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Dive into the research topics where Xianguo Kong is active.

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Featured researches published by Xianguo Kong.


Nature Medicine | 2013

Racial differences in human platelet PAR4 reactivity reflect expression of PCTP and miR-376c

Leonard C. Edelstein; Lukas M. Simon; Raul Teruel Montoya; Michael Holinstat; Edward S. Chen; Angela L. Bergeron; Xianguo Kong; Srikanth Nagalla; Narla Mohandas; David E. Cohen; Jing Fei Dong; Chad A. Shaw; Paul F. Bray

Racial differences in the pathophysiology of atherothrombosis are poorly understood. We explored the function and transcriptome of platelets in healthy black (n = 70) and white (n = 84) subjects. Platelet aggregation and calcium mobilization induced by the PAR4 thrombin receptor were significantly greater in black subjects. Numerous differentially expressed RNAs were associated with both race and PAR4 reactivity, including PCTP (encoding phosphatidylcholine transfer protein), and platelets from black subjects expressed higher levels of PC-TP protein. PC-TP inhibition or depletion blocked PAR4- but not PAR1-mediated activation of platelets and megakaryocytic cell lines. miR-376c levels were differentially expressed by race and PAR4 reactivity and were inversely correlated with PCTP mRNA levels, PC-TP protein levels and PAR4 reactivity. miR-376c regulated the expression of PC-TP in human megakaryocytes. A disproportionately high number of microRNAs that were differentially expressed by race and PAR4 reactivity, including miR-376c, are encoded in the DLK1-DIO3 locus and were expressed at lower levels in platelets from black subjects. These results suggest that PC-TP contributes to the racial difference in PAR4-mediated platelet activation, indicate a genomic contribution to platelet function that differs by race and emphasize a need to consider the effects of race when developing anti-thrombotic drugs.


Blood | 2014

Human platelet microRNA-mRNA networks associated with age and gender revealed by integrated plateletomics.

Lukas M. Simon; Leonard C. Edelstein; Srikanth Nagalla; Angela Bergeron Woodley; Edward S. Chen; Xianguo Kong; Lin Ma; Paolo Fortina; Satya P. Kunapuli; Michael Holinstat; Steven E. McKenzie; Jing Fei Dong; Chad A. Shaw; Paul F. Bray

There is little data considering relationships among human RNA, demographic variables, and primary human cell physiology. The platelet RNA and expression-1 study measured platelet aggregation to arachidonic acid, ADP, protease-activated receptor (PAR) 1 activation peptide (PAR1-AP), and PAR4-AP, as well as mRNA and microRNA (miRNA) levels in platelets from 84 white and 70 black healthy subjects. A total of 5911 uniquely mapped mRNAs and 181 miRNAs were commonly expressed and validated in a separate cohort. One hundred twenty-nine mRNAs and 15 miRNAs were differentially expressed (DE) by age, and targets of these miRNAs were over-represented among these mRNAs. Fifty-four mRNAs and 9 miRNAs were DE by gender. Networks of miRNAs targeting mRNAs, both DE by age and gender, were identified. The inverse relationship in these RNA pairs suggests miRNAs regulate mRNA levels on aging and between genders. A simple, interactive public web tool (www.plateletomics.com) was developed that permits queries of RNA levels and associations among RNA, platelet aggregation and demographic variables. Access to these data will facilitate discovery of mechanisms of miRNA regulation of gene expression. These results provide new insights into aging and gender, and future platelet RNA association studies must account for age and gender.


Blood | 2014

Common variants in the human platelet PAR4 thrombin receptor alter platelet function and differ by race

Leonard C. Edelstein; Lukas M. Simon; Cory R. Lindsay; Xianguo Kong; Raúl Teruel-Montoya; Benjamin E. Tourdot; Edward S. Chen; Lin Ma; Shaun R. Coughlin; Marvin T. Nieman; Michael Holinstat; Chad A. Shaw; Paul F. Bray

Human platelets express 2 thrombin receptors: protease-activated receptor (PAR)-1 and PAR4. Recently, we reported 3.7-fold increased PAR4-mediated aggregation kinetics in platelets from black subjects compared with white subjects. We now show that platelets from blacks (n = 70) express 14% more PAR4 protein than those from whites (n = 84), but this difference is not associated with platelet PAR4 function. Quantitative trait locus analysis identified 3 common single nucleotide polymorphisms in the PAR4 gene (F2RL3) associated with PAR4-induced platelet aggregation. Among these single nucleotide polymorphisms, rs773902 determines whether residue 120 in transmembrane domain 2 is an alanine (Ala) or threonine (Thr). Compared with the Ala120 variant, Thr120 was more common in black subjects than in white subjects (63% vs 19%), was associated with higher PAR4-induced human platelet aggregation and Ca2+ flux, and generated greater inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate in transfected cells. A second, less frequent F2RL3 variant, Phe296Val, was only observed in blacks and abolished the enhanced PAR4-induced platelet aggregation and 1,4,5-triphosphate generation associated with PAR4-Thr120. PAR4 genotype did not affect vorapaxar inhibition of platelet PAR1 function, but a strong pharmacogenetic effect was observed with the PAR4-specific antagonist YD-3 [1-benzyl-3(ethoxycarbonylphenyl)-indazole]. These findings may have an important pharmacogenetic effect on the development of new PAR antagonists.


PLOS ONE | 2014

MicroRNA Expression Differences in Human Hematopoietic Cell Lineages Enable Regulated Transgene Expression.

Raúl Teruel-Montoya; Xianguo Kong; Shaji Abraham; Lin Ma; Satya P. Kunapuli; Michael Holinstat; Chad A. Shaw; Steven E. McKenzie; Leonard C. Edelstein; Paul F. Bray

Blood microRNA (miRNA) levels have been associated with and shown to participate in disease pathophysiology. However, the hematopoietic cell of origin of blood miRNAs and the individual blood cell miRNA profiles are poorly understood. We report the miRNA content of highly purified normal hematopoietic cells from the same individuals. Although T-cells, B-cells and granulocytes had the highest miRNA content per cell, erythrocytes contributed more cellular miRNA to the blood, followed by granulocytes and platelets. miRNA profiling revealed different patterns and different expression levels of miRNA specific for each lineage. miR-30c-5p was determined to be an appropriate reference normalizer for cross-cell qRT-PCR comparisons. miRNA profiling of 5 hematopoietic cell lines revealed differential expression of miR-125a-5p. We demonstrated endogenous levels of miR-125a-5p regulate reporter gene expression in Meg-01 and Jurkat cells by (1) constructs containing binding sites for miR-125a-5p or (2) over-expressing or inhibiting miR-125a-5p. This quantitative analysis of the miRNA profiles of peripheral blood cells identifies the circulating hematopoietic cellular miRNAs, supports the use of miRNA profiles for distinguishing different hematopoietic lineages and suggests that endogenously expressed miRNAs can be exploited to regulate transgene expression in a cell-specific manner.


Circulation | 2012

Human Genome-Wide Association and Mouse Knockout Approaches Identify Platelet Supervillin as an Inhibitor of Thrombus Formation Under Shear Stress

Leonard C. Edelstein; Elizabeth J. Luna; Ian B. Gibson; Molly S. Bray; Ying Jin; Altaf A. Kondkar; Srikanth Nagalla; Nacima Hadjout-Rabi; Tara C. Smith; Daniel Covarrubias; Stephen N. Jones; Firdos Ahmad; Moritz Stolla; Xianguo Kong; Zhiyou Fang; Wolfgang Bergmeier; Chad A. Shaw; Suzanne M. Leal; Paul F. Bray

Background— High shear force critically regulates platelet adhesion and thrombus formation during ischemic vascular events. To identify genetic factors that influence platelet thrombus formation under high shear stress, we performed a genome-wide association study and confirmatory experiments in human and animal platelets. Methods and Results— Closure times in the shear-dependent platelet function analyzer (PFA)–100 were measured on healthy, nondiabetic European Americans (n=125) and blacks (n=116). A genome-wide association (P<5×10−8) was identified with 2 single-nucleotide polymorphisms within the SVIL gene (chromosome 10p11.23) in African Americans but not European Americans. Microarray analyses of human platelet RNA demonstrated the presence of SVIL isoform 1 (supervillin) but not muscle-specific isoforms 2 and 3 (archvillin, SmAV). SVIL mRNA levels were associated with SVIL genotypes (P⩽0.02) and were inversely correlated with PFA-100 closure times (P<0.04) and platelet volume (P<0.02). Leukocyte-depleted platelets contained abundant levels of the ≈205-kDa supervillin polypeptide. To assess functionality, mice lacking platelet supervillin were generated and back-crossed onto a C57BL/6 background. Compared with controls, murine platelets lacking supervillin were larger by flow cytometry and confocal microscopy and exhibited enhanced platelet thrombus formation under high-shear but not low-shear conditions. Conclusions— We show for the first time that (1) platelets contain supervillin; (2) platelet thrombus formation in the PFA-100 is associated with human SVIL variants and low SVIL expression; and (3) murine platelets lacking supervillin exhibit enhanced platelet thrombus formation at high shear stress. These data are consistent with an inhibitory role for supervillin in platelet adhesion and arterial thrombosis.


Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2017

Identification of a functional genetic variant driving racially dimorphic platelet gene expression of the thrombin receptor regulator, PCTP

Xianguo Kong; Lukas M. Simon; Michael Holinstat; Chad A. Shaw; Paul F. Bray; Leonard C. Edelstein

Platelet activation in response to stimulation of the Protease Activated Receptor 4 (PAR4) receptor differs by race. One factor that contributes to this difference is the expression level of Phosphatidylcholine Transfer Protein (PCTP), a regulator of platelet PAR4 function. We have conducted an expression Quantitative Trait Locus (eQTL) analysis that identifies single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) linked to the expression level of platelet genes. This analysis revealed 26 SNPs associated with the expression level of PCTP at genome-wide significance (p < 5×10-8). Using annotation from ENCODE and other public data we prioritised one of these SNPs, rs2912553, for functional testing. The allelic frequency of rs2912553 is racially-dimorphic, in concordance with the racially differential expression of PCTP. Reporter gene assays confirmed that the single nucleotide change caused by rs2912553 altered the transcriptional potency of the surrounding genomic locus. Electromobility shift assays, luciferase assays, and overexpression studies indicated a role for the megakaryocytic transcription factor GATA1. In summary, we have integrated multi-omic data to identify and functionalise an eQTL. This, along with the previously described relationship between PCTP and PAR4 function, allows us to characterise a genotype-phenotype relationship through the mechanism of gene expression.


Blood | 2011

Platelet microRNA-mRNA coexpression profiles correlate with platelet reactivity

Srikanth Nagalla; Chad A. Shaw; Xianguo Kong; Altaf A. Kondkar; Leonard C. Edelstein; Lin Ma; Junmei Chen; G. Stanley McKnight; José A. López; Linghai Yang; Ying Jin; Molly S. Bray; Suzanne M. Leal; Jing Fei Dong; Paul F. Bray


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2016

Integrative Multi-omic Analysis of Human Platelet eQTLs Reveals Alternative Start Site in Mitofusin 2.

Lukas M. Simon; Edward S. Chen; Leonard C. Edelstein; Xianguo Kong; Seema Bhatlekar; Isidore Rigoutsos; Paul F. Bray; Chad A. Shaw


Blood | 2013

Effect Of Age and Gender On Human Platelet mRNA and Micro-RNA Levels

Lukas M. Simon; Leonard C. Edelstein; Srikanth Nagalla; Angela L. Bergeron; Edward S. Chen; Xianguo Kong; Lin Ma; Satya P. Kunapuli; Michael Holinstat; Steven E. McKenzie; Jing Fei Dong; Chad A. Shaw


Blood | 2013

Molecular Characterization Of a Patient With Thrombocytopenia-Absent Radii (TAR) Syndrome and Diffuse Langerhans Cell Histiocytosis (LCH): Novel Genetic Findings

Alina Dulau Florea; Xianguo Kong; Douglass A. Drelich; Srikanth Nagalla; Steven E. McKenzie

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Chad A. Shaw

Baylor College of Medicine

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Paul F. Bray

Thomas Jefferson University

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Lin Ma

Thomas Jefferson University

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Lukas M. Simon

Baylor College of Medicine

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Srikanth Nagalla

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Edward S. Chen

Baylor College of Medicine

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Steven E. McKenzie

Thomas Jefferson University

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Jing Fei Dong

University of Washington

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