Investigator

Peng Huang

Professor · Johns Hopkins University, Oncology

PHPeng Huang
Papers(1)
Spatial Transcriptomi…
Collaborators(7)
Tian-Li WangTricia A. NumanYeh WangBrant G. WangFang-Chi HsuIe-Ming ShihLeslie Cope
Institutions(3)
Johns Hopkins Univers…Roswell Park Comprehe…Baylor St. Luke's Med…

Papers

Spatial Transcriptomic Analysis of Ovarian Cancer Precursors Reveals Reactivation of IGFBP2 during Pathogenesis

Abstract Elucidating the earliest pathogenic steps in cancer development is fundamental to improving its early detection and prevention. Ovarian high-grade serous carcinoma (HGSC), a highly aggressive cancer, mostly originates from the fallopian tube epithelium through a precursor stage, serous tubal intraepithelial carcinoma (STIC). In this study, we performed spatial transcriptomic analysis to compare STICs, carcinoma, and their matched normal fallopian tube epithelium. Several differentially expressed genes in STICs and carcinomas were involved in cancer metabolism and detected in a larger independent transcriptomic dataset of ovarian HGSCs. Among these, insulin-like growth factor binding protein-2 (IGFBP2) was found to undergo DNA hypomethylation and to be increased at the protein level in STICs. Pyrosequencing revealed an association of IGFBP2 expression with the methylation state of its proximal enhancer, and 5-azacytidine treatment increased IGFBP2 expression. In postmenopausal fallopian tubes, where most STICs are detected, IGFBP2 immunoreactivity was detected in all 38 proliferatively active STICs but was undetectable in morphologically normal tubal epithelia, including those with TP53 mutations. In premenopausal fallopian tubes, IGFBP2 expression was limited to the secretory epithelium at the proliferative phase, and estradiol treatment increased IGFBP2 expression levels. IGFBP2 knockdown suppressed the growth of IGFBP2-expressing tubal epithelial cells via inactivation of the AKT pathway. Taken together, demethylation of the proximal enhancer of IGFBP2 drives tumor development by maintaining the increased IGFBP2 required for proliferation in an otherwise estrogen-deprived, proliferation-quiescent, and postmenopausal tubal microenvironment. Significance: Molecular studies of the earliest precursor lesions of ovarian cancer reveal a role of IGFBP2 in propelling tumor initiation, providing new insights into ovarian cancer development.

73Works
1Papers
7Collaborators
Neoplasm Recurrence, LocalOvarian NeoplasmsLung NeoplasmsNeoplasm StagingCarcinoma in SituTumor Suppressor Protein p53Fallopian Tube Neoplasms

Positions

2025–

Professor

Johns Hopkins University · Oncology

2013–

Associate Professor

Johns Hopkins University · Biostatistics

2009–

Associate Professor

Johns Hopkins University · Oncology

2006–

Associate Professor

Medical University of South Carolina · Biostatistics, Bioinformatics and Epidemiology

2000–

Assistant Professor

Medical University of South Carolina · Biostatistics, Bioinformatics, and Epidemiology

Education

2000

PhD

University of Rochester · Statistics

1995

MS

Rochester Institute of Technology · Center for Quality and Applied Statistics