Linchun Jin
University of Florida
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Publication
Featured researches published by Linchun Jin.
International Journal of Cancer | 2017
Haitao Ge; Luyan Mu; Linchun Jin; Changlin Yang; Yifan Chang; Yu Long; Gabriel De Leon; Loic P. Deleyrolle; Duane Mitchell; Paul Kubilis; Dunyue Lu; Jiping Qi; Yunhe Gu; Zhiguo Lin; Jianping Huang
Tumor migration/metastasis and immunosuppression are major obstacles in effective cancer therapy. Incidentally, these 2 hurdles usually coexist inside tumors, therefore making therapy significantly more complicated, as both oncogenic mechanisms must be addressed for successful therapeutic intervention. Our recent report highlights that the tumor expression of a TNF family member, CD70, is correlated with poor survival for primary gliomas. In this study, we investigated how CD70 expression by GBM affects the characteristics of tumor cells and the tumor microenvironment. We found that the ablation of CD70 in primary GBM decreased CD44 and SOX2 gene expression, and inhibited tumor migration, growth and the ability to attract monocyte‐derived M2 macrophages in vitro. In the tumor microenvironment, CD70 was associated with immune cell infiltrates, such as T cells; myeloid‐derived suppressor cells; and monocytes/macrophages based on the RNA‐sequencing profile. The CD163+ macrophages were far more abundant than T cells were. This overwhelming level of macrophages was identified only in GBM and not in low‐grade gliomas and normal brain specimens, implying their tumor association. CD70 was detected only on tumor cells, not on macrophages, and was highly correlated with CD163 gene expression in primary GBM. Additionally, the co‐expression of the CD70 and CD163 genes was found to correlate with decreased survival for patients with primary GBM. Together, these data suggest that CD70 expression is involved in promoting tumor aggressiveness and immunosuppression via tumor‐associated macrophage recruitment/activation. Our current efforts to target this molecule using chimeric antigen receptor T cells hold great potential for treating patients with GBM.
Frontiers in Immunology | 2017
Luyan Mu; Changlin Yang; Qiang Gao; Yu Long; Haitao Ge; Gabriel DeLeon; Linchun Jin; Yifan Chang; Elias Sayour; Jingjing Ji; Jie Jiang; Paul Kubilis; Jiping Qi; Yunhe Gu; Jiabin Wang; Yuwen Song; Duane Mitchell; Zhiguo Lin; Jianping Huang
Background Angiogenesis and immune cell infiltration are key features of gliomas and their manipulation of the microenvironment, but their prognostic significance remains indeterminate. We evaluate the interconnection between tumor-infiltrating lymphocyte (TIL) and tumor blood-vasculatures in the context of glioma progression. Methods Paired tumor tissues of 44 patients from three tumor-recurrent groups: diffuse astrocytomas (DA) recurred as DA, DA recurred as glioblastomas (GBM), and GBM recurred as GBM were evaluated by genetic analysis, immunohistochemistry for tumor blood vessel density, TIL subsets, and clinical outcomes. These cells were geographically divided into perivascular and intratumoral TILs. Associations were examined between these TILs, CD34+ tumor blood vessels, and clinical outcomes. To determine key changes in TIL subsets, microarray data of 15-paired tumors from patients who failed antiangiogenic therapy- bevacizumab, and 16-paired tumors from chemo-naïve recurrent GBM were also evaluated and compared. Results Upon recurrence in primary gliomas, similar kinetic changes were found between tumor blood vessels and each TIL subset in all groups, but only CD4+ including Foxp3+ TILs, positively correlated with the density of tumor blood vessels. CD4 was the predominant T cell population based on the expression of gene-transcripts in primary GBMs, and increased activated CD4+ T cells were revealed in Bevacizumab-resistant recurrent tumors (not in chemo-naïve recurrent tumors). Among these TILs, 2/3 of them were found in the perivascular niche; Foxp3+ T cells in these niches not only correlated with the tumor vessels but were also an independent predictor of shortened recurrence-free survival (RFS) (HR = 4.199, 95% CI 1.522–11.584, p = 0.006). Conclusion The minimal intratumoral T cell infiltration and low detection of CD8 transcripts expression in primary GBMs can potentially limit antitumor response. CD4+ and perivascular Foxp3+ TILs associate with tumor angiogenesis and tumor progression in glioma patients. Our results suggest that combining antiangiogenic agents with immunotherapeutic approaches may help improve the antitumor efficacy for patients with malignant gliomas.
Oral Oncology | 2018
Yuk Pheel Park; Linchun Jin; Katie B. Bennett; Dunrui Wang; Kristianna M. Fredenburg; Jennifer E. Tseng; Lung-Ji Chang; Jianping Huang; Edward K. L. Chan
OBJECTIVES In accordance with the Precision Medicine Initiative, new treatment strategies for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) are needed to yield better therapeutic outcomes. The purpose of this study was to establish and validate chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cells targets in HNSCC. METHODS Putative CAR-T antigens were identified in The Cancer Genome Atlas database. To validate antigen suitability, quantitative RT-PCR, flow cytometry, and immunofluorescent staining were performed. A retroviral human CD70 CAR construct, using truncated CD27 conjugated with 4-1BB and CD3-zeta costimulatory molecules, was used to transduce activated human T cells to generate CD70 CAR-T cells. Cell-based cytotoxicity and cytokine ELISAs were used to measure efficacy of killing. RESULTS Nine potential CAR-T targets (CD276, EGFR, MICA, MICB, MAGE-A4, FAP, EPCAM, CD70, B4GALNT1) were identified based on their high expression in tumors compared to flanking control tissues. CD70 was selected for further proof-of-principle analysis based on its differential expression in several tumor subtypes, and showed substantial heterogeneity in individual tumors analyzed. Cell surface CD70 protein and CD70 mRNA were detected from low to high levels in established HNSCC cancer cell lines. CD70 was highly expressed in 4 of 21 tumor biopsies (19%), and 3 of 4 specimens showed strong CD70 expression on the tumor cell surface. CD70-specific CAR-T cells were generated and further demonstrated to recognize and kill CD70-positive HNSCC cells efficiently, but not CD70-negative cancer cells. CONCLUSION CD70-specific CAR-T cells specifically recognized and efficiently eliminated CD70-positive HNSCC cells. This study provides the basis for further investigation into CD70 and other CAR-T targets.
Neuro-oncology | 2018
Linchun Jin; Haitao Ge; Yu Long; Changlin Yang; Yifan Chang; Luyan Mu; Elias Sayour; Gabriel De Leon; Qiong J Wang; James Chih-Hsin Yang; Paul Kubilis; Hongbo Bao; Songsong Xia; Dunyue Lu; Yingjun Kong; Li Hu; Yujiao Shang; Chencheng Jiang; Jing Nie; Shimin Li; Yunhe Gu; Jiahang Sun; Duane Mitchell; Zhiguo Lin; Jianping Huang
Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience | 2018
Luyan Mu; Yu Long; Changlin Yang; Linchun Jin; Haipeng Tao; Haitao Ge; Yifan E. Chang; Aida Karachi; Paul Kubilis; Gabriel De Leon; Jiping Qi; Elias Sayour; Duane Mitchell; Zhiguo Lin; Jianping Huang
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2018
Linchun Jin; Haitao Ge; Changlin Yang; Yu Long; Yifan Chang; Luyan Mu; Elias Sayour; Gabriel De Leon; Qiong J. Wang; James Chih-Hsin Yang; Jeffrey Drake; Paul Kubilis; Dunyue Lu; Yingjun Kong; Li Hu; Qi Jiping; Yunhe Gu; Zhiguo Lin; Duane Mitchell; Jianping Huang
Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2018
Changlin Yang; Haitao Ge; Linchun Jin; Qiong J. Wang; James Chih-Hsin Yang; Yu Long; Yifan Chang; Jeffrey Drake; Luyan Mu; Elias Sayour; Gabriel De Leon; Paul Kubilis; Jesse Kresak; Dunyue Lu; Yingjun Kong; Li Hu; Jiahang Sun; Duane Mitchell; Zhiguo Lin; Jianping Huang
Archive | 2017
Zhiguo Lin; 林志国; Jianping Huang; 黄建平; Hongbo Bao; 暴洪博; Linchun Jin; 金林春; Haitao Ge; 葛海涛; Luyan Mu; 慕璐岩; Yibo Yin; 殷一博; Yu Long; 龙宇; Changlin Yang; 杨昌霖; Songsong Xia; 夏松松; Jiabin Wang; 王佳斌
Neuro-oncology | 2016
Luyan Mu; Changlin Yang; Yunhe Gu; Haitao Ge; Yifan Chang; Gabriel De Leon; Elias Sayour; Songsong Xia; Hongbo Bao; Long Yu; Linchun Jin; Jiping Qi; Jiahang Sun; Xiang Gao; Ying Ching Song; Paul Kubilis; Duane Mitchell; Zhiguo Lin; Jianping Huang
Neuro-oncology | 2016
Haitao Ge; Linchun Jin; Changlin Yang; Yu Long; Yifan Chang; Luyan Mu; Elias Sayour; Gabriel DeLeon; Jeffrey Drake; Paul Kubilis; Hongbo Bao; Songsong Xia; Dunyue Lu; Yingjun Kong; Li Hu; Yibo Yin; Yujiao Shang; Chencheng Jiang; Jing Nie; Shimin Li; Jiping Qi; Yunhe Gu; Jiahang Sun; Zhiguo Lin; Duane Mitchell; Jianping Huang