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Dive into the research topics where Wan Xing Hong is active.

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Featured researches published by Wan Xing Hong.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2014

Effect of human donor cell source on differentiation and function of cardiac induced pluripotent stem cells.

Veronica Sanchez-Freire; Andrew S. Lee; Shijun Hu; Oscar J. Abilez; Ping Liang; Feng Lan; Bruno C. Huber; Sang-Ging Ong; Wan Xing Hong; Mei Huang; Joseph C. Wu

BACKGROUND Human-induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) are a potentially unlimited source for generation of cardiomyocytes (iPSC-CMs). However, current protocols for iPSC-CM derivation face several challenges, including variability in somatic cell sources and inconsistencies in cardiac differentiation efficiency. OBJECTIVES This study aimed to assess the effect of epigenetic memory on differentiation and function of iPSC-CMs generated from somatic cell sources of cardiac versus noncardiac origins. METHODS Cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs) and skin fibroblasts from the same donors were reprogrammed into iPSCs and differentiated into iPSC-CMs via embryoid body and monolayer-based differentiation protocols. RESULTS Differentiation efficiency was found to be higher in CPC-derived iPSC-CMs (CPC-iPSC-CMs) than in fibroblast-derived iPSC-CMs (Fib-iPSC-CMs). Gene expression analysis during cardiac differentiation demonstrated up-regulation of cardiac transcription factors in CPC-iPSC-CMs, including NKX2-5, MESP1, ISL1, HAND2, MYOCD, MEF2C, and GATA4. Epigenetic assessment revealed higher methylation in the promoter region of NKX2-5 in Fib-iPSC-CMs compared with CPC-iPSC-CMs. Epigenetic differences were found to dissipate with increased cell passaging, and a battery of in vitro assays revealed no significant differences in their morphological and electrophysiological properties at early passage. Finally, cell delivery into a small animal myocardial infarction model indicated that CPC-iPSC-CMs and Fib-iPSC-CMs possess comparable therapeutic capabilities in improving functional recovery in vivo. CONCLUSIONS This is the first study to compare differentiation of iPSC-CMs from human CPCs versus human fibroblasts from the same donors. The authors demonstrate that although epigenetic memory improves differentiation efficiency of cardiac versus noncardiac somatic cell sources in vitro, it does not contribute to improved functional outcome in vivo.


Annals of Biomedical Engineering | 2014

Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Repair in Wound Healing

Michael S. Hu; Zeshaan N. Maan; Jen-Chieh Wu; Robert C. Rennert; Wan Xing Hong; Tiffany S. Lai; Alexander T. M. Cheung; Graham G. Walmsley; Michael T. Chung; Adrian McArdle; Michael T. Longaker; H. Peter Lorenz

Wound healing is a highly evolved defense mechanism against infection and further injury. It is a complex process involving multiple cell types and biological pathways. Mammalian adult cutaneous wound healing is mediated by a fibroproliferative response leading to scar formation. In contrast, early to mid-gestational fetal cutaneous wound healing is more akin to regeneration and occurs without scar formation. This early observation has led to extensive research seeking to unlock the mechanism underlying fetal scarless regenerative repair. Building upon recent advances in biomaterials and stem cell applications, tissue engineering approaches are working towards a recapitulation of this phenomenon. In this review, we describe the elements that distinguish fetal scarless and adult scarring wound healing, and discuss current trends in tissue engineering aimed at achieving scarless tissue regeneration.


Regenerative Medicine | 2014

Wound healing: an update

Elizabeth R. Zielins; David Atashroo; Zeshaan N. Maan; Dominik Duscher; Graham G. Walmsley; Michael Hu; Kshemendra Senarath-Yapa; Adrian McArdle; Ruth Tevlin; Taylor Wearda; Kevin J. Paik; Christopher Duldulao; Wan Xing Hong; Geoffrey C. Gurtner; Michael T. Longaker

Wounds, both chronic and acute, continue to be a tremendous socioeconomic burden. As such, technologies drawn from many disciplines within science and engineering are constantly being incorporated into innovative wound healing therapies. While many of these therapies are experimental, they have resulted in new insights into the pathophysiology of wound healing, and in turn the development of more specialized treatments for both normal and abnormal wound healing states. Herein, we review some of the emerging technologies that are currently being developed to aid and improve wound healing after cutaneous injury.


Journal of Surgical Research | 2014

Gene expression in fetal murine keratinocytes and fibroblasts.

Michael S. Hu; Michael Januszyk; Wan Xing Hong; Graham G. Walmsley; Elizabeth R. Zielins; David Atashroo; Zeshaan N. Maan; Adrian McArdle; Danny Takanishi; Geoffrey C. Gurtner; Michael T. Longaker; H.P. Lorenz

BACKGROUND Early fetuses heal wounds without the formation of a scar. Many studies have attempted to explain this remarkable phenomenon. However, the exact mechanism remains unknown. Herein, we examine the predominant cell types of the epidermis and dermis--the keratinocyte and fibroblast--during different stages of fetal development to better understand the changes that lead to scarring wound repair versus regeneration. MATERIALS AND METHODS Keratinocytes and fibroblasts were harvested and cultured from the dorsal skin of time-dated BALB/c fetuses. Total RNA was isolated and microarray analysis was performed using chips with 42,000 genes. Significance analysis of microarrays was used to select genes with >2-fold expression differences with a false discovery rate<2. Enrichment analysis was performed on significant genes to identify differentially expressed pathways. RESULTS By comparing the gene expression profile of keratinocytes from E16 versus E18 fetuses, we identified 24 genes that were downregulated at E16. Analysis of E16 and E18 fibroblasts revealed 522 differentially expressed genes. Enrichment analysis showed the top 20 signaling pathways that were downregulated in E16 keratinocytes and upregulated or downregulated in E16 fibroblasts. CONCLUSIONS Our data reveal 546 differentially expressed genes in keratinocytes and fibroblasts between the scarless and scarring transition. In addition, a total of 60 signaling pathways have been identified to be either upregulated or downregulated in these cell types. The genes and pathways recognized by our study may prove to be essential targets that may discriminate between fetal wound regeneration and adult wound repair.


Nature Biomedical Engineering | 2018

Prolonged survival of transplanted stem cells after ischaemic injury via the slow release of pro-survival peptides from a collagen matrix

Andrew S. Lee; Mohammed Inayathullah; Maarten A. Lijkwan; Xin Zhao; Wenchao Sun; Sujin Park; Wan Xing Hong; Mansi Bharat Parekh; Andrey V. Malkovskiy; Edward Lau; Xulei Qin; Venkata Raveendra Pothineni; Veronica Sanchez-Freire; Wendy Y. Zhang; Nigel G. Kooreman; Antje D. Ebert; Charles K. Chan; Patricia K. Nguyen; Jayakumar Rajadas; Joseph C. Wu

Stem-cell-based therapies hold considerable promise for regenerative medicine. However, acute donor-cell death within several weeks after cell delivery remains a critical hurdle for clinical translation. Co-transplantation of stem cells with pro-survival factors can improve cell engraftment, but this strategy has been hampered by the typically short half-lives of the factors and by the use of Matrigel and other scaffolds that are not chemically defined. Here, we report a collagen–dendrimer biomaterial crosslinked with pro-survival peptide analogues that adheres to the extracellular matrix and slowly releases the peptides, significantly prolonging stem cell survival in mouse models of ischaemic injury. The biomaterial can serve as a generic delivery system to improve functional outcomes in cell-replacement therapy.The slow release of pro-survival peptide analogues crosslinked to an injectable collagen–dendrimer biomaterial significantly prolongs the engraftment and survival of transplanted stem cells in mouse models of ischaemic injury.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2015

A mouse fetal skin model of scarless wound repair.

Graham G. Walmsley; Michael S. Hu; Wan Xing Hong; Zeshaan N. Maan; H. Peter Lorenz; Michael T. Longaker

Early in utero, but not in postnatal life, cutaneous wounds undergo regeneration and heal without formation of a scar. Scarless fetal wound healing occurs across species but is age dependent. The transition from a scarless to scarring phenotype occurs in the third trimester of pregnancy in humans and around embryonic day 18 (E18) in mice. However, this varies with the size of the wound with larger defects generating a scar at an earlier gestational age. The emergence of lineage tracing and other genetic tools in the mouse has opened promising new avenues for investigation of fetal scarless wound healing. However, given the inherently high rates of morbidity and premature uterine contraction associated with fetal surgery, investigations of fetal scarless wound healing in vivo require a precise and reproducible surgical model. Here we detail a reliable model of fetal scarless wound healing in the dorsum of E16.5 (scarless) and E18.5 (scarring) mouse embryos.


JCI insight | 2017

Delivery of monocyte lineage cells in a biomimetic scaffold enhances tissue repair

Michael S. Hu; Graham G. Walmsley; Leandra A. Barnes; Kipp Weiskopf; Robert C. Rennert; Dominik Duscher; Michael Januszyk; Zeshaan N. Maan; Wan Xing Hong; Alexander T. M. Cheung; Tripp Leavitt; Clement D. Marshall; Ryan C. Ransom; Samir Malhotra; Alessandra L. Moore; Jayakumar Rajadas; H. Peter Lorenz; Irving L. Weissman; Geoffrey C. Gurtner; Michael T. Longaker

The monocyte lineage is essential to normal wound healing. Macrophage inhibition or knockout in mice results in impaired wound healing through reduced neovascularization, granulation tissue formation, and reepithelialization. Numerous studies have either depleted macrophages or reduced their activity in the context of wound healing. Here, we demonstrate that by increasing the number of macrophages or monocytes in the wound site above physiologic levels via pullulan-collagen composite dermal hydrogel scaffold delivery, the rate of wound healing can be significantly accelerated in both wild-type and diabetic mice, with no adverse effect on the quality of repair. Macrophages transplanted onto wounds differentiate into M1 and M2 phenotypes of different proportions at various time points, ultimately increasing angiogenesis. Given that monocytes can be readily isolated from peripheral blood without in vitro manipulation, these findings hold promise for translational medicine aimed at accelerating wound healing across a broad spectrum of diseases.


Differentiation | 2013

PDGF mediates derivation of human embryonic germ cells.

Yang Li; Wan Xing Hong; Baojin Lan; Xiaoyan Xu; Yinan Liu; Lin Kong; Yaxuan Li; Shixin Zhou; Ying Liu; Ruopeng Feng; Sibo Jiang; Qihua He; Jichun Tan

Human embryonic germ cells (hEGCs) are a valuable and underutilized source of pluripotent stem cells. Unlike embryonic stem cells, which have been extensively studied, little is known about the factors that regulate hEGC derivation and maintenance. This study demonstrates for the first time a central role for selective activation of PDGFR signaling in the derivation and maintenance of pluripotency in hEGCs. In the study, hEGCs were found to express PDGF receptor α at high levels compared to human embryonic stem cells (hESCs). PDGF significantly improved formation of alkaline phosphatase (AP) positive hEGC colonies. We subsequently determined that PDGF activates the phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K) pathway as phosphorylation of AKT was up-regulated in response to PDGF. Furthermore, inhibition of PI3K signaling using small molecular inhibitor LY294002 led to significantly decreased AP positive hEGC colony formation whereas inhibition of MAPK pathway using U0126 had a negligible effect. We established a primary mechanism for PDGF mediated derivation and maintenance of hEGCs by demonstrating that OCT4 was upregulated and PTEN was suppressed in a dose dependent manner in response to PDGF.


Stem Cells | 2017

Brief Report: External Beam Radiation Therapy for the Treatment of Human Pluripotent Stem Cell-Derived Teratomas

Andrew S. Lee; Chad Tang; Wan Xing Hong; Sujin Park; Magdalena Bazalova-Carter; G Nelson; Veronica Sanchez-Freire; Isaac Bakerman; Wendy Y. Zhang; Evgenios Neofytou; Andrew J. Connolly; Charles K. Chan; Edward E. Graves; Irving L. Weissman; Patricia K. Nguyen; Joseph C. Wu

Human pluripotent stem cells, including human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) and human induced PSCs (hiPSCs), have great potential as an unlimited donor source for cell‐based therapeutics. The risk of teratoma formation from residual undifferentiated cells, however, remains a critical barrier to the clinical application of these cells. Herein, we describe external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) as an attractive option for the treatment of this iatrogenic growth. We present evidence that EBRT is effective in arresting growth of hESC‐derived teratomas in vivo at day 28 post‐implantation by using a microCT irradiator capable of targeted treatment in small animals. Within several days of irradiation, teratomas derived from injection of undifferentiated hESCs and hiPSCs demonstrated complete growth arrest lasting several months. In addition, EBRT reduced reseeding potential of teratoma cells during serial transplantation experiments, requiring irradiated teratomas to be seeded at 1 × 103 higher doses to form new teratomas. We demonstrate that irradiation induces teratoma cell apoptosis, senescence, and growth arrest, similar to established radiobiology mechanisms. Taken together, these results provide proof of concept for the use of EBRT in the treatment of existing teratomas and highlight a strategy to increase the safety of stem cell‐based therapies. Stem Cells 2017;35:1994–2000


Stem Cells | 2017

External Beam Radiation Therapy for the Treatment of Human Pluripotent Stem Cell-Derived Teratomas

Andrew S. Lee; Chad Tang; Wan Xing Hong; Sujin Park; M Bazalova; G Nelson; Veronica Sanchez-Freire; Isaac Bakerman; Wendy Y. Zhang; Evgenios Neofytou; Andrew J. Connolly; Charles K. Chan; Edward E. Graves; Irving L. Weissman; Patricia K. Nguyen; Joseph C. Wu

Human pluripotent stem cells, including human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) and human induced PSCs (hiPSCs), have great potential as an unlimited donor source for cell‐based therapeutics. The risk of teratoma formation from residual undifferentiated cells, however, remains a critical barrier to the clinical application of these cells. Herein, we describe external beam radiation therapy (EBRT) as an attractive option for the treatment of this iatrogenic growth. We present evidence that EBRT is effective in arresting growth of hESC‐derived teratomas in vivo at day 28 post‐implantation by using a microCT irradiator capable of targeted treatment in small animals. Within several days of irradiation, teratomas derived from injection of undifferentiated hESCs and hiPSCs demonstrated complete growth arrest lasting several months. In addition, EBRT reduced reseeding potential of teratoma cells during serial transplantation experiments, requiring irradiated teratomas to be seeded at 1 × 103 higher doses to form new teratomas. We demonstrate that irradiation induces teratoma cell apoptosis, senescence, and growth arrest, similar to established radiobiology mechanisms. Taken together, these results provide proof of concept for the use of EBRT in the treatment of existing teratomas and highlight a strategy to increase the safety of stem cell‐based therapies. Stem Cells 2017;35:1994–2000

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