Andong Qiu
Columbia University
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Featured researches published by Andong Qiu.
Cell | 2006
Andong Qiu; Michaela Jansen; Antoinette Sakaris; Sang Hee Min; Shrikanta Chattopadhyay; Eugenia Tsai; Claudio Sandoval; Rongbao Zhao; Myles H. Akabas; I. David Goldman
Folates are essential nutrients that are required for one-carbon biosynthetic and epigenetic processes. While folates are absorbed in the acidic milieu of the upper small intestine, the underlying absorption mechanism has not been defined. We now report the identification of a human proton-coupled, high-affinity folate transporter that recapitulates properties of folate transport and absorption in intestine and in various cell types at low pH. We demonstrate that a loss-of-function mutation in this gene is the molecular basis for hereditary folate malabsorption in a family with this disease. This transporter was previously reported to be a lower-affinity, pH-independent heme carrier protein, HCP1. However, the current study establishes that a major function of this gene product is proton-coupled folate transport required for folate homeostasis in man, and we have thus amended the name to PCFT/HCP1.
Nature Medicine | 2011
Neal Paragas; Andong Qiu; Qing-Yin Zhang; Benjamin Samstein; Shixian Deng; Kai M. Schmidt-Ott; Melanie Viltard; Wenqiang Yu; Catherine S. Forster; Gangli Gong; Yidong Liu; Ritwij Kulkarni; Kiyoshi Mori; Avtandil Kalandadze; Adam J. Ratner; Prasad Devarajan; Donald W. Landry; Chyuan-Sheng Lin; Jonathan Barasch
Many proteins have been proposed to act as surrogate markers of organ damage, yet for many candidates the essential biomarker characteristics that link the protein to the injured organ have not yet been described. We generated an Ngal reporter mouse by inserting a double-fusion reporter gene encoding luciferase-2 and mCherry (Luc2-mC) into the Ngal (Lcn2) locus. The Ngal-Luc2-mC reporter accurately recapitulated the endogenous message and illuminated injuries in vivo in real time. In the kidney, Ngal-Luc2-mC imaging showed a sensitive, rapid, dose-dependent, reversible, and organ- and cell-specific relationship with tubular stress, which correlated with the level of urinary Ngal (uNgal). Unexpectedly, specific cells of the distal nephron were the source of uNgal. Cells isolated from Ngal-Luc2-mC mice also revealed both the onset and the resolution of the injury, and the actions of NF-κB inhibitors and antibiotics during infection. Thus, imaging of Ngal-Luc2-mC mice and cells identified injurious and reparative agents that affect kidney damage.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2010
Guanhu Bao; Matthew S Clifton; Trisha M. Hoette; Kiyoshi Mori; Shixian Deng; Andong Qiu; Melanie Viltard; David Y. Williams; Neal Paragas; Thomas Leete; Ritwij Kulkarni; Xiangpo Li; Belinda T. Lee; Avtandil Kalandadze; Adam J. Ratner; Juan C. Pizarro; Kai M. Schmidt-Ott; Donald W. Landry; Kenneth N. Raymond; Roland K. Strong; Jonathan Barasch
The lipocalins are secreted proteins that bind small organic molecules. Scn-Ngal [known as Neutrophil Gelatinase Associated Lipocalin, Siderocalin, Lipocalin 2] sequesters bacterial iron chelators, called siderophores, and consequently blocks bacterial growth. However, Scn-Ngal is also prominently expressed in aseptic diseases, implying that it binds additional ligands and serves additional functions. Using chemical screens, crystallography, and fluorescence methods, we report that Scn-Ngal binds iron together with a small metabolic product called catechol. The formation of the complex blocked the reactivity of iron and permitted its transport once introduced into circulation in vivo. Scn-Ngal then recycled its iron in endosomes by a pH sensitive mechanism. Since catechols derive from bacterial and mammalian metabolism of dietary compounds, the Scn-Ngal:catechol:iron complex represents an unforeseen microbial-host interaction, which mimics Scn-Ngal:siderophore interactions, but instead traffics iron in aseptic tissues. These results identify an endogenous siderophore, which may link the disparate roles of Scn-Ngal in different diseases.
Developmental Cell | 2009
Jau Yi Li; Neal Paragas; Renée M. Ned; Andong Qiu; Melanie Viltard; Thomas Leete; Ian R. Drexler; Xia Chen; Simone Sanna-Cherchi; Farah Mohammed; David Y. Williams; Chyuan Sheng Lin; Kai M. Schmidt-Ott; Nancy C. Andrews; Jonathan Barasch
Developing organs require iron for a myriad of functions, but embryos deleted of the major adult transport proteins, transferrin or its receptor transferrin receptor1 (TfR1(-/-)), still initiate organogenesis, suggesting that non-transferrin pathways are important. To examine these pathways, we developed chimeras composed of fluorescence-tagged TfR1(-/-) cells and untagged wild-type cells. In the kidney, TfR1(-/-) cells populated capsule and stroma, mesenchyme and nephron, but were underrepresented in ureteric bud tips. Consistently, TfR1 provided transferrin to the ureteric bud, but not to the capsule or the stroma. Instead of transferrin, we found that the capsule internalized ferritin. Since the capsule expressed a novel receptor called Scara5, we tested its role in ferritin uptake and found that Scara5 bound serum ferritin and then stimulated its endocytosis from the cell surface with consequent iron delivery. These data implicate cell type-specific mechanisms of iron traffic in organogenesis, which alternatively utilize transferrin or non-transferrin iron delivery pathways.
Molecular Pharmacology | 2008
Rongbao Zhao; Andong Qiu; Eugenia Tsai; Michaela Jansen; Myles H. Akabas; I. David Goldman
The reduced folate carrier (RFC) and the proton-coupled folate transporter (PCFT) are ubiquitously expressed in normal and malignant mammalian tissues and in human solid tumor cell lines. This article addresses the extent to which PCFT contributes to transport of pemetrexed and to the activities of this and other antifolates relative to RFC at physiological pH. Either RFC or PCFT cDNA was stably transfected into a transporter-null HeLa cell variant to achieve activities similar to their endogenous function in wild-type HeLa cells. PCFT and RFC produced comparable increases in pemetrexed activity in growth medium with 5-formyltetrahydrofolate. However, PCFT had little or no effect on the activities of methotrexate, N-(5-[N-(3,4-dihydro-2-methyl-4-oxyquinazolin-6-ylmethyl)-N-methyl-amino]-2-thenoyl)-l-glutamic acid (raltitrexed, Tomudex; ZD1694), or Nα-(4-amino-4-deoxypteroyl)-Nδ-hemiphthaloyl-l-ornithine (PT523) in comparison with RFC irrespective of the folate growth source. PCFT, expressed at high levels in Xenopus laevis oocytes and in transporter-competent HepG2 cells, exhibited a high affinity for pemetrexed, with an influx Km value of 0.2 to 0.8 μM at pH 5.5. PCFT increased the growth inhibitory activity of pemetrexed, but not that of the other antifolates in HepG2 cells grown with 5-formyltetrahydrofolate at physiological pH. These findings illustrate the unique role that PCFT plays in the transport and pharmacological activity of pemetrexed. Because of the ubiquitous expression of PCFT in human tumors, and the ability of PCFT to sustain pemetrexed activity even in the absence of RFC, tumor cells are unlikely to become resistant to pemetrexed as a result of impaired transport because of the redundancy of these genetically distinct routes.
Journal of Neurochemistry | 2008
Jan B. Wollack; Benedette Makori; Stuti Ahlawat; Rajeth Koneru; Sonia Picinich; Angela K. Smith; I. David Goldman; Andong Qiu; Peter D. Cole; John Glod; Barton A. Kamen
J. Neurochem. (2008) 104, 1494–1503.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2014
Neal Paragas; Ritwij Kulkarni; Max Werth; Kai M. Schmidt-Ott; Catherine S. Forster; Rong Deng; Qing-Yin Zhang; Eugenia Singer; Alexander D. Klose; Tian Huai Shen; Kevin P. Francis; Sunetra Ray; Soundarapandian Vijayakumar; Samuel Seward; Mary E. Bovino; Katherine Xu; Yared Takabe; Fábio E. Amaral; Sumit Mohan; Rebecca Wax; Kaitlyn Corbin; Simone Sanna-Cherchi; Kiyoshi Mori; Lynne L. Johnson; Thomas L. Nickolas; Vivette D. D’Agati; Chyuan-Sheng Lin; Andong Qiu; Qais Al-Awqati; Adam J. Ratner
α-Intercalated cells (A-ICs) within the collecting duct of the kidney are critical for acid-base homeostasis. Here, we have shown that A-ICs also serve as both sentinels and effectors in the defense against urinary infections. In a murine urinary tract infection model, A-ICs bound uropathogenic E. coli and responded by acidifying the urine and secreting the bacteriostatic protein lipocalin 2 (LCN2; also known as NGAL). A-IC-dependent LCN2 secretion required TLR4, as mice expressing an LPS-insensitive form of TLR4 expressed reduced levels of LCN2. The presence of LCN2 in urine was both necessary and sufficient to control the urinary tract infection through iron sequestration, even in the harsh condition of urine acidification. In mice lacking A-ICs, both urinary LCN2 and urinary acidification were reduced, and consequently bacterial clearance was limited. Together these results indicate that A-ICs, which are known to regulate acid-base metabolism, are also critical for urinary defense against pathogenic bacteria. They respond to both cystitis and pyelonephritis by delivering bacteriostatic chemical agents to the lower urinary system.
Biochemical Journal | 2005
Andong Qiu; Christer Hogstrand
Zinc is a vital micronutrient to all organisms and it is therefore very important to determine the mechanisms that regulate cellular zinc uptake. Previously, we reported on zinc uptake transporters from zebrafish (Danio rerio; DrZIP1) and Fugu pufferfish (Takifugu rubripes; FrZIP1) that facilitated cellular zinc uptake of high affinity (K(m)<0.5 microM) in both CHSE214 [chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) embryonic 214] cells and Xenopus laevis oocytes. To investigate additional biochemical pathways of zinc uptake in fish, we molecularly cloned the second fish member (FrZIP2) of the SLC39 subfamily II from Fugu pufferfish gill. Functional characterization suggests that FrZIP2 stimulated zinc uptake in a temperature-, time-, concentration- and pH-dependent manner when overexpressed in MDCK cells (Madin-Darby canine kidney cells). In comparison with FrZIP1 and DrZIP1 (<0.5 microM), FrZIP2 appears to represent a low-affinity zinc uptake transporter (K(m)=13.6 microM) in pufferfish. FrZIP2 protein was selective for zinc, but it might also transport Cu2+, since 20 times excess of Cu2+ completely abolished its zinc uptake activity. The zinc uptake by FrZIP2 was stimulated in a slightly acidic medium (pH 5.5-6.5) and was completely blocked at pH 7.5 and above, suggesting that an inward H+ gradient might provide a driving force for zinc transport by FrZIP2. Furthermore, FrZIP2-mediated zinc uptake activity was slightly inhibited by 0.5 mM HCO3-, indicating that FrZIP2 may employ a different mechanism of zinc translocation from the assumed HCO3--coupled zinc transport used by human SLC39A2. The FrZIP2 gene was expressed in all the tissues studied herein, with especially high levels in the ovary and intestines. Thus FrZIP2 may be a prominent zinc uptake transporter of low affinity in many cell types of Fugu pufferfish.
Biochemical Journal | 2005
Andong Qiu; M Shayeghi; Christer Hogstrand
Zinc is a vital micronutrient to all organisms and a potential toxicant to aquatic animals. It is therefore of importance to understand the mechanism of zinc regulation. In the present study, we molecularly cloned and functionally characterized a zinc transporter of the SLC39A family [commonly referred to as the ZIP (Zrt- and Irt-related protein) family] from the gill of zebrafish (Danio rerio) (DrZIP1). DrZIP1 protein was found to localize at the plasma membrane and to function as a zinc uptake transporter when being expressed in either chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) embryonic 214 cells or Xenopus laevis oocytes. In comparison with pufferfish transporter proteins (FrZIP2 and FrECaC) that are known to facilitate cellular zinc uptake, DrZIP1 appears to have high affinity to bind and transport zinc, suggesting that it maybe a high-affinity zinc uptake transporter (Km < 0.5 microM) in fish. Orthologues of DrZIP1 were also identified in both freshwater and seawater pufferfish (Tetraodon nigroviridis and Takifugu rubripes), indicating that these proteins may be functionally conserved among different fish species. DrZIP1 mRNA is expressed in all the tissues examined in the present study and thus DrZIP1 may be a constitutive zinc uptake transporter in many cell types of zebrafish.
Blood | 2007
Rongbao Zhao; Sang Hee Min; Andong Qiu; Antoinette Sakaris; Gary L. Goldberg; Claudio Sandoval; J. Jeffrey Malatack; David S. Rosenblatt; I. David Goldman