Investigator

Jennifer X Ji

University Of British Columbia

JXJJennifer X Ji
Papers(3)
The unique metabolome…The proteome of clear…Comparison of p53 imm…
Collaborators(10)
David HuntsmanDawn R. CochraneMichael AnglesioRamon I Klein GeltinkY Ariel LiuBasile Tessier‐Clouti…C Blake GilksEmily F ThompsonJutta HuvilaGian Luca Negri
Institutions(3)
University Of British…University of TurkuCanadas Michael Smith…

Papers

The unique metabolome of clear cell ovarian carcinoma

AbstractClear cell ovarian carcinoma (CCOC) is an aggressive malignancy affecting younger women. Despite ovarian cancer subtypes having diverse molecular and clinical characteristics, the mainstay of treatment for advanced stage disease remains cytotoxic chemotherapy. Late stage CCOC is resistant to conventional chemotherapy, which means a suboptimal outcome for patients affected. Despite detailed genomic, epigenomic, transcriptomic, and proteomic characterisation, subtype‐specific treatment for CCOC has shown little progress. The unique glycogen accumulation defining CCOC suggests altered metabolic pathway activity and dependency. This study presents the first metabolomic landscape of ovarian cancer subtypes, including 42 CCOC, 20 high‐grade serous and 21 endometrioid ovarian carcinomas, together comprising the three most common ovarian carcinoma subtypes. We describe a distinct metabolomic landscape of CCOC compared with other ovarian cancer subtypes, including alterations in energy utilisation and cysteine metabolism. In addition, we identify CCOC‐specific alterations in metabolic pathways including serine biosynthesis and ROS‐associated pathways that could serve as potential therapeutic targets. Our study provides the first in‐depth study into the metabolome of ovarian cancers and a rich resource to support ongoing research efforts to identify subtype‐specific therapeutic targets that could improve the dismal outcome for patients with this devastating malignancy. © 2024 The Author(s). The Journal of Pathology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland.

Comparison of p53 immunohistochemical staining in differentiated vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia (dVIN) with that in inflammatory dermatoses and benign squamous lesions in the vulva

AimsDifferentiated vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia (dVIN), the precursor lesion to human papillomavirus‐independent vulvar squamous cell carcinoma (VSCC), can be difficult to distinguish from vulvar inflammatory dermatoses. Our goal was to determine if p53 could be a useful biomarker for dVIN, by characterizing p53 percentage, intensity and patterns of staining in dVIN and its histological mimics.Methods and resultsWe studied p53 immunohistochemical staining patterns in 16 dVIN cases and 46 vulvar non‐neoplastic squamous lesions [12 lichen sclerosus (LS); seven lichen simplex chronicus; three lichen planus (LP); six psoriasis; 13 spongiotic dermatitis (SPO); and five candidiasis]. dVIN cases were adjacent to a p16‐negative invasive VSCC in resection specimens. All dVIN cases showed null‐type or moderate to strong uniform p53 staining in >70% of basal cells, with moderate to strong continuous parabasal staining extending to two‐thirds of the epidermis. This was in contrast to weak or weak to moderate patchy p53 staining in the majority of other lesions. Moderate to strong and increased basal p53 staining (≥70%) was also observed in a subset of LS cases (5/12, 42%), LP cases (1/3, 33%), and SPO cases (36%, 4/11); however, in all categories, this was limited to the basal layer, and any staining in the parabasal layers was patchy.ConclusionStrong and uniform p53 staining of basal cells, extending into the parabasal layers, and a complete absence of staining (null type) is useful in distinguishing dVIN from other mimics in the vulva. p53 staining of lesser intensity or quantity, particularly basal overexpression only, overlaps with that in vulvar inflammatory lesions.

3Papers
11Collaborators