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77


Using Humanized Germ-Free Mice to Understand Microbiome Variation in IBD Patients Who Respond to Anti-TNF Medications [Meeting Abstract]

Chen, Lea Ann; Ruiz, Victoria E; Battaglia, Thomas; Swaminath, Arun; Radin, Arielle; Tuen, Michael; Xu, Ruliang; Alvarez, Yelina; Bowcutt, Rowann; Lukin, Dana J; Lawlor, Garrett; Rosen, Melissa H; Hudesman, David; Malter, Lisa; Loke, P'ng; Sartor, RBalfour; Blaser, Martin J
ISI:000391783700785
ISSN: 1528-0012
CID: 2460562

Clinical and pathologic features of nutritional and herbal supplements induced liver injury [Meeting Abstract]

Acosta-Gonzalez, G; Ettel, M; Eze, O; Gera, S; Hajdu, C H; Park, J S; Sigal, S; Xu, R
Background: Certain nutritional and herbal supplements may have potential hepatotoxic effects. With increasing use of these supplements in the general population, supplements-induced liver injury (SILI) has become a common problem clinically. However, there is not much data about the clinical and pathologic features of SILI, and pathological characteristics of SILI have not been defined. Design: All liver biopsy cases with diagnoses of hepatitis or liver injury were reviewed from our pathology database from 2014-2015. The cases of SILI were confirmed by pathological and clinical correlation. Pre-biopsy liver function tests (LFTs) were collected from the electronic medical record system. The H&E and Trichrome stain slides were re-assessed for pathologic changes. The morphologic patterns of liver injury, including bile duct injury, portal inflammation, interface hepatitis, lobular inflammation, fibrosis, presence of granulomas, and plasma cell and eosinophil infiltrates were recorded and analyzed. Results: Total 17 cases of SILI were identified from 323 liver biopsy cases of hepatitis and liver injury. Two of 17 patients with SILI developed acute fulminant hepatic failure and succumbed to the illness. The hepatotoxic nutritional/herbal supplements identified included boswellic acid, carnosyn beta-alanine, whey protein, maca extract, rhodiola, holy basil, creatine, and some unspecified tea and anti-itching supplements. Histologically, the major pattern of liver injury was combined bile duct damage and hepatitis, and the majority of cases showed significant cholestasis. Fibrosis ranged from mild portal fibrosis to cirrhosis. No granulomas were identified. Plasma cells were rare to minimal in all cases, while eosinophils ranged from none up to 12 per high power field. Serologically, the mean values of alanine transaminase, aspartate transaminase, alkaline phosphatase, and total bilirubin were 625 U/L, 447 U/L, 241 U/L, and 12 mg/d, respectively. Conclusions: Nutritional and herbal supplements have become a common cause of drug induced liver injury that may be under recognized. Histologically, the pattern of SILI in this study is the combination of bile duct and hepatocytic damage, ranging from mild disease to fulminant hepatitis. Significant elevation of LFTs, in combination with mixed pattern of liver injury should trigger the consideration of SILI
EMBASE:72178664
ISSN: 0023-6837
CID: 1947412

Frequency and Pathological Characteristics of Drug-Induced Liver Injury in a Tertiary Medical Center [Meeting Abstract]

Ettel, Mark; Acosta-Gonzalez, Gabriel; Eze, Ogechukwu; Gera, Shweta; Hajdu, Cristina H; Park, James S; Sigal, Samuel; Xu, Ruliang
ISI:000369270702392
ISSN: 1530-0307
CID: 1955182

Clinical and Pathologic Features of Nutritional and Herbal Supplements Induced Liver Injury [Meeting Abstract]

Acosta-Gonzalez, Gabriel; Ettel, Mark; Eze, Ogechukwu; Gera, Shweta; Hajdu, Cristina H; Park, James S; Sigal, Samuel; Xu, Ruliang
ISI:000370302503102
ISSN: 1530-0285
CID: 2019582

Frequency and Pathological Characteristics of Drug-Induced Liver Injury in a Tertiary Medical Center [Meeting Abstract]

Ettel, Mark; Acosta-Gonzalez, Gabriel; Eze, Ogechukwu; Gera, Shweta; Hajdu, Cristina H; Park, James S; Sigal, Samuel; Xu, Ruliang
ISI:000370302503127
ISSN: 1530-0285
CID: 2019592

Clinical and biological significance of precursor lesions of intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma

Ettel, Mark; Eze, Ogechukwu; Xu, Ruliang
Cholangiocarcinoma (CC) is primarily a malignant tumor of older adults most prevalent in Southeast Asia, where liver fluke infestation is high. However the etiology in western countries is unknown. Although the incidence of extrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma has remained constant, incidence of intrahepatic CC (ICC) which differs in morphology, pathogenesis, risk factors, treatment and prognosis is increasing. While this increase is associated with hepatitis C virus infection, chronic nonalcoholic liver disease, obesity, and smoking, the pathogenesis of ICC and molecular alterations underlying the carcinogenesis are not completely elucidated. Benign biliary lesions such as biliary intraepithelial neoplasia, intraductal papillary neoplasm of the bile duct, von Meyenburg complex or bile duct hamartoma, and bile duct adenoma have been associated with ICC. For each of these entities, evidence suggests or supports a role as premalignant lesions. This article summarized the important biological significance of the precursor lesions of ICC and the molecular mechanisms that may be involved in intrahepatic cholangiocarcinogenesis.
PMCID:4635141
PMID: 26557948
ISSN: 1948-5182
CID: 1834602

GPR15 mediated homing controls immune homeostasis in the large intestine mucosa [Meeting Abstract]

Kim, S; Xiang, W; Kwak, C; Yang, Y; Lin, X; Ota, M; Sarpel, U; Rifkin, D; Xu, R; Littman, D
The large intestine is the site most commonly affected in inflammatory bowel diseases. However, the mechanism of T cell homing to the large intestine, which contributes to inflammation, had remained unclear. We show here that an orphan G-protein coupled receptor GPR15 controls the specific homing of T cells, particularly FOXP3+ regulatory T cells (Tregs), to the large intestine lamina propria (LILP). GPR15 expression is promoted by gut microbiota and TGF-beta1, but not by retinoic acid. GPR15-deficient mice had fewer Tregs in LILP and were prone to develop more severe inflammation in the large intestine, which was rescued by the transfer of GPR15-sufficient Tregs. Our findings thus indicate that GPR15 is a T cell homing receptor for LILP and that GPR15 plays a key role in maintaining gut immune homeostasis, largely by regulating the influx of Tregs. Our study also demonstrates that adaptive immune responses in the gut are functionally compartmentalized through the differential requirements for T cell homing to the small and large bowel
EMBASE:71474032
ISSN: 0022-1767
CID: 1058262

Imbalanced expression of Tif1gamma inhibits pancreatic ductal epithelial cell growth

Ligr, Martin; Wu, Xinyu; Daniels, Garrett; Zhang, David; Wang, Huamin; Hajdu, Cristina; Wang, Jinhua; Pan, Ruimin; Pei, Zhiheng; Zhang, Lanjing; Melis, Marcovalerio; Pincus, Matthew R; Saunders, John K; Lee, Peng; Xu, Ruliang
Transcriptional intermediary factor 1 gamma (Tif1gamma) (Ectodermin/PTC7/RFG7/TRIM33) is a transcriptional cofactor with an important role in the regulation of the TGFbeta pathway. It has been suggested that it competes with Smad2/Smad3 for binding to Smad4, or alternatively that it may target Smad4 for degradation, although its role in carcinogenesis is unclear. In this study, we showed that Tif1gamma interacts with Smad1/Smad4 complex in vivo, using both yeast two-hybrid and coimmunoprecipitation assays. We demonstrated that Tif1gamma inhibits transcriptional activity of the Smad1/Smad4 complex through its PHD domain or bromo-domainin pancreatic cells by luciferase assay. Additionally, there is a dynamic inverse relationship between the levels of Tif1gamma and Smad4 in benign and malignant pancreatic cell lines. Overexpression of Tif1gamma resulted in decreased level of Smad4. Both overexpression and knockdown of Tif1gamma resulted in growth inhibition in both benign and cancerous pancreatic cell lines, attributable to a G2-phase cell cycle arrest, but only knockdown of Tif1gamma reduces tumor cell invasiveness in vitro. Our study demonstrated that imbalanced expression of Tif1gamma results in inhibition of pancreatic ductal epithelial cell growth. In addition, knockdown of Tif1gamma may inhibit tumor invasion. These data suggest that Tif1gamma might serve as a potential therapeutic target for pancreatic cancer.
PMCID:4065401
PMID: 24959375
ISSN: 2156-6976
CID: 1051012

Distinct breast cancer subtypes in women with early-onset disease across races

Singh, Mandeep; Ding, Yi; Zhang, Li-Ying; Song, Dong; Gong, Yun; Adams, Sylvia; Ross, Dara S; Wang, Jin-Hua; Grover, Shruti; Doval, Dinesh Chandra; Shao, Charles; He, Zi-Li; Chang, Victor; Chin, Warren W; Deng, Fang-Ming; Singh, Baljit; Zhang, David; Xu, Ru-Liang; Lee, Peng
BACKGROUND: Racial disparities among breast cancer (BCa) patients are known but not well studied in early-onset BCa. We analyzed molecular subtypes in early-onset BCa across five major races. METHODS: A total of 2120 cases were included from non-Hispanic White (NHW), African American (AA) and Hispanic, Chinese and Indian. Based on ER, PR and HER-2 status, BCa was classified into 4 intrinsic subtypes as Luminal A, Luminal B, HER2/neu overexpression and Triple negative BCa (TNBC) subtypes. Data was stratified according to race and age as younger/early-onset group (40-years and younger) and older group (50-years and older). RESULTS: In early-onset BCa, incidence of TNBC was significantly higher (p = 0.0369) in Indian women followed by AA, Hispanic, NHW and Chinese women. Incidence of Her2 over-expression subtype also was highest in Indian women, followed by Hispanic, Chinese, AA and NHW women. In contrast, Luminal B subtype was most significantly higher in AA women (p = 0.0000) followed by NHW (p = 0.0002), Chinese (p = 0.0003), Hispanic (0.0128) and Indian (p = 0.0468) women. Luminal A subtype was most significantly reduced in Indian women (p = 0.0113) followed by Hispanic, AA, NHW and Chinese women. These results were based on statistical analysis with the mean of older group populations. CONCLUSIONS: These results show significant disparities in receptor subtypes across races. This study will contribute in developing optimal clinical trial protocols and personalized management strategies for early-onset BCa patients.
PMCID:4106652
PMID: 25057437
ISSN: 2156-6976
CID: 1268482

Isoprenylcysteine carboxylmethyltransferase deficiency exacerbates KRAS-driven pancreatic neoplasia via Notch suppression

Court, Helen; Amoyel, Marc; Hackman, Michael; Lee, Kyoung Eun; Xu, Ruliang; Miller, George; Bar-Sagi, Dafna; Bach, Erika A; Bergo, Martin O; Philips, Mark R
RAS is the most frequently mutated oncogene in human cancers. Despite decades of effort, anti-RAS therapies have remained elusive. Isoprenylcysteine carboxylmethyltransferase (ICMT) methylates RAS and other CaaX-containing proteins, but its potential as a target for cancer therapy has not been fully evaluated. We crossed a Pdx1-Cre;LSL-KrasG12D mouse, which is a model of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDA), with a mouse harboring a floxed allele of Icmt. Surprisingly, we found that ICMT deficiency dramatically accelerated the development and progression of neoplasia. ICMT-deficient pancreatic ductal epithelial cells had a slight growth advantage and were resistant to premature senescence by a mechanism that involved suppression of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 2A (p16INK4A) expression. ICMT deficiency precisely phenocopied Notch1 deficiency in the Pdx1-Cre;LSL-KrasG12D model by exacerbating pancreatic intraepithelial neoplasias, promoting facial papillomas, and derepressing Wnt signaling. Silencing ICMT in human osteosarcoma cells decreased Notch1 signaling in response to stimulation with cell-surface ligands. Additionally, targeted silencing of Ste14, the Drosophila homolog of Icmt, resulted in defects in wing development, consistent with Notch loss of function. Our data suggest that ICMT behaves like a tumor suppressor in PDA because it is required for Notch1 signaling.
PMCID:3809775
PMID: 24216479
ISSN: 0021-9738
CID: 761382