancer initiation, maintenance, and therapeutic failure. A hallmark of stem cells is self-renewal via asymmetric cell division (ACD) into daughter stem cells and cells predestined for differentiation. In addition, recent reports questioned the ability of the gold standard for testing CSC (xenotransplantation into immunodeficient mice) to truly detect and test CSC. The aim of this study was to demonstrate fundamental stem cell9s traits such as ACD with non-random-chromosomal cosegregation (ACD-NRCC) in cancers. Here, we show that a unique self-renewal mechanism i.e. ACD-NRCC occurs in various human cancers using DNA double labeling and confocal microscopy. ACD-NRCC was found exclusively in a subpopulation of CSC (side population and CD133+ cells) and not in the non-cancer-stem-cells fractions. Cells that demonstrated ACD-NRCC also exhibited superior tumor initiation capacity in nude mice (p=0.028). Furthermore, we found that the niche provided by the non-stem cancer cells directly regulates self-renewal via ACD-NRCC. This regulation is dependent on a potentially novel heat sensitive soluble factor (Self Renewal Factor, SRF). Gene expression microarray data showed down-regulation of genes associated with ACD in tested cancers. Detection of ACD-NRCC in various human cancers provides direct evidence for the existence of cancer cells with unique stem cells traits. This is the first report to demonstrate the fundamental stem cells trait of ACD-NRCC in human cancer. Detection of cells capable of undergoing ACD-NRCC in various cancers potentially defines a novel class of CSC with superior tumor initiating capacity. Using ACD-NRCC, we propose a universal method for testing, isolating and targeting CSC. The gene expression microarray data suggested that faulty mechanisms of ACD-NRCC might result in stem cells derived cancers. Further purification of the niche9s self-renewal-signals and utilizing our methodology for isolation of CSC have far reaching implications in regenerative medicine, cancer genetics and potential novel cancer therapeutics targeting CSC via ACD-NRCC. Citation Format: {Authors}. {Abstract title} [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 101st Annual Meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research; 2010 Apr 17-21; Washington, DC. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2010;70(8 Suppl):Abstract nr 11.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2011

Cellular spectroscopy: applications to cancer stem cell characterization

Gordon Wiegand; Hong-Wu Xin; Andrew J. Anderson; John E. Mullinax; Kshama R. Jaiswal; A. Wiegand; Itzhak Avital

Spectroscopic and light scattering methods were used to gain insight into the existence and characterization of the cancer stem cell. Fundamental technical description of devices used have been reported elsewhere. We included alterations and implementation of these biophotonic instruments as applied to our objectives. We disassociated human tumor and submitted the cells to optical characterization to support our working hypothesis of stem cell origins to cancer and mechanisms. Single cell combined with population based analysis within the Pancreatic cancer system led us to information regarding the polarization state of cells possessing anchor proteins and drug influx pumps. Multispectral imaging combined with flow cytometry enabled us to target rare cells that appear to retain template DNA. rendering them resistant to anti-cancer drug therapy. In this study we describe an optical method that combines high-throughput population pattern and correlates each cell with an individual fluorescent and bright-field image.


Oncotarget | 2017

A novel serum based biomarker panel has complementary ability to preclude presence of early lung cancer for low dose CT (LDCT)

Xiaobing Wang; Xiuyi Zhi; Zhaogang Yang; Haimei Tian; Yanfen Li; Mo Li; Wenya Zhao; Chao Zhang; Teng Wang; Jing Liu; Di Shen; Cuining Zheng; Dan Zhao; Sheng Yang; Jun Qi; Hong-Wu Xin; Alexander Stojadinovic; Itzhak Avital; L. James Lee; Jianyu Rao; Wei Zhang

Low Dosage Computerized Tomography (LDCT) has been shown to improve early detection of lung cancer and mortality rates in high-risk individuals, which was, however, limited by specifically coverage for heavy smokers and high rates of false positivity. Here, we aim to investigate a novel biomarker for early detection of lung cancer, and further extend to concentrate high-risk subjects for increasing specificity and coverage of LDCT. We performed retrospective blinded evaluation of lung cancer and healthy controls in training and validation cohorts. Macrophage inhibitory cytokine 1 (MIC-1) alone and panel were assessed. Our data showed the sensitivity of MIC-1 was 72.2% and 67.1% for lung cancer diagnosis and early diagnosis respectively, at 96.6% specificity, which were significantly higher than Cyfra21-1, NSE CA125, CEA and SCC. At 90% specificity, the panel of MIC-1, Cyfra21-1, CA125 and CEA provided 89.5% sensitivity for early diagnosis of lung cancer, which could be used to concentrate the high-risk subjects for further LDCT screening. We conclude that MIC-1 have great capacity in early lung cancer diagnosis. The algorithmic panel of MIC-1, Cyfra21-1, CA125 and CEA could be used to refine the preselection criteria of high-risk subjects, and thus might facilitate the widespread implementation of LDCT screening.

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Itzhak Avital

National Institutes of Health

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Gordon Wiegand

National Institutes of Health

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Satyajit Ray

National Institutes of Health

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Tomotake Koizumi

National Institutes of Health

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John E. Mullinax

National Institutes of Health

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Andrew J. Anderson

National Institutes of Health

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Alexander Stojadinovic

Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences

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Udo Rudloff

National Institutes of Health

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