Investigator

Shirng-Wern Tsaih

Scientist II · Medical College of Wisconsin, Obstetrics and Gynecology

Research Interests

STShirng-Wern Tsaih
Papers(2)
Rearrangements of vir…Peritoneal Spread of …
Collaborators(10)
Janet S. RaderSteven J.M. JonesSunila PradeepVahid AkbariVanessa L. PorterAndrew J. MungallAnjali GeethadeviBindu NairDeepak ParasharDenise S. Uyar
Institutions(2)
Medical College Of Wi…BC Cancer

Papers

Rearrangements of viral and human genomes at human papillomavirus integration events and their allele-specific impacts on cancer genome regulation

Human papillomavirus (HPV) integration has been implicated in transforming HPV infection into cancer. To resolve genome dysregulation associated with HPV integration, we performed Oxford Nanopore Technologies long-read sequencing on 72 cervical cancer genomes from a Ugandan data set that was previously characterized using short-read sequencing. We find recurrent structural rearrangement patterns at HPV integration events, which we categorize as del(etion)-like, dup(lication)-like, translocation, multi-breakpoint, or repeat region integrations. Integrations involving amplified HPV–human concatemers, particularly multi-breakpoint events, frequently harbor heterogeneous forms and copy numbers of the viral genome. Transcriptionally active integrants are characterized by unmethylated regions in both the viral and human genomes downstream from the viral transcription start site, resulting in HPV–human fusion transcripts. In contrast, integrants without evidence of expression lack consistent methylation patterns. Furthermore, whereas transcriptional dysregulation is limited to genes within 200 kb of an HPV integrant, dysregulation of the human epigenome in the form of allelic differentially methylated regions affects megabase expanses of the genome, irrespective of the integrant's transcriptional status. By elucidating the structural, epigenetic, and allele-specific impacts of HPV integration, we provide insight into the role of integrated HPV in cervical cancer.

Peritoneal Spread of Ovarian Cancer Harbors Therapeutic Vulnerabilities Regulated by FOXM1 and EGFR/ERBB2 Signaling

Abstract Peritoneal spread is the primary mechanism of metastasis of ovarian cancer, and survival of ovarian cancer cells in the peritoneal cavity as nonadherent spheroids and their adherence to the mesothelium of distant organs lead to cancer progression, metastasis, and mortality. However, the mechanisms that govern this metastatic process in ovarian cancer cells remain poorly understood. In this study, we cultured ovarian cancer cell lines in adherent and nonadherent conditions in vitro and analyzed changes in mRNA and protein levels to identify mechanisms of tumor cell survival and proliferation in adherent and nonadherent cells. EGFR or ERBB2 upregulated ZEB1 in nonadherent cells, which caused resistance to cell death and increased tumor-initiating capacity. Conversely, Forkhead box M1 (FOXM1) was required for the induction of integrin β1, integrin-α V, and integrin-α 5 for adhesion of cancer cells. FOXM1 also upregulated ZEB1, which could act as a feedback inhibitor of FOXM1, and caused the transition of adherent cells to nonadherent cells. Strikingly, the combinatorial treatment with lapatinib [dual kinase inhibitor of EGFR (ERBB1) and ERBB2] and thiostrepton (FOXM1 inhibitor) reduced growth and peritoneal spread of ovarian cancer cells more effectively than either single-agent treatment in vivo. In conclusion, these results demonstrate that FOXM1 and EGFR/ERBB2 pathways are key points of vulnerability for therapy to disrupt peritoneal spread and adhesion of ovarian cancer cells. Significance: This study describes the mechanism exhibited by ovarian cancer cells required for adherent cell transition to nonadherent form during peritoneal spread and metastasis.

12Works
2Papers
22Collaborators
Uterine Cervical NeoplasmsCell Line, TumorDisease Models, AnimalOvarian NeoplasmsPeritoneal Neoplasms

Positions

2018–

Scientist II

Medical College of Wisconsin · Obstetrics and Gynecology

2016–

Research Scientist II

Medical College of Wisconsin · Physiology

2010–

Research Scientist II

Medical College of Wisconsin · Human and Molecular Genetics Center

2007–

Research Scientist

Jackson Laboratory · Nathan Shock Center of Excellence in the Basic Biology of Aging

Education

1999

Sc.D.

Harvard School of Public Health · Epidemiology

Country

US