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Yang Cao

Chinese Academy of Tropical Agricultural Sciences

ORCID: 0000-0002-8910-9576

Publishes on Autophagy in Disease and Therapy, Genetic and phenotypic traits in livestock, Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptors. 115 papers and 6.3k citations.

115Publications
6.3kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Many actions of cyclooxygenase‐2 in cellular dynamics and in cancer
Yang Cao, Stephen M. Prescott|Journal of Cellular Physiology|2002
Cited by 464Open Access

Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) is the inducible isoform of cyclooxygenase, the enzyme that catalyzes the rate-limiting step in prostaglandin synthesis from arachidonic acid. Various prostaglandins are produced in a cell type-specific manner, and they elicit cellular functions via signaling through G-protein coupled membrane receptors, and in some cases, through the nuclear receptor PPAR. COX-2 utilization of arachidonic acid also perturbs the level of intracellular free arachidonic acid and subsequently affects cellular functions. In a number of cell and animal models, induction of COX-2 has been shown to promote cell growth, inhibit apoptosis and enhance cell motility and adhesion. The mechanisms behind these multiple actions of COX-2 are largely unknown. Compelling evidence from genetic and clinical studies indicates that COX-2 upregulation is a key step in carcinogenesis. Overexpression of COX-2 is sufficient to cause tumorigenesis in animal models and inhibition of the COX-2 pathway results in reduction in tumor incidence and progression. Therefore, the potential for application of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs as well as the recently developed COX-2 specific inhibitors in cancer clinical practice has drawn tremendous attention in the past few years. Inhibition of COX-2 promises to be an effective approach in the prevention and treatment of cancer, especially colorectal cancer.

Intracellular unesterified arachidonic acid signals apoptosis
Yang Cao, A. Terrece Pearman, Guy A. Zimmerman et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2000
Cited by 432Open Access

Cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) is up-regulated in many cancers and is a rate-limiting step in colon carcinogenesis. Nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, which inhibit COX-2, prevent colon cancer and cause apoptosis. The mechanism for this response is not clear, but it might result from an accumulation of the substrate, arachidonic acid, an absence of a prostaglandin product, or diversion of the substrate into another pathway. We found that colon adenocarcinomas overexpress another arachidonic acid-utilizing enzyme, fatty acid-CoA ligase (FACL) 4, in addition to COX-2. Exogenous arachidonic acid caused apoptosis in colon cancer and other cell lines, as did triacsin C, a FACL inhibitor. In addition, indomethacin and sulindac significantly enhanced the apoptosis-inducing effect of triacsin C. These findings suggested that unesterified arachidonic acid in cells is a signal for induction of apoptosis. To test this hypothesis, we engineered cells with inducible overexpression of COX-2 and FACL4 as "sinks" for unesterified arachidonic acid. Activation of the enzymatic sinks blocked apoptosis, and the reduction of cell death was inversely correlated with the cellular level of arachidonic acid. Inhibition of the COX-2 component by nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs restored the apoptotic response. Cell death caused by exposure to tumor necrosis factor alpha or to calcium ionophore also was prevented by removal of unesterified arachidonic acid. We conclude that the cellular level of unesterified arachidonic acid is a general mechanism by which apoptosis is regulated and that COX-2 and FACL4 promote carcinogenesis by lowering this level.

Efficient targeted gene disruption in <i>Xenopus</i> embryos using engineered transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs)
Yong Lei, Xiaogang Guo, Yun Liu et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2012
Cited by 241Open Access

Transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs) are an approach for directed gene disruption and have been proved to be effective in various animal models. Here, we report that TALENs can induce somatic mutations in Xenopus embryos with reliably high efficiency and that such mutations are heritable through germ-line transmission. We modified the Golden Gate method for TALEN assembly to make the product suitable for RNA transcription and microinjection into Xenopus embryos. Eight pairs of TALENs were constructed to target eight Xenopus genes, and all resulted in indel mutations with high efficiencies of up to 95.7% at the targeted loci. Furthermore, mutations induced by TALENs were highly efficiently passed through the germ line to F(1) frogs. Together with simple and reliable PCR-based approaches for detecting TALEN-induced mutations, our results indicate that TALENs are an effective tool for targeted gene editing/knockout in Xenopus.