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Featured researches published by Ying Kuang.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2009

An essential role for DNA methyltransferase 3a in melanoma tumorigenesis

Tao Deng; Ying Kuang; Long Wang; Jiang Li; Wang Z; Jian Fei

Abnormal DNA methylation and associated silencing of tumor suppressor genes are common to many types of cancers. Among the three coordinate DNA methyltransferases (Dnmts), Dnmt1 and Dnmt3b were both shown to be important for cancer cell survival and tumorigenesis. However, the relationship between Dnmt3a and tumorigenesis is still largely unknown. Here, we show that inhibition of Dnmt3a expression, by stable transfection of a Dnmt3a-RNA interference (RNAi) construct dramatically inhibited melanoma growth and metastasis in mouse melanoma models. Microarray analysis revealed that genes critical for the tumor immune response, were implicated in the inhibition of melanoma growth. Expression of a cluster of class I and class II MHC genes, class II transactivator (Ciita), as well as a subset of 5 chemokines (Cxcl9, Cxcl16, Ccl12, Ccl4, and Ccl2) were up-regulated. Furthermore, we determined that the promoter IV of Ciita was significantly demethylated in Dnmt3a-depleted tumors. In addition, several known tumor-related genes, which are critical for developmental processes and cell cycle, were confirmed to be misregulated, including TgfB1, Socs1, Socs2, E2F6, Ccne1, and Cyr61. The results presented in this report strongly suggest that Dnmt3a plays an essential role in melanoma tumorigenesis, and that the underlying mechanisms include the modulation of the tumor immune response, as well as other processes.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2012

A Nonsense Mutation in DHTKD1 Causes Charcot-Marie-Tooth Disease Type 2 in a Large Chinese Pedigree

Wangyang Xu; Ming-Min Gu; Lian-hua Sun; Wen-ting Guo; Houbao Zhu; Jian-Fang Ma; Wentao Yuan; Ying Kuang; Bao-jun Ji; Xiao-lin Wu; Yan Chen; Hong-Xin Zhang; Fu-ting Sun; Wei Huang; Lei Huang; Sheng-Di Chen; Wang Z

Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease represents a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of inherited neuropathies. Here, we report a five-generation family of eight affected individuals with CMT disease type 2, CMT2. Genome-wide linkage analysis showed that the disease phenotype is closely linked to chromosomal region 10p13-14, which spans 5.41 Mb between D10S585 and D10S1477. DNA-sequencing analysis revealed a nonsense mutation, c.1455T>G (p.Tyr485(∗)), in exon 8 of dehydrogenase E1 and transketolase domain-containing 1 (DHTKD1) in all eight affected individuals, but not in other unaffected individuals in this family or in 250 unrelated normal persons. DHTKD1 mRNA expression levels in peripheral blood of affected persons were observed to be half of those in unaffected individuals. In vitro studies have shown that, compared to wild-type mRNA and DHTKD1, mutant mRNA and truncated DHTKD1 are significantly decreased by rapid mRNA decay in transfected cells. Inhibition of nonsense-mediated mRNA decay by UPF1 silencing effectively rescued the decreased levels of mutant mRNA and protein. More importantly, DHTKD1 silencing was found to lead to impaired energy production, evidenced by decreased ATP, total NAD(+) and NADH, and NADH levels. In conclusion, our data demonstrate that the heterozygous nonsense mutation in DHTKD1 is one of CMT2-causative genetic alterations, implicating an important role for DHTKD1 in mitochondrial energy production and neurological development.


Biology of Reproduction | 2013

Prss37 Is Required for Male Fertility in the Mouse

Chunling Shen; Ying Kuang; Jianbing Liu; Jingsheng Feng; Xiaoyi Chen; Wenting Wu; Jun Chi; Lingyun Tang; Yifei Wang; Jian Fei; Wang Z

ABSTRACT In order to understand the mechanisms of mammalian fertilization, studies using genetically manipulated animals have provided us with plenty of interesting and valuable information on the genetic factors affecting male fertility. In the present work, we demonstrate for the first time that Prss37, a previously uncharacterized putative trypsin-like serine protease, is required for male fertility. Prss37 is highly and exclusively expressed in the testis of adult mice, especially in the elongating spermatids during spermiogenesis, and almost vanishes in the mature sperm of mice. Mice deficient for Prss37 show male infertility, but their mating activity, spermatogenesis, sperm morphology, and motility remain unaffected. In vivo fertilization assays revealed that Prss37−/− mice exhibited a markedly decreased fertilization rate (2.3% vs. 70% of that in control mice) accompanied by the defect in sperm migration from uterus into oviduct. In vitro study further showed sperm were incapable of sperm-egg recognition/binding when zona-intact eggs were exposed to Prss37−/− sperm, in which mature Adam3 was completely undetectable. Interestingly, however, Prss37−/− sperm were able to fertilize cumulus-intact oocytes in vitro. These data clearly indicate that Prss37 deficiency causes the absence of mature Adam3 in sperm and a defect in sperm migration from uterus into oviduct, which mainly accounts for male infertility of Prss37-null mice, while the defect in sperm-zona binding seems irrelevant to the fertilizing ability of Prss37−/− sperm.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Rig-I regulates NF-κB activity through binding to Nf-κb1 3′-UTR mRNA

Hong-Xin Zhang; Zi-Xing Liu; Yue-Ping Sun; Jiang Zhu; Shunyuan Lu; Xue-Song Liu; Qiu-Hua Huang; Yin-Yin Xie; Houbao Zhu; Suying Dang; Hai-Feng Chen; Guang-Yong Zheng; Yixue Li; Ying Kuang; Jian Fei; Sai-Juan Chen; Zhu Chen; Wang Z

Retinoic acid inducible gene I (RIG-I) senses viral RNAs and triggers innate antiviral responses through induction of type I IFNs and inflammatory cytokines. However, whether RIG-I interacts with host cellular RNA remains undetermined. Here we report that Rig-I interacts with multiple cellular mRNAs, especially Nf-κb1. Rig-I is required for NF-κB activity via regulating Nf-κb1 expression at posttranscriptional levels. It interacts with the multiple binding sites within 3′-UTR of Nf-κb1 mRNA. Further analyses reveal that three distinct tandem motifs enriched in the 3′-UTR fragments can be recognized by Rig-I. The 3′-UTR binding with Rig-I plays a critical role in normal translation of Nf-κb1 by recruiting the ribosomal proteins [ribosomal protein L13 (Rpl13) and Rpl8] and rRNAs (18S and 28S). Down-regulation of Rig-I or Rpl13 significantly reduces Nf-κb1 and 3′-UTR–mediated luciferase expression levels. These findings indicate that Rig-I functions as a positive regulator for NF-κB signaling and is involved in multiple biological processes in addition to host antivirus immunity.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Deficiency of Adiponectin Protects against Ovariectomy-Induced Osteoporosis in Mice

Fang Wang; Pei-xia Wang; Xiao-lin Wu; Suying Dang; Yan Chen; Ying-yin Ni; Li-hong Gao; Shun yuan Lu; Ying Kuang; Lei Huang; Jian Fei; Wang Z; Xiao-fen Pang

Adipokine adiponectin (APN) has been recently reported to play a role in regulating bone mineral density (BMD). To explore the mechanism by which APN affects BMD, we investigated BMD and biomechanical strength properties of the femur and vertebra in sham-operated (Sham) and ovariectomized (OVX) APN knockout (KO) mice as compared to their operated wild-type (WT) littermates. The results show that APN deficiency has no effect on BMD but induces increased ALP activity and osteoclast cell number. While OVX indeed leads to significant bone loss in both femora and vertebras of WT mice with comparable osteogenic activity and a significant increase in osteoclast cell number when compared to that of sham control. However, no differences in BMD, ALP activity and osteoclast cell number were found between Sham and OVX mice deficient for APN. Further studies using bone marrow derived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) demonstrate an enhanced osteogenic differentiation and extracellular matrix calcification in APN KO mice. The possible mechanism for APN deletion induced acceleration of osteogenesis could involve increased proliferation of MSCs and higher expression of Runx2 and Osterix genes. These findings indicate that APN deficiency can protect against OVX-induced osteoporosis in mice, suggesting a potential role of APN in regulating the balance of bone formation and bone resorption, especially in the development of post-menopausal osteoporosis.


Development Growth & Differentiation | 2007

Disruption of imprinting and aberrant embryo development in completely inbred embryonic stem cell-derived mice.

Tao Deng; Ying Kuang; Dan Zhang; Long Wang; Ruilin Sun; Guojiang Xu; Wang Z; Jian Fei

The completely embryonic stem (ES) cell‐derived mice (ES mice) produced by tetraploid embryo complementation provide us with a rapid and powerful approach for functional genome analysis. However, inbred ES cell lines often fail to generate ES mice. The genome of mouse ES cells is extremely unstable during in vitro culture and passage, and the expression of the imprinted genes is most likely to be affected. Whether the ES mice retain or repair the abnormalities of the donor ES cells has still to be determined. Here we report that the inbred ES mice were efficiently produced with the inbred ES cell line (SCR012). The ES fetuses grew more slowly before day 17.5 after mating, but had an excessive growth from day 17.5 to birth. Five imprinted genes examined (H19, Igf2, Igf2r, Peg1, Peg3) were expressed abnormally in ES fetuses. Most remarkably, the expression of H19 was dramatically repressed in the ES fetuses through the embryo developmental stage, and this repression was associated with abnormal biallelic methylation of the H19 upstream region. The altered methylation pattern of H19 was further demonstrated to have arisen in the donor ES cells and persisted on in vivo differentiation to the fetal stage. These results indicate that the ES fetuses did retain the epigenetic alterations in imprinted genes from the donor ES cells.


Genes & Cancer | 2010

Germinal Cell Aplasia in Kif18a Mutant Male Mice Due to Impaired Chromosome Congression and Dysregulated BubR1 and CENP-E

Xue-Song Liu; Xudong Zhao; Xiaoxing Wang; Yixin Yao; Liang-liang Zhang; Run-Zhe Shu; Weihua Ren; Ying Huang; Lei Huang; Ming-Min Gu; Ying Kuang; Long Wang; Shunyuan Lu; Jun Chi; Jing-sheng Fen; Yifei Wang; Jian Fei; Wei Dai; Wang Z

Chromosomal instability during cell division frequently causes cell death or malignant transformation. Orderly chromosome congression at the metaphase plate, a paramount process to vertebrate mitosis and meiosis, is controlled by a number of molecular regulators, including kinesins. Kinesin-8 (Kif18A) functions to control mitotic chromosome alignment at the mid-zone by negative regulation of kinetochore oscillation. Here the authors report that disrupting Kif18a function results in complete sterility in male but not in female mice. Histological examination reveals that Kif18a(-/-) testes exhibit severe developmental impairment of seminiferous tubules. Testis atrophy in Kif18a(-/-) mice is caused by perturbation of microtubule dynamics and spindle pole integrity, leading to chromosome congression defects during mitosis and meiosis. Depletion of KIF18A via RNAi causes mitotic arrest accompanied by unaligned chromosomes and increased microtubule nucleating centers in both GC-1 and HeLa cells. Prolonged depletion of KIF18A causes apoptosis due to perturbed microtubule dynamics. Further studies reveal that KIF18A silencing results in degradation of CENP-E and BubR1, which is accompanied by premature sister chromatid separation. KIF18A physically interacts with BubR1 and CENP-E, and this interaction is modulated during mitosis. Combined, the studies indicate that KIF18A is essential for normal chromosome congression during cell division and that the absence of KIF18A function causes severe defects in microtubule dynamics, spindle integrity, and checkpoint activation, leading to germinal cell aplasia in mice.


PLOS ONE | 2011

The cytoplasmic domain of MUC1 induces hyperplasia in the mammary gland and correlates with nuclear accumulation of β-catenin.

Yuan Li; Haiying Yi; Yixin Yao; Xiaodong Liao; Yiqun Xie; Jie Yang; Zheng Yan; Long Wang; Shunyuan Lu; Ying Kuang; Ming-Min Gu; Jian Fei; Wang Z; Lei Huang

MUC1 is an oncoprotein that is overexpressed in up to 90% of breast carcinomas. A previous in vitro study by our group demonstrated that the cytoplasmic domain of MUC1 (MUC1-CD), the minimal functional unit of MUC1, contributes to the malignant phenotype in cells by binding directly to β-catenin and protecting β-catenin from GSK3β-induced degradation. To understand the in vivo role of MUC1-CD in breast development, we generated a MUC1-CD transgenic mouse model under the control of the MMTV promoter in a C57BL/6J background, which is more resistant to breast tumor. We show that the expression of MUC1-CD in luminal epithelial cells of the mammary gland induced a hyperplasia phenotype characterized by the development of hyper-branching and extensive lobuloalveoli in transgenic mice. In addition to this hyperplasia, there was a marked increase in cellular proliferation in the mouse mammary gland. We further show that MUC1-CD induces nuclear localization of β-catenin, which is associated with a significant increase of β-catenin activity, as shown by the elevated expression of cyclin D1 and c-Myc in MMTV-MUC1-CD mice. Consistent with this finding, we observed that overexpression of MUC1-C is associated with β-catenin nuclear localization in tumor tissues and increased expression of Cyclin D1 and c-Myc in breast carcinoma specimens. Collectively, our data indicate a critical role for MUC1-CD in the development of mammary gland preneoplasia and tumorigenesis, suggesting MUC1-CD as a potential target for the diagnosis and chemoprevention of human breast cancer.


Biomaterials | 2013

The effect of overexpression of Dlx2 on the migration, proliferation and osteogenic differentiation of cranial neural crest stem cells

Jiewen Dai; Ying Kuang; Bing Fang; Hui Gong; Shunyuan Lu; Zhifang Mou; Hao Sun; Yuefu Dong; Jingting Lu; Wenbin Zhang; Jianfei Zhang; Wang Z; Xudong Wang; Guofang Shen

Craniofacial skeleton mainly originate from the cranial neural crest stem cells (CNCCs), which is a subpopulation of neural crest stem cells (NCCs). Dlx2, a member of the homeodomain family of transcription factors, plays crucial roles in the development of the CNCCs derived craniofacial skeleton. Previous reports reveal that Dlx2-targeted null mutation resulted in anomalies in the skeletal derivatives of CNCCs in mice. Dlx2 overexpression in ova disturbed the migration and differentiation of affected CNCCs and induced the development of ectopic skeleton elements. However, whether Dlx2 overexpression can impair the morphogenesis of CNCCs derived craniofacial skeleton in vivo has not been explored. Here, we generated a transgenic mouse overexpressing Dlx2 in NCCs (Wnt1Cre::iZEG-Dlx2). The Wnt1Cre::iZEG-Dlx2 embryos showed decreased cell proliferation, increased cell apoptosis, abnormal chondrogenesis and impaired osteogenesis within the CNCCs population, resulting in obvious craniofacial defects that ranged from a cleft lip and midfacial clefts to neural tube defects and exencephaly. Adult Wnt1Cre::iZEG-Dlx2 mice showed nasal and premaxillary hypoplasia and spinal deformities. These findings reveal that Dlx2 overexpression in NCCs may be a new pathogenesis of facial cleft and spinal kyphosis in mammals, and may offer us a useful model organism to find suitable therapy methods for these genetic defects that may be different from the traumatic defect and resected defect.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2013

Targeted deletion of Kif18a protects from colitis-associated colorectal (CAC) tumors in mice through impairing Akt phosphorylation

Houbao Zhu; Wangyang Xu; Hong-Xin Zhang; Jianbing Liu; Haimin Xu; Shunyuan Lu; Suying Dang; Ying Kuang; Xiaolong Jin; Wang Z

Kinesins are a superfamily of molecular motors involved in cell division or intracellular transport. They are becoming important targets for chemotherapeutic intervention of cancer due to their crucial role in mitosis. Here, we demonstrate that the kinesin-8 Kif18a is overexpressed in murine CAC and is a crucial promoter during early CAC carcinogenesis. Kif18a-deficient mice are evidently protected from AOM-DSS-induced colon carcinogenesis. Kif18A is responsible for proliferation of colonic tumor cells, while Kif18a ablation in mice promotes cell apoptosis. Mechanistically, Kif18a is responsible for induction of Akt phosphorylation, which is known to be associated with cell survival regulation. In conclusion, Kif18a is critical for colorectal carcinogenesis in the setting of inflammation by mechanisms of increased PI3K-AKT signaling. Inhibition of Kif18A activity may be useful in the prevention or chemotherapeutic intervention of CAC.

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Wang Z

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Jian Fei

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Shunyuan Lu

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Chunling Shen

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Suying Dang

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Hong-Xin Zhang

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Jianbing Liu

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Yan Chen

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Xuejiao Chen

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Houbao Zhu

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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