Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jen-Tsan Chi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jen-Tsan Chi.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Diversity, topographic differentiation, and positional memory in human fibroblasts.

Howard Y. Chang; Jen-Tsan Chi; Sandrine Dudoit; Chanda Bondre; Matt van de Rijn; David Botstein; Patrick O. Brown

A fundamental feature of the architecture and functional design of vertebrate animals is a stroma, composed of extracellular matrix and mesenchymal cells, which provides a structural scaffold and conduit for blood and lymphatic vessels, nerves, and leukocytes. Reciprocal interactions between mesenchymal and epithelial cells are known to play a critical role in orchestrating the development and morphogenesis of tissues and organs, but the roles played by specific stromal cells in controlling the design and function of tissues remain poorly understood. The principal cells of stromal tissue are called fibroblasts, a catch-all designation that belies their diversity. We characterized genome-wide patterns of gene expression in cultured fetal and adult human fibroblasts derived from skin at different anatomical sites. Fibroblasts from each site displayed distinct and characteristic transcriptional patterns, suggesting that fibroblasts at different locations in the body should be considered distinct differentiated cell types. Notable groups of differentially expressed genes included some implicated in extracellular matrix synthesis, lipid metabolism, and cell signaling pathways that control proliferation, cell migration, and fate determination. Several genes implicated in genetic diseases were found to be expressed in fibroblasts in an anatomic pattern that paralleled the phenotypic defects. Finally, adult fibroblasts maintained key features of HOX gene expression patterns established during embryogenesis, suggesting that HOX genes may direct topographic differentiation and underlie the detailed positional memory in fibroblasts.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Endothelial cell diversity revealed by global expression profiling.

Jen-Tsan Chi; Howard Y. Chang; Guttorm Haraldsen; Frode L. Jahnsen; Olga G. Troyanskaya; Dustin S. Chang; Zhen Wang; Stanley G. Rockson; Matt van de Rijn; David Botstein; Patrick O. Brown

The vascular system is locally specialized to accommodate widely varying blood flow and pressure and the distinct needs of individual tissues. The endothelial cells (ECs) that line the lumens of blood and lymphatic vessels play an integral role in the regional specialization of vascular structure and physiology. However, our understanding of EC diversity is limited. To explore EC specialization on a global scale, we used DNA microarrays to determine the expression profile of 53 cultured ECs. We found that ECs from different blood vessels and microvascular ECs from different tissues have distinct and characteristic gene expression profiles. Pervasive differences in gene expression patterns distinguish the ECs of large vessels from microvascular ECs. We identified groups of genes characteristic of arterial and venous endothelium. Hey2, the human homologue of the zebrafish gene gridlock, was selectively expressed in arterial ECs and induced the expression of several arterial-specific genes. Several genes critical in the establishment of left/right asymmetry were expressed preferentially in venous ECs, suggesting coordination between vascular differentiation and body plan development. Tissue-specific expression patterns in different tissue microvascular ECs suggest they are distinct differentiated cell types that play roles in the local physiology of their respective organs and tissues.


Nature | 2007

A viral microRNA functions as an orthologue of cellular miR-155

Eva Gottwein; Neelanjan Mukherjee; Christoph Sachse; Corina Frenzel; William H. Majoros; Jen-Tsan Chi; Ravi Braich; Muthiah Manoharan; Jürgen Soutschek; Uwe Ohler; Bryan R. Cullen

All metazoan eukaryotes express microRNAs (miRNAs), roughly 22-nucleotide regulatory RNAs that can repress the expression of messenger RNAs bearing complementary sequences. Several DNA viruses also express miRNAs in infected cells, suggesting a role in viral replication and pathogenesis. Although specific viral miRNAs have been shown to autoregulate viral mRNAs or downregulate cellular mRNAs, the function of most viral miRNAs remains unknown. Here we report that the miR-K12-11 miRNA encoded by Kaposi’s-sarcoma-associated herpes virus (KSHV) shows significant homology to cellular miR-155, including the entire miRNA ‘seed’ region. Using a range of assays, we show that expression of physiological levels of miR-K12-11 or miR-155 results in the downregulation of an extensive set of common mRNA targets, including genes with known roles in cell growth regulation. Our findings indicate that viral miR-K12-11 functions as an orthologue of cellular miR-155 and probably evolved to exploit a pre-existing gene regulatory pathway in B cells. Moreover, the known aetiological role of miR-155 in B-cell transformation suggests that miR-K12-11 may contribute to the induction of KSHV-positive B-cell tumours in infected patients.


PLOS Medicine | 2006

Gene expression programs in response to hypoxia: Cell type specificity and prognostic significance in human cancers

Jen-Tsan Chi; Zhen Wang; Dimitry S.A. Nuyten; Edwin Rodriguez; Marci E. Schaner; Ali Salim; Yun Wang; Gunnar B. Kristensen; Åslaug Helland; Anne Lise Børresen-Dale; Amato J. Giaccia; Michael T. Longaker; Trevor Hastie; George P. Yang; Marc J. van de Vijver; Patrick O. Brown

Background Inadequate oxygen (hypoxia) triggers a multifaceted cellular response that has important roles in normal physiology and in many human diseases. A transcription factor, hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF), plays a central role in the hypoxia response; its activity is regulated by the oxygen-dependent degradation of the HIF-1α protein. Despite the ubiquity and importance of hypoxia responses, little is known about the variation in the global transcriptional response to hypoxia among different cell types or how this variation might relate to tissue- and cell-specific diseases. Methods and Findings We analyzed the temporal changes in global transcript levels in response to hypoxia in primary renal proximal tubule epithelial cells, breast epithelial cells, smooth muscle cells, and endothelial cells with DNA microarrays. The extent of the transcriptional response to hypoxia was greatest in the renal tubule cells. This heightened response was associated with a uniquely high level of HIF-1α RNA in renal cells, and it could be diminished by reducing HIF-1α expression via RNA interference. A gene-expression signature of the hypoxia response, derived from our studies of cultured mammary and renal tubular epithelial cells, showed coordinated variation in several human cancers, and was a strong predictor of clinical outcomes in breast and ovarian cancers. In an analysis of a large, published gene-expression dataset from breast cancers, we found that the prognostic information in the hypoxia signature was virtually independent of that provided by the previously reported wound signature and more predictive of outcomes than any of the clinical parameters in current use. Conclusions The transcriptional response to hypoxia varies among human cells. Some of this variation is traceable to variation in expression of the HIF1A gene. A gene-expression signature of the cellular response to hypoxia is associated with a significantly poorer prognosis in breast and ovarian cancer.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Genomewide view of gene silencing by small interfering RNAs

Jen-Tsan Chi; Howard Y. Chang; Nancy Wang; Dustin S. Chang; Nina Dunphy; Patrick O. Brown

RNA interference (RNAi) is an evolutionarily conserved mechanism in plant and animal cells that directs the degradation of messenger RNAs homologous to short double-stranded RNAs termed small interfering RNA (siRNA). The ability of siRNA to direct gene silencing in mammalian cells has raised the possibility that siRNA might be used to investigate gene function in a high throughput fashion or to modulate gene expression in human diseases. The specificity of siRNA-mediated silencing, a critical consideration in these applications, has not been addressed on a genomewide scale. Here we show that siRNA-induced gene silencing of transient or stably expressed mRNA is highly gene-specific and does not produce secondary effects detectable by genomewide expression profiling. A test for transitive RNAi, extension of the RNAi effect to sequences 5′ of the target region that has been observed in Caenorhabditis elegans, was unable to detect this phenomenon in human cells.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2012

Translocation of sickle cell erythrocyte microRNAs into Plasmodium falciparum inhibits parasite translation and contributes to malaria resistance

Gregory LaMonte; Nisha Philip; Joseph M. Reardon; Joshua R. Lacsina; William H. Majoros; Lesley Chapman; Courtney D. Thornburg; Marilyn J. Telen; Uwe Ohler; Christopher V. Nicchitta; Timothy A. J. Haystead; Jen-Tsan Chi

Erythrocytes carrying a variant hemoglobin allele (HbS), which causes sickle cell disease and resists infection by the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum. The molecular basis of this resistance, which has long been recognized as multifactorial, remains incompletely understood. Here we show that the dysregulated microRNA (miRNA) composition, of either heterozygous HbAS or homozygous HbSS erythrocytes, contributes to resistance against P. falciparum. During the intraerythrocytic life cycle of P. falciparum, a subset of erythrocyte miRNAs translocate into the parasite. Two miRNAs, miR-451 and let-7i, were highly enriched in HbAS and HbSS erythrocytes, and these miRNAs, along with miR-223, negatively regulated parasite growth. Surprisingly, we found that miR-451 and let-7i integrated into essential parasite messenger RNAs and, via impaired ribosomal loading, resulted in translational inhibition. Hence, sickle cell erythrocytes exhibit cell-intrinsic resistance to malaria in part through an atypical miRNA activity, which may represent a unique host defense strategy against complex eukaryotic pathogens.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Systemic and cell type-specific gene expression patterns in scleroderma skin

Michael L. Whitfield; Deborah Finlay; John I. Murray; Olga G. Troyanskaya; Jen-Tsan Chi; Timothy H. McCalmont; Patrick O. Brown; David Botstein; M. Kari Connolly

We used DNA microarrays representing >12,000 human genes to characterize gene expression patterns in skin biopsies from individuals with a diagnosis of systemic sclerosis with diffuse scleroderma. We found consistent differences in the patterns of gene expression between skin biopsies from individuals with scleroderma and those from normal, unaffected individuals. The biopsies from affected individuals showed nearly indistinguishable patterns of gene expression in clinically affected and clinically unaffected tissue, even though these were clearly distinguishable from the patterns found in similar tissue from unaffected individuals. Genes characteristically expressed in endothelial cells, B lymphocytes, and fibroblasts showed differential expression between scleroderma and normal biopsies. Analysis of lymphocyte populations in scleroderma skin biopsies by immunohistochemistry suggest the B lymphocyte signature observed on our arrays is from CD20+ B cells. These results provide evidence that scleroderma has systemic manifestations that affect multiple cell types and suggests genes that could be used as potential markers for the disease.


Blood | 2010

microRNA miR-144 modulates oxidative stress tolerance and associates with anemia severity in sickle cell disease

Carolyn Sangokoya; Marilyn J. Telen; Jen-Tsan Chi

Although individuals with homozygous sickle cell disease (HbSS) share the same genetic mutation, the severity and manifestations of this disease are extremely heterogeneous. We have previously shown that the microRNA expression in normal and HbSS erythrocytes exhibit dramatic differences. In this study, we identify a subset of HbSS patients with higher erythrocytic miR-144 expression and more severe anemia. HbSS erythrocytes are known to have reduced tolerance for oxidative stress, yet the basis for this phenotype remains unknown. This study reveals that miR-144 directly regulates nuclear factor-erythroid 2-related factor 2, a central regulator of cellular response to oxidative stress, and modulates the oxidative stress response in K562 cell line and primary erythroid progenitor cells. We further demonstrate that increased miR-144 is associated with reduced NRF2 levels in HbSS reticulocytes and with decreased glutathione regeneration and attenuated antioxidant capacity in HbSS erythrocytes, thereby providing a possible mechanism for the reduced oxidative stress tolerance and increased anemia severity seen in HbSS patients. Taken together, our findings suggest that erythroid microRNAs can serve as genetic modifiers of HbS-related anemia and can provide novel insights into the clinical heterogeneity and pathobiology of sickle cell disease.


Nature Medicine | 2010

Pleiotrophin regulates the expansion and regeneration of hematopoietic stem cells

Heather A. Himburg; Garrett G. Muramoto; Pamela Daher; Sarah K. Meadows; J. Lauren Russell; Phuong L. Doan; Jen-Tsan Chi; Alice B. Salter; William Lento; Tannishtha Reya; Nelson J. Chao; John P. Chute

Hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) self-renewal is regulated by both intrinsic and extrinsic signals. Although some of the pathways that regulate HSC self-renewal have been uncovered, it remains largely unknown whether these pathways can be triggered by deliverable growth factors to induce HSC growth or regeneration. Here we show that pleiotrophin, a neurite outgrowth factor with no known function in hematopoiesis, efficiently promotes HSC expansion in vitro and HSC regeneration in vivo. Treatment of mouse bone marrow HSCs with pleiotrophin caused a marked increase in long-term repopulating HSC numbers in culture, as measured in competitive repopulating assays. Treatment of human cord blood CD34+CDCD38−Lin− cells with pleiotrophin also substantially increased severe combined immunodeficient (SCID)-repopulating cell counts in culture, compared to input and cytokine-treated cultures. Systemic administration of pleiotrophin to irradiated mice caused a pronounced expansion of bone marrow stem and progenitor cells in vivo, indicating that pleiotrophin is a regenerative growth factor for HSCs. Mechanistically, pleiotrophin activated phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) signaling in HSCs; antagonism of PI3K or Notch signaling inhibited pleiotrophin-mediated expansion of HSCs in culture. We identify the secreted growth factor pleiotrophin as a new regulator of both HSC expansion and regeneration.


Science Translational Medicine | 2011

Targeting GLUT1 and the Warburg effect in renal cell carcinoma by chemical synthetic lethality

Denise A. Chan; Patrick D. Sutphin; Phuong Nguyen; Sandra Turcotte; Edwin W. Lai; Alice Banh; Gloria E. Reynolds; Jen-Tsan Chi; Jason Wu; David E. Solow-Cordero; Muriel Bonnet; Jack U. Flanagan; Donna M. Bouley; Edward E. Graves; William A. Denny; Michael P. Hay; Amato J. Giaccia

A screen identifies a drug that specifically kills glycolysis-dependent cancer cells by inhibiting glucose uptake. Cancer’s Achilles’ Heel A quick tug on a fuel line can stop a car dead in its tracks. Similarly, depriving a cancer cell of its energy source can bring proliferation to a standstill. Chan et al. devised a drug discovery assay that took advantage of the fact that some kidney cancer cells depend on glucose for survival. By screening 64,000 small molecules, the authors found a class of drug that inhibits the glucose transporter and selectively impairs growth of these cancer cells in cultures and in animals. Certain kidney and other types of cancer cells lack the von Hippel–Lindau (VHL) tumor suppressor protein. This deficiency reorients carbohydrate metabolism so that the cancer cells depend on aerobic glycolysis—the conversion of glucose to lactate—rather than the more typical oxidative phosphorylation for a supply of energy. The drug identified by the authors, STF-31, was toxic to the VHL-deficient kidney tumor cells but, unlike many other cancer drugs, did not induce autophagy, apoptosis, or DNA damage. Rather, STF-31 exploited the fact that inactivation of VHL increases the activity of hypoxia-inducible factor transcription factor, which in turn stimulates the transcription of genes involved in glucose metabolism, including the glucose transporter–encoding gene GLUT1. By binding directly to the transporter, STF-31 blocked glucose uptake in VHL-deficient cancer cells but not in those with intact VHL; with their sugar delivery system stymied, the tumor suppressor–deprived cancer cells ceased glycolysis and thus adenosine 5′-triphosphate production and succumbed to necrosis. An extra benefit of the new agent is that its activity can be easily visualized, even deep inside an animal. Glucose uptake in a tumor can be monitored by fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography. The reduction in glucose metabolism forced on tumors by STF-31 was detected in mice with this method—an approach that can be readily applied to humans to test the drug’s efficacy. If it can thwart the fuel supply line in human cancers, this promising drug likely will bring tumor thriving to a halt. Identifying new targeted therapies that kill tumor cells while sparing normal tissue is a major challenge of cancer research. Using a high-throughput chemical synthetic lethal screen, we sought to identify compounds that exploit the loss of the von Hippel–Lindau (VHL) tumor suppressor gene, which occurs in about 80% of renal cell carcinomas (RCCs). RCCs, like many other cancers, are dependent on aerobic glycolysis for ATP production, a phenomenon known as the Warburg effect. The dependence of RCCs on glycolysis is in part a result of induction of glucose transporter 1 (GLUT1). Here, we report the identification of a class of compounds, the 3-series, exemplified by STF-31, which selectively kills RCCs by specifically targeting glucose uptake through GLUT1 and exploiting the unique dependence of these cells on GLUT1 for survival. Treatment with these agents inhibits the growth of RCCs by binding GLUT1 directly and impeding glucose uptake in vivo without toxicity to normal tissue. Activity of STF-31 in these experimental renal tumors can be monitored by [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose uptake by micro–positron emission tomography imaging, and therefore, these agents may be readily tested clinically in human tumors. Our results show that the Warburg effect confers distinct characteristics on tumor cells that can be selectively targeted for therapy.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jen-Tsan Chi's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hsiu-Ni Kung

National Taiwan University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge