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Dive into the research topics where Xiaochong Wu is active.

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Featured researches published by Xiaochong Wu.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Multiple recurrent genetic events converge on control of histone lysine methylation in medulloblastoma

Paul A. Northcott; Yukiko Nakahara; Xiaochong Wu; Lars Feuk; David W. Ellison; Sid Croul; Stephen C. Mack; Paul N. Kongkham; John Peacock; Adrian Dubuc; Young Shin Ra; Karen Zilberberg; Jessica McLeod; Stephen W. Scherer; J. Sunil Rao; Charles G. Eberhart; Wiesia Grajkowska; Yancey Gillespie; Boleslaw Lach; Richard Grundy; Ian F. Pollack; Ronald L. Hamilton; Timothy Van Meter; Carlos Gilberto Carlotti; Frederick A. Boop; Darrell D. Bigner; Richard J. Gilbertson; James T. Rutka; Michael D. Taylor

We used high-resolution SNP genotyping to identify regions of genomic gain and loss in the genomes of 212 medulloblastomas, malignant pediatric brain tumors. We found focal amplifications of 15 known oncogenes and focal deletions of 20 known tumor suppressor genes (TSG), most not previously implicated in medulloblastoma. Notably, we identified previously unknown amplifications and homozygous deletions, including recurrent, mutually exclusive, highly focal genetic events in genes targeting histone lysine methylation, particularly that of histone 3, lysine 9 (H3K9). Post-translational modification of histone proteins is critical for regulation of gene expression, can participate in determination of stem cell fates and has been implicated in carcinogenesis. Consistent with our genetic data, restoration of expression of genes controlling H3K9 methylation greatly diminishes proliferation of medulloblastoma in vitro. Copy number aberrations of genes with critical roles in writing, reading, removing and blocking the state of histone lysine methylation, particularly at H3K9, suggest that defective control of the histone code contributes to the pathogenesis of medulloblastoma.


Nature | 2012

Clonal selection drives genetic divergence of metastatic medulloblastoma

Xiaochong Wu; Paul A. Northcott; Adrian Dubuc; Adam J. Dupuy; David Shih; Hendrik Witt; Sidney Croul; Eric Bouffet; Daniel W. Fults; Charles G. Eberhart; Livia Garzia; Timothy Van Meter; David Zagzag; Nada Jabado; Jeremy Schwartzentruber; Jacek Majewski; Todd E. Scheetz; Stefan M. Pfister; Andrey Korshunov; Xiao-Nan Li; Stephen W. Scherer; Yoon-Jae Cho; Keiko Akagi; Tobey J. MacDonald; Jan Koster; Martin McCabe; Aaron L. Sarver; V. Peter Collins; William A. Weiss; David A. Largaespada

Medulloblastoma, the most common malignant paediatric brain tumour, arises in the cerebellum and disseminates through the cerebrospinal fluid in the leptomeningeal space to coat the brain and spinal cord. Dissemination, a marker of poor prognosis, is found in up to 40% of children at diagnosis and in most children at the time of recurrence. Affected children therefore are treated with radiation to the entire developing brain and spinal cord, followed by high-dose chemotherapy, with the ensuing deleterious effects on the developing nervous system. The mechanisms of dissemination through the cerebrospinal fluid are poorly studied, and medulloblastoma metastases have been assumed to be biologically similar to the primary tumour. Here we show that in both mouse and human medulloblastoma, the metastases from an individual are extremely similar to each other but are divergent from the matched primary tumour. Clonal genetic events in the metastases can be demonstrated in a restricted subclone of the primary tumour, suggesting that only rare cells within the primary tumour have the ability to metastasize. Failure to account for the bicompartmental nature of metastatic medulloblastoma could be a major barrier to the development of effective targeted therapies.


Nature | 2014

Epigenomic alterations define lethal CIMP-positive ependymomas of infancy.

Stephen C. Mack; Hendrik Witt; Rosario M. Piro; Lei Gu; Scott Zuyderduyn; A. M. Stütz; Xiaosong Wang; Marco Gallo; Livia Garzia; Kory Zayne; Xiaoyang Zhang; Vijay Ramaswamy; Natalie Jäger; David T. W. Jones; Martin Sill; Trevor J. Pugh; M. Ryzhova; Khalida Wani; David Shih; Renee Head; Marc Remke; S. D. Bailey; Thomas Zichner; Claudia C. Faria; Mark Barszczyk; Sebastian Stark; Huriye Seker-Cin; Sonja Hutter; Pascal Johann; Sebastian Bender

Ependymomas are common childhood brain tumours that occur throughout the nervous system, but are most common in the paediatric hindbrain. Current standard therapy comprises surgery and radiation, but not cytotoxic chemotherapy as it does not further increase survival. Whole-genome and whole-exome sequencing of 47 hindbrain ependymomas reveals an extremely low mutation rate, and zero significant recurrent somatic single nucleotide variants. Although devoid of recurrent single nucleotide variants and focal copy number aberrations, poor-prognosis hindbrain ependymomas exhibit a CpG island methylator phenotype. Transcriptional silencing driven by CpG methylation converges exclusively on targets of the Polycomb repressive complex 2 which represses expression of differentiation genes through trimethylation of H3K27. CpG island methylator phenotype-positive hindbrain ependymomas are responsive to clinical drugs that target either DNA or H3K27 methylation both in vitro and in vivo. We conclude that epigenetic modifiers are the first rational therapeutic candidates for this deadly malignancy, which is epigenetically deregulated but genetically bland.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2014

Cytogenetic Prognostication Within Medulloblastoma Subgroups

David Shih; Paul A. Northcott; Marc Remke; Andrey Korshunov; Vijay Ramaswamy; Marcel Kool; Betty Luu; Yuan Yao; Xin Wang; Adrian Dubuc; Livia Garzia; John Peacock; Stephen C. Mack; Xiaochong Wu; Adi Rolider; A. Sorana Morrissy; Florence M.G. Cavalli; David T. W. Jones; Karel Zitterbart; Claudia C. Faria; Ulrich Schüller; Leos Kren; Toshihiro Kumabe; Teiji Tominaga; Young Shin Ra; Miklós Garami; Péter Hauser; Jennifer A. Chan; Shenandoah Robinson; László Bognár

PURPOSE Medulloblastoma comprises four distinct molecular subgroups: WNT, SHH, Group 3, and Group 4. Current medulloblastoma protocols stratify patients based on clinical features: patient age, metastatic stage, extent of resection, and histologic variant. Stark prognostic and genetic differences among the four subgroups suggest that subgroup-specific molecular biomarkers could improve patient prognostication. PATIENTS AND METHODS Molecular biomarkers were identified from a discovery set of 673 medulloblastomas from 43 cities around the world. Combined risk stratification models were designed based on clinical and cytogenetic biomarkers identified by multivariable Cox proportional hazards analyses. Identified biomarkers were tested using fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) on a nonoverlapping medulloblastoma tissue microarray (n = 453), with subsequent validation of the risk stratification models. RESULTS Subgroup information improves the predictive accuracy of a multivariable survival model compared with clinical biomarkers alone. Most previously published cytogenetic biomarkers are only prognostic within a single medulloblastoma subgroup. Profiling six FISH biomarkers (GLI2, MYC, chromosome 11 [chr11], chr14, 17p, and 17q) on formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues, we can reliably and reproducibly identify very low-risk and very high-risk patients within SHH, Group 3, and Group 4 medulloblastomas. CONCLUSION Combining subgroup and cytogenetic biomarkers with established clinical biomarkers substantially improves patient prognostication, even in the context of heterogeneous clinical therapies. The prognostic significance of most molecular biomarkers is restricted to a specific subgroup. We have identified a small panel of cytogenetic biomarkers that reliably identifies very high-risk and very low-risk groups of patients, making it an excellent tool for selecting patients for therapy intensification and therapy de-escalation in future clinical trials.


Nature | 2017

The whole-genome landscape of medulloblastoma subtypes

Paul A. Northcott; Ivo Buchhalter; A. Sorana Morrissy; Volker Hovestadt; Joachim Weischenfeldt; Tobias Ehrenberger; Susanne Gröbner; Maia Segura-Wang; Thomas Zichner; Vasilisa A. Rudneva; Hans-Jörg Warnatz; Nikos Sidiropoulos; Aaron H. Phillips; Steven E. Schumacher; Kortine Kleinheinz; Sebastian M. Waszak; Serap Erkek; David Jones; Barbara C. Worst; Marcel Kool; Marc Zapatka; Natalie Jäger; Lukas Chavez; Barbara Hutter; Matthias Bieg; Nagarajan Paramasivam; Michael Heinold; Zuguang Gu; Naveed Ishaque; Christina Jäger-Schmidt

Current therapies for medulloblastoma, a highly malignant childhood brain tumour, impose debilitating effects on the developing child, and highlight the need for molecularly targeted treatments with reduced toxicity. Previous studies have been unable to identify the full spectrum of driver genes and molecular processes that operate in medulloblastoma subgroups. Here we analyse the somatic landscape across 491 sequenced medulloblastoma samples and the molecular heterogeneity among 1,256 epigenetically analysed cases, and identify subgroup-specific driver alterations that include previously undiscovered actionable targets. Driver mutations were confidently assigned to most patients belonging to Group 3 and Group 4 medulloblastoma subgroups, greatly enhancing previous knowledge. New molecular subtypes were differentially enriched for specific driver events, including hotspot in-frame insertions that target KBTBD4 and ‘enhancer hijacking’ events that activate PRDM6. Thus, the application of integrative genomics to an extensive cohort of clinical samples derived from a single childhood cancer entity revealed a series of cancer genes and biologically relevant subtype diversity that represent attractive therapeutic targets for the treatment of patients with medulloblastoma.


Nature Medicine | 2014

The G protein α subunit Gαs is a tumor suppressor in Sonic hedgehog-driven medulloblastoma.

Xuelian He; Liguo Zhang; Ying Chen; Marc Remke; David Shih; Fanghui Lu; Haibo Wang; Yaqi Deng; Yang Yu; Yong Xia; Xiaochong Wu; Vijay Ramaswamy; Tom Hu; Fan Wang; Wenhao Zhou; Dennis K. Burns; Se Hoon Kim; Marcel Kool; Stefan M. Pfister; Lee S. Weinstein; Scott L. Pomeroy; Richard J. Gilbertson; Joshua B. Rubin; Yiping Hou; Robert J. Wechsler-Reya; Michael D. Taylor; Q. Richard Lu

Medulloblastoma, the most common malignant childhood brain tumor, exhibits distinct molecular subtypes and cellular origins. Genetic alterations driving medulloblastoma initiation and progression remain poorly understood. Herein, we identify GNAS, encoding the G protein Gαs, as a potent tumor suppressor gene that, when expressed at low levels, defines a subset of aggressive Sonic hedgehog (SHH)-driven human medulloblastomas. Ablation of the single Gnas gene in anatomically distinct progenitors in mice is sufficient to induce Shh-associated medulloblastomas, which recapitulate their human counterparts. Gαs is highly enriched at the primary cilium of granule neuron precursors and suppresses Shh signaling by regulating both the cAMP-dependent pathway and ciliary trafficking of Hedgehog pathway components. Elevation in levels of a Gαs effector, cAMP, effectively inhibits tumor cell proliferation and progression in Gnas-ablated mice. Thus, our gain- and loss-of-function studies identify a previously unrecognized tumor suppressor function for Gαs that can be found consistently across Shh-group medulloblastomas of disparate cellular and anatomical origins, highlighting G protein modulation as a potential therapeutic avenue.


Acta Neuropathologica | 2015

Medulloblastoma subgroups remain stable across primary and metastatic compartments

Xin Wang; Adrian Dubuc; Vijay Ramaswamy; Stephen C. Mack; Deena M A Gendoo; Marc Remke; Xiaochong Wu; Livia Garzia; Betty Luu; Florence M.G. Cavalli; John Peacock; Borja López; Patryk Skowron; David Zagzag; David Lyden; Caitlin Hoffman; Yoon-Jae Cho; Charles G. Eberhart; Tobey J. MacDonald; Xiao-Nan Li; Timothy Van Meter; Paul A. Northcott; Benjamin Haibe-Kains; Cynthia Hawkins; James T. Rutka; Eric Bouffet; Stefan M. Pfister; Andrey Korshunov; Michael D. Taylor

Medulloblastoma comprises four distinct molecular variants with distinct genetics, transcriptomes, and outcomes. Subgroup affiliation has been previously shown to remain stable at the time of recurrence, which likely reflects their distinct cells of origin. However, a therapeutically relevant question that remains unanswered is subgroup stability in the metastatic compartment. We assembled a cohort of 12-paired primary-metastatic tumors collected in the MAGIC consortium, and established their molecular subgroup affiliation by performing integrative gene expression and DNA methylation analysis. Frozen tissues were collected and profiled using Affymetrix gene expression arrays and Illumina methylation arrays. Class prediction and hierarchical clustering were performed using existing published datasets. Our molecular analysis, using consensus integrative genomic data, establishes the unequivocal maintenance of molecular subgroup affiliation in metastatic medulloblastoma. We further validated these findings by interrogating a non-overlapping cohort of 19 pairs of primary-metastatic tumors from the Burdenko Neurosurgical Institute using an orthogonal technique of immunohistochemical staining. This investigation represents the largest reported primary-metastatic paired cohort profiled to date and provides a unique opportunity to evaluate subgroup-specific molecular aberrations within the metastatic compartment. Our findings further support the hypothesis that medulloblastoma subgroups arise from distinct cells of origin, which are carried forward from ontogeny to oncology.


Cancer Research | 2012

Functional Genomics Identifies Drivers of Medulloblastoma Dissemination

Michael L. Mumert; Adrian Dubuc; Xiaochong Wu; Paul A. Northcott; Steven S. Chin; Carolyn A. Pedone; Michael D. Taylor; Daniel W. Fults

Medulloblastomas are malignant brain tumors that arise in the cerebellum in children and disseminate via the cerebrospinal fluid to the leptomeningeal spaces of the brain and spinal cord. Challenged by the poor prognosis for patients with metastatic dissemination, pediatric oncologists have developed aggressive treatment protocols, combining surgery, craniospinal radiation, and high-dose chemotherapy, that often cause disabling neurotoxic effects in long-term survivors. Insights into the genetic control of medulloblastoma dissemination have come from transposon insertion mutagenesis studies. Mobilizing the Sleeping Beauty transposon in cerebellar neural progenitor cells caused widespread dissemination of typically nonmetastatic medulloblastomas in Patched(+/-) mice, in which Shh signaling is hyperactive. Candidate metastasis genes were identified by sequencing the insertion sites and then mapping these sequences back to the mouse genome. To determine whether genes located at transposon insertion sites directly caused medulloblastomas to disseminate, we overexpressed candidate genes in Nestin(+) neural progenitors in the cerebella of mice by retroviral transfer in combination with Shh. We show here that ectopic expression of Eras, Lhx1, Ccrk, and Akt shifted the in vivo growth characteristics of Shh-induced medulloblastomas from a localized pattern to a disseminated pattern in which tumor cells seeded the leptomeningeal spaces of the brain and spinal cord.


Chinese Journal of Cancer | 2011

Mouse models of medulloblastoma

Xiaochong Wu; Paul A. Northcott; Sidney Croul; Michael D. Taylor

Medulloblastoma is the most common malignant pediatric brain tumor. Despite its prevalence and importance in pediatric neuro-oncology, the genes and pathways responsible for its initiation, maintenance, and progression remain poorly understood. Genetically engineered mouse models are an essential tool for uncovering the molecular and cellular basis of human diseases, including cancer, and serve a valuable role as preclinical models for testing targeted therapies. In this review, we summarize how such models have been successfully applied to the study of medulloblastoma over the past decade and what we might expect in the coming years.


Nature Genetics | 2017

Spatial heterogeneity in medulloblastoma

A. Sorana Morrissy; Florence M.G. Cavalli; Marc Remke; Vijay Ramaswamy; David Shih; Borja L. Holgado; Hamza Farooq; Laura K. Donovan; Livia Garzia; Sameer Agnihotri; Erin Kiehna; Eloi Mercier; Chelsea Mayoh; Simon Papillon-Cavanagh; Hamid Nikbakht; Tenzin Gayden; Jonathon Torchia; Daniel Picard; Diana Merino; Maria Vladoiu; Betty Luu; Xiaochong Wu; Craig Daniels; Stuart Horswell; Yuan Yao Thompson; Volker Hovestadt; Paul A. Northcott; David T. W. Jones; John Peacock; Xin Wang

Spatial heterogeneity of transcriptional and genetic markers between physically isolated biopsies of a single tumor poses major barriers to the identification of biomarkers and the development of targeted therapies that will be effective against the entire tumor. We analyzed the spatial heterogeneity of multiregional biopsies from 35 patients, using a combination of transcriptomic and genomic profiles. Medulloblastomas (MBs), but not high-grade gliomas (HGGs), demonstrated spatially homogeneous transcriptomes, which allowed for accurate subgrouping of tumors from a single biopsy. Conversely, somatic mutations that affect genes suitable for targeted therapeutics demonstrated high levels of spatial heterogeneity in MB, malignant glioma, and renal cell carcinoma (RCC). Actionable targets found in a single MB biopsy were seldom clonal across the entire tumor, which brings the efficacy of monotherapies against a single target into question. Clinical trials of targeted therapies for MB should first ensure the spatially ubiquitous nature of the target mutation.

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Adrian Dubuc

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Xin Wang

University of Toronto

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Stephen C. Mack

Baylor College of Medicine

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Betty Luu

University of Toronto

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