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Browsing by Author "Zhao, Di"
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Item Chinese Clinical Trial Registry 13-year data collection and analysis: geographic distribution, financial support, research phase, duration, and disease categories(Frontiers Media, 2023-10-12) Fan, Ruitai; Zheng, Yufei; Zhou, Runze; Beeraka, Narasimha M.; Sukocheva, Olga A.; Zhao, Ruiwen; Li, Shijie; Zhao, Xiang; Liu, Chunying; He, Song; Mahesh, P. A.; Gurupadayya, B. M.; Nikolenko, Vladimir N.; Zhao, Di; Liu, Junqi; Pediatrics, School of MedicineObjective: To evaluate the current status of trial registration on the Chinese Clinical Trial Registry (ChiCTR). Design: In this descriptive study, a multi-dimensional grouping analysis was conducted to estimate trends in the annual trial registration, geographical distribution, sources of funding, targeted diseases, and trial subtypes. Setting: We have analyzed all clinical trial records (over 30,000) registered on the Chinese Clinical Trial Registry (ChiCTR) from 2007 to 2020 executed in China. Main outcomes and measures: The main outcome was the baseline characteristics of registered trials. These trials were categorized and analyzed based on geographical distribution, year of implementation, disease type, resource and funding type, trial duration, trial phase, and the type of experimental approach. Results: From 2008 to 2017, a consistent upward trend in clinical trial registrations was observed, showing an average annual growth rate of 29.2%. The most significant year-on-year (yoy%) growth in registrations occurred in 2014 (62%) and 2018 (68.5%). Public funding represented the predominant source of funding in the Chinese healthcare system. The top five ChiCTR registration sites for all disease types were highly populated urban regions of China, including Shanghai (5,658 trials, 18%), Beijing (5,127 trials, 16%), Guangdong (3,612 trials, 11%), Sichuan (2,448 trials, 8%), and Jiangsu (2,196 trials, 7%). Trials targeting neoplastic diseases accounted for the largest portion of registrations, followed by cardio/cerebrovascular disease (CCVD) and orthopedic diseases-related trials. The largest proportions of registration trial duration were 1-2 years, less than 1 year, and 2-3 years (at 27.36, 26.71, and 22.46%). In the case of the research phase, the top three types of all the registered trials are exploratory research, post-marketing drugs, and clinical trials of new therapeutic technology. Conclusion and relevance: Oncological and cardiovascular diseases receive the highest share of national public funding for medical clinical trial-based research in China. Publicly funded trials represent a major segment of the ChiCTR registry, indicating the dominating role of public governance in this health research sector. Furthermore, the growing number of analyzed records reflect the escalation of clinical research activities in China. The tendency to distribute funding resources toward exceedingly populated areas with the highest incidence of oncological and cardiovascular diseases reveals an aim to reduce the dominating disease burden in the urban conglomerates in China.Item An In Vivo Screen Identifies PYGO2 as a Driver for Metastatic Prostate Cancer(American Association for Cancer Research, 2018-07-15) Lu, Xin; Pan, Xiaolu; Wu, Chang-Jiun; Zhao, Di; Feng, Shan; Zang, Yong; Lee, Rumi; Khadka, Sunada; Amin, Samirkumar B.; Jin, Eun-Jung; Shang, Xiaoying; Deng, Pingna; Luo, Yanting; Morgenlander, William R.; Weinrich, Jacqueline; Lu, Xuemin; Jiang, Shan; Chang, Qing; Navone, Nora M.; Troncoso, Patricia; DePinho, Ronald A.; Wang, Y. Alan; Biostatistics, IU School of MedicineAdvanced prostate cancer displays conspicuous chromosomal instability and rampant copy number aberrations, yet the identity of functional drivers resident in many amplicons remain elusive. Here, we implemented a functional genomics approach to identify new oncogenes involved in prostate cancer progression. Through integrated analyses of focal amplicons in large prostate cancer genomic and transcriptomic datasets as well as genes upregulated in metastasis, 276 putative oncogenes were enlisted into an in vivo gain-of-function tumorigenesis screen. Among the top positive hits, we conducted an in-depth functional analysis on Pygopus family PHD finger 2 (PYGO2), located in the amplicon at 1q21.3. PYGO2 overexpression enhances primary tumor growth and local invasion to draining lymph nodes. Conversely, PYGO2 depletion inhibits prostate cancer cell invasion in vitro and progression of primary tumor and metastasis in vivo In clinical samples, PYGO2 upregulation associated with higher Gleason score and metastasis to lymph nodes and bone. Silencing PYGO2 expression in patient-derived xenograft models impairs tumor progression. Finally, PYGO2 is necessary to enhance the transcriptional activation in response to ligand-induced Wnt/β-catenin signaling. Together, our results indicate that PYGO2 functions as a driver oncogene in the 1q21.3 amplicon and may serve as a potential prognostic biomarker and therapeutic target for metastatic prostate cancer.Significance: Amplification/overexpression of PYGO2 may serve as a biomarker for prostate cancer progression and metastasis. Cancer Res; 78(14); 3823-33. ©2018 AACR.Item Screening fructosamine-3-kinase (FN3K) inhibitors, a deglycating enzyme of oncogenic Nrf2: Human FN3K homology modelling, docking and molecular dynamics simulations(Public Library of Science, 2023-11-01) Beeraka, Narasimha M.; Zhang, Jin; Mandal, Subhankar; Vikram P. R., Hemanth; Liu, Junqi; B. M., Namitha; Zhao, Di; Vishwanath, Prashanth; Gurupadayya, B. M.; Fan, Ruitai; Pediatrics, School of MedicineFructosamine-3-kinase (FN3K) is involved in the deglycation of Nrf2, a significant regulator of oxidative stress in cancer cells. However, the intricate functional aspects of FN3K and Nrf2 in breast cancers have not been explored vividly. The objectives of this study are to design the human FN3K protein using homology modeling followed by the screening of several anticancer molecules and examining their efficacy to modulate FN3K activity, Nrf2-mediated antioxidant signalling. Methods pertinent to homology modeling, virtual screening, molecular docking, molecular dynamics simulations, assessment of ADME properties, cytotoxicity assays for anticancer molecules of natural/synthetic origin in breast cancer cells (BT-474, T-47D), and Western blotting were used in this study. The screened anticancer molecules including kinase inhibitors of natural and synthetic origin interacted with the 3-dimensional structure of the catalytic domain in human FN3K protein designed through homology modeling by significant CDOCKER interaction energies. Subsequently, gefitinib, sorafenib, neratinib, tamoxifen citrate, and cyclosporine A enhanced the expression of FN3K in BT-474 cell lines with simultaneous alteration in Nrf2-driven antioxidant signalling. Oxaliplatin significantly downregulated FN3K expression and modulated Nrf2-driven antioxidant signalling when compared to cisplatin and other anticancer drugs. Hence, the study concluded the potential implications of existing anticancer drugs to modulate FN3K activity in breast cancers.