Changqi Wang
University of Sydney
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Publication
Featured researches published by Changqi Wang.
BMC Immunology | 2013
Changqi Wang; Xiao Yu; Qi Cao; Ya Wang; Guoping Zheng; Thian Kui Tan; Hong Zhao; Ye Zhao; Yiping Wang; David C.H. Harris
BackgroundMacrophages have heterogeneous phenotypes and complex functions within both innate and adaptive immune responses. To date, most experimental studies have been performed on macrophages derived from bone marrow, spleen and peritoneum. However, differences among macrophages from these particular sources remain unclear. In this study, the features of murine macrophages from bone marrow, spleen and peritoneum were compared.ResultsWe found that peritoneal macrophages (PMs) appear to be more mature than bone marrow derived macrophages (BMs) and splenic macrophages (SPMs) based on their morphology and surface molecular characteristics. BMs showed the strongest capacity for both proliferation and phagocytosis among the three populations of macrophage. Under resting conditions, SPMs maintained high levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines expression (IL-6, IL-12 and TNF-α), whereas BMs produced high levels of suppressive cytokines (IL-10 and TGF-β). However, SPMs activated with LPS not only maintained higher levels of (IL-6, IL-12 and TNF-α) than BMs or PMs, but also maintained higher levels of IL-10 and TGF-β.ConclusionsOur results show that BMs, SPMs and PMs are distinct populations with different biological functions, providing clues to guide their further experimental or therapeutic use.
Kidney International | 2013
Junyu Lu; Qi Cao; Dong Zheng; Yan Sun; Changqi Wang; Xiao Yu; Ya Wang; Vincent W.S. Lee; Guoping Zheng; Thian Kui Tan; Xin Wang; Stephen I. Alexander; David C.H. Harris; Yiping Wang
Two types of alternatively activated macrophages, M(2a) induced by IL-4/IL-13 and M(2c) by IL-10/TGF-β, exhibit anti-inflammatory functions in vitro and protect against renal injury in vivo. Since their relative therapeutic efficacy is unclear, we compared the effects of these two macrophage subsets in murine adriamycin nephrosis. Both subsets significantly reduced renal inflammation and renal injury; however, M(2c) macrophages more effectively reduced glomerulosclerosis, tubular atrophy, interstitial expansion, and proteinuria than M(2a) macrophages. The M(2c) macrophages were also more effective than M(2a) in reduction of macrophage and CD4(+) T-cell infiltration in kidney. Moreover, nephrotic mice treated with M(2c) had a greater reduction in renal fibrosis than those treated with M(2a). M(2c) but not M(2a) macrophages induced regulatory T cells (Tregs) from CD4(+)CD25(-) T cells in vitro, and increased Treg numbers in local draining lymph nodes of nephrotic mice. To determine whether the greater protection with M(2c) was due to their capability to induce Tregs, the Tregs were depleted by PC61 antibody in nephrotic mice treated with M(2a) or M(2c). Treg depletion diminished the superior effects of M(2c) compared to M(2a) in protection against renal injury, inflammatory infiltrates, and renal fibrosis. Thus, M(2c) are more potent than M(2a) macrophages in protecting against renal injury due to their ability to induce Tregs.
Laboratory Investigation | 2013
Thian Kui Tan; Guoping Zheng; Tzu-Ting Hsu; So Ra Lee; Jianlin Zhang; Ye Zhao; Xinrui Tian; Yiping Wang; Yuan Min Wang; Qi Cao; Ya Wang; Vincent W.S. Lee; Changqi Wang; Dong Zheng; Stephen I. Alexander; Erik W. Thompson; David C.H. Harris
A pro-fibrotic role of matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) in tubular cell epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) is well established in renal fibrosis; however studies from our group and others have demonstrated some previously unrecognized complexity of MMP-9 that has been overlooked in renal fibrosis. Therefore, the aim of this study was to determine the expression pattern, origin and the exact mechanism underlying the contribution of MMP-9 to unilateral ureteral obstruction (UUO), a well-established model of renal fibrosis via MMP-9 inhibition. Renal MMP-9 expression in BALB/c mice with UUO was examined on day 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11 and 14. To inhibit MMP-9 activity, MMP-2/9 inhibitor or MMP-9-neutralizing antibody was administered daily for 4 consecutive days from day 0–3, 6–9 or 10–13 and tissues harvested at day 14. In UUO, there was a bi-phasic early- and late-stage upregulation of MMP-9 activity. Interestingly, tubular epithelial cells (TECs) were the predominant source of MMP-9 during early stage, whereas TECs, macrophages and myofibroblasts produced MMP-9 during late-stage UUO. Early- and late-stage inhibition of MMP-9 in UUO mice significantly reduced tubular cell EMT and renal fibrosis. Moreover, MMP-9 inhibition caused a significant reduction in MMP-9-cleaved osteopontin and macrophage infiltration in UUO kidney. Our in vitro study showed MMP-9-cleaved osteopontin enhanced macrophage transwell migration and MMP-9 of both primary TEC and macrophage induced tubular cell EMT. In summary, our result suggests that MMP-9 of both TEC and macrophage origin may directly or indirectly contribute to the pathogenesis of renal fibrosis via osteopontin cleavage, which, in turn further recruit macrophage and induce tubular cell EMT. Our study also highlights the time dependency of its expression and the potential of stage-specific inhibition strategy against renal fibrosis.
Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2011
Qi Cao; Changqi Wang; Dong Zheng; Ya Wang; Vincent W.S. Lee; Yuan Min Wang; Guoping Zheng; Thian Kui Tan; Di Yu; Stephen I. Alexander; David C.H. Harris; Yiping Wang
The kidney contains receptors for the cytokine IL-25, but the effects of IL-25 in CKD are unknown. Here, we induced adriamycin nephropathy in both BALB/c mice and severe combined immunodeficient (SCID) mice, and we injected IL-25 for 7 consecutive days starting at day 5 after adriamycin administration. BALB/c mice treated with IL-25 had less glomerulosclerosis, tubular atrophy, interstitial expansion, and proteinuria than control mice at day 28. IL-25 increased the levels of IL-4 and IL-13 in serum, kidney, renal draining lymph nodes, and CD4+ lymphocytes. IL-25 also directly suppressed effector macrophages in vitro and in vivo and induced alternatively activated (M2) macrophages in vivo. However, in SCID mice and in BALB/c mice treated with IL-4/13-neutralizing antibody, IL-25 failed to protect against renal injury and did not induce M2. In conclusion, IL-25 protects against renal injury in adriamycin nephropathy in mice by, at least in part, inducing Th2 immune responses.
Kidney International | 2014
Qi Cao; Yiping Wang; Dong Zheng; Yan Sun; Changqi Wang; Xin M. Wang; Vincent W.S. Lee; Ya Wang; Guoping Zheng; Thian Kui Tan; Y. M. Wang; Stephen I. Alexander; David C.H. Harris
Alternatively activated macrophages (M2) regulate immune responses and ex vivo polarized splenic M2 are able to ameliorate renal injury including models of renal disease, such as adriamycin nephropathy. Whether M2 derived from other organs have similar protective efficacy is unknown. Here, we report adoptively transferred bone marrow M2 macrophages did not improve renal function or reduce renal injury in adriamycin nephropathy, whereas splenic M2 macrophages were protective. Bone marrow and splenic M2 macrophages showed similar regulatory phenotypes and suppressive functions in vitro. Within the inflamed kidney, suppressive phenotypes in bone marrow but not in splenic M2 macrophages, were dramatically reduced. Loss of the suppressive phenotype in bone marrow M2 was related to strong proliferation of bone marrow M2. Bone marrow M2 proliferation in vivo correlated with M-CSF expression by tubular cells in the inflamed kidney. Inhibition of M-CSF in vitro limited bone marrow M2 proliferation and prevented switch of phenotype. Proliferating cells derived from transfused bone marrow M2 were inflammatory rather than regulatory in their phenotype and function. Thus bone marrow in contrast to splenic M2 macrophages do not protect against renal structural and functional injury in murine adriamycin nephropathy. The failed renoprotection of bone marrow M2 is due to the switch of transfused M2 macrophages from a regulatory to an inflammatory phenotype.
Journal of Cell Science | 2013
Xinrui Tian; Jianlin Zhang; Thian Kui Tan; J. Guy Lyons; Hong Zhao; Bo Niu; So Ra Lee; Tania Tsatralis; Ye Zhao; Ya Wang; Qi Cao; Changqi Wang; Yiping Wang; Vincent W.S. Lee; Michael Kahn; Guoping Zheng; David C.H. Harris
Summary Transforming growth factor &bgr;1 (TGF-&bgr;1) is known to be both anti-inflammatory and profibrotic. Cross-talk between TGF-&bgr;/Smad and Wnt/&bgr;-catenin pathways in epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) suggests a specific role for &bgr;-catenin in profibrotic effects of TGF-&bgr;1. However, no such mechanistic role has been demonstrated for &bgr;-catenin in the anti-inflammatory effects of TGF-&bgr;1. In the present study, we explored the role of &bgr;-catenin in the profibrotic and anti-inflammatory effects of TGF-&bgr;1 by using a cytosolic, but not membrane, &bgr;-catenin knockdown chimera (F-TrCP-Ecad) and the &bgr;-catenin/CBP inhibitor ICG-001. TGF-&bgr;1 induced nuclear Smad3/&bgr;-catenin complex, but not &bgr;-catenin/LEF-1 complex or TOP-flash activity, during EMT of C1.1 (renal tubular epithelial) cells. F-TrCP-Ecad selectively degraded TGF-&bgr;1-induced cytoplasmic &bgr;-catenin and blocked EMT of C1.1 cells. Both F-TrCP-Ecad and ICG-001 blocked TGF-&bgr;1-induced Smad3/&bgr;-catenin and Smad reporter activity in C1.1 cells, suggesting that TGF-&bgr;1-induced EMT depends on &bgr;-catenin binding to Smad3, but not LEF-1 downstream of Smad3, through canonical Wnt. In contrast, in J774 macrophages, the &bgr;-catenin level was low and was not changed by interferon-&ggr; (IFN-&ggr;) or lipopolysaccharide (LPS) with or without TGF-&bgr;1. TGF-&bgr;1 inhibition of LPS-induced TNF-&agr; and IFN-&ggr;-stimulated inducible NO synthase (iNOS) expression was not affected by F-TrCP-Ecad, ICG-001 or by overexpression of wild-type &bgr;-catenin in J774 cells. Inhibition of &bgr;-catenin by either F-TrCP-Ecad or ICG-001 abolished LiCl-induced TOP-flash, but not TGF-&bgr;1-induced Smad reporter, activity in J774 cells. These results demonstrate for the first time that &bgr;-catenin is required as a co-factor of Smad in TGF-&bgr;1-induced EMT of C1.1 epithelial cells, but not in TGF-&bgr;1 inhibition of macrophage activation. Targeting &bgr;-catenin may dissociate the TGF-&bgr;1 profibrotic and anti-inflammatory effects.
Kidney International | 2012
Dong Zheng; Qi Cao; Vincent W.S. Lee; Ya Wang; Guoping Zheng; Yuan Min Wang; Thian Kui Tan; Changqi Wang; Stephen I. Alexander; David C.H. Harris; Yiping Wang
Plasmacytoid dendritic cells play important roles in inducing immune tolerance, preventing allograft rejection, and regulating immune responses in both autoimmune disease and graft-versus-host disease. In order to evaluate a possible protective effect of plasmacytoid dendritic cells against renal inflammation and injury, we purified these cells from mouse spleens and adoptively transferred lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-treated cells, modified ex vivo, into mice with adriamycin nephropathy. These LPS-treated cells localized to the kidney cortex and the lymph nodes draining the kidney, and protected the kidney from injury during adriamycin nephropathy. Glomerulosclerosis, tubular atrophy, interstitial expansion, proteinuria, and creatinine clearance were significantly reduced in mice with adriamycin nephropathy subsequently treated with LPS-activated plasmacytoid dendritic cells as compared to the kidney injury in mice given naive plasmacytoid dendritic cells. In addition, LPS-pretreated cells, but not naive plasmacytoid dendritic cells, convert CD4+CD25− T cells into Foxp3+ regulatory T cells and suppress the proinflammatory cytokine production of endogenous renal macrophages. This may explain their ability to protect against renal injury in adriamycin nephropathy.
Kidney International | 2013
Ya Wang; Yuan Min Wang; Yiping Wang; Guoping Zheng; Geoff Yu Zhang; Jimmy Jianheng Zhou; Thian Kui Tan; Qi Cao; Min Hu; Debbie Watson; Huiling Wu; Dong Zheng; Changqi Wang; Mireille H. Lahoud; Irina Caminschi; David C.H. Harris; Stephen I. Alexander
The CD40-CD154 costimulatory pathway has been shown to be critical for both T- and B-cell activation in autoimmune disease. Here, we assessed the effects of blocking this pathway using CD40 DNA vaccine enhanced by dendritic cell targeting on the development of active Heymann nephritis, a rat model of human membranous nephropathy. DNA vaccination delivers plasmid DNA encoding the target antigen, either alone or in combination with enhancing elements, to induce both humoral and cellular immune responses. To determine whether CD40 DNA vaccine targeting the encoded CD40 directly to dendritic cells would improve the efficacy of the vaccination against self-protein CD40, we utilized a plasmid encoding a single-chain Fv antibody specific for the dendritic cell-restricted antigen-uptake receptor DEC205 (scDEC), the target gene CD40, and the adjuvant tetanus sequence p30. This vaccine plasmid was compared to a control plasmid without scDEC. Rats vaccinated with scDEC-CD40 had significantly less proteinuria and renal injury than did rats receiving scControl-CD40 and were protected from developing Heymann nephritis. Thus, CD40 DNA vaccination targeted to dendritic cells limits the development of Heymann nephritis.
American Journal of Physiology-renal Physiology | 2018
Qi Cao; Yiping Wang; Changqi Wang; Xin M. Wang; Vincent Weng Seng Lee; Guoping Zheng; Ye Zhao; Stephen L Alexander; David C.H. Harris
Cell therapy using macrophages requires large amounts of cells, which are difficult to collect from patients. Patients undergoing peritoneal dialysis (PD) discard huge numbers of peritoneal macrophages in dialysate daily. Macrophages can be modulated to become regulatory macrophages, which have shown great promise as a therapeutic strategy in experimental kidney disease and human kidney transplantation. This study aimed to examine the potential of using peritoneal macrophages (PMs) from peritoneal dialysate to treat kidney disease. Monocytes/macrophages accounted for >40% of total peritoneal leukocytes in both patients and mice undergoing PD. PMs from patients and mice undergoing PD were more mature than peripheral monocytes/macrophages, as shown by low expression of C-C motif chemokine receptor 2 (CCR2) and morphological changes during in vitro culture. PMs from patients and mice undergoing PD displayed normal macrophage function and could be modulated into a regulatory (M2) phenotype. In vivo, adoptive transfer of peritoneal M2 macrophages derived from PD mice effectively protected against kidney injury in mice with adriamycin nephropathy (AN). Importantly, the transfused peritoneal M2 macrophages maintained their M2 phenotype in kidney of AN mice. In conclusion, PMs derived from patients and mice undergoing PD exhibited conventional macrophage features. Peritoneal M2 macrophages derived from PD mice are able to reduce kidney injury in AN, suggesting that peritoneal macrophages from patients undergoing PD may have the potential for clinical therapeutic application.
American Journal of Pathology | 2016
Guoping Zheng; Jianlin Zhang; Hong Zhao; Hailong Wang; Min Pang; Xi Qiao; So R. Lee; Tzu-Ting Hsu; Thian Kui Tan; J. Guy Lyons; Ye Zhao; Xinrui Tian; David A.F. Loebel; Isabella Rubera; Michel Tauc; Ya Wang; Yiping Wang; Y. M. Wang; Qi Cao; Changqi Wang; Vincent W.S. Lee; Stephen I. Alexander; Patrick P.L. Tam; David C.H. Harris