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Dive into the research topics where Mengfeng Li is active.

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Featured researches published by Mengfeng Li.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2009

The polycomb group protein Bmi-1 represses the tumor suppressor PTEN and induces epithelial-mesenchymal transition in human nasopharyngeal epithelial cells

Li Bing Song; Jun Li; W. Liao; Yan Feng; Chun Ping Yu; Li Juan Hu; Qing Li Kong; Li Hua Xu; Xing Zhang; Wan Li Liu; Man Zhi Li; Ling Zhang; Tie Bang Kang; Li Wu Fu; Wenlin Huang; Yun Fei Xia; Sai Wah Tsao; Mengfeng Li; Vimla Band; Hamid Band; Qinghua Shi; Yi Xin Zeng; Mu Sheng Zeng

The polycomb group protein B lymphoma Mo-MLV insertion region 1 homolog (Bmi-1) is dysregulated in various cancers, and its upregulation strongly correlates with an invasive phenotype and poor prognosis in patients with nasopharyngeal carcinomas. However, the underlying mechanism of Bmi-1-mediated invasiveness remains unknown. In the current study, we found that upregulation of Bmi-1 induced epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and enhanced the motility and invasiveness of human nasopharyngeal epithelial cells, whereas silencing endogenous Bmi-1 expression reversed EMT and reduced motility. Furthermore, upregulation of Bmi-1 led to the stabilization of Snail, a transcriptional repressor associated with EMT, via modulation of PI3K/Akt/GSK-3beta signaling. Chromatin immunoprecipitation assays revealed that Bmi-1 transcriptionally downregulated expression of the tumor suppressor PTEN in tumor cells through direct association with the PTEN locus. This in vitro analysis was consistent with the statistical inverse correlation detected between Bmi-1 and PTEN expression in a cohort of human nasopharyngeal carcinoma biopsies. Moreover, ablation of PTEN expression partially rescued the migratory/invasive phenotype of Bmi-1-silenced cells, indicating that PTEN might be a major mediator of Bmi-1-induced EMT. Our results provide functional and mechanistic links between the oncoprotein Bmi-1 and the tumor suppressor PTEN in the development and progression of cancer.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

MicroRNA-374a activates Wnt/β-catenin signaling to promote breast cancer metastasis

Junchao Cai; Hongyu Guan; Lishan Fang; Yi Yang; Xun Zhu; Jie Yuan; Jueheng Wu; Mengfeng Li

Tumor metastasis involves a series of biological steps during which the tumor cells acquire the ability to invade surrounding tissues and survive outside the original tumor site. During the early stages, the cancer cells undergo an epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Wnt/β-catenin signaling is known to drive EMT and metastasis. Here we report that Wnt/β-catenin signaling is hyperactivated in metastatic breast cancer cells that express microRNA 374a (miR-374a). In breast cancer cell lines, ectopic overexpression of miR-374a promoted EMT and metastasis both in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, miR-374a directly targeted and suppressed multiple negative regulators of the Wnt/β-catenin signaling cascade, including WIF1, PTEN, and WNT5A. Notably, miR-374a was markedly upregulated in primary tumor samples from patients with distant metastases and was associated with poor metastasis-free survival. These results demonstrate that miR-374a maintains constitutively activated Wnt/β-catenin signaling and may represent a therapeutic target for early metastatic breast cancer.


Cancer Research | 2010

Astrocyte Elevated Gene-1 Upregulates Matrix Metalloproteinase-9 and Induces Human Glioma Invasion

Liping Liu; Jueheng Wu; Zhe Ying; Baixue Chen; Anjia Han; Yingjie Liang; Libing Song; Jie Yuan; Jun Li; Mengfeng Li

The poor prognosis of malignant gliomas is largely attributed to their highly invasive nature. The molecular mechanism underlying the invasiveness of glioma cells, however, remains to be elucidated. The present study found that astrocyte elevated gene-1 (AEG-1) was upregulated in human glioma cell lines and glioma tissues compared with normal astrocytes and brain tissues. AEG-1 was found to be upregulated in 265 of 296 (89.5%) glioma sections, and the AEG-1 expression level significantly correlated with clinicopathologic stages of gliomas. Ectopic expression or short hairpin RNA silencing of AEG-1 significantly enhanced or inhibited, respectively, the invasive ability of glioma cells. At the molecular level, we showed that upregulated AEG-1 in glioma cells interacted with matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) promoter and transactivated MMP-9 expression, whereas knockdown of AEG-1 expression reduced the level of MMP-9. Two regions in MMP-9 promoter were found to be involved in the interaction with AEG-1. Suppression of endogenous MMP-9 abrogated the effects of AEG-1 on invasiveness. Consistent with these observations, immunostaining analysis revealed a significant correlation between the expressions of AEG-1 and MMP-9 in a cohort of clinical glioma samples. Moreover, intracranial xenografts of glioma cells engineered to express AEG-1 were highly invasive compared with the parental cells and expressed high level of MMP-9. Collectively, these findings provide evidence that AEG-1 contributes to glioma progression by enhancing MMP-9 transcription and, hence, tumor cell invasiveness, and underscore the importance of AEG-1 in glioma development and progression.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2009

Sphingosine kinase 1 is associated with gastric cancer progression and poor survival of patients.

Wen Li; Chun Ping Yu; Jin Tang Xia; Ling Zhang; Gui Xiang Weng; Hai Qing Zheng; Qing Ii Kong; Li Juan Hu; Mu Sheng Zeng; Yi Xin Zeng; Mengfeng Li; Jun Li; Li Bing Song

Purpose: The present study was to investigate the clinical significance of sphingosine kinase 1 (SPHK1), an oncoenzyme, in the development and progression of gastric cancer. Experimental Design: mRNA and protein levels of SPHK1 expression in normal gastric epithelial cells, gastric cancer cell lines, and paired gastric cancer lesions and the adjacent noncancerous tissues were examined using reverse transcription-PCR and Western blotting. Immunohistochemistry was employed to analyze SPHK1 expression in 175 clinicopathologically characterized gastric cancer cases. Statistical analyses were applied to derive prognostic and diagnostic associations. Results: Levels of SPHK1 mRNA and protein were higher in gastric cancer cell lines than in normal gastric epithelial cells. SPHK1 protein level was up-regulated in gastric cancer lesions compared with that in the paired adjacent noncancerous tissues. Gastric cancer tissues from 115 of 175 (65.7%) patients revealed high level of SPHK1 protein expression in contrast to the undetectable or marginally detectable expression of SPHK1 in the adjacent noncancerous gastric tissues. Significantly different expression levels of SPHK1 were found in patients at different clinical stages (P = 0.003), T classification (P = 0.035), and M classification (P = 0.020). Patients with higher SPHK1 expression had shorter overall survival time, whereas those with lower SPHK1 expression survived longer. Further multivariate analysis suggested that SPHK1 up-regulation was an independent prognostic indicator for the disease. Conclusions: SPHK1 protein could be a useful marker for the prognosis of gastric cancer. Further study on the potential use of SPHK1 as a therapeutic target is also warranted.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2008

Clinical significance of sphingosine kinase-1 expression in human astrocytomas progression and overall patient survival.

Jun Li; Hong Yu Guan; Li Yun Gong; Li Bing Song; Nu Zhang; Jueheng Wu; Jie Yuan; Yi Jie Zheng; Zheng Song Huang; Mengfeng Li

Purpose: To characterize the expression of sphingosine kinase-1 (SPHK1) in human astrocytomas and to investigate the association between SPHK1 expression and progression of astrocytomas. Experimental Design: The expression of SPHK1 in normal human astrocytes, astrocytoma cell lines, and four pairs of matched astrocytoma tissues and their adjacent normal brain tissues were detected by quantitative reverse transcription-PCR and Western blot. In addition, SPHK1 protein expression was examined in 243 cases of histologically characterized astrocytomas by immunohistochemistry. Statistical analyses were applied to test for prognostic and diagnostic associations. Results: SPHK1 in astrocytoma cell lines was elevated at both mRNA and protein levels, and the SPHK1 mRNA and protein were significantly up-regulated by up to 6.8- and 40-fold, respectively, in primary astrocytomas compared with those in the adjacent noncancerous brain tissues. Immunohistochemical analysis showed that 100 of 243 (41.2%) paraffin-embedded archival astrocytoma biopsies exhibited high expression of SPHK1. Statistical analysis suggested that the up-regulation of SPHK1 was significantly correlated with the histologic grade of astrocytoma (P = 0.000) and that patients with high SPHK1 level exhibited shorter survival time (P < 0.001). Multivariate analysis revealed that SPHK1 up-regulation might be an independent prognostic indicator for the survival of patients with astrocytoma. Conclusions: SPHK1 might represent a novel and useful prognostic marker for astrocytoma and play a role during the development and progression of the disease.


Oncogene | 2009

Astrocyte elevated gene-1 is a proliferation promoter in breast cancer via suppressing transcriptional factor FOXO1

Jisheng Li; Lu Yang; Libing Song; Huaping Xiong; Lin Lin Wang; X. Yan; Jie Yuan; Jueheng Wu; Mengfeng Li

We have previously reported that astrocyte elevated gene-1 (AEG-1) was upregulated in human breast cancer. However, the biological function of AEG-1 in the development and progression of breast cancer remains to be clarified. In this study, we examined the effect of AEG-1 on cell proliferation and found that AEG-1 upregulation was significantly linked to increased Ki67 (P<0.001). Ectopic expression of AEG-1 in MCF-7 and MDA-MB-435 breast cancer cells dramatically enhanced cell proliferation and their ability of anchorage-independent growth, whereas silencing endogenous AEG-1 with shRNAs inhibited cell proliferation and colony-forming ability of the cells on soft agar. Furthermore, these proliferative effects were significantly associated with decreases of p27Kip1 and p21Cip1 two key cell-cycle inhibitors. Moreover, we further demonstrated that AEG-1 could downregulate the transcriptional activity of FOXO1 by inducing its phosphorylation through the PI3K/Akt signaling pathway. These observations were further confirmed in clinical human primary breast cancer specimens, in which high-level expression of AEG-1 was inversely correlated with the expression of FOXO1. Taken together, our results provide the first demonstration of a novel mechanism by which AEG-1 induces proliferation of breast cancer cell, and our findings suggest that AEG-1 might play an important role in tumorigenesis of breast cancer.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012

MicroRNA-30e* promotes human glioma cell invasiveness in an orthotopic xenotransplantation model by disrupting the NF-κB/IκBα negative feedback loop

Lili Jiang; Chuyong Lin; Libing Song; Jueheng Wu; Baixue Chen; Zhe Ying; Lishan Fang; Xiao Yan; Mian He; Jun Li; Mengfeng Li

Constitutive activation of NF-κB is a frequent event in human cancers, playing important roles in cancer development and progression. In nontransformed cells, NF-κB activation is tightly controlled by IκBs. IκBs bind NF-κB in the cytoplasm, preventing it from translocating to the nucleus to modulate gene expression. Stimuli that activate NF-κB signaling trigger IκB degradation, enabling nuclear translocation of NF-κB. Among the genes regulated by NF-κB are those encoding the IκBs, providing a negative feedback loop that limits NF-κB activity. How transformed cells override this NF-κB/IκB negative feedback loop remains unclear. Here, we report in human glioma cell lines that microRNA-30e* (miR-30e*) directly targets the IκBα 3ι-UTR and suppresses IκBα expression. Overexpression of miR-30e* in human glioma cell lines led to hyperactivation of NF-κB and enhanced expression of NF-κB-regulated genes, which promoted glioma cell invasiveness in in vitro assays and in an orthotopic xenotransplantation model. These effects of miR-30e* were shown to be clinically relevant, as miR-30e* was found to be upregulated in primary human glioma cells and correlated with malignant progression and poor survival. Hence, miR-30e* provides an epigenetic mechanism that disrupts the NF-κB/IκBα loop and may represent a new therapeutic target and prognostic marker.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012

TGF-β induces miR-182 to sustain NF-κB activation in glioma subsets

Libing Song; Liping Liu; Zhiqiang Wu; Yun Li; Zhe Ying; Chuyong Lin; Jueheng Wu; Bo Hu; Shi Yuan Cheng; Mengfeng Li; Jun Li

The strength and duration of NF-κB signaling are tightly controlled by multiple negative feedback mechanisms. However, in cancer cells, these feedback loops are overridden through unclear mechanisms to sustain oncogenic activation of NF-κB signaling. Previously, we demonstrated that overexpression of miR-30e* directly represses IκBα expression and leads to hyperactivation of NF-κB. Here, we report that miR-182 was overexpressed in a different set of gliomas with relatively lower miR-30e* expression and that miR-182 directly suppressed cylindromatosis (CYLD), an NF-κB negative regulator. This suppression of CYLD promoted ubiquitin conjugation of NF-κB signaling pathway components and induction of an aggressive phenotype of glioma cells both in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, we found that TGF-β induced miR-182 expression, leading to prolonged NF-κB activation. Importantly, the results of these experiments were consistent with an identified significant correlation between miR-182 levels with TGF-β hyperactivation and activated NF-κB in a cohort of human glioma specimens. These findings uncover a plausible mechanism for sustained NF-κB activation in malignant gliomas and may suggest a new target for clinical intervention in human cancer.


Cancer Research | 2013

miR-205 Targets PTEN and PHLPP2 to Augment AKT Signaling and Drive Malignant Phenotypes in Non–Small Cell Lung Cancer

Junchao Cai; Lishan Fang; Yongbo Huang; Rong Li; Jie Yuan; Yi Yang; Xun Zhu; Baixue Chen; Jueheng Wu; Mengfeng Li

AKT signaling is constitutively activated in various cancers, due in large part to loss-of-function in the PTEN and PHLPP phosphatases that act as tumor suppressor genes. However, AKT signaling is activated widely in non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLC) where genetic alterations in PTEN or PHLPP genes are rare, suggesting an undefined mechanism(s) for their suppression. In this study, we report upregulation of the oncomir microRNA (miR)-205 in multiple subtypes of NSCLC, which directly represses PTEN and PHLPP2 expression and activates both the AKT/FOXO3a and AKT/mTOR signaling pathways. miR-205 overexpression in NSCLC cells accelerated tumor cell proliferation and promoted blood vessel formation in vitro and in vivo. Conversely, RNA interference-mediated silencing of endogenous miR-205 abrogated these effects. The malignant properties induced by miR-205 in NSCLC cells were reversed by AKT inhibitors, FOXO3a overexpression, rapamycin treatment, or restoring PHLPP2 or PTEN expression. Mechanistic investigations revealed that miR-205 overexpression was a result of NF-κB-mediated transactivation of the miR-205 gene. Taken together, our results define a major epigenetic mechanism for suppression of PTEN and PHLPP2 in NSCLC, identifying a pivotal role for miR-205 in development and progression of this widespread disease.


Aaps Journal | 2010

microRNA and Cancer

Mengfeng Li; Jun Li; Xiaofan Ding; Mian He; Shi Yuan Cheng

MicroRNAs (miRNAs), a class of small, regulatory, non-coding RNA molecules, display aberrant expression patterns and functional abnormalities in human diseases including cancers. This review summarizes the abnormally expressed miRNAs in various types of human cancers, possible mechanisms underlying such abnormalities, and miRNA-modulated molecular pathways critical for cancer development. Practical implications of miRNAs as biomarkers, novel drug targets and therapeutic tools for diagnosis, prognosis, and treatments of human cancers are also discussed.

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Jueheng Wu

Sun Yat-sen University

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Jun Li

Sun Yat-sen University

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Xun Zhu

Sun Yat-sen University

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Jie Yuan

Sun Yat-sen University

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Libing Song

Sun Yat-sen University

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Junchao Cai

Sun Yat-sen University

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Zhenjian He

Sun Yat-sen University

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Hongyu Guan

Sun Yat-sen University

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Yi Yang

Sun Yat-sen University

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