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Dive into the research topics where Jiun Sheng Chen is active.

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Featured researches published by Jiun Sheng Chen.


Expert Opinion on Therapeutic Targets | 2013

Targeting TGF-β signaling in cancer.

Lior H. Katz; Ying Li; Jiun Sheng Chen; Nina M. Muñoz; Avijit Majumdar; Jian Chen; Lopa Mishra

Introduction: The transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) signaling pathway has a pivotal role in tumor suppression and yet, paradoxically, in tumor promotion. Functional context dependent insights into the TGF-β pathway are crucial in developing TGF-β-based therapeutics for cancer. Areas covered: This review discusses the molecular mechanism of the TGF-β pathway and describes the different ways of tumor suppression by TGF-β. It is then explained how tumors can evade these effects and how TGF-β contributes to further growing and spreading of some of the tumors. In the last part of the review, the data on targeting TGF-β pathway for cancer treatment is assessed. This review focuses on anti-TGF-β based treatment and other options targeting activated pathways in tumors where the TGF-β tumor suppressor pathway is lost. Pre-clinical as well up to date results of the most recent clinical trials are given. Expert opinion: Targeting the TGF-β pathway can be a promising direction in cancer treatment. However, several challenges still exist, the most important are differentiating between the carcinogenic effects of TGF-β and its other physiological roles, and delineating the tumor suppressive versus the tumor promoting roles of TGF-β in each specific tumor. Future studies are needed in order to find safer and more effective TGF-β-based drugs.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Aurora B kinase phosphorylates and instigates degradation of p53

Chris Gully; Guermarie Velazquez-Torres; Ji Hyun Shin; Enrique Fuentes-Mattei; Edward Wang; Colin Carlock; Jian Chen; Daniel Rothenberg; Henry P. Adams; Hyun Ho Choi; Sergei Guma; Liem Phan; Ping Chieh Chou; Chun Hui Su; Fanmao Zhang; Jiun Sheng Chen; Tsung Ying Yang; Sai Ching J. Yeung; Mong Hong Lee

Aurora B is a mitotic checkpoint kinase that plays a pivotal role in the cell cycle, ensuring correct chromosome segregation and normal progression through mitosis. Aurora B is overexpressed in many types of human cancers, which has made it an attractive target for cancer therapies. Tumor suppressor p53 is a genome guardian and important negative regulator of the cell cycle. Whether Aurora B and p53 are coordinately regulated during the cell cycle is not known. We report that Aurora B directly interacts with p53 at different subcellular localizations and during different phases of the cell cycle (for instance, at the nucleus in interphase and the centromeres in prometaphase of mitosis). We show that Aurora B phosphorylates p53 at S183, T211, and S215 to accelerate the degradation of p53 through the polyubiquitination–proteasome pathway, thus functionally suppressing the expression of p53 target genes involved in cell cycle inhibition and apoptosis (e.g., p21 and PUMA). Pharmacologic inhibition of Aurora B in cancer cells with WT p53 increased p53 protein level and expression of p53 target genes to inhibit tumor growth. Together, these results define a mechanism of p53 inactivation during the cell cycle and imply that oncogenic hyperactivation or overexpression of Aurora B may compromise the tumor suppressor function of p53. We have elucidated the antineoplastic mechanism for Aurora B kinase inhibitors in cancer cells with WT p53.


Oncogene | 2009

Pim-1 plays a pivotal role in hypoxia-induced chemoresistance

Jiun Sheng Chen; M. Kobayashi; Stephanie Darmanin; Yi Qiao; Christopher Gully; Ruiying Zhao; Sai Ching J. Yeung; Mong Hong Lee

Hypoxia changes the responses of cancer cells to many chemotherapy agents, resulting in chemoresistance. The underlying molecular mechanism of hypoxia-induced drug resistance remains unclear. Pim-1 is a survival kinase, which phosphorylates Bad at serine 112 to antagonize drug-induced apoptosis. Here we show that hypoxia increases Pim-1 in a hypoxia-inducible factor-1α-independent manner. Inhibition of Pim-1 function by dominant-negative Pim-1 dramatically restores the drug sensitivity to apoptosis induced by chemotherapy under hypoxic conditions in both in vitro and in vivo tumor models. Introduction of siRNAs for Pim-1 also resensitizes cancer cells to chemotherapy drugs under hypoxic conditions, whereas forced overexpression of Pim-1 endows solid tumor cells with resistance to cisplatin, even under normoxia. Dominant-negative Pim-1 prevents a decrease in mitochondrial transmembrane potential in solid tumor cells, which is normally induced by cisplatin (CDDP), followed by the reduced activity of Caspase-3 and Caspase-9, indicating that Pim-1 participates in hypoxia-induced drug resistance through the stabilization of mitochondrial transmembrane potential. Our results demonstrate that Pim-1 is a pivotal regulator involved in hypoxia-induced chemoresistance. Targeting Pim-1 may improve the chemotherapeutic strategy for solid tumors.


Journal of the National Cancer Institute | 2014

Effects of Obesity on Transcriptomic Changes and Cancer Hallmarks in Estrogen Receptor–Positive Breast Cancer

Enrique Fuentes-Mattei; Guermarie Velazquez-Torres; Liem Phan; Fanmao Zhang; Ping Chieh Chou; Ji Hyun Shin; Hyun Ho Choi; Jiun Sheng Chen; Ruiying Zhao; Jian Chen; Chris Gully; Colin Carlock; Yuan Qi; Ya Zhang; Yun Wu; Francisco J. Esteva; Yongde Luo; Wallace L. McKeehan; Joe Ensor; Gabriel N. Hortobagyi; Lajos Pusztai; W. Fraser Symmans; Mong Hong Lee; Sai Ching Jim Yeung

Background Obesity increases the risk of cancer death among postmenopausal women with estrogen receptor–positive (ER+) breast cancer, but the direct evidence for the mechanisms is lacking. The purpose of this study is to demonstrate direct evidence for the mechanisms mediating this epidemiologic phenomenon. Methods We analyzed transcriptomic profiles of pretreatment biopsies from a prospective cohort of 137 ER+ breast cancer patients. We generated transgenic (MMTV-TGFα;A y /a) and orthotopic/syngeneic (A y /a) obese mouse models to investigate the effect of obesity on tumorigenesis and tumor progression and to determine biological mechanisms using whole-genome transcriptome microarrays and protein analyses. We used a coculture system to examine the impact of adipocytes/adipokines on breast cancer cell proliferation. All statistical tests were two-sided. Results Functional transcriptomic analysis of patients revealed the association of obesity with 59 biological functional changes (P < .05) linked to cancer hallmarks. Gene enrichment analysis revealed enrichment of AKT-target genes (P = .04) and epithelial–mesenchymal transition genes (P = .03) in patients. Our obese mouse models demonstrated activation of the AKT/mTOR pathway in obesity-accelerated mammary tumor growth (3.7- to 7.0-fold; P < .001; n = 6–7 mice per group). Metformin or everolimus can suppress obesity-induced secretion of adipokines and breast tumor formation and growth (0.5-fold, P = .04; 0.3-fold, P < .001, respectively; n = 6–8 mice per group). The coculture model revealed that adipocyte-secreted adipokines (eg, TIMP-1) regulate adipocyte-induced breast cancer cell proliferation and invasion. Metformin suppress adipocyte-induced cell proliferation and adipocyte-secreted adipokines in vitro. Conclusions Adipokine secretion and AKT/mTOR activation play important roles in obesity-accelerated breast cancer aggressiveness in addition to hyperinsulinemia, estrogen signaling, and inflammation. Metformin and everolimus have potential for therapeutic interventions of ER+ breast cancer patients with obesity.


Oncogene | 2011

COP9 signalosome subunit 6 stabilizes COP1, which functions as an E3 ubiquitin ligase for 14-3-3σ.

Hyun Ho Choi; Christopher Gully; Chun-Hui Su; Guermarie Velazquez-Torres; Ping-Chieh Chou; Chieh Tseng; Ruiying Zhao; Liem Phan; T. Shaiken; Jiun Sheng Chen; Sai Ching J. Yeung; Mong Hong Lee

14-3-3σ, a gene upregulated by p53 in response to DNA damage, exists as part of a positive-feedback loop, which activates p53 and is a human cancer epithelial marker downregulated in various cancer types. 14-3-3σ levels are critical for maintaining p53 activity in response to DNA damage and regulating signal mediators such as Akt. In this study, we identify mammalian constitutive photomorphogenic 1 (COP1) as a novel E3 ubiquitin ligase for targeting 14-3-3σ through proteasomal degradation. We show for the first time that COP9 signalosome subunit 6 (CSN6) associates with COP1 and is involved in 14-3-3σ ubiquitin-mediated degradation. Mechanistic studies show that CSN6 expression leads to stabilization of COP1 through reducing COP1 self-ubiquitination and decelerating COP1s turnover rate. We also show that CSN6-mediated 14-3-3σ ubiquitination is compromised when COP1 is knocked down. Thus, CSN6 mediates 14-3-3σ ubiquitination through enhancing COP1 stability. Subsequently, we show that CSN6 causes 14-3-3σ downregulation, thereby activating Akt and promoting cell survival. Also, CSN6 overexpression leads to increased cell growth, transformation and promotes tumorigenicity. Significantly, 14-3-3σ expression can correct the abnormalities mediated by CSN6 expression. These data suggest that the CSN6-COP1 axis is involved in 14-3-3σ degradation, and that deregulation of this axis will promote cell growth and tumorigenicity.


Nature Communications | 2014

CSN6 drives carcinogenesis by positively regulating Myc stability

Jian Chen; Ji Hyun Shin; Ruiying Zhao; Liem Phan; Hua Wang; Yuwen Xue; Sean M. Post; Hyun Ho Choi; Jiun Sheng Chen; Edward Wang; Zhongguo Zhou; Chieh Tseng; Christopher Gully; Guermarie Velazquez-Torres; Enrique Fuentes-Mattei; Giselle Yeung; Yi Qiao; Ping Chieh Chou; Chun Hui Su; Yun Chih Hsieh; Shih Lan Hsu; Kazufumi Ohshiro; Tattym Shaikenov; Huamin Wang; Sai Ching Jim Yeung; Mong Hong Lee

Summary Cullin-RING ubiquitin ligases (CRL) are critical in ubiquitinating Myc, while COP9 signalosome (CSN) controls neddylation of Cullin in CRL. The mechanistic link between Cullin neddylation and Myc ubiquitination/degradation is unclear. Here we show that Myc is a target of the CSN subunit 6 (CSN6)–Cullin signaling axis and that CSN6 is a positive regulator of Myc. CSN6 enhanced neddylation of Cullin-1 and facilitated auto-ubiquitination/degradation of Fbxw7, a component of CRL involved in Myc ubiquitination, thereby stabilizing Myc. Csn6 haplo-insufficiency decreased Cullin-1 neddylation but increased Fbxw7 stability to compromise Myc stability and activity in an Eµ-Myc mouse model, resulting in decelerated lymphomagenesis. We found that CSN6 overexpression, which leads to aberrant expression of Myc target genes, is frequent in human cancers. Together, these results define a mechanism for the regulation of Myc stability through the CSN-Cullin-Fbxw7 axis and provide insights into the correlation of CSN6 overexpression with Myc stabilization/activation during tumorigenesis.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2016

TGF-β/β2-spectrin/CTCF-regulated tumor suppression in human stem cell disorder Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome

Jian Chen; Zhi Xing Yao; Jiun Sheng Chen; Young Jin Gi; Nina M. Muñoz; Suchin Kundra; H. Franklin Herlong; Yun Seong Jeong; Alexei Goltsov; Kazufumi Ohshiro; Nipun A. Mistry; Jianping Zhang; Xiaoping Su; Sanaa Choufani; Abhisek Mitra; Shulin Li; Bibhuti Mishra; Jon C. White; Asif Rashid; Alan Yaoqi Wang; Milind Javle; Marta L. Davila; Peter Michaely; Rosanna Weksberg; Wayne L. Hofstetter; Milton J. Finegold; Jerry W. Shay; Keigo Machida; Hidekazu Tsukamoto; Lopa Mishra

Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) is a human stem cell disorder, and individuals with this disease have a substantially increased risk (~800-fold) of developing tumors. Epigenetic silencing of β2-spectrin (β2SP, encoded by SPTBN1), a SMAD adaptor for TGF-β signaling, is causally associated with BWS; however, a role of TGF-β deficiency in BWS-associated neoplastic transformation is unexplored. Here, we have reported that double-heterozygous Sptbn1+/- Smad3+/- mice, which have defective TGF-β signaling, develop multiple tumors that are phenotypically similar to those of BWS patients. Moreover, tumorigenesis-associated genes IGF2 and telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) were overexpressed in fibroblasts from BWS patients and TGF-β-defective mice. We further determined that chromatin insulator CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF) is TGF-β inducible and facilitates TGF-β-mediated repression of TERT transcription via interactions with β2SP and SMAD3. This regulation was abrogated in TGF-β-defective mice and BWS, resulting in TERT overexpression. Imprinting of the IGF2/H19 locus and the CDKN1C/KCNQ1 locus on chromosome 11p15.5 is mediated by CTCF, and this regulation is lost in BWS, leading to aberrant overexpression of growth-promoting genes. Therefore, we propose that loss of CTCF-dependent imprinting of tumor-promoting genes, such as IGF2 and TERT, results from a defective TGF-β pathway and is responsible at least in part for BWS-associated tumorigenesis as well as sporadic human cancers that are frequently associated with SPTBN1 and SMAD3 mutations.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Mutational Profiles Reveal an Aberrant TGF-β-CEA Regulated Pathway in Colon Adenomas

Jian Chen; Gottumukkala S. Raju; Wilma Jogunoori; Vipin Kumar Menon; Avijit Majumdar; Jiun Sheng Chen; Young Jin Gi; Yun Seong Jeong; Liem Phan; Mitchell Belkin; Shoujun Gu; Suchin Kundra; Nipun A. Mistry; Jianping Zhang; Xiaoping Su; Shulin Li; Sue Hwa Lin; Milind Javle; John S. McMurray; Thomas F. Rahlfs; Bibhuti Mishra; Jon White; Asif Rashid; Nicole Beauchemin; Brian Weston; Mehnaz A. Shafi; John R. Stroehlein; Marta L. Davila; Rehan Akbani; John N. Weinstein

Mutational processes and signatures that drive early tumorigenesis are centrally important for early cancer prevention. Yet, to date, biomarkers and risk factors for polyps (adenomas) that inordinately and rapidly develop into colon cancer remain poorly defined. Here, we describe surprisingly high mutational profiles through whole-genome sequence (WGS) analysis in 2 of 4 pairs of benign colorectal adenoma tissue samples. Unsupervised hierarchical clustered transcriptomic analysis of a further 7 pairs of adenomas reveals distinct mutational signatures regardless of adenoma size. Transitional single nucleotide substitutions of C:G>T:A predominate in the adenoma mutational spectrum. Strikingly, we observe mutations in the TGF-β pathway and CEA-associated genes in 4 out of 11 adenomas, overlapping with the Wnt pathway. Immunohistochemical labeling reveals a nearly 5-fold increase in CEA levels in 23% of adenoma samples with a concomitant loss of TGF-β signaling. We also define a functional role by which the CEA B3 domain interacts with TGFBR1, potentially inactivating the tumor suppressor function of TGF-β signaling. Our study uncovers diverse mutational processes underlying the transition from early adenoma to cancer. This has broad implications for biomarker-driven targeting of CEA/TGF-β in high-risk adenomas and may lead to early detection of aggressive adenoma to CRC progression.


Gut | 2018

The somatic mutation landscape of premalignant colorectal adenoma

Shu Hong Lin; Gottumukkala S. Raju; Chad D. Huff; Yuanqing Ye; Jian Gu; Jiun Sheng Chen; Michelle A.T. Hildebrandt; Han Liang; David G. Menter; Jeffery Morris; Ernest T. Hawk; John R. Stroehlein; Andrew Futreal; Scott Kopetz; Lopa Mishra; Xifeng Wu

Objective There are few studies which characterised the molecular alterations in premalignant colorectal adenomas. Our major goal was to establish colorectal adenoma genome atlas and identify molecular markers of progression from colorectal adenoma to adenocarcinoma. Design Whole-exome sequencing and targeted sequencing were carried out in 149 adenoma samples and paired blood from patients with conventional adenoma or sessile serrated adenoma to characterise the somatic mutation landscape for premalignant colorectal lesions. The identified somatic mutations were compared with those in colorectal cancer (CRC) samples from The Cancer Genome Atlas. A supervised random forest model was employed to identify gene panels differentiating adenoma from CRC. Results Similar somatic mutation frequencies, but distinctive driver mutations, were observed in sessile serrated adenomas and conventional adenomas. The final model included 20 genes and was able to separate the somatic mutation profile of colorectal adenoma and adenocarcinoma with an area under the curve of 0.941. Conclusion The findings of this project hold potential to better identify patients with adenoma who may be candidates for targeted surveillance programmes and preventive interventions to reduce the incidence of CRC.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2018

Integrated case-control and somatic-germline interaction analyses of melanoma susceptibility genes

Yao Yu; Hao Hu; Jiun Sheng Chen; Fulan Hu; Jerry Fowler; Paul Scheet; Hua Zhao; Chad D. Huff

While a number of genes have been implicated in melanoma susceptibility, the role of protein-coding variation in melanoma development and progression remains underexplored. To better characterize the role of germline coding variation in melanoma, we conducted a whole-exome case-control and somatic-germline interaction study involving 322 skin cutaneous melanoma cases from The Cancer Genome Atlas and 3607 controls of European ancestry. We controlled for cross-platform technological stratification using XPAT and conducted gene-based association tests using VAAST 2. Four established melanoma susceptibility genes achieved nominal statistical significance, MC1R (p = .0014), MITF (p = .0165) BRCA2 (p = .0206), and MTAP (p = .0393). We also observed a suggestive association for FANCA (p = .002), a gene previously implicated in melanoma survival. The association signal for BRCA2 was driven primarily by likely gene disrupting (LGD) variants, with an Odds Ratio (OR) of 5.62 (95% Confidence Interval (CI) 1.03-30.1). In contrast, the association signals for MC1R and MITF were driven primarily by predicted pathogenic missense variants, with estimated ORs of 1.4 to 3.0 for MC1R and 4.1 for MITF. MTAP exhibited an excess of both LGD and predicted damaging missense variants among cases, with ORs of 5.62 and 3.72, respectively, although neither category was significant. For individuals with known or predicted damaging variants, age of disease onset was significantly lower for two of the four genes, MC1R (p = .005) and MTAP (p = .035). In an analysis of germline carrier status and overlapping copy number alterations, we observed no evidence to support a two-hit model of carcinogenesis in any of the four genes. Although MC1R carriers were represented proportionally among the four molecular tumor subtypes, these individuals accounted for 69% of ultraviolet (UV) radiation mutational signatures among triple-wild type tumors (p = .040), highlighting the increased sensitivity to UV exposure among individuals with loss-of-function variants in MC1R.

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Jian Chen

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Liem Phan

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Mong Hong Lee

University of Pittsburgh

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Hyun Ho Choi

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Guermarie Velazquez-Torres

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Lopa Mishra

George Washington University

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Ping Chieh Chou

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Ruiying Zhao

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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Sai Ching J. Yeung

University of Texas at Austin

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Asif Rashid

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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