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Dive into the research topics where I-Ching Wang is active.

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Featured researches published by I-Ching Wang.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005

Forkhead Box M1 Regulates the Transcriptional Network of Genes Essential for Mitotic Progression and Genes Encoding the SCF (Skp2-Cks1) Ubiquitin Ligase

I-Ching Wang; Yi Ju Chen; Douglas E. Hughes; Vladimir Petrovic; Michael L. Major; Hyung Jung Park; Yongjun Tan; Timothy Ackerson; Robert H. Costa

ABSTRACT The Forkhead box m1 (Foxm1) gene is critical for G1/S transition and essential for mitotic progression. However, the transcriptional mechanisms downstream of FoxM1 that control these cell cycle events remain to be determined. Here, we show that both early-passage Foxm1 − / − mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) and human osteosarcoma U2OS cells depleted of FoxM1 protein by small interfering RNA fail to grow in culture due to a mitotic block and accumulate nuclear levels of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor (CDKI) proteins p21Cip1 and p27Kip1. Using quantitative chromatin immunoprecipitation and expression assays, we show that FoxM1 is essential for transcription of the mitotic regulatory genes Cdc25B, Aurora B kinase, survivin, centromere protein A (CENPA), and CENPB. We also identify the mechanism by which FoxM1 deficiency causes elevated nuclear levels of the CDKI proteins p21Cip1 and p27Kip1. We provide evidence that FoxM1 is essential for transcription of Skp2 and Cks1, which are specificity subunits of the Skp1-Cullin 1-F-box (SCF) ubiquitin ligase complex that targets these CDKI proteins for degradation during the G1/S transition. Moreover, early-passage Foxm1 − / − MEFs display premature senescence as evidenced by high expression of the senescence-associated β-galactosidase, p19ARF, and p16INK4A proteins. Taken together, these results demonstrate that FoxM1 regulates transcription of cell cycle genes critical for progression into S-phase and mitosis.


Cancer Research | 2006

The Forkhead Box m1 Transcription Factor Stimulates the Proliferation of Tumor Cells during Development of Lung Cancer

Il-Man Kim; Timothy Ackerson; Sneha Ramakrishna; Maria Tretiakova; I-Ching Wang; Tanya V. Kalin; Michael L. Major; Galina A. Gusarova; Helena M. Yoder; Robert H. Costa; Vladimir V. Kalinichenko

The proliferation-specific Forkhead Box m1 (Foxm1 or Foxm1b) transcription factor (previously called HFH-11B, Trident, Win, or MPP2) regulates expression of cell cycle genes essential for progression into DNA replication and mitosis. Expression of Foxm1 is found in a variety of distinct human cancers including hepatocellular carcinomas, intrahepatic cholangiocarcinomas, basal cell carcinomas, ductal breast carcinomas, and anaplastic astrocytomas and glioblastomas. In this study, we show that human Foxm1 protein is abundantly expressed in highly proliferative human non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLC) as well as in mouse lung tumors induced by urethane. To determine the role of Foxm1 during the development of mouse lung tumors, we used IFN-inducible Mx-Cre recombinase transgene to delete mouse Foxm1 fl/fl-targeted allele before inducing lung tumors with urethane. We show that Mx-Cre Foxm1-/- mice exhibit diminished proliferation of lung tumor cells causing a significant reduction in number and size of lung adenomas. Transient transfection experiments with A549 lung adenocarcinoma cells show that depletion of Foxm1 levels by short interfering RNA caused diminished DNA replication and mitosis and reduced anchorage-independent growth of cell colonies on soft agar. Foxm1-depleted A549 cells exhibit reduced expression of cell cycle-promoting cyclin A2 and cyclin B1 genes. These data show that Foxm1 stimulates the proliferation of tumor cells during progression of NSCLC.


Cancer Research | 2006

Increased Levels of the FoxM1 Transcription Factor Accelerate Development and Progression of Prostate Carcinomas in both TRAMP and LADY Transgenic Mice

Tanya V. Kalin; I-Ching Wang; Timothy Ackerson; Michael L. Major; Carol J. Detrisac; Vladimir V. Kalinichenko; Alexander V. Lyubimov; Robert H. Costa

The proliferation-specific Forkhead Box M1 (FoxM1 or FoxM1b) transcription factor is overexpressed in a number of aggressive human carcinomas. Mouse hepatocytes deficient in FoxM1 fail to proliferate and are highly resistant to developing carcinogen-induced liver tumors. We previously developed a transgenic (TG) mouse line in which the ubiquitous Rosa26 promoter was used to drive expression of the human FoxM1b cDNA transgene in all mouse cell types. To investigate the role of FoxM1b in prostate cancer progression, we bred Rosa26-FoxM1b mice with both TRAMP and LADY TG mouse models of prostate cancer. We show that increased expression of FoxM1b accelerated development, proliferation, and growth of prostatic tumors in both TRAMP and LADY double TG mice. Furthermore, development of prostate carcinomas in TRAMP/Rosa26-FoxM1b double TG mice required high levels of FoxM1 protein to overcome sustained expression of the alternative reading frame tumor suppressor, a potent inhibitor of FoxM1 transcriptional activity. Depletion of FoxM1 levels in prostate cancer cell lines PC-3, LNCaP, or DU-145 by small interfering RNA transfection caused significant reduction in proliferation and anchorage-independent growth on soft agar. This phenotype was associated with increased nuclear levels of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor protein p27(Kip1) and diminished expression of S-phase promoting cyclin A2 and M-phase promoting cyclin B1 proteins. Finally, we show that elevated levels of FoxM1 protein correlate with high proliferation rates in human prostate adenocarcinomas. Our results suggest that the FoxM1 transcription factor regulates development and proliferation of prostate tumors, and that FoxM1 is a novel target for prostate cancer treatment.


Cancer Research | 2006

Identification of a Chemical Inhibitor of the Oncogenic Transcription Factor Forkhead Box M1

Senthil K. Radhakrishnan; Uppoor G. Bhat; Douglas E. Hughes; I-Ching Wang; Robert H. Costa; Andrei L. Gartel

The oncogenic transcription factor forkhead box M1 (FoxM1) is overexpressed in a number of different carcinomas, whereas its expression is turned off in terminally differentiated cells. For this reason, FoxM1 is an attractive target for therapeutic intervention in cancer treatment. As a first step toward realizing this goal, in this study, using a high-throughput, cell-based assay system, we screened for and isolated the antibiotic thiazole compound Siomycin A as an inhibitor of FoxM1. Interestingly, we observed that Siomycin A was able to down-regulate the transcriptional activity as well as the protein and mRNA abundance of FoxM1. Consequently, we found that the downstream target genes of FoxM1, such as Cdc25B, Survivin, and CENPB, were repressed. Also, we observed that consistent with earlier reports of FoxM1 inhibition, Siomycin A was able to reduce anchorage-independent growth of cells in soft agar. Furthermore, we found that Siomycin A was able to induce apoptosis selectively in transformed but not normal cells of the same origin. Taken together, our data suggest that FoxM1 inhibitor Siomycin A could represent a useful starting point for the development of anticancer therapeutics.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2007

A cell-penetrating ARF peptide inhibitor of FoxM1 in mouse hepatocellular carcinoma treatment

Galina A. Gusarova; I-Ching Wang; Michael L. Major; Vladimir V. Kalinichenko; Timothy Ackerson; Vladimir Petrovic; Robert H. Costa

The forkhead box m1 (Foxm1) transcription factor is essential for initiation of carcinogen-induced liver tumors; however, whether FoxM1 constitutes a therapeutic target for liver cancer treatment remains unknown. In this study, we used diethylnitrosamine/phenobarbital treatment to induce hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) in either WT mice or Arf(-/-)Rosa26-FoxM1b Tg mice, in which forkhead box M1b (FoxM1b) is overexpressed and alternative reading frame (ARF) inhibition of FoxM1 transcriptional activity is eliminated. To pharmacologically reduce FoxM1 activity in HCCs, we subjected these HCC-bearing mice to daily injections of a cell-penetrating ARF(26-44) peptide inhibitor of FoxM1 function. After 4 weeks of this treatment, HCC regions displayed reduced tumor cell proliferation and angiogenesis and a significant increase in apoptosis within the HCC region but not in the adjacent normal liver tissue. ARF peptide treatment also induced apoptosis of several distinct human hepatoma cell lines, which correlated with reduced protein levels of the mitotic regulatory genes encoding polo-like kinase 1, aurora B kinase, and survivin, all of which are transcriptional targets of FoxM1 that are highly expressed in cancer cells and function to prevent apoptosis. These studies indicate that ARF peptide treatment is an effective therapeutic approach to limit proliferation and induce apoptosis of liver cancer cells in vivo.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2006

Endothelial cell–restricted disruption of FoxM1 impairs endothelial repair following LPS-induced vascular injury

You Yang Zhao; Xiaopei Gao; Yidan D. Zhao; Muhammad K. Mirza; Randall S. Frey; Vladimir V. Kalinichenko; I-Ching Wang; Robert H. Costa; Asrar B. Malik

Recovery of endothelial integrity after vascular injury is vital for endothelial barrier function and vascular homeostasis. However, little is known about the molecular mechanisms of endothelial barrier repair following injury. To investigate the functional role of forkhead box M1 (FoxM1) in the mechanism of endothelial repair, we generated endothelial cell-restricted FoxM1-deficient mice (FoxM1 CKO mice). These mutant mice were viable and exhibited no overt phenotype. However, in response to the inflammatory mediator LPS, FoxM1 CKO mice displayed significantly protracted increase in lung vascular permeability and markedly increased mortality. Following LPS-induced vascular injury, FoxM1 CKO lungs demonstrated impaired cell proliferation in association with sustained expression of p27(Kip1) and decreased expression of cyclin B1 and Cdc25C. Endothelial cells isolated from FoxM1 CKO lungs failed to proliferate, and siRNA-mediated suppression of FoxM1 expression in human endothelial cells resulted in defective cell cycle progression. Deletion of FoxM1 in endothelial cells induced decreased expression of cyclins, Cdc2, and Cdc25C, increased p27(Kip1) expression, and decreased Cdk activities. Thus, FoxM1 plays a critical role in the mechanism of the restoration of endothelial barrier function following vascular injury. These data suggest that impairment in FoxM1 activation may be an important determinant of the persistent vascular barrier leakiness and edema formation associated with inflammatory diseases.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Ubiquitous Expression of the Forkhead Box M1B Transgene Accelerates Proliferation of Distinct Pulmonary Cell Types following Lung Injury

Vladimir V. Kalinichenko; Galina A. Gusarova; Yongjun Tan; I-Ching Wang; Michael L. Major; Xinhe Wang; Helena M. Yoder; Robert H. Costal

The delayed early transcription factor Forkhead Box M1B (FoxM1B) is expressed in proliferating cells, but its expression is extinguished in cells undergoing terminal differentiation. Liver regeneration studies with genetically altered mice that either prematurely expressed FoxM1B in hepatocytes or contained a hepatocyte-specific deletion of the Foxm1b allele demonstrated that FoxM1B is critical for regulating the expression of cell cycle genes required for hepatocyte proliferation. Furthermore, preventing the decline in hepatocyte FoxM1B levels during aging was sufficient to increase regenerating hepatocyte proliferation and expression of cell cycle genes to levels found in young regenerating mouse liver. Although these liver regeneration studies demonstrated that FoxM1B is required for hepatocyte proliferation, whether FoxM1B regulates proliferation of cell types other than hepatocytes remains to be determined. Here, we developed a new TG mouse line in which the –800-base pair Rosa26 promoter was used to drive expression of the FoxM1B transgene in all mouse tissues and found that Rosa26-FoxM1B TG mice were healthy, displaying no developmental defects. We used butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT) lung injury to demonstrate that premature expression of the FoxM1B transgene protein accelerated proliferation of different lung cell types, including alveolar type II epithelial cells, bronchial epithelial and smooth muscle cells, and endothelial cells of pulmonary capillaries and arteries. This was associated with the earlier expression of the cell cycle promoting cyclin A2, cyclin E, cyclin B1, cyclin F, and cyclin dependent kinase-1 (Cdk1) genes and diminished protein levels of Cdk inhibitor p21Cip1. Taken together, these results suggest that increasing FoxM1B levels is an effective means to stimulate cellular proliferation during aging and in lung diseases such as emphysema.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Forkhead Box m1 transcription factor is required for perinatal lung function

Tanya V. Kalin; I-Ching Wang; Lucille N. Meliton; Yufang Zhang; Susan E. Wert; Xiaomeng Ren; Jonathan Snyder; Sheila M. Bell; Lloyd H Graf; Jeffrey A. Whitsett; Vladimir V. Kalinichenko

The Forkhead Box m1 (Foxm1 or Foxm1b) transcription factor (previously called HFH-11B, Trident, Win, or MPP2) is an important positive regulator of DNA replication and mitosis in a variety of cell types. Global deletion of Foxm1 in Foxm1−/− mice is lethal in the embryonic period, causing multiple abnormalities in the liver, heart, lung, and blood vessels. In the present study, Foxm1 was deleted conditionally in the respiratory epithelium (epFoxm1−/−). Surprisingly, deletion of Foxm1 did not alter lung growth, branching morphogenesis, or epithelial proliferation but inhibited lung maturation and caused respiratory failure after birth. Maturation defects in epFoxm1−/− lungs were associated with decreased expression of T1-α and aquaporin 5, consistent with a delay of type I cell differentiation. Expression of surfactant-associated proteins A, B, C, and D was decreased by deletion of Foxm1. Foxm1 directly bound and induced transcriptional activity of the mouse surfactant protein B and A (Sftpb and Sftpa) promoters in vitro, indicating that Foxm1 is a direct transcriptional activator of these genes. Foxm1 is critical for surfactant homeostasis and lung maturation before birth and is required for adaptation to air breathing.


Developmental Dynamics | 2007

Myocardium defects and ventricular hypoplasia in mice homozygous null for the Forkhead Box m1 transcription factor

Sneha Ramakrishna; Il-Man Kim; Vladimir Petrovic; Dmitriy Malin; I-Ching Wang; Tanya V. Kalin; Lucille N. Meliton; You Yang Zhao; Timothy Ackerson; Yimin Qin; Asrar B. Malik; Robert H. Costa; Vladimir V. Kalinichenko

The Forkhead Box m1 (Foxm1) transcription factor is expressed in cardiomyocytes and cardiac endothelial cells during heart development. In this study, we used a novel Foxm1 −/− mouse line to demonstrate that Foxm1‐deletion causes ventricular hypoplasia and diminished DNA replication and mitosis in developing cardiomyocytes. Proliferation defects in Foxm1 −/− hearts were associated with a reduced expression of Cdk1‐activator Cdc25B phosphatase and NFATc3 transcription factor, and with abnormal nuclear accumulation of the Cdk‐inhibitor p21Cip1 protein. Depletion of Foxm1 levels by siRNA caused altered expression of these genes in cultured HL‐1 cardiomyocytes. Endothelial‐specific deletion of the Foxm1 fl/fl allele in Tie2‐Cre Foxm1 fl/fl embryos did not influence heart development and cardiomyocyte proliferation. Foxm1 protein binds to the −9,259/−9,288‐bp region of the endogenous mouse NFATc3 promoter, indicating that Foxm1 is a transcriptional activator of the NFATc3 gene. Foxm1 regulates expression of genes essential for the proliferation of cardiomyocytes during heart development. Developmental Dynamics 236:1000–1013, 2007.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2012

Foxm1 Mediates Cross Talk between Kras/Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase and Canonical Wnt Pathways during Development of Respiratory Epithelium

I-Ching Wang; Jonathan Snyder; Yufang Zhang; Julie Lander; Yuto Nakafuku; James Lin; Gang Chen; Tanya V. Kalin; Jeffrey A. Whitsett; Vladimir V. Kalinichenko

ABSTRACT While Kras/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and canonical Wnt/β-catenin are critical for lung morphogenesis, mechanisms integrating these important signaling pathways during lung development are unknown. Herein, we demonstrate that the Foxm1 transcription factor is a key downstream target of activated KrasG12D. Deletion of Foxm1 from respiratory epithelial cells during lung formation prevented structural abnormalities caused by activated KrasG12D. Kras/Foxm1 signaling inhibited the activity of canonical Wnt signaling in the developing lung in vivo. Foxm1 decreased T-cell factor (TCF) transcriptional activity induced by activated β-catenin in vitro. Depletion of Foxm1 by short interfering RNA (siRNA) increased nuclear localization of β-catenin, increased expression of β-catenin target genes, and decreased mRNA and protein levels of the β-catenin inhibitor Axin2. Axin2 mRNA was reduced in distal lung epithelium of Foxm1-deficient mice. Foxm1 directly bound to and increased transcriptional activity of the Axin2 promoter region. Foxm1 is required for Kras signaling in distal lung epithelium and provides a mechanism integrating Kras and canonical Wnt/β-catenin signaling during lung development.

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Robert H. Costa

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Vladimir V. Kalinichenko

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Michael L. Major

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Galina A. Gusarova

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Tanya V. Kalin

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Timothy Ackerson

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Xinhe Wang

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Helena M. Yoder

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Yongjun Tan

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Vladimir Petrovic

University of Illinois at Chicago

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