Publications by authors named "Cheng-Yen Wu"

Carbonic anhydrase 8 (CA8) is a member of the α-carbonic anhydrase family but does not catalyze the reversible hydration of carbon dioxide. In the present study, we examined the effects of CA8 on two human colon cancer cell lines, SW480 and SW620, by suppressing CA8 expression through shRNA knockdown. Our results showed that knockdown of CA8 decreased cell growth and cell mobility in SW620 cells, but not in SW480 cells.

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Adenosine-to-inosine (A-to-I) RNA editing is the most common posttranscriptional editing to create somatic mutations and increase proteomic diversity. However, the functions of the edited mutations are largely underexplored. To identify novel targets in lung adenocarcinoma (LUAD), we conducted a genome-wide somatic A-to-I RNA editing analysis of 23 paired adjacent normal and LUAD transcriptomes and identified 26,280 events, including known nonsynonymous AZIN1-S367G and novel RHOAiso2 (RHOA isoform 2)-R176G, tubulin gamma complex associated protein 2 (TUBGCP2)-N211S, and RBMXL1-I40 M mutations.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study assessed health risks from heavy metal contamination (As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Hg, Pb, Ni, Zn) in the Houjing River, southern Taiwan, using contamination factors and metal indexes to evaluate the severity of the pollution.
  • - Human health risks were simulated through three scenarios: fish ingestion, dermal water contact, and incidental water ingestion during swimming, with specific metrics like hazard quotient and cancer risk index used to quantify risks.
  • - Findings highlighted severe contamination, particularly from Cu, Ni, and Pb, with fish ingestion posing significantly higher health risks compared to swimming; these insights aim to guide future pollution control measures and health management strategies.
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Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most lethal cancers worldwide due to metastasis. Paraspeckle component 1 (PSPC1) upregulation has been identified as an HCC pro-metastatic activator associated with poor patient prognosis, but with a lack of targeting strategy. Here, we report that PSPC1, a nuclear substrate of PTK6, sequesters PTK6 in the nucleus and loses its metastasis driving capability.

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Microporous activated carbon fibers (ACFs) were developed for CO₂ capture based on potassium hydroxide (KOH) activation and tetraethylenepentamine (TEPA) amination. The material properties of the modified ACFs were characterized using several techniques. The adsorption breakthrough curves of CO₂ were measured and the effect of relative humidity in the carrier gas was determined.

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Article Synopsis
  • V. cholerae causes severe diarrhea by secreting a toxin as it colonizes the small intestine, and while early infection steps are well-studied, the later phases need more attention.
  • A newly observed "mucosal escape response" occurs 12 hours post-infection, where bacteria detach from the intestine and require RpoS and HapR for this process to happen.
  • The research shows that RpoS helps increase motility and chemotaxis-related genes during bacterial escape, possibly reducing virulence gene expression to prepare for future survival stages.
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The mosaic-structured Vibrio cholerae genome points to the importance of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) in the evolution of this human pathogen. We showed that V. cholerae can acquire new genetic material by natural transformation during growth on chitin, a biopolymer that is abundant in aquatic habitats (e.

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Chitin, an insoluble polymer of GlcNAc, is an abundant source of carbon, nitrogen, and energy for marine microorganisms. Microarray expression profiling and mutational studies of Vibrio cholerae growing on a natural chitin surface, or with the soluble chitin oligosaccharides (GlcNAc)(2-6), GlcNAc, or the glucosamine dimer (GlcN)2 identified three sets of differentially regulated genes. We show that (i) ChiS, a sensor histidine kinase, regulates expression of the (GlcNAc)(2-6) gene set, including a (GlcNAc)2 catabolic operon, two extracellular chitinases, a chitoporin, and a PilA-containing type IV pilus, designated ChiRP (chitin-regulated pilus) that confers a significant growth advantage to V.

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The type IV bundle-forming pili (BFP) of enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) are required for virulence in orally challenged human volunteers and for the localized adherence and autoaggregation in vitro phenotypes. BFP filament biogenesis and function are encoded by the 14-gene bfp operon. The BFP assembly complex, containing a BfpB-His6 fusion protein, was chemically cross-linked in situ, and the complex was then purified from BFP-expressing EPEC by a combination of nickel- and BfpB antibody-based affinity chromatography.

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Production of type IV bundle-forming pili (BFP) by enteropathogenic Escherichia coli (EPEC) requires the protein products of 12 genes of the 14-gene bfp operon. Antisera against each of these proteins were used to demonstrate that in-frame deletion of individual genes within the operon reduces the abundance of other bfp operon-encoded proteins. This result was demonstrated not to be due to downstream polar effects of the mutations but rather was taken as evidence for protein-protein interactions and their role in the stabilization of the BFP assembly complex.

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