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Yingxin Kong

Johnson University

Publishes on Esophageal Cancer Research and Treatment, Helicobacter pylori-related gastroenterology studies, Gastric Cancer Management and Outcomes. 8 papers and 107 citations.

8Publications
107Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Bone Morphogenetic Protein-2–Induced Transformation Involves the Activation of Mammalian Target of Rapamycin
Elaine Langenfeld, Yingxin Kong, John Langenfeld|Molecular Cancer Research|2005
Cited by 53Open Access

Bone morphogenetic protein-2 (BMP-2) is an evolutionary conserved protein that is essential for embryonic development. BMP-2 is highly expressed in approximately 98% of human lung carcinomas with little expression in normal lung tissues. BMP-2 has been shown to enhance mobility, invasiveness, and metastasis of cancer cell lines. During development, BMP-2 induces the proto-oncogene phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K)/mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling pathway to regulate stem cell differentiation. We show that BMP-2 induces the phosphorylation of mTOR in A549 and H1299 lung cancer cell lines, which is attenuated by the PI3K antagonists LY-294002 and wortmannin. p70S6 kinase, which is a direct downstream target of mTOR, is also regulated by BMP-2 in lung cancer cell lines. We find that BMP-2 induces cyclin E in A549 and H1299 cells, which is mediated by the PI3K/mTOR signaling pathway. The regulation of cyclin E by BMP-2 occurs through a Smad 1/5-independent mechanism. Forced expression of BMP-2 in A549 cells (A549/BMP-2) induces transformation as shown by an increase in foci formation. The mTOR antagonist, rapamycin, prevented foci formation of the A549/BMP-2 cells. This study provides evidence that BMP-2-mediated transformation of lung cancer cells involves the activation of the PI3K/mTOR signaling pathway.

Transformation of benign Barrett's epithelium by repeated acid and bile exposure over 65 weeks: A novel <i>in vitro</i> model
Kiron M. Das, Yingxin Kong, Manisha Bajpai et al.|International Journal of Cancer|2010
Cited by 40Open Access

The mechanism by which gastroesophageal reflux promotes metaplasia→dysplasia→carcinoma is unknown. The aim of the study is to determine if repeated exposure to acid and bile confers a tumorigenic phenotype in a telomerase (hTERT)-immortalized benign Barrett's cell line (BAR-T). BAR-T cells were exposed to acid (pH 4) (A) and bile salt (200 μM glycochenodeoxycholic acid) (B) daily for 5 min up to 65+ weeks. The control cells were grown in parallel without any A or B treatment. Cell morphology, proliferation, transformation, and molecular changes in the gene expression for COX-2, TC22, p53 and p53 target genes were analyzed at 8-12 weeks intervals. At 46 weeks BAR-T cells exposed to (A+B) showed distinct phenotypic changes: forming clusters and acini, and at 65 weeks displayed foci in monolayer, and formed distinct colonies in soft agar. Untreated cells did not show any such changes. In A+B-treated BAR-T cells, COX-2 mRNA increased 10- to 20-fold, TC22 mRNA increased by 2- to 3-fold at 22-65 weeks, p53, MDM2, PERP, and p21mRNA increased 2.5-, 6.4-, 4-, and 2.6-fold respectively when compared to untreated cells at 34 weeks. However, at 58 weeks onward, there was a sharp decline of p53 and its target genes to the baseline level. At 65 weeks A+B-treated BAR-T cells formed tumor in nude mice whereas untreated cells did not. We demonstrate a novel in vitro model of transformation of a benign Barrett's cell line following repeated exposure to A+B over the course of 65 weeks.