Sung Jin Huh
Harvard University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sung Jin Huh.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011
Lauren L.C. Marotta; Vanessa Almendro; Andriy Marusyk; Michail Shipitsin; Janina Schemme; Sarah R. Walker; Noga Bloushtain-Qimron; Jessica Kim; Sibgat Choudhury; Reo Maruyama; Zhenhua Wu; Mithat Gonen; Laura Mulvey; Marina Bessarabova; Sung Jin Huh; Serena J. Silver; So Young Kim; So Yeon Park; Hee Eun Lee; Karen S. Anderson; Andrea L. Richardson; Tatiana Nikolskaya; Yuri Nikolsky; X. Shirley Liu; David E. Root; William C. Hahn; David A. Frank; Kornelia Polyak
Intratumor heterogeneity is a major clinical problem because tumor cell subtypes display variable sensitivity to therapeutics and may play different roles in progression. We previously characterized 2 cell populations in human breast tumors with distinct properties: CD44+CD24- cells that have stem cell-like characteristics, and CD44-CD24+ cells that resemble more differentiated breast cancer cells. Here we identified 15 genes required for cell growth or proliferation in CD44+CD24- human breast cancer cells in a large-scale loss-of-function screen and found that inhibition of several of these (IL6, PTGIS, HAS1, CXCL3, and PFKFB3) reduced Stat3 activation. We found that the IL-6/JAK2/Stat3 pathway was preferentially active in CD44+CD24- breast cancer cells compared with other tumor cell types, and inhibition of JAK2 decreased their number and blocked growth of xenografts. Our results highlight the differences between distinct breast cancer cell types and identify targets such as JAK2 and Stat3 that may lead to more specific and effective breast cancer therapies.
Breast Cancer Research | 2011
Andrew E. Place; Sung Jin Huh; Kornelia Polyak
Breast cancer comprises a heterogeneous group of malignancies derived from the ductal epithelium. The microenvironment of these cancers is now recognized as a critical participant in tumor progression and therapeutic responses. Recent data demonstrate significant gene expression and epigenetic alterations in cells composing the microenvironment during disease progression, which can be explored as biomarkers and targets for therapy. Indeed, gene expression signatures derived from tumor stroma have been linked to clinical outcomes. There is increasing interest in translating our current understanding of the tumor microenvironment to the development of novel therapies.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014
Mike Ran Zou; Jian Cao; Zongzhi Liu; Sung Jin Huh; Kornelia Polyak; Qin Yan
Background: Histone demethylase JARID1B is a potential oncoprotein, but its in vivo roles are not well understood. Results: Mice lacking JARID1B showed delayed mammary gland development and decreased female fertility. Conclusion: JARID1B promotes luminal lineage transcription programs in the mammary gland and fine-tunes systemic estrogen level. Significance: JARID1B functions in cancer are likely linked to its roles in gene regulation and mammary gland development. The JmjC domain-containing H3K4 histone demethylase jumonji AT-rich interactive domain 1B (JARID1B) (also known as KDM5B and PLU1) is overexpressed in breast cancer and is a potential target for breast cancer treatment. To investigate the in vivo function of JARID1B, we developed Jarid1b−/− mice and characterized their phenotypes in detail. Unlike previously reported Jarid1b−/− strains, the majority of these Jarid1b−/− mice were viable beyond embryonic and neonatal stages. This allowed us to further examine phenotypes associated with the loss of JARID1B in pubertal development and pregnancy. These Jarid1b−/− mice exhibited decreased body weight, premature mortality, decreased female fertility, and delayed mammary gland development. Related to these phenotypes, JARID1B loss decreased serum estrogen level and reduced mammary epithelial cell proliferation in early puberty. In mammary epithelial cells, JARID1B loss diminished the expression of key regulators for mammary morphogenesis and luminal lineage specification, including FOXA1 and estrogen receptor α. Mechanistically, JARID1B was required for GATA3 recruitment to the Foxa1 promoter to activate Foxa1 expression. These results indicate that JARID1B positively regulates mammary ductal development through both extrinsic and cell-autonomous mechanisms.
Cancer Discovery | 2017
Carlos R. Gil Del Alcazar; Sung Jin Huh; Muhammad B. Ekram; Anne Trinh; Lin Liu; Francisco Beca; Xiaoyuan Zi; Minsuk Kwak; Helga Bergholtz; Ying Su; Lina Ding; Hege G. Russnes; Andrea L. Richardson; Kirsten Babski; Elizabeth Min Hui Kim; Charles H. McDonnell; Jon Wagner; Ron Rowberry; Gordon J. Freeman; Deborah A. Dillon; Therese Sørlie; Lisa M. Coussens; Judy Garber; Rong Fan; Kristie Bobolis; D. Craig Allred; Joon Jeong; So Yeon Park; Franziska Michor; Kornelia Polyak
To investigate immune escape during breast tumor progression, we analyzed the composition of leukocytes in normal breast tissues, ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS), and invasive ductal carcinomas (IDC). We found significant tissue and tumor subtype-specific differences in multiple cell types including T cells and neutrophils. Gene expression profiling of CD45+CD3+ T cells demonstrated a decrease in CD8+ signatures in IDCs. Immunofluorescence analysis showed fewer activated GZMB+CD8+ T cells in IDC than in DCIS, including in matched DCIS and recurrent IDC. T-cell receptor clonotype diversity was significantly higher in DCIS than in IDCs. Immune checkpoint protein TIGIT-expressing T cells were more frequent in DCIS, whereas high PD-L1 expression and amplification of CD274 (encoding PD-L1) was only detected in triple-negative IDCs. Coamplification of a 17q12 chemokine cluster with ERBB2 subdivided HER2+ breast tumors into immunologically and clinically distinct subtypes. Our results show coevolution of cancer cells and the immune microenvironment during tumor progression.Significance: The design of effective cancer immunotherapies requires the understanding of mechanisms underlying immune escape during tumor progression. Here we demonstrate a switch to a less active tumor immune environment during the in situ to invasive breast carcinoma transition, and identify immune regulators and genomic alterations that shape tumor evolution. Cancer Discov; 7(10); 1098-115. ©2017 AACR.See related commentary by Speiser and Verdeil, p. 1062This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1047.
Stem cell reports | 2015
Sung Jin Huh; Kendell Clement; David Jee; Alessandra Merlini; Sibgat Choudhury; Reo Maruyama; Ronnie Yoo; Anna Chytil; Patrick J. Boyle; Fei Ann Ran; Harold L. Moses; Mary Helen Barcellos-Hoff; Laurie Jackson-Grusby; Alexander Meissner; Kornelia Polyak
Summary Postnatal mammary gland development and differentiation occur during puberty and pregnancy. To explore the role of DNA methylation in these processes, we determined the genome-wide DNA methylation and gene expression profiles of CD24+CD61+CD29hi, CD24+CD61+CD29lo, and CD24+CD61−CD29lo cell populations that were previously associated with distinct biological properties at different ages and reproductive stages. We found that pregnancy had the most significant effects on CD24+CD61+CD29hi and CD24+CD61+CD29lo cells, inducing distinct epigenetic states that were maintained through life. Integrated analysis of gene expression, DNA methylation, and histone modification profiles revealed cell-type- and reproductive-stage-specific changes. We identified p27 and TGFβ signaling as key regulators of CD24+CD61+CD29lo cell proliferation, based on their expression patterns and results from mammary gland explant cultures. Our results suggest that relatively minor changes in DNA methylation occur during luminal differentiation compared with the effects of pregnancy on CD24+CD61+CD29hi and CD24+CD61+CD29lo cells.
Nature Biomedical Engineering | 2018
Matthew R. Golder; Jenny Liu; Jannik N. Andersen; Michail Shipitsin; Farrukh Vohidov; Hung V.-T. Nguyen; Deborah J. C. Ehrlich; Sung Jin Huh; Bhavatarini Vangamudi; Kyriakos D. Economides; Allison M. Neenan; James C. Ackley; Joelle Baddour; Sattanathan Paramasivan; Samantha W. Brady; Eric J. Held; Lawrence A. Reiter; Jennifer K. Saucier-Sawyer; Paul W. Kopesky; Donald E. Chickering; Peter Blume-Jensen; Jeremiah A. Johnson
At present there are no drugs for the treatment of chronic liver fibrosis that have been approved by the Food and Drug Administration of the United States. Telmisartan, a small-molecule antihypertensive drug, displays antifibrotic activity, but its clinical use is limited because it causes systemic hypotension. Here, we report the scalable and convergent synthesis of macromolecular telmisartan prodrugs optimized for preferential release in diseased liver tissue. We have optimized the release of active telmisartan in fibrotic liver to be depot-like (that is, a constant therapeutic concentration) through the molecular design of telmisartan brush-arm star polymers, and show that these lead to improved efficacy and to the avoidance of dose-limiting hypotension in both metabolically and chemically induced mouse models of hepatic fibrosis, as determined by histopathology, enzyme levels in the liver, intact-tissue protein markers, hepatocyte necrosis protection and gene-expression analyses. In rats and dogs, the prodrugs are retained long term in liver tissue, and have a well-tolerated safety profile. Our findings support the further development of telmisartan prodrugs that enable infrequent dosing in the treatment of liver fibrosis.Macromolecular telmisartan prodrugs optimized for preferential release in fibrotic liver tissue reduce liver fibrosis in mouse models, and are retained and well tolerated in the liver tissue of rats and dogs.
Cancer Research | 2016
Sung Jin Huh; Hannah Oh; Michael A. Peterson; Vanessa Almendro; Rong Hu; Michaela Bowden; Rosina L. Lis; Maura B. Cotter; Massimo Loda; William T. Barry; Kornelia Polyak; Rulla M. Tamimi
Other Topics | 2018
Lina Ding; Ying Su; Muhammad B. Ekram; Sung Jin Huh; Noga Bloushtain-Qimron; Sibgat Choudhury; William C. Hines; Jun Yao; Mina J. Bissell; Kornelia Polyak
Nature Biomedical Engineering | 2018
Matthew R. Golder; Jenny Liu; Jannik N. Andersen; Michail Shipitsin; Farrukh Vohidov; Hung V.-T. Nguyen; Deborah J. C. Ehrlich; Sung Jin Huh; Bhavatarini Vangamudi; Kyriakos D. Economides; Allison M. Neenan; James C. Ackley; Joelle Baddour; Sattanathan Paramasivan; Samantha W. Brady; Eric J. Held; Lawrence A. Reiter; Jennifer K. Saucier-Sawyer; Paul W. Kopesky; Donald E. Chickering; Peter Blume-Jensen; Jeremiah A. Johnson
Cancer Research | 2018
Farrukh Vohidov; Jannik N. Andersen; Kyriakos D. Economides; Michail Shipitsin; Olga Burenkova; Nolan M. Gallagher; Peyton Sheih; Matthew R. Golder; Jenny Liu; William K. Dahlberg; Hung V. Nguyen; Deborah J. Ehrlich; Julie Kim; Sung Jin Huh; Bhavatarini Vangamudi; Allison M. Neenan; James C. Ackley; Joelle Baddour; Sattanathan Paramasivan; Gaurab Kc; David Turnquist; Jenny K. Saucier-Sawyer; Paul W. Kopesky; Samantha W. Brady; Michael J. Jessel; Lawrence A. Reiter; Donald E. Chickering; Jeremiah A. Johnson; Peter Blume-Jensen