Investigator

Lydia W. T. Cheung

Assistant Professor · University of Hong Kong, School of Biomedical Sciences

About

LWTLydia W. T. Cheung
Papers(5)
Vertical inhibition o…Therapeutic targeting…APOBEC3B stratifies o…Strategic Combination…p85β regulates autoph…
Collaborators(10)
Guanglei ZhuangMeiying ZhangPeiye ShenQinyang HeRongyu ZangTingyan ShiWen DiXiao ZhangXia YinYing Li
Institutions(7)
University Of Hong Ko…Shanghai Jiao Tong Un…Shanghai Institute Of…Fudan UniversityShanghai Jiao Tong Un…Union Hospital, Tongj…Interdisciplinary Res…

Papers

Vertical inhibition of p110α/ AKT and N‐cadherin enhances treatment efficacy in PIK3CA ‐aberrated ovarian cancer cells

Phosphatidylinositol‐4,5‐bisphosphate 3‐kinase catalytic subunit alpha [ PIK3CA , encoding PI3Kalpha (also known as p110α)] is one of the most commonly aberrated genes in human cancers. In serous ovarian cancer, PIK3CA amplification is highly frequent but PIK3CA point mutation is rare. However, whether PIK3CA amplification and PIK3CA driver mutations have the same functional impact in the disease is unclear. Here, we report that both PIK3CA amplification and E545K mutation are tumorigenic. While the protein kinase B (AKT) signaling axis was activated in both E545K knock‐in cells and PIK3CA ‐overexpressing cells, the mitogen‐activated protein kinase 3/1 (ERK1/2) pathway was induced selectively by E545K mutation but not PIK3CA amplification. Intriguingly, AKT signaling in these PIK3CA ‐aberrated cells increased transcriptional coactivator YAP1 (YAP) Ser127 phosphorylation and thereby cytoplasmic YAP levels, which in turn increased cell migration through Ras‐related C3 botulinum toxin substrate 1 (RAC1) activation. In addition to the altered YAP signaling, AKT upregulated N‐cadherin expression, which also contributed to cell migration. Pharmacological inhibition of N‐cadherin reduced cell migratory potential. Importantly, co‐targeting N‐cadherin and p110α/AKT caused additive reduction in cell migration in vitro and metastases formation in vivo . Together, this study reveals the molecular pathways driven by the PIK3CA aberrations and the exploitable vulnerabilities in PIK3CA ‐aberrated serous ovarian cancer cells.

APOBEC3B stratifies ovarian clear cell carcinoma with distinct immunophenotype and prognosis

Ovarian clear cell carcinoma (OCCC) is a challenging disease due to its intrinsic chemoresistance. Immunotherapy is an emerging treatment option but currently impeded by insufficient understanding of OCCC immunophenotypes and their molecular determinants. Whole-genome sequencing on 23 pathologically confirmed patients was employed to depict the genomic profile of primary OCCCs. APOBEC3B expression and digital pathology-based Immunoscore were assessed by performing immunohistochemistry and correlated with clinical outcomes. An APOBEC-positive (APOBEC+) subtype was identified based on the characteristic mutational signature and prevalent kataegis events. APOBEC + OCCC displayed favourable prognosis across one internal and two external patient cohorts. The improved outcome was ascribable to increased lymphocytic infiltration. Similar phenomena of APOBEC3B expression and T-cell accumulation were observed in endometriotic tissues, suggesting that APOBEC-induced mutagenesis and immunogenicity could occur early during OCCC pathogenesis. Corroborating these results, a case report was presented for an APOBEC + patient demonstrating inflamed tumour microenvironment and clinical response to immune checkpoint blockade. Our findings implicate APOBEC3B as a novel mechanism of OCCC stratification with prognostic value and as a potential predictive biomarker that may inform immunotherapeutic opportunities.

47Works
5Papers
21Collaborators
Cell Line, TumorOvarian NeoplasmsNeoplasm Recurrence, LocalPrognosisCarcinomaAdenocarcinoma, Clear CellTumor Microenvironment

Positions

2016–

Assistant Professor

University of Hong Kong · School of Biomedical Sciences

2015–

Instructor

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center · Systems Biology

2010–

Postdoctoral fellow

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center · Systems Biology