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Featured researches published by Hsin-Hsin Chen.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Acute Heat Stress Induces Differential Gene Expressions in the Testes of a Broiler-Type Strain of Taiwan Country Chickens

Shih-Han Wang; Chuen-Yu Cheng; Pin-Chi Tang; Chih-Feng Chen; Hsin-Hsin Chen; Yen-Pai Lee; San-Yuan Huang

The expression of testicular genes following acute heat stress has been reported in layer-type roosters, but few similar studies have been conducted on broilers. This study investigated the effect of acute heat stress on the gene expression in the testes of a broiler-type strain of Taiwan country chickens. Roosters were subjected to acute heat stress (38°C) for 4 h, and then exposed to 25°C, with testes collected 0, 2, and 6 h after the cessation of heat stress, using non-heat-stressed roosters as controls (n = 3 roosters per group). The body temperature and respiratory rate increased significantly (p<0.05) during the heat stress. The numbers of apoptotic cells increased 2 h after the acute heat stress (79 ± 7 vs. 322 ± 192, control vs. heat stress; p<0.05), which was earlier than the time of increase in layer-type roosters. Based on a chicken 44 K oligo microarray, 163 genes were found to be expressed significantly different in the testes of the heat-stressed chickens from those of the controls, including genes involved in the response to stimulus, protein metabolism, signal transduction, cell adhesion, transcription, and apoptosis. The mRNA expressions of upregulated genes, including HSP25, HSP90AA1, HSPA2, and LPAR2, and of downregulated genes, including CDH5, CTNNA3, EHF, CIRBP, SLA, and NTF3, were confirmed through quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR). Moreover, numerous transcripts in the testes exhibited distinct expressions between the heat-stressed broiler-type and layer-type chickens. We concluded that the transcriptional responses of testes to acute heat stress may differ between the broiler-type and layer-type roosters. Whether the differential expression patterns associate with the heat-tolerance in the strains require a further exploration.


Theriogenology | 2016

Profiling of differential gene expression in the hypothalamus of broiler-type Taiwan country chickens in response to acute heat stress

Wei-Lin Tu; Chuen-Yu Cheng; Shih-Han Wang; Pin-Chi Tang; Chih-Feng Chen; Hsin-Hsin Chen; Yen-Pai Lee; Shuen-Ei Chen; San-Yuan Huang

Acute heat stress severely impacts poultry production. The hypothalamus acts as a crucial center to regulate body temperature, detect temperature changes, and modulate the autonomic nervous system and endocrine loop for heat retention and dissipation. The purpose of this study was to investigate global gene expression in the hypothalamus of broiler-type B strain Taiwan country chickens after acute heat stress. Twelve 30-week-old hens were allocated to four groups. Three heat-stressed groups were subjected to acute heat stress at 38 °C for 2 hours without recovery (H2R0), with 2 hours of recovery (H2R2), and with 6 hours of recovery (H2R6). The control hens were maintained at 25 °C. At the end, hypothalamus samples were collected for gene expression analysis. The results showed that 24, 11, and 25 genes were upregulated and 41, 15, and 42 genes were downregulated in H2R0, H2R2, and H2R6 treatments, respectively. The expressions of gonadotropin-releasing hormone 1 (GNRH1), heat shock 27-kDa protein 1 (HSPB1), neuropeptide Y (NPY), and heat shock protein 25 (HSP25) were upregulated at all recovery times after heat exposure. Conversely, the expression of TPH2 was downregulated at all recovery times. A gene ontology analysis showed that most of the differentially expressed genes were involved in biological processes including cellular processes, metabolic processes, localization, multicellular organismal processes, developmental processes, and biological regulation. A functional annotation analysis showed that the differentially expressed genes were related to the gene networks of responses to stress and reproductive functions. These differentially expressed genes might be essential and unique key factors in the heat stress response of the hypothalamus in chickens.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Annotation of Differential Gene Expression in Small Yellow Follicles of a Broiler-Type Strain of Taiwan Country Chickens in Response to Acute Heat Stress

Chuen-Yu Cheng; Wei-Lin Tu; Shih-Han Wang; Pin-Chi Tang; Chih-Feng Chen; Hsin-Hsin Chen; Yen-Pai Lee; Shuen-Ei Chen; San-Yuan Huang

This study investigated global gene expression in the small yellow follicles (6–8 mm diameter) of broiler-type B strain Taiwan country chickens (TCCs) in response to acute heat stress. Twelve 30-wk-old TCC hens were divided into four groups: control hens maintained at 25°C and hens subjected to 38°C acute heat stress for 2 h without recovery (H2R0), with 2-h recovery (H2R2), and with 6-h recovery (H2R6). Small yellow follicles were collected for RNA isolation and microarray analysis at the end of each time point. Results showed that 69, 51, and 76 genes were upregulated and 58, 15, 56 genes were downregulated after heat treatment of H2R0, H2R2, and H2R6, respectively, using a cutoff value of two-fold or higher. Gene ontology analysis revealed that these differentially expressed genes are associated with the biological processes of cell communication, developmental process, protein metabolic process, immune system process, and response to stimuli. Upregulation of heat shock protein 25, interleukin 6, metallopeptidase 1, and metalloproteinase 13, and downregulation of type II alpha 1 collagen, discoidin domain receptor tyrosine kinase 2, and Kruppel-like factor 2 suggested that acute heat stress induces proteolytic disintegration of the structural matrix and inflamed damage and adaptive responses of gene expression in the follicle cells. These suggestions were validated through gene expression, using quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction. Functional annotation clarified that interleukin 6-related pathways play a critical role in regulating acute heat stress responses in the small yellow follicles of TCC hens.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Functional genomics study of acute heat stress response in the small yellow follicles of layer-type chickens

Chuen-Yu Cheng; Wei-Lin Tu; Chao-Jung Chen; Hong-Lin Chan; Chih-Feng Chen; Hsin-Hsin Chen; Pin-Chi Tang; Yen-Pai Lee; Shuen-Ei Chen; San-Yuan Huang

This study investigated global gene and protein expression in the small yellow follicle (SYF; 6–8 mm in diameter) tissues of chickens in response to acute heat stress. Twelve 30-week-old layer-type hens were divided into four groups: control hens were maintained at 25 °C while treatment hens were subjected to acute heat stress at 36 °C for 4 h without recovery, with 2-h recovery, and with 6-h recovery. SYFs were collected at each time point for mRNA and protein analyses. A total of 176 genes and 93 distinct proteins with differential expressions were identified, mainly associated with the molecular functions of catalytic activity and binding. The upregulated expression of heat shock proteins and peroxiredoxin family after acute heat stress is suggestive of responsive machineries to protect cells from apoptosis and oxidative insults. In conclusion, both the transcripts and proteins associated with apoptosis, stress response, and antioxidative defense were upregulated in the SYFs of layer-type hens to alleviate the detrimental effects by acute heat stress. However, the genomic regulations of specific cell type in response to acute heat stress of SYFs require further investigation.


Animal Biotechnology | 2018

Acute Heat Stress Changes Protein Expression in the Testes of a Broiler-Type Strain of Taiwan Country Chickens

Shih-Han Wang; Chuen-Yu Cheng; Chao-Jung Chen; Hong-Lin Chan; Hsin-Hsin Chen; Pin-Chi Tang; Chih-Feng Chen; Yen-Pai Lee; San-Yuan Huang

ABSTRACT Heat stress leads to decreased fertility in roosters. This study investigated the global protein expression in response to acute heat stress in the testes of a broiler-type strain of Taiwan country chickens (TCCs). Twelve 45-week-old roosters were randomly allocated to the control group maintained at 25°C, and three groups subjected to acute heat stress at 38°C for 4 h, with 0, 2, and 6 h of recovery, respectively. Testis samples were collected for hematoxylin and eosin staining, apoptosis assay, and protein analysis. The results revealed 101 protein spots that differed significantly from the control following exposure to acute heat stress. The proteins that were differentially expressed participated mainly in protein metabolism and other metabolic processes, responses to stimuli, apoptosis, cellular organization, and spermatogenesis. Proteins that negatively regulate apoptosis were downregulated and proteins involved in autophagy and major heat shock proteins (HSP90α, HSPA5, and HSPA8) were upregulated in the testes of heat-stressed chickens. In conclusion, acute heat stress causes a change in protein expression in the testes of broiler-type B strain TCCs and may thus impair cell morphology, spermatogenesis, and apoptosis. The expression of heat shock proteins increased to attenuate the testicular injury induced by acute heat stress.


Journal of Poultry Science | 2017

Proteomic Analysis of Thermal Regulation of Small Yellow Follicles in Broiler-Type Taiwan Country Chickens

Chuen-Yu Cheng; Wei-Lin Tu; Chao-Jung Chen; Hong-Lin Chan; Chih-Feng Chen; Hsin-Hsin Chen; Pin-Chi Tang; Yen-Pai Lee; Shuen-Ei Chen; San-Yuan Huang

Heat stress hampers egg production and lowers fertility in layers. This study investigated global protein abundance in the small yellow follicles (SYFs, 6–8 mm diameter) of a broiler-type strain of Taiwan country chickens (TCCs) under acute heat stress. Twelve 30-week-old TCC hens were allocated to a control group maintained at 25°C, and to three acute heat-stressed groups subjected to 38°C for 2 h without recovery, with 2-h recovery, or with 6-h recovery. Two-dimensional difference gel electrophoresis analysis identified 119 significantly differentially expressed proteins after acute heat exposure. Gene ontology analysis revealed that most of these proteins are involved in molecular binding (34%), catalytic activity (23%), and structural molecule activity (11%), and participate in metabolic processes (20%), cellular processes (20%), and cellular component organization or biogenesis (11%). Proteins associated with stress response and survival (HSP25, HSP47, HSP70, HSC70, HSPA9), cytoskeleton remodeling, mitochondrial metabolic process of ATP production, antioxidative defense (peroxiredoxin-6), cargo lipid export and delivery (vitellogenin, apolipoprotein B and A1), and toxin/metabolite clearance and delivery (albumin) were upregulated after acute heat stress in the SYFs of TCCs. No overt cell death and atresia were observed in SYFs after acute heat stress. Collectively, these responses may represent a protective mechanism to maintain follicle cell integrity and survival, thereby ensuring a sufficient pool of SYFs for selection into the ovulation hierarchy for successful egg production.


Canadian Journal of Veterinary Research-revue Canadienne De Recherche Veterinaire | 2003

Serum acute phase proteins and swine health status.

Hsin-Hsin Chen; Jyh-Hung Lin; Hang-Pong Fung; Lin-Lin Ho; Ping-Chin Yang; Wen-Chuan Lee; Yan-Pai Lee; Rea-Min Chu


Theriogenology | 2013

Differential gene expressions in testes of L2 strain Taiwan country chicken in response to acute heat stress.

Shih-Han Wang; Chuen-Yu Cheng; Pin-Chi Tang; Chih-Feng Chen; Hsin-Hsin Chen; Yen-Pai Lee; San-Yuan Huang


Proteomics | 2006

Analysis of chicken serum proteome and differential protein expression during development in single‐comb White Leghorn hens

San-Yuan Huang; Jyh-Hung Lin; Yu-Huey Chen; Chin-kai Chuang; Yu-Fang Chiu; Ming-Yu Chen; Hsin-Hsin Chen; Wen-Chuan Lee


Theriogenology | 2005

Developmental changes of heat-shock proteins in porcine testis by a proteomic analysis.

San-Yuan Huang; Ming-F. Tam; Yu-Tsin Hsu; Jyh-Hung Lin; Hsin-Hsin Chen; Chin-kai Chuang; Ming-Yu Chen; Yueh-Tsu King; Wen-Chuan Lee

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San-Yuan Huang

National Chung Hsing University

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Yen-Pai Lee

National Chung Hsing University

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Chih-Feng Chen

National Chung Hsing University

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Chuen-Yu Cheng

National Chung Hsing University

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Pin-Chi Tang

National Chung Hsing University

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Shih-Han Wang

National Chung Hsing University

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Shuen-Ei Chen

National Chung Hsing University

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Wei-Lin Tu

National Chung Hsing University

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Jyh-Hung Lin

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Hong-Lin Chan

National Tsing Hua University

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