Publications by authors named "Adeline B Ding"

The tumor microenvironment (TME) is a complex network of non-malignant cells and stroma that perform a wide array of vital roles in tumor growth, immune evasion, metastasis, and therapeutic resistance. These highly diverse roles have been shown to be critically important to the progression of cancers and have already shown potential as therapeutic targets. Therefore, there has been a tremendous push to elucidate the pathways that underlie these roles and to develop new TME-directed therapies for cancer treatment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Bone metastases represent a lethal condition that frequently occurs in solid tumors such as prostate, breast, lung, and renal cell carcinomas, and increase the risk of skeletal-related events (SREs) including pain, pathologic fractures, and spinal cord compression. This unique metastatic niche consists of a multicellular complex that cancer cells co-opt to engender bone remodeling, immune suppression, and stromal-mediated therapeutic resistance. This review comprehensively discusses clinical challenges of bone metastases, novel preclinical models of the bone and bone marrow microenviroment, and crucial signaling pathways active in bone homeostasis and metastatic niche.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

As sessile organisms, plants face versatile environmental challenges and require proper responses at multiple levels for survival. Epigenetic modification of DNA and histones is a conserved gene-regulatory mechanism and plays critical roles in diverse aspects of biological processes, ranging from genome defense and imprinting to development and physiology. In recent years, emerging studies have revealed the interplay between signaling transduction pathways, epigenetic modifications, and chromatin cascades.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Lysine acetylation, one of the major types of post-translational modifications, plays critical roles in regulating gene expression and protein function. Histone deacetylases (HDACs) are responsible for removing acetyl groups from lysines of both histone and non-histone proteins. While tremendous progress has been made in understanding the function and mechanism of HDACs in animals in the past two decades, nearly half of the HDAC studies in plants were reported within the past five years.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF