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Dive into the research topics where Chen-Song Zhang is active.

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Featured researches published by Chen-Song Zhang.


Science | 2012

GSK3-TIP60-ULK1 signaling pathway links growth factor deprivation to autophagy.

Shu-Yong Lin; Terytty Yang Li; Qing Liu; Cixiong Zhang; Xiaotong Li; Yan Chen; Guili Lian; Qi Liu; Ka Ruan; Zhen Wang; Chen-Song Zhang; Kun-Yi Chien; Jia-Wei Wu; Qinxi Li; Jiahuai Han; Sheng-Cai Lin

Acetylation and Autophagy Autophagy allows cells to digest their own components when necessary to survive stressful conditions. Lin et al. (p. 477) and Yi et al. (p. 474) describe signaling mechanisms in mammalian cells and yeast, respectively, by which autophagy is regulated by protein acetylation. In mammalian cells deprived of serum, the acetyltransferase TIP60 was activated by phosphorylation by the protein kinase GSK3 (glycogen synthase kinase 3). TIP60s target appeared to be a protein kinase central to autophagy regulation, ULK1. This activating pathway was required for autophagy in the absence of serum, but was not needed for autophagy in cells deprived of glucose. In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae starved of nitrogen, another acetylation mechanism was uncovered. Starvation led to activation of the histone acetyltransferase Esa1, which acetylated the protein Atg3, a key component of the autophagy machinery, thus increasing its interaction with another autophagy protein, Atg8. A signaling pathway is involved in cellular responses to serum starvation but not glucose starvation. In metazoans, cells depend on extracellular growth factors for energy homeostasis. We found that glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK3), when deinhibited by default in cells deprived of growth factors, activates acetyltransferase TIP60 through phosphorylating TIP60-Ser86, which directly acetylates and stimulates the protein kinase ULK1, which is required for autophagy. Cells engineered to express TIP60S86A that cannot be phosphorylated by GSK3 could not undergo serum deprivation–induced autophagy. An acetylation-defective mutant of ULK1 failed to rescue autophagy in ULK1−/− mouse embryonic fibroblasts. Cells used signaling from GSK3 to TIP60 and ULK1 to regulate autophagy when deprived of serum but not glucose. These findings uncover an activating pathway that integrates protein phosphorylation and acetylation to connect growth factor deprivation to autophagy.


Cell Metabolism | 2014

The Lysosomal v-ATPase-Ragulator Complex is a Common Activator for AMPK and mTORC1, Acting as a Switch between Catabolism and Anabolism

Chen-Song Zhang; Bin Jiang; Mengqi Li; Mingjiang Zhu; Yongying Peng; Yalin Zhang; Yu-Qing Wu; Terytty Yang Li; Yu Liang; Zailian Lu; Guili Lian; Qing Liu; Huiling Guo; Zhenyu Yin; Zhiyun Ye; Jiahuai Han; Jia-Wei Wu; Huiyong Yin; Shu-Yong Lin; Sheng-Cai Lin

AMPK and mTOR play principal roles in governing metabolic programs; however, mechanisms underlying the coordination of the two inversely regulated kinases remain unclear. In this study we found, most surprisingly, that the late endosomal/lysosomal protein complex v-ATPase-Ragulator, essential for activation of mTORC1, is also required for AMPK activation. We also uncovered that AMPK is a residential protein of late endosome/lysosome. Under glucose starvation, the v-ATPase-Ragulator complex is accessible to AXIN/LKB1 for AMPK activation. Concurrently, the guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) activity of Ragulator toward RAG is inhibited by AXIN, causing dissociation from endosome and inactivation of mTORC1. We have thus revealed that the v-ATPase-Ragulator complex is also an initiating sensor for energy stress and meanwhile serves as an endosomal docking site for LKB1-mediated AMPK activation by forming the v-ATPase-Ragulator-AXIN/LKB1-AMPK complex, thereby providing a switch between catabolism and anabolism. Our current study also emphasizes a general role of late endosome/lysosome in controlling metabolic programs.


Cell Metabolism | 2013

AMP as a Low-Energy Charge Signal Autonomously Initiates Assembly of AXIN-AMPK-LKB1 Complex for AMPK Activation

Yalin Zhang; Huiling Guo; Chen-Song Zhang; Shu-Yong Lin; Zhenyu Yin; Yongying Peng; Hui Luo; Yuzhe Shi; Guili Lian; Cixiong Zhang; Mengqi Li; Zhiyun Ye; Jing Ye; Jiahuai Han; Peng Li; Jia-Wei Wu; Sheng-Cai Lin

The AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a master regulator of metabolic homeostasis by sensing cellular energy status. AMPK is mainly activated via phosphorylation by LKB1 when cellular AMP/ADP levels are increased. However, how AMP/ADP brings about AMPK phosphorylation remains unclear. Here, we show that it is AMP, but not ADP, that drives AXIN to directly tether LKB1 to phosphorylate AMPK. The complex formation of AXIN-AMPK-LKB1 is greatly enhanced in glucose-starved or AICAR-treated cells and in cell-free systems supplemented with exogenous AMP. Depletion of AXIN abrogated starvation-induced AMPK-LKB1 colocalization. Importantly, adenovirus-based knockdown of AXIN in the mouse liver impaired AMPK activation and caused exacerbated fatty liver after starvation, underscoring an essential role of AXIN in AMPK activation. These findings demonstrate an initiating role of AMP and demonstrate that AXIN directly transmits AMP binding of AMPK to its activation by LKB1, uncovering the mechanistic route for AMP to elicit AMPK activation by LKB1.


Nature | 2017

Fructose-1,6-bisphosphate and aldolase mediate glucose sensing by AMPK.

Chen-Song Zhang; Simon A. Hawley; Yue Zong; Mengqi Li; Zhichao Wang; Alexander Gray; Teng Ma; Jiwen Cui; Jin-Wei Feng; Mingjiang Zhu; Yu-Qing Wu; Terytty Yang Li; Zhiyun Ye; Shu-Yong Lin; Huiyong Yin; Hailong Piao; D. Grahame Hardie; Sheng-Cai Lin

The major energy source for most cells is glucose, from which ATP is generated via glycolysis and/or oxidative metabolism. Glucose deprivation activates AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), but it is unclear whether this activation occurs solely via changes in AMP or ADP, the classical activators of AMPK. Here, we describe an AMP/ADP-independent mechanism that triggers AMPK activation by sensing the absence of fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (FBP), with AMPK being progressively activated as extracellular glucose and intracellular FBP decrease. When unoccupied by FBP, aldolases promote the formation of a lysosomal complex containing at least v-ATPase, ragulator, axin, liver kinase B1 (LKB1) and AMPK, which has previously been shown to be required for AMPK activation. Knockdown of aldolases activates AMPK even in cells with abundant glucose, whereas the catalysis-defective D34S aldolase mutant, which still binds FBP, blocks AMPK activation. Cell-free reconstitution assays show that addition of FBP disrupts the association of axin and LKB1 with v-ATPase and ragulator. Importantly, in some cell types AMP/ATP and ADP/ATP ratios remain unchanged during acute glucose starvation, and intact AMP-binding sites on AMPK are not required for AMPK activation. These results establish that aldolase, as well as being a glycolytic enzyme, is a sensor of glucose availability that regulates AMPK.


Cell Metabolism | 2016

Metformin Activates AMPK through the Lysosomal Pathway

Chen-Song Zhang; Mengqi Li; Teng Ma; Yue Zong; Jiwen Cui; Jin-Wei Feng; Yu-Qing Wu; Shu-Yong Lin; Sheng-Cai Lin

Metformin (N, N-dimethylbiguanide) is the most widely used first-line drug for treatment of type 2 diabetes (T2D). This anti-hyperglycemic drug offers clinical superiority over other glucose-lowering drugs, with little induction of hypoglycemia or weight gain and with the effects to reverse fatty liver, improve insulin sensitivity, and ameliorate cardiovascular dysfunctions associated with T2D (extensively reviewed by Foretz et al., 2014). Administration of metformin to nematodes (C. elegans) and mice gave rise to extended lifespan and health span (Barzilai et al., 2016).


Cell Metabolism | 2016

AMPK Promotes Autophagy by Facilitating Mitochondrial Fission.

Chen-Song Zhang; Sheng-Cai Lin

AMPK senses decreased cellular energy levels, triggering mitochondrial autophagy or mitophagy through activating ULK1 and inhibiting mTORC1. In a recent report, Toyama et al. (2016) show that activated AMPK phosphorylation of MFF is critical for mitochondrial fission. Unphosphorylatable MFF mutants block mitophagy, connecting AMPK to mitochondrial fission and to mitophagy.


Autophagy | 2012

Protein phosphorylation-acetylation cascade connects growth factor deprivation to autophagy

Shu-Yong Lin; Terytty Yang Li; Qing Liu; Cixiong Zhang; Xiaotong Li; Yan Chen; Guili Lian; Qi Liu; Ka Ruan; Zhen-Bo Wang; Chen-Song Zhang; Kun-Yi Chien; Jia-Wei Wu; Qinxi Li; Jiahuai Han; Sheng-Cai Lin

Different from unicellular organisms, metazoan cells require the presence of extracellular growth factors to utilize environmental nutrients. However, the underlying mechanism was unclear. We have delineated a pathway, in which glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3) in cells deprived of growth factors phosphorylates and activates the acetyltransferase KAT5/TIP60, which in turn stimulates the protein kinase ULK1 to elicit autophagy. Cells with the Kat5/Tip60 gene replaced with Kat5S86A that cannot be phosphorylated by GSK3 are resistant to serum starvation-induced autophagy. Acetylation sites on ULK1 were mapped to K162 and K606, and the acetylation-defective mutant ULK1K162,606R displays reduced kinase activity and fails to rescue autophagy in Ulk1−/− mouse embryonic fibroblasts, indicating that acetylation is vital to the activation of ULK1. The GSK3-KAT5-ULK1 cascade seems to be specific for cells to sense growth factors, as KAT5 phosphorylation is not enhanced under glucose deprivation. Distinct from the glucose starvation-autophagy pathway that is conserved in all eukaryotic organisms, the growth factor deprivation response pathway is perhaps unique to metazoan organisms.


Cell Research | 2015

RHOBTB3 promotes proteasomal degradation of HIFα through facilitating hydroxylation and suppresses the Warburg effect.

Chen-Song Zhang; Qi Liu; Mengqi Li; Shu-Yong Lin; Yongying Peng; Di Wu; Terytty Yang Li; Qiang Fu; Weiping Jia; Xinjun Wang; Teng Ma; Yue Zong; Jiwen Cui; Chengfei Pu; Guili Lian; Huiling Guo; Zhiyun Ye; Sheng-Cai Lin

Hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs) are master regulators of adaptive responses to low oxygen, and their α-subunits are rapidly degraded through the ubiquitination-dependent proteasomal pathway after hydroxylation. Aberrant accumulation or activation of HIFs is closely linked to many types of cancer. However, how hydroxylation of HIFα and its delivery to the ubiquitination machinery are regulated remains unclear. Here we show that Rho-related BTB domain-containing protein 3 (RHOBTB3) directly interacts with the hydroxylase PHD2 to promote HIFα hydroxylation. RHOBTB3 also directly interacts with the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) protein, a component of the E3 ubiquitin ligase complex, facilitating ubiquitination of HIFα. Remarkably, RHOBTB3 dimerizes with LIMD1, and constructs a RHOBTB3/LIMD1-PHD2-VHL-HIFα complex to effect the maximal degradation of HIFα. Hypoxia reduces the RHOBTB3-centered complex formation, resulting in an accumulation of HIFα. Importantly, the expression level of RHOBTB3 is greatly reduced in human renal carcinomas, and RHOBTB3 deficiency significantly elevates the Warburg effect and accelerates xenograft growth. Our work thus reveals that RHOBTB3 serves as a scaffold to organize a multi-subunit complex that promotes the hydroxylation, ubiquitination and degradation of HIFα.


Nature Communications | 2016

A conserved motif in JNK/p38-specific MAPK phosphatases as a determinant for JNK1 recognition and inactivation

Xin Liu; Chen-Song Zhang; Chang Lu; Sheng-Cai Lin; Jia-Wei Wu; Zhi-Xin Wang

Mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs), important in a large array of signalling pathways, are tightly controlled by a cascade of protein kinases and by MAPK phosphatases (MKPs). MAPK signalling efficiency and specificity is modulated by protein–protein interactions between individual MAPKs and the docking motifs in cognate binding partners. Two types of docking interactions have been identified: D-motif-mediated interaction and FXF-docking interaction. Here we report the crystal structure of JNK1 bound to the catalytic domain of MKP7 at 2.4-Å resolution, providing high-resolution structural insight into the FXF-docking interaction. The 285FNFL288 segment in MKP7 directly binds to a hydrophobic site on JNK1 that is near the MAPK insertion and helix αG. Biochemical studies further reveal that this highly conserved structural motif is present in all members of the MKP family, and the interaction mode is universal and critical for the MKP-MAPK recognition and biological function.


Nature Communications | 2018

Tip60-mediated lipin 1 acetylation and ER translocation determine triacylglycerol synthesis rate

Terytty Yang Li; Lintao Song; Yu Sun; Jingyi Li; Cong Yi; Sin Man Lam; Dijin Xu; Linkang Zhou; Xiaotong Li; Ying Yang; Chen-Song Zhang; Changchuan Xie; Xi Huang; Guanghou Shui; Shu-Yong Lin; Karen Reue; Sheng-Cai Lin

Obesity is characterized by excessive fatty acid conversion to triacylglycerols (TAGs) in adipose tissues. However, how signaling networks sense fatty acids and connect to the stimulation of lipid synthesis remains elusive. Here, we show that homozygous knock-in mice carrying a point mutation at the Ser86 phosphorylation site of acetyltransferase Tip60 (Tip60SA/SA) display remarkably reduced body fat mass, and Tip60SA/SA females fail to nurture pups to adulthood due to severely reduced milk TAGs. Mechanistically, fatty acids stimulate Tip60-dependent acetylation and endoplasmic reticulum translocation of phosphatidic acid phosphatase lipin 1 to generate diacylglycerol for TAG synthesis, which is repressed by deacetylase Sirt1. Inhibition of Tip60 activity strongly blocks fatty acid-induced TAG synthesis while Sirt1 suppression leads to increased adiposity. Genetic analysis of loss-of-function mutants in Saccharomyces cerevisiae reveals a requirement of ESA1, yeast ortholog of Tip60, in TAG accumulation. These findings uncover a conserved mechanism linking fatty acid sensing to fat synthesis.The acetyltransferase Tip60 mediates signaling pathways by acetylating non-histone proteins. Here the authors show that fatty acids induce Tip60–dependent acetylation of phosphatidic acid phosphatase lipin1 which, then, translocates to the ER and generates diacylglycerols for triglyceride synthesis.

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