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Dive into the research topics where Mingxia Gu is active.

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Featured researches published by Mingxia Gu.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2014

Genome Editing of Isogenic Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Recapitulates Long QT Phenotype for Drug Testing

Yongming Wang; Ping Liang; Feng Lan; Haodi Wu; Leszek Lisowski; Mingxia Gu; Shijun Hu; Mark A. Kay; Fyodor D. Urnov; Rami Shinnawi; Joseph D. Gold; Lior Gepstein; Joseph C. Wu

BACKGROUND Human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) play an important role in disease modeling and drug testing. However, the current methods are time-consuming and lack an isogenic control. OBJECTIVES This study sought to establish an efficient technology to generate human PSC-based disease models with isogenic control. METHODS The ion channel genes KCNQ1 and KCNH2 with dominant negative mutations causing long QT syndrome types 1 and 2, respectively, were stably integrated into a safe harbor AAVS1 locus using zinc finger nuclease technology. RESULTS Patch-clamp recording revealed that the edited iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes (iPSC-CMs) displayed characteristic long QT syndrome phenotype and significant prolongation of the action potential duration compared with the unedited control cells. Finally, addition of nifedipine (L-type calcium channel blocker) or pinacidil (KATP-channel opener) shortened the action potential duration of iPSC-CMs, confirming the validity of isogenic iPSC lines for drug testing in the future. CONCLUSIONS Our study demonstrates that iPSC-CM-based disease models can be rapidly generated by overexpression of dominant negative gene mutants.


Circulation Research | 2012

Microfluidic Single-Cell Analysis Shows That Porcine Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell–Derived Endothelial Cells Improve Myocardial Function by Paracrine Activation

Mingxia Gu; Patricia K. Nguyen; Andrew S. Lee; Dan Xu; Shijun Hu; Jordan R. Plews; Leng Han; Bruno C. Huber; Won Hee Lee; Yongquan Gong; Patricia E. de Almeida; Jennifer Lyons; Fumi Ikeno; Cholawat Pacharinsak; Andrew J. Connolly; Sanjiv S. Gambhir; Robert C. Robbins; Michael T. Longaker; Joseph C. Wu

Rationale: Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) hold great promise for the development of patient-specific therapies for cardiovascular disease. However, clinical translation will require preclinical optimization and validation of large-animal iPSC models. Objective: To successfully derive endothelial cells from porcine iPSCs and demonstrate their potential utility for the treatment of myocardial ischemia. Methods and Results: Porcine adipose stromal cells were reprogrammed to generate porcine iPSCs (piPSCs). Immunohistochemistry, quantitative PCR, microarray hybridization, and angiogenic assays confirmed that piPSC-derived endothelial cells (piPSC-ECs) shared similar morphological and functional properties as endothelial cells isolated from the autologous pig aorta. To demonstrate their therapeutic potential, piPSC-ECs were transplanted into mice with myocardial infarction. Compared with control, animals transplanted with piPSC-ECs showed significant functional improvement measured by echocardiography (fractional shortening at week 4: 27.2±1.3% versus 22.3±1.1%; P<0.001) and MRI (ejection fraction at week 4: 45.8±1.3% versus 42.3±0.9%; P<0.05). Quantitative protein assays and microfluidic single-cell PCR profiling showed that piPSC-ECs released proangiogenic and antiapoptotic factors in the ischemic microenvironment, which promoted neovascularization and cardiomyocyte survival, respectively. Release of paracrine factors varied significantly among subpopulations of transplanted cells, suggesting that transplantation of specific cell populations may result in greater functional recovery. Conclusions: In summary, this is the first study to successfully differentiate piPSCs-ECs from piPSCs and demonstrate that transplantation of piPSC-ECs improved cardiac function after myocardial infarction via paracrine activation. Further development of these large animal iPSC models will yield significant insights into their therapeutic potential and accelerate the clinical translation of autologous iPSC-based therapy.


Cell Stem Cell | 2015

Epigenetic Regulation of Phosphodiesterases 2A and 3A Underlies Compromised β-adrenergic Signaling in an iPSC Model of Dilated Cardiomyopathy

Haodi Wu; Jaecheol Lee; Ludovic G. Vincent; Qingtong Wang; Mingxia Gu; Feng Lan; Jared M. Churko; Karim Sallam; Elena Matsa; Arun Sharma; Joseph D. Gold; Adam J. Engler; Yang K. Xiang; Donald M. Bers; Joseph C. Wu

β-adrenergic signaling pathways mediate key aspects of cardiac function. Its dysregulation is associated with a range of cardiac diseases, including dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). Previously, we established an iPSC model of familial DCM from patients with a mutation in TNNT2, a sarcomeric protein. Here, we found that the β-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol induced mature β-adrenergic signaling in iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes (iPSC-CMs) but that this pathway was blunted in DCM iPSC-CMs. Although expression levels of several β-adrenergic signaling components were unaltered between control and DCM iPSC-CMs, we found that phosphodiesterases (PDEs) 2A and PDE3A were upregulated in DCM iPSC-CMs and that PDE2A was also upregulated in DCM patient tissue. We further discovered increased nuclear localization of mutant TNNT2 and epigenetic modifications of PDE genes in both DCM iPSC-CMs and patient tissue. Notably, pharmacologic inhibition of PDE2A and PDE3A restored cAMP levels and ameliorated the impaired β-adrenergic signaling of DCM iPSC-CMs, suggesting therapeutic potential.


Circulation Research | 2012

Microfluidic Single Cell Analysis Show Porcine Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell–Derived Endothelial Cells Improve Myocardial Function by Paracrine Activation

Mingxia Gu; Patricia K. Nguyen; Andrew S. Lee; Dan Xu; Shijun Hu; Jordan R. Plews; Leng Han; Bruno C. Huber; Won Hee Lee; Yongquan Gong; Patricia E. de Almeida; Jennifer Lyons; Fumi Ikeno; Cholawat Pacharinsak; Andrew J. Connolly; Sanjiv S. Gambhir; Robert C. Robbins; Michael T. Longaker; Joseph C. Wu

Rationale: Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) hold great promise for the development of patient-specific therapies for cardiovascular disease. However, clinical translation will require preclinical optimization and validation of large-animal iPSC models. Objective: To successfully derive endothelial cells from porcine iPSCs and demonstrate their potential utility for the treatment of myocardial ischemia. Methods and Results: Porcine adipose stromal cells were reprogrammed to generate porcine iPSCs (piPSCs). Immunohistochemistry, quantitative PCR, microarray hybridization, and angiogenic assays confirmed that piPSC-derived endothelial cells (piPSC-ECs) shared similar morphological and functional properties as endothelial cells isolated from the autologous pig aorta. To demonstrate their therapeutic potential, piPSC-ECs were transplanted into mice with myocardial infarction. Compared with control, animals transplanted with piPSC-ECs showed significant functional improvement measured by echocardiography (fractional shortening at week 4: 27.2±1.3% versus 22.3±1.1%; P<0.001) and MRI (ejection fraction at week 4: 45.8±1.3% versus 42.3±0.9%; P<0.05). Quantitative protein assays and microfluidic single-cell PCR profiling showed that piPSC-ECs released proangiogenic and antiapoptotic factors in the ischemic microenvironment, which promoted neovascularization and cardiomyocyte survival, respectively. Release of paracrine factors varied significantly among subpopulations of transplanted cells, suggesting that transplantation of specific cell populations may result in greater functional recovery. Conclusions: In summary, this is the first study to successfully differentiate piPSCs-ECs from piPSCs and demonstrate that transplantation of piPSC-ECs improved cardiac function after myocardial infarction via paracrine activation. Further development of these large animal iPSC models will yield significant insights into their therapeutic potential and accelerate the clinical translation of autologous iPSC-based therapy.


Circulation | 2016

In Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension, Reduced BMPR2 Promotes Endothelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition via HMGA1 and Its Target Slug

Rachel K. Hopper; Jan-Renier A.J. Moonen; Isabel Diebold; Aiqin Cao; Christopher J. Rhodes; Nancy F. Tojais; Jan K. Hennigs; Mingxia Gu; Lingli Wang; Marlene Rabinovitch

Background— We previously reported high-throughput RNA sequencing analyses that identified heightened expression of the chromatin architectural factor High Mobility Group AT-hook 1 (HMGA1) in pulmonary arterial endothelial cells (PAECs) from patients who had idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) in comparison with controls. Because HMGA1 promotes epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition in cancer, we hypothesized that increased HMGA1 could induce transition of PAECs to a smooth muscle (SM)–like mesenchymal phenotype (endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition), explaining both dysregulation of PAEC function and possible cellular contribution to the occlusive remodeling that characterizes advanced idiopathic PAH. Methods and Results— We documented increased HMGA1 in PAECs cultured from idiopathic PAH versus donor control lungs. Confocal microscopy of lung explants localized the increase in HMGA1 consistently to pulmonary arterial endothelium, and identified many cells double-positive for HMGA1 and SM22&agr; in occlusive and plexogenic lesions. Because decreased expression and function of bone morphogenetic protein receptor 2 (BMPR2) is observed in PAH, we reduced BMPR2 by small interfering RNA in control PAECs and documented an increase in HMGA1 protein. Consistent with transition of PAECs by HMGA1, we detected reduced platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule 1 (CD31) and increased endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition markers, &agr;SM actin, SM22&agr;, calponin, phospho-vimentin, and Slug. The transition was associated with spindle SM-like morphology, and the increase in &agr;SM actin was largely reversed by joint knockdown of BMPR2 and HMGA1 or Slug. Pulmonary endothelial cells from mice with endothelial cell–specific loss of Bmpr2 showed similar gene and protein changes. Conclusions— Increased HMGA1 in PAECs resulting from dysfunctional BMPR2 signaling can transition endothelium to SM-like cells associated with PAH.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2015

Elafin Reverses Pulmonary Hypertension via Caveolin-1–Dependent Bone Morphogenetic Protein Signaling

Nils Nickel; Edda Spiekerkoetter; Mingxia Gu; Caiyun G. Li; Hai Li; Mark Kaschwich; Isabel Diebold; Jan K. Hennigs; Ki-Yoon Kim; Kazuya Miyagawa; Lingli Wang; Aiqin Cao; Silin Sa; Xinguo Jiang; Raymond W. Stockstill; Mark R. Nicolls; Roham T. Zamanian; Richard D. Bland; Marlene Rabinovitch

RATIONALE Pulmonary arterial hypertension is characterized by endothelial dysfunction, impaired bone morphogenetic protein receptor 2 (BMPR2) signaling, and increased elastase activity. Synthetic elastase inhibitors reverse experimental pulmonary hypertension but cause hepatotoxicity in clinical studies. The endogenous elastase inhibitor elafin attenuates hypoxic pulmonary hypertension in mice, but its potential to improve endothelial function and BMPR2 signaling, and to reverse severe experimental pulmonary hypertension or vascular pathology in the human disease was unknown. OBJECTIVES To assess elafin-mediated regression of pulmonary vascular pathology in rats and in lung explants from patients with pulmonary hypertension. To determine if elafin amplifies BMPR2 signaling in pulmonary artery endothelial cells and to elucidate the underlying mechanism. METHODS Rats with pulmonary hypertension induced by vascular endothelial growth factor receptor blockade and hypoxia (Sugen/hypoxia) as well as lung organ cultures from patients with pulmonary hypertension were used to assess elafin-mediated reversibility of pulmonary vascular disease. Pulmonary arterial endothelial cells from patients and control subjects were used to determine the efficacy and mechanism of elafin-mediated BMPR2 signaling. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS In Sugen/hypoxia rats, elafin reduced elastase activity and reversed pulmonary hypertension, judged by regression of right ventricular systolic pressure and hypertrophy and pulmonary artery occlusive changes. Elafin improved endothelial function by increasing apelin, a BMPR2 target. Elafin induced apoptosis in human pulmonary arterial smooth muscle cells and decreased neointimal lesions in lung organ culture. In normal and patient pulmonary artery endothelial cells, elafin promoted angiogenesis by increasing pSMAD-dependent and -independent BMPR2 signaling. This was linked mechanistically to augmented interaction of BMPR2 with caveolin-1 via elafin-mediated stabilization of endothelial surface caveolin-1. CONCLUSIONS Elafin reverses obliterative changes in pulmonary arteries via elastase inhibition and caveolin-1-dependent amplification of BMPR2 signaling.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2015

RNA Sequencing Analysis Detection of a Novel Pathway of Endothelial Dysfunction in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension.

Christopher J. Rhodes; Hogune Im; Aiqin Cao; Jan K. Hennigs; Lingli Wang; Silin Sa; Pin-I Chen; Nils Nickel; Kazuya Miyagawa; Rachel K. Hopper; Nancy F. Tojais; Caiyun G. Li; Mingxia Gu; Edda Spiekerkoetter; Zhaoying Xian; Rui Chen; Mingming Zhao; Mark Kaschwich; Patricia Del Rosario; Daniel Bernstein; Roham T. Zamanian; Joseph C. Wu; Michael Snyder; Marlene Rabinovitch

RATIONALE Pulmonary arterial hypertension is characterized by endothelial dysregulation, but global changes in gene expression have not been related to perturbations in function. OBJECTIVES RNA sequencing was used to discriminate changes in transcriptomes of endothelial cells cultured from lungs of patients with idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension versus control subjects and to assess the functional significance of major differentially expressed transcripts. METHODS The endothelial transcriptomes from the lungs of seven control subjects and six patients with idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension were analyzed. Differentially expressed genes were related to bone morphogenetic protein type 2 receptor (BMPR2) signaling. Those down-regulated were assessed for function in cultured cells and in a transgenic mouse. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Fold differences in 10 genes were significant (P < 0.05), four increased and six decreased in patients versus control subjects. No patient was mutant for BMPR2. However, knockdown of BMPR2 by siRNA in control pulmonary arterial endothelial cells recapitulated 6 of 10 patient-related gene changes, including decreased collagen IV (COL4A1, COL4A2) and ephrinA1 (EFNA1). Reduction of BMPR2-regulated transcripts was related to decreased β-catenin. Reducing COL4A1, COL4A2, and EFNA1 by siRNA inhibited pulmonary endothelial adhesion, migration, and tube formation. In mice null for the EFNA1 receptor, EphA2, versus control animals, vascular endothelial growth factor receptor blockade and hypoxia caused more severe pulmonary hypertension, judged by elevated right ventricular systolic pressure, right ventricular hypertrophy, and loss of small arteries. CONCLUSIONS The novel relationship between BMPR2 dysfunction and reduced expression of endothelial COL4 and EFNA1 may underlie vulnerability to injury in pulmonary arterial hypertension.


European Heart Journal | 2015

Pravastatin reverses obesity-induced dysfunction of induced pluripotent stem cell-derived endothelial cells via a nitric oxide-dependent mechanism

Mingxia Gu; Nicholas M. Mordwinkin; Nigel G. Kooreman; Jaecheol Lee; Haodi Wu; Shijun Hu; Jared M. Churko; Sebastian Diecke; Paul W. Burridge; Chunjiang He; Frances E. Barron; Sang Ging Ong; Joseph D. Gold; Joseph C. Wu

AIMS High-fat diet-induced obesity (DIO) is a major contributor to type II diabetes and micro- and macro-vascular complications leading to peripheral vascular disease (PVD). Metabolic abnormalities of induced pluripotent stem cell-derived endothelial cells (iPSC-ECs) from obese individuals could potentially limit their therapeutic efficacy for PVD. The aim of this study was to compare the function of iPSC-ECs from normal and DIO mice using comprehensive in vitro and in vivo assays. METHODS AND RESULTS Six-week-old C57Bl/6 mice were fed with a normal or high-fat diet. At 24 weeks, iPSCs were generated from tail tip fibroblasts and differentiated into iPSC-ECs using a directed monolayer approach. In vitro functional analysis revealed that iPSC-ECs from DIO mice had significantly decreased capacity to form capillary-like networks, diminished migration, and lower proliferation. Microarray and ELISA confirmed elevated apoptotic, inflammatory, and oxidative stress pathways in DIO iPSC-ECs. Following hindlimb ischaemia, mice receiving intramuscular injections of DIO iPSC-ECs had significantly decreased reperfusion compared with mice injected with control healthy iPSC-ECs. Hindlimb sections revealed increased muscle atrophy and presence of inflammatory cells in mice receiving DIO iPSC-ECs. When pravastatin was co-administered to mice receiving DIO iPSC-ECs, a significant increase in reperfusion was observed; however, this beneficial effect was blunted by co-administration of the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor, N(ω)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester. CONCLUSION This is the first study to provide evidence that iPSC-ECs from DIO mice exhibit signs of endothelial dysfunction and have suboptimal efficacy following transplantation in a hindlimb ischaemia model. These findings may have important implications for future treatment of PVD using iPSC-ECs in the obese population.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2017

iPSC Model of Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension Reveals Novel Gene Expression and Patient Specificity.

Silin Sa; Mingxia Gu; James D. Chappell; Ning-Yi Shao; Mohamed Ameen; Kathryn A. T. Elliott; Dan Li; Fabian Grubert; Caiyun G. Li; Shalina Taylor; Aiqin Cao; Yu Ma; Ryan Fong; Long Nguyen; Joseph C. Wu; Michael Snyder; Marlene Rabinovitch

Rationale: Idiopathic or heritable pulmonary arterial hypertension is characterized by loss and obliteration of lung vasculature. Endothelial cell dysfunction is pivotal to the pathophysiology, but different causal mechanisms may reflect a need for patient‐tailored therapies. Objectives: Endothelial cells differentiated from induced pluripotent stem cells were compared with pulmonary arterial endothelial cells from the same patients with idiopathic or heritable pulmonary arterial hypertension, to determine whether they shared functional abnormalities and altered gene expression patterns that differed from those in unused donor cells. We then investigated whether endothelial cells differentiated from pluripotent cells could serve as surrogates to test emerging therapies. Methods: Functional changes assessed included adhesion, migration, tube formation, and propensity to apoptosis. Expression of bone morphogenetic protein receptor type 2 (BMPR2) and its target, collagen IV, signaling of the phosphorylated form of the mothers against decapentaplegic proteins (pSMAD1/5), and transcriptomic profiles were also analyzed. Measurements and Main Results: Native pulmonary arterial and induced pluripotent stem cell‐derived endothelial cells from patients with idiopathic and heritable pulmonary arterial hypertension compared with control subjects showed a similar reduction in adhesion, migration, survival, and tube formation, and decreased BMPR2 and downstream signaling and collagen IV expression. Transcriptomic profiling revealed high kisspeptin 1 (KISS1) related to reduced migration and low carboxylesterase 1 (CES1), to impaired survival in patient cells. A beneficial angiogenic response to potential therapies, FK506 and Elafin, was related to reduced slit guidance ligand 3 (SLIT3), an antimigratory factor. Conclusions: Despite the site of disease in the lung, our study indicates that induced pluripotent stem cell‐derived endothelial cells are useful surrogates to uncover novel features related to disease mechanisms and to better match patients to therapies.


Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine | 2012

LARGE ANIMAL INDUCED PLURIPOTENT STEM CELLS AS PRE-CLINICAL MODELS FOR STUDYING HUMAN DISEASE

Jordan R. Plews; Mingxia Gu; Michael T. Longaker; Joseph C. Wu

The path to induced pluripotency Discovery of a pan‐species pluripotency network Animal iPSCs and disease modelling Issues with large animal iPSCs Conclusions

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