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Dive into the research topics where Poki Wong is active.

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Featured researches published by Poki Wong.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Human prion proteins with pathogenic mutations share common conformational changes resulting in enhanced binding to glycosaminoglycans

Shaoman Yin; Nancy Pham; Shuiliang Yu; Chaoyang Li; Poki Wong; Binggong Chang; Shin Chung Kang; Emiliano Biasini; Po Tien; David A. Harris; Man Sun Sy

Mutation in the prion gene PRNP accounts for 10–15% of human prion diseases. However, little is known about the mechanisms by which mutant prion proteins (PrPs) cause disease. Here we investigated the effects of 10 different pathogenic mutations on the conformation and ligand-binding activity of recombinant human PrP (rPrP). We found that mutant rPrPs react more strongly with N terminus-specific antibodies, indicative of a more exposed N terminus. The N terminus of PrP contains a glycosaminoglycan (GAG)-binding motif. Binding of GAG is important in prion disease. Accordingly, all mutant rPrPs bind more GAG, and GAG promotes the aggregation of mutant rPrPs more efficiently than wild-type recombinant normal cellular PrP (rPrPC). Furthermore, point mutations in PRNP also cause conformational changes in the region between residues 109 and 136, resulting in the exposure of a second, normally buried, GAG-binding motif. Importantly, brain-derived PrP from transgenic mice, which express a pathogenic mutant with nine extra octapeptide repeats, also binds more strongly to GAG than wild-type PrPC. Thus, several rPrPs with distinct pathogenic mutations have common conformational changes, which enhance binding to GAG. These changes may contribute to the pathogenesis of inherited prion diseases.


Journal of Virology | 2005

An Aggregation-Specific Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay: Detection of Conformational Differences between Recombinant PrP Protein Dimers and PrPSc Aggregates

Tao Pan; Binggong Chang; Poki Wong; Chaoyang Li; Ruliang Li; Shin Chung Kang; John Robinson; Andrew R. Thompsett; Po Tein; Shaoman Yin; Geoff Barnard; Ian McConnell; David R. Brown; Thomas Wisniewski; Man Sun Sy

ABSTRACT The conversion of the normal cellular prion protein, PrPC, into the protease-resistant, scrapie PrPSc aggregate is the cause of prion diseases. We developed a novel enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) that is specific for PrP aggregate by screening 30 anti-PrP monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) for their ability to react with recombinant mouse, ovine, bovine, or human PrP dimers. One MAb that reacts with all four recombinant PrP dimers also reacts with PrPSc aggregates in ME7-, 139A-, or 22L-infected mouse brains. The PrPSc aggregate is proteinase K resistant, has a mass of 2,000 kDa or more, and is present at a time when no protease-resistant PrP is detectable. This simple and sensitive assay provides the basis for the development of a diagnostic test for prion diseases in other species. Finally, the principle of the aggregate-specific ELISA we have developed may be applicable to other diseases caused by abnormal protein aggregation, such as Alzheimers disease or Parkinsons disease.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Prion proteins with insertion mutations have altered N-terminal conformation and increased ligand binding activity and are more susceptible to oxidative attack.

Shaoman Yin; Shuiliang Yu; Chaoyang Li; Poki Wong; Binggong Chang; Fan Xiao; Shin Chung Kang; Huimin Yan; Gengfu Xiao; Jacques Grassi; Po Tien; Man Sun Sy

We compared the biochemical properties of a wild type recombinant normal human cellular prion protein, rPrPc, with a recombinant mutant human prion protein that has three additional octapeptide repeats, rPrP8OR. Monoclonal antibodies that are specific for the N terminus of rPrPc react much better with rPrP8OR than rPrPc, suggesting that the N terminus of rPrP8OR is more exposed and hence more available for antibody binding. The N terminus of PrPc contains a glycosaminoglycan binding motif. Accordingly, rPrP8OR also binds more glycosaminoglycan than rPrPc. In addition, the divalent cation copper modulates the conformations of rPrPc and rPrP8OR differently. When compared with rPrPc, rPrP8OR is also more susceptible to oxidative damage. Furthermore, the abnormalities associated with rPrP8OR are recapitulated, but even more profoundly, in another insertion mutant, which has five extra octapeptide repeats, rPrP10OR. Therefore, insertion mutants appear to share common features, and the degree of abnormality is proportional to the number of insertions. Any of these anomalies may contribute to the pathogenesis of inherited human prion disease.


Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2007

Test for Detection of Disease-Associated Prion Aggregate in the Blood of Infected but Asymptomatic Animals

Binggong Chang; Xin Cheng; Shaoman Yin; Tao Pan; Hongtao Zhang; Poki Wong; Shin Chung Kang; Fan Xiao; Huimin Yan; Chaoyang Li; Lisa L. Wolfe; Michael W. Miller; Thomas Wisniewski; Mark I. Greene; Man Sun Sy

ABSTRACT We have developed a sensitive in vitro assay for detecting disease-associated prion aggregates by combining an aggregation-specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (AS-ELISA) with the fluorescent amplification catalyzed by T7 RNA polymerase technique (FACTT). The new assay, named aggregation-specific FACTT (AS-FACTT), is much more sensitive than AS-ELISA and could detect prion aggregates in the brain of mice as early as 7 days after an intraperitoneal inoculation of PrPSc. However, AS-FACTT was still unable to detect prion aggregates in blood of infected mice. To further improve the detection limit of AS-FACTT, we added an additional prion amplification step (Am) and developed a third-generation assay, termed Am-A-FACTT. Am-A-FACTT has 100% sensitivity and specificity in detecting disease-associated prion aggregates in blood of infected mice at late but still asymptomatic stages of disease. At a very early stage, Am-A-FACTT had a sensitivity of 50% and a specificity of 100%. Most importantly, Am-A-FACTT also detects prion aggregates in blood of mule deer infected with the agent causing a naturally occurring prion disease, chronic wasting disease. Application of this assay to cattle, sheep, and humans could safeguard food supplies and prevent human contagion.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Biochemical Fingerprints of Prion Infection: Accumulations of Aberrant Full-Length and N-Terminally Truncated PrP Species Are Common Features in Mouse Prion Disease

Tao Pan; Poki Wong; Binggong Chang; Chaoyang Li; Ruliang Li; Shin Chung Kang; Thomas Wisniewski; Man Sun Sy

ABSTRACT Infection with any one of three strains of mouse scrapie prion (PrPSc), 139A, ME7, or 22L, results in the accumulation of two underglycosylated, full-length PrP species and an N-terminally truncated PrP species that are not detectable in uninfected animals. The levels of the N-terminally truncated PrP species vary depending on PrPSc strain. Furthermore, 22L-infected brains consistently have the highest levels of proteinase K (PK)-resistant PrP species, followed by ME7- and 139A-infected brains. The three strains of PrPSc are equally susceptible to PK and proteases papain and chymotrypsin. Their protease resistance patterns are also similar. In sucrose gradient velocity sedimentation, the aberrant PrP species partition with PrPSc aggregates, indicating that they are physically associated with PrPSc. In ME7-infected animals, one of the underglycosylated, full-length PrP species is detected much earlier than the other, before both the onset of clinical disease and the detection of PK-resistant PrP species. In contrast, the appearance of the N-terminally truncated PrP species coincides with the presence of PK-resistant species and the manifestation of clinical symptoms. Therefore, accumulation of the underglycosylated, full-length PrP species is an early biochemical fingerprint of PrPSc infection. Accumulation of the underglycosylated, full-length PrP species and the aberrant N-terminally truncated PrP species may be important in the pathogenesis of prion disease.


Oncogene | 2012

A Notch1-neuregulin1 autocrine signaling loop contributes to melanoma growth.

Keman Zhang; Poki Wong; Lukun Zhang; Barbara S. Jacobs; Ernest C. Borden; Barbara Bedogni

The Notch pathway is an evolutionary conserved signaling cascade that has an essential role in melanoblast and melanocyte stem cell homeostasis. Notch signaling is emerging as a key player in melanoma, the most deadly form of skin cancer. In melanoma, Notch1 is inappropriately reactivated and contributes to melanoma tumorigenicity. Here, we propose a novel mechanism by which Notch1 promotes the disease. We found that Notch1 directly regulates the transcription of neuregulin1 (NRG1) by binding to its promoter region. NRG1 is the ligand for ERBB3 and 4, members of the epidermal growth factor family of receptors that are involved in the genesis and progression of a number of cancers. Notch1 and NRG1 expression are associated in melanoma and inhibition of NRG1 signaling leads to melanoma cell growth inhibition and tumor growth delay. Mechanistically, these effects are associated with the inhibition of the PI3Kinase/Akt signaling pathway and with the accumulation of p27Kip1. On the other end, addition of recombinant NRG1 can partially restore melanoma cell growth that is inhibited by Notch1 ablation. Taken together, our findings underline a new, previously undescribed autocrine signaling loop between Notch1 and NRG1 that controls melanoma growth and provide experimental evidence that the targeting of Notch and ERBB signaling may represent a novel potential therapeutic approach in melanoma.


FEBS Journal | 2008

Ligand binding promotes prion protein aggregation – role of the octapeptide repeats

Shuiliang Yu; Shaoman Yin; Nancy Pham; Poki Wong; Shin Chung Kang; Robert B. Petersen; Chaoyang Li; Man Sun Sy

Aggregation of the normal cellular prion protein, PrP, is important in the pathogenesis of prion disease. PrP binds glycosaminoglycan (GAG) and divalent cations, such as Cu2+ and Zn2+. Here, we report our findings that GAG and Cu2+ promote the aggregation of recombinant human PrP (rPrP). The normal cellular prion protein has five octapeptide repeats. In the presence of either GAG or Cu2+, mutant rPrPs with eight or ten octapeptide repeats are more aggregation prone, exhibit faster kinetics and form larger aggregates than wild‐type PrP. When the GAG‐binding motif, KKRPK, is deleted the effect of GAG but not that of Cu2+ is abolished. By contrast, when the Cu2+‐binding motif, the octapeptide‐repeat region, is deleted, neither GAG nor Cu2+ is able to promote aggregation. Therefore, the octapeptide‐repeat region is critical in the aggregation of rPrP, irrespective of the promoting ligand. Furthermore, aggregation of rPrP in the presence of GAG is blocked with anti‐PrP mAbs, whereas none of the tested anti‐PrP mAbs block Cu2+‐promoted aggregation. However, a mAb that is specific for an epitope at the N‐terminus enhances aggregation in the presence of either GAG or Cu2+. Therefore, although binding of either GAG or Cu2+ promotes the aggregation of rPrP, their aggregation processes are different, suggesting multiple pathways of rPrP aggregation.


Biochemical Journal | 2007

Aggregation of prion protein with insertion mutations is proportional to the number of inserts

Shuiliang Yu; Shaoman Yin; Chaoyang Li; Poki Wong; Binggong Chang; Fan Xiao; Shin Chung Kang; Huimin Yan; Gengfu Xiao; Po Tien; Man Sun Sy

Mutation in the prion gene, PRNP, accounts for approx. 10-15% of human prion diseases. However, little is known about the mechanisms by which a mutant prion protein (PrP) causes disease. We compared the biochemical properties of a wild-type human prion protein, rPrP(C) (recombinant wild-type PrP), which has five octapeptide-repeats, with two recombinant human prion proteins with insertion mutations, one with three more octapeptide repeats, rPrP(8OR), and the other with five more octapeptide repeats, rPrP(10OR). We found that the insertion mutant proteins are more prone to aggregate, and the degree and kinetics of aggregation are proportional to the number of inserts. The octapeptide-repeat and alpha-helix 1 regions are important in aggregate formation, because aggregation is inhibited with monoclonal antibodies that are specific for epitopes in these regions. We also showed that a small amount of mutant protein could enhance the formation of mixed aggregates that are composed of mutant protein and wild-type rPrP(C). Accordingly, rPrP(10OR) is also more efficient in promoting the aggregation of rPrP(C) than rPrP(8OR). These findings provide a biochemical explanation for the clinical observations that the severity of the disease in patients with insertion mutations is proportional to the number of inserts, and thus have implications for the pathogenesis of inherited human prion disease.


Pigment Cell & Melanoma Research | 2014

MT1-MMP modulates melanoma cell dissemination and metastasis through activation of MMP2 and RAC1.

Khvaramze Shaverdashvili; Poki Wong; Jun Ma; Keman Zhang; Iman Osman; Barbara Bedogni

Metastatic melanoma remains the deadliest of all skin cancers with a survival rate at five years of less than 15%. MT1‐MMP is a membrane‐associated matrix metalloproteinase that controls pericellular proteolysis and is an important, invasion‐promoting, pro‐tumorigenic MMP in cancer. We show that deregulation of MT1‐MMP expression happens as early as the transition from nevus to primary melanoma and continues to increase during melanoma progression. Furthermore, MT1‐MMP expression is associated with poor melanoma patient outcome, underscoring a pivotal role of MT1‐MMP in melanoma pathogenesis. We demonstrate that MT1‐MMP is directly required for melanoma cells to metastasize, as cells deprived of MT1‐MMP fail to form distant metastasis in an orthotopic mouse melanoma model. We show that MT1‐MMP affects cell invasion by activating its target MMP2. Importantly, we demonstrate, for the first time, that activation of MMP2 by MT1‐MMP is required to sustain RAC1 activity and promote MT1‐MMP‐dependent cell motility. These data highlight a novel MT1‐MMP/MMP2/RAC1 signaling axis in melanoma that may represent an intriguing molecular target for the treatment of invasive melanoma.


Biochemical Journal | 2007

Normal cellular prion protein is a ligand of selectins: binding requires LeX but is inhibited by sLeX

Chaoyang Li; Poki Wong; Tao Pan; Fan Xiao; Shaoman Yin; Binggong Chang; Shin Chung Kang; James Ironside; Man Sun Sy

The normal PrP(C) (cellular prion protein) contains sLe(X) [sialyl-Le(X) (Lewis X)] and Le(X). sLe(X) is a ligand of selectins. To examine whether PrP(C) is a ligand of selectins, we generated three human PrP(C)-Ig fusion proteins: one with Le(X), one with sLe(X), and the other with neither Le(X) nor sLe(X). Only Le(X)-PrP(C)-Ig binds E-, L- and P-selectins. Binding is Ca(2+)-dependent and occurs with nanomolar affinity. Removal of sialic acid on sLe(X)-PrP(C)-Ig enables the fusion protein to bind all selectins. These findings were confirmed with brain-derived PrP(C). The selectins precipitated PrP(C) in human brain in a Ca(2+)-dependent manner. Treatment of brain homogenates with neuraminidase increased the amounts of PrP(C) precipitated. Therefore the presence of sialic acid prevents the binding of PrP(C) in human brain to selectins. Hence, human brain PrP(C) interacts with selectins in a manner that is distinct from interactions in peripheral tissues. Alternations in these interactions may have pathological consequences.

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Man Sun Sy

Case Western Reserve University

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Shin Chung Kang

Case Western Reserve University

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Chaoyang Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Shaoman Yin

Case Western Reserve University

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Binggong Chang

Case Western Reserve University

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Barbara Bedogni

Case Western Reserve University

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Keman Zhang

Case Western Reserve University

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Fan Xiao

Case Western Reserve University

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Shuiliang Yu

Case Western Reserve University

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Tao Pan

Case Western Reserve University

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