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Dive into the research topics where Xiuping Yu is active.

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Featured researches published by Xiuping Yu.


Development | 2005

Forkhead box A1 regulates prostate ductal morphogenesis and promotes epithelial cell maturation

Nan Gao; Kenichiro Ishii; Janni Mirosevich; Satoru Kuwajima; Stacey R. Oppenheimer; Richard L. Roberts; Ming Jiang; Xiuping Yu; Scott B. Shappell; Richard M. Caprioli; Markus Stoffel; Simon W. Hayward; Robert J. Matusik

We have previously shown that a forkhead transcription factor Foxa1 interacts with androgen signaling and controls prostate differentiated response. Here, we show the mouse Foxa1 expression marks the entire embryonic urogenital sinus epithelium (UGE), contrasting with Shh and Foxa2, which are restricted to the basally located cells during prostate budding. The Foxa1-deficient mouse prostate shows a severely altered ductal pattern that resembles primitive epithelial cords surrounded by thick stromal layers. Characterization of these mutant cells indicates a population of basal-like cells similar to those found in the embryonic UGE, whereas no differentiated or mature luminal epithelial cells are found in Foxa1-deficient epithelium. These phenotypic changes are accompanied with molecular aberrations, including focal epithelial activation of Shh and elevated Foxa2 and Notch1 in the null epithelium. Perturbed epithelial-stromal interactions induced by Foxa1-deficient epithelium is evident, as demonstrated by the expansion of surrounding smooth muscle and elevated levels of stromal factors (Bmp4, Fgf7, Fgf10 and Gli). The prostatic homeobox protein Nkx3.1, a known proliferation inhibitor, was downregulated in Foxa1-deficient epithelial cells, while several prostate-specific androgen-regulated markers, including a novel Foxa1 target, are absent in the null prostate. These data indicate that Foxa1 plays a pivotal role in controlling prostate morphogenesis and cell differentiation.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2005

Foxa1 and Foxa2 Interact with the Androgen Receptor to Regulate Prostate and Epididymal Genes Differentially

Xiuping Yu; Aparna Gupta; Yongqing Wang; Kichiya Suzuki; Janni Mirosevich; Marie-Claire Orgebin-Crist; Robert J. Matusik

Abstract: Previous studies from our group have shown that Foxa1 is expressed in the prostate and interacts with the androgen receptor (AR) to regulate prostate‐specific genes such as prostate‐specific antigen (PSA) and probasin (PB). We report here that Foxa2 but not Foxa1 is expressed in the epididymis. Further, Foxa2 interacts with the AR to regulate the mouse epididymal retinoic acid binding protein (mE‐RABP) gene, an epididymis‐specific gene. Binding of Foxa2 to the mE‐RABP promoter was confirmed by gel‐shift and chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays. Overexpression of Foxa2 suppresses androgen activation of the mE‐RABP promoter while overexpression of Foxa2 with prostate‐specific promoters activates gene expression in an androgen‐independent manner. GST pull‐down assays determined that both Foxa1 and Foxa2 physically interact with the DNA binding domain of the AR. The interaction between Foxa proteins and AR was further confirmed by gel‐shift assays where Foxa protein was recruited to AR binding oligomers even when Foxa binding sites were not present, and AR was recruited to Foxa binding oligomers even in the absence of an AR binding site. Given that Foxa1 and Foxa2 proteins are expressed differentially in the prostate and epididymis, these data suggest that the Foxa proteins have distinct effects on AR‐regulated genes in different male reproductive accessory organs.


The Prostate | 2009

Activation of β-Catenin in mouse prostate causes HGPIN and continuous prostate growth after castration

Xiuping Yu; Yongqing Wang; Ming Jiang; Brian Bierie; Pradip Roy-Burman; Michael M. Shen; Makoto M. Taketo; Marcia L. Wills; Robert J. Matusik

The role of Wnt/β‐Catenin signaling in embryogenesis and carcinogenesis has been extensively studied in organs such as colon, lung and pancreas, but little is known about Wnt/β‐Catenin signaling in the prostate. Although stabilizing mutations in APC and β‐Catenin are rare in primary prostate tumors, recent studies suggest that cytoplasmic/nuclear β‐Catenin is associated with advanced, metastatic, hormone‐refractory prostate carcinoma.


Oncogene | 2011

Wnt/β-Catenin activation promotes prostate tumor progression in a mouse model

Xiuping Yu; Yongqing Wang; David J. DeGraff; Marcia L. Wills; Robert J. Matusik

Our previous studies have found that activation of Wnt/β-catenin signaling resulted in mouse prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (mPIN). In the large probasin promoter directed SV40-large T-antigen (LPB–Tag) expressing mouse prostate, mPIN forms with rare areas of adenocarcinoma. Combining expression of both Wnt-signaling and Tag expression in the mouse prostate, we have studied the role of Wnt/β-catenin signaling in the progression from mPIN to adenocarcinoma. Our results show that the prostates of mice expressing Tag alone or nuclear β-catenin alone developed mPIN, whereas the activation of both Tag and the Wnt/β-catenin pathway resulted in invasive prostate adenocarcinoma. Furthermore, Foxa2, a forkhead transcription factor, was induced by active Wnt/β-catenin signaling, and the expression of Foxa2 was associated with the invasive phenotype in the primary prostate cancer. In the LPB–Tag/dominant active (DA) β-catenin prostates, MMP7, a Wnt/β-catenin target gene, was upregulated. Furthermore, we also assessed AR and AR signaling pathway in these LPB–Tag/DA β-catenin mice. Although β-catenin is a well-known AR co-activator in vitro, our study provides strong in vivo evidences indicating that both AR protein and the AR pathway were downregulated in the prostate of LPB–Tag/DA β-catenin mice. Histological analysis shows that prostate sections derived from the LPB–Tag/DA β-catenin mice display neuroendocrine differentiation (NED), but NE cancer does not develop. Together, our findings indicate that Wnt/β-catenin signaling has an important role in the progression of mPIN to prostate adenocarcinoma.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Loss of the Urothelial Differentiation Marker FOXA1 Is Associated with High Grade, Late Stage Bladder Cancer and Increased Tumor Proliferation

David J. DeGraff; Peter E. Clark; Justin M. Cates; Hironobu Yamashita; Victoria L. Robinson; Xiuping Yu; Mark E. Smolkin; Sam S. Chang; Michael S. Cookson; Mary K. Herrick; Shahrokh F. Shariat; Gary D. Steinberg; Henry F. Frierson; Xue-Ru Wu; Dan Theodorescu; Robert J. Matusik

Approximately 50% of patients with muscle-invasive bladder cancer (MIBC) develop metastatic disease, which is almost invariably lethal. However, our understanding of pathways that drive aggressive behavior of MIBC is incomplete. Members of the FOXA subfamily of transcription factors are implicated in normal urogenital development and urologic malignancies. FOXA proteins are implicated in normal urothelial differentiation, but their role in bladder cancer is unknown. We examined FOXA expression in commonly used in vitro models of bladder cancer and in human bladder cancer specimens, and used a novel in vivo tissue recombination system to determine the functional significance of FOXA1 expression in bladder cancer. Logistic regression analysis showed decreased FOXA1 expression is associated with increasing tumor stage (p<0.001), and loss of FOXA1 is associated with high histologic grade (p<0.001). Also, we found that bladder urothelium that has undergone keratinizing squamous metaplasia, a precursor to the development of squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) exhibited loss of FOXA1 expression. Furthermore, 81% of cases of SCC of the bladder were negative for FOXA1 staining compared to only 40% of urothelial cell carcinomas. In addition, we showed that a subpopulation of FOXA1 negative urothelial tumor cells are highly proliferative. Knockdown of FOXA1 in RT4 bladder cancer cells resulted in increased expression of UPK1B, UPK2, UPK3A, and UPK3B, decreased E-cadherin expression and significantly increased cell proliferation, while overexpression of FOXA1 in T24 cells increased E-cadherin expression and significantly decreased cell growth and invasion. In vivo recombination of bladder cancer cells engineered to exhibit reduced FOXA1 expression with embryonic rat bladder mesenchyme and subsequent renal capsule engraftment resulted in enhanced tumor proliferation. These findings provide the first evidence linking loss of FOXA1 expression with histological subtypes of MIBC and urothelial cell proliferation, and suggest an important role for FOXA1 in the malignant phenotype of MIBC.


Oncogene | 2015

Inhibition of NF-kappa B signaling restores responsiveness of castrate-resistant prostate cancer cells to anti-androgen treatment by decreasing androgen receptor-variant expression

Renjie Jin; Hironobu Yamashita; Xiuping Yu; Jingbin Wang; Omar E. Franco; Yufen Wang; Simon W. Hayward; Robert J. Matusik

Androgen receptor splicing variants (ARVs) that lack the ligand-binding domain (LBD) are associated with the development of castration-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC), including resistance to the new generation of high-affinity anti-androgens. However, the mechanism by which ARV expression is regulated is not fully understood. In this study, we show that the activation of classical nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-κB) signaling increases the expression of ARVs in prostate cancer (PCa) cells and converts androgen-sensitive PCa cells to become androgen-insensitive, whereas downregulation of NF-κB signaling inhibits ARV expression and restores responsiveness of CRPC to anti-androgen therapy. In addition, we demonstrated that combination of anti-androgen with NF-κB-targeted therapy inhibits efficiently tumor growth of human CRPC xenografts. These results indicate that induction of ARVs by activated NF-κB signaling in PCa cells is a critical mechanism by which the PCa progresses to CRPC. This has important implications as it can prolong the survival of CRPC patients by restoring the tumors to once again respond to conventional androgen-deprivation therapy (ADT).


Molecular Endocrinology | 2014

NFI transcription factors interact with FOXA1 to regulate prostate-specific gene expression

Magdalena M. Grabowska; Amicia D. Elliott; David J. DeGraff; Philip D. Anderson; Govindaraj Anumanthan; Hironobu Yamashita; Qian Sun; David B. Friedman; David L. Hachey; Xiuping Yu; Jonathan H. Sheehan; Jung Mo Ahn; Ganesh V. Raj; David W. Piston; Richard M. Gronostajski; Robert J. Matusik

Androgen receptor (AR) action throughout prostate development and in maintenance of the prostatic epithelium is partly controlled by interactions between AR and forkhead box (FOX) transcription factors, particularly FOXA1. We sought to identity additional FOXA1 binding partners that may mediate prostate-specific gene expression. Here we identify the nuclear factor I (NFI) family of transcription factors as novel FOXA1 binding proteins. All four family members (NFIA, NFIB, NFIC, and NFIX) can interact with FOXA1, and knockdown studies in androgen-dependent LNCaP cells determined that modulating expression of NFI family members results in changes in AR target gene expression. This effect is probably mediated by binding of NFI family members to AR target gene promoters, because chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) studies found that NFIB bound to the prostate-specific antigen enhancer. Förster resonance energy transfer studies revealed that FOXA1 is capable of bringing AR and NFIX into proximity, indicating that FOXA1 facilitates the AR and NFI interaction by bridging the complex. To determine the extent to which NFI family members regulate AR/FOXA1 target genes, motif analysis of publicly available data for ChIP followed by sequencing was undertaken. This analysis revealed that 34.4% of peaks bound by AR and FOXA1 contain NFI binding sites. Validation of 8 of these peaks by ChIP revealed that NFI family members can bind 6 of these predicted genomic elements, and 4 of the 8 associated genes undergo gene expression changes as a result of individual NFI knockdown. These observations suggest that NFI regulation of FOXA1/AR action is a frequent event, with individual family members playing distinct roles in AR target gene expression.


Differentiation | 2008

Prostate epithelial cell fate.

Robert J. Matusik; Ren Jie Jin; Qian Sun; Yongqing Wang; Xiuping Yu; Aparna Gupta; Srinivas Nandana; Thomas C. Case; Manik Paul; Janni Mirosevich; Siam Oottamasathien; John C. Thomas

Androgen receptor (AR) within prostatic mesenchymal cells, with the absence of AR in the epithelium, is still sufficient to induce prostate development. AR in the luminal epithelium is required to express the secretory markers associated with differentiation. Nkx3.1 is expressed in the epithelium in early prostatic embryonic development and expression is maintained in the adult. Induction of the mouse prostate gland by the embryonic mesenchymal cells results in the organization of a sparse basal layer below the luminal epithelium with rare neuroendocrine cells that are interdispersed within this basal layer. The human prostate shows similar glandular organization; however, the basal layer is continuous. The strong inductive nature of embryonic prostatic and bladder mesenchymal cells is demonstrated in grafts where embryonic stem (ES) cells are induced to differentiate and organize as a prostate and bladder, respectively. Further, the ES cells can be driven by the correct embryonic mesenchymal cells to form epithelium that differentiates into secretory prostate glands and differentiated bladders that produce uroplakin. This requires the ES cells to mature into endoderm that gives rise to differentiated epithelium. This process is control by transcription factors in both the inductive mesenchymal cells (AR) and the responding epithelium (FoxA1 and Nkx3.1) that allows for organ development and differentiation. In this review, we explore a molecular mechanism where the pattern of transcription factor expression controls cell determination, where the cell is assigned a developmental fate and subsequently cell differentiation, and where the assigned cell now emerges with its own unique character.


Laboratory Investigation | 2014

FOXA1 deletion in luminal epithelium causes prostatic hyperplasia and alteration of differentiated phenotype

David J. DeGraff; Magdalena M. Grabowska; Tom Case; Xiuping Yu; Mary K. Herrick; William J. Hayward; Douglas W. Strand; Justin M. Cates; Simon W. Hayward; Nan Gao; Michael A. Walter; Ralph Buttyan; Yajun Yi; Klaus H. Kaestner; Robert J. Matusik

The forkhead box (Fox) superfamily of transcription factors has essential roles in organogenesis and tissue differentiation. Foxa1 and Foxa2 are expressed during prostate budding and ductal morphogenesis, whereas Foxa1 expression is retained in adult prostate epithelium. Previous characterization of prostatic tissue rescued from embryonic Foxa1 knockout mice revealed Foxa1 to be essential for ductal morphogenesis and epithelial maturation. However, it is unknown whether Foxa1 is required to maintain the differentiated status in adult prostate epithelium. Here, we employed the PBCre4 transgenic system and determined the impact of prostate-specific Foxa1 deletion in adult murine epithelium. PBCre4/Foxa1loxp/loxp mouse prostates showed progressive florid hyperplasia with extensive cribriform patterning, with the anterior prostate being most affected. Immunohistochemistry studies show mosaic Foxa1 KO consistent with PBCre4 activity, with Foxa1 KO epithelial cells specifically exhibiting altered cell morphology, increased proliferation, and elevated expression of basal cell markers. Castration studies showed that, while PBCre4/Foxa1loxp/loxp prostates did not exhibit altered sensitivity in response to hormone ablation compared with control prostates, the number of Foxa1-positive cells in mosaic Foxa1 KO prostates was significantly reduced compared with Foxa1-negative cells following castration. Unexpectedly, gene expression profile analyses revealed that Foxa1 deletion caused abnormal expression of seminal vesicle-associated genes in KO prostates. In summary, these results indicate Foxa1 expression is required for the maintenance of prostatic cellular differentiation.


The Prostate | 2014

Skp2 regulates androgen receptor through ubiquitin-mediated degradation independent of Akt/mTOR pathways in prostate cancer

Bo Li; Wenfu Lu; Qing Yang; Xiuping Yu; Robert J. Matusik; Zhenbang Chen

The intervention of advanced prostate cancer (PCa) in patients has been commonly depending on androgen deprivation therapy. Despite of tremendous research efforts, however, molecular mechanisms on AR regulation remain poorly understood, particularly for castration resistant prostate cancer (CRPC). Targeting AR and associated factors is considered an effective strategy in PCa treatment.

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David J. DeGraff

Pennsylvania State University

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Yongqing Wang

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Qian Sun

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Aparna Gupta

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Magdalena M. Grabowska

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Janni Mirosevich

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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