Chunsik Lee
National Institutes of Health
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Publication
Featured researches published by Chunsik Lee.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009
Fan Zhang; Zhongshu Tang; Xu Hou; Johan Lennartsson; Yang Li; Alexander W. Koch; Pierre Scotney; Chunsik Lee; Pachiappan Arjunan; Lijin Dong; Anil Kumar; Tuomas T. Rissanen; Bin Wang; Nobuo Nagai; Pierre Fons; Robert N. Fariss; Yongqing Zhang; Eric F. Wawrousek; Ginger Tansey; James Raber; Guo-Hua Fong; Hao Ding; David A. Greenberg; Kevin G. Becker; Jean-Marc Herbert; Andrew D. Nash; Seppo Ylä-Herttuala; Yihai Cao; Ryan J. Watts; Xuri Li
VEGF-B, a homolog of VEGF discovered a long time ago, has not been considered an important target in antiangiogenic therapy. Instead, it has received little attention from the field. In this study, using different animal models and multiple types of vascular cells, we revealed that although VEGF-B is dispensable for blood vessel growth, it is critical for their survival. Importantly, the survival effect of VEGF-B is not only on vascular endothelial cells, but also on pericytes, smooth muscle cells, and vascular stem/progenitor cells. In vivo, VEGF-B targeting inhibited both choroidal and retinal neovascularization. Mechanistically, we found that the vascular survival effect of VEGF-B is achieved by regulating the expression of many vascular prosurvival genes via both NP-1 and VEGFR-1. Our work thus indicates that the function of VEGF-B in the vascular system is to act as a “survival,” rather than an “angiogenic” factor and that VEGF-B inhibition may offer new therapeutic opportunities to treat neovascular diseases.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1996
Sheng Jun Zhang; Coso Oa; Chunsik Lee; Gutkind Js; William F. Simonds
While multiple G protein β and γ subunit isoforms have been identified, the implications of this potential diversity of βγ heterodimers for signaling through βγ-regulated effector pathways remains unclear. Furthermore the molecular mechanism(s) by which the βγ complex modulates diverse mammalian effector molecules is unknown. Effector signaling by the structurally distinct brain-specific β5 subunit was assessed by transient cotransfection with γ2 in COS cells and compared with β1. Transfection of either β1 or β5 with γ2 stimulated the activity of cotransfected phospholipase C-β2 (PLC-β2), as previously reported. In contrast, cotransfection of β1 but not β5 with γ2 stimulated the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) pathways even though the expression of β5 in COS cells was evident by immunoblotting. The G protein β5 expressed in transfected COS cells was properly folded as its pattern of stable C-terminal proteolytic fragments was identical to that of native brain β5. The inability of β5 to activate the MAPK and JNK pathways was not overcome by cotransfection with three additional Gγ isoforms. These results suggest it is the Gβ subunit which determines the pattern of downstream signaling by the βγ complex and imply that the structural features of the βγ complex mediating effector regulation may differ among effectors.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2010
Zhongshu Tang; Pachiappan Arjunan; Chunsik Lee; Yang Li; Anil Kumar; Xu Hou; Bin Wang; Piotr Wardega; Fan Zhang; Lijin Dong; Yongqing Zhang; Shi-Zhuang Zhang; Hao Ding; Robert N. Fariss; Kevin G. Becker; Johan Lennartsson; Nobuo Nagai; Yihai Cao; Xuri Li
Platelet-derived growth factor CC (PDGF-CC) is the third member of the PDGF family discovered after more than two decades of studies on the original members of the family, PDGF-AA and PDGF-BB. The biological function of PDGF-CC remains largely to be explored. We report a novel finding that PDGF-CC is a potent neuroprotective factor that acts by modulating glycogen synthase kinase 3β (GSK3β) activity. In several different animal models of neuronal injury, such as axotomy-induced neuronal death, neurotoxin-induced neuronal injury, 6-hydroxydopamine–induced Parkinson’s dopaminergic neuronal death, and ischemia-induced stroke, PDGF-CC protein or gene delivery protected different types of neurons from apoptosis in both the retina and brain. On the other hand, loss-of-function assays using PDGF-C null mice, neutralizing antibody, or short hairpin RNA showed that PDGF-CC deficiency/inhibition exacerbated neuronal death in different neuronal tissues in vivo. Mechanistically, we revealed that the neuroprotective effect of PDGF-CC was achieved by regulating GSK3β phosphorylation and expression. Our data demonstrate that PDGF-CC is critically required for neuronal survival and may potentially be used to treat neurodegenerative diseases. Inhibition of the PDGF-CC–PDGF receptor pathway for different clinical purposes should be conducted with caution to preserve normal neuronal functions.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010
Xu Hou; Anil Kumar; Chunsik Lee; Bin Wang; Pachiappan Arjunan; Lijin Dong; Arvydas Maminishkis; Zhongshu Tang; Yang Li; Fan Zhang; Shi-Zhuang Zhang; Piotr Wardega; Sagarika Chakrabarty; Baoying Liu; Zhijian Wu; Peter Colosi; Robert N. Fariss; Johan Lennartsson; Robert B. Nussenblatt; J. Silvio Gutkind; Yihai Cao; Xuri Li
The importance of identifying VEGF-independent pathways in pathological angiogenesis is increasingly recognized as a result of the emerging drug resistance to anti-VEGF therapies. PDGF-CC is the third member of the PDGF family discovered after more than two decades of studies on PDGF-AA and PDGF-BB. The biological function of PDGF-CC and the underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms remain largely unexplored. Here, using different animal models, we report that PDGF-CC inhibition by neutralizing antibody, shRNA, or genetic deletion suppressed both choroidal and retinal neovascularization. Importantly, we revealed that PDGF-CC targeting acted not only on multiple cell types important for pathological angiogenesis, such as vascular mural and endothelial cells, macrophages, choroidal fibroblasts and retinal pigment epithelial cells, but also on the expression of other important angiogenic genes, such as PDGF-BB and PDGF receptors. At a molecular level, we found that PDGF-CC regulated glycogen synthase kinase (GSK)–3β phosphorylation and expression both in vitro and in vivo. Activation of GSK3β impaired PDGF-CC–induced angiogenesis, and inhibition of GSK3β abolished the antiangiogenic effect of PDGF-CC blockade. Thus, we identified PDGF-CC as an important candidate target gene for antiangiogenic therapy, and PDGF-CC inhibition may be of therapeutic value in treating neovascular diseases.
Cell Adhesion & Migration | 2009
Xuri Li; Chunsik Lee; Zhongshu Tang; Fan Zhang; Pachiappan Arjunan; Yang Li; Xu Hou; Anil Kumar; Lijin Dong
Despite its early discovery and high sequence homology to the other VEGF family members, the biological function of VEGF-B remained debatable for a long time, and VEGF-B has received little attention from the field thus far. Recently, we and others have found that (1) VEGF-B is a potent survival factor for different types of cells by inhibiting apoptosis via suppressing the expression of BH3-only protein and other apoptotic/cell death-related genes. (2) VEGF-B has a negligible role in inducing blood vessel growth in most organs. Instead, it is critically required for blood vessel survival. VEGF-B targeting inhibited pathological angiogenesis by abolishing blood vessel survival in different animal models. (3) Using different types of neuro-injury and neurodegenerative disease models, VEGF-B treatment protected endangered neurons from apoptosis without inducing undesired blood vessel growth or permeability. Thus, VEGF-B is the first member of the VEGF family that has a potent survival/anti-apoptotic effect, while lacking a general angiogenic activity. Our work thus advocates that the major function of VEGF-B is to act as a “survival”, rather than an “angiogenic” factor, and implicates a therapeutic potential of VEGF-B in treating different types of vascular and neurodegenerative diseases.
Trends in Molecular Medicine | 2012
Xuri Li; Anil Kumar; Fan Zhang; Chunsik Lee; Zhongshu Tang
No other member of the VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) family has been as mysterious as VEGF-B. Notwithstanding its name, VEGF-B can hardly be regarded as a growth factor because growth occurs fairly normally in Vegf-b deficient mice. Moreover, VEGF-B is barely angiogenic under most conditions, although it was expected to be an angiogenic factor for a long time. Under certain conditions, VEGF-B has been shown to be involved in blood vessel growth. Under other conditions, however, VEGF-B can act to inhibit tumor growth and angiogenesis. Given these contradictory findings, the biological function of VEGF-B appears enigmatic. In this review, we summarize recent advances in VEGF-B biology and discuss its multifaceted roles, the underlying mechanisms, and the potential therapeutic implications.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Anil Kumar; Xu Hou; Chunsik Lee; Yang Li; Arvydas Maminishkis; Zhongshu Tang; Fan Zhang; Harald Langer; Pachiappan Arjunan; Lijin Dong; Zhijian Wu; Linda Yijia Zhu; Lianchun Wang; Wang Min; Peter Colosi; Triantafyllos Chavakis; Xuri Li
Platelet-derived growth factor-DD (PDGF-DD) is a recently discovered member of the PDGF family. The role of PDGF-DD in pathological angiogenesis and the underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms remain largely unexplored. In this study, using different animal models, we showed that PDGF-DD expression was up-regulated during pathological angiogenesis, and inhibition of PDGF-DD suppressed both choroidal and retinal neovascularization. We also demonstrated a novel mechanism mediating the function of PDGF-DD. PDGF-DD induced glycogen synthase kinase-3β (GSK3β) Ser9 phosphorylation and Tyr216 dephosphorylation in vitro and in vivo, leading to increased cell survival. Consistently, GSK3β activity was required for the antiangiogenic effect of PDGF-DD targeting. Moreover, PDGF-DD regulated the expression of GSK3β and many other genes important for angiogenesis and apoptosis. Thus, we identified PDGF-DD as an important target gene for antiangiogenic therapy due to its pleiotropic effects on vascular and non-vascular cells. PDGF-DD inhibition may offer new therapeutic options to treat neovascular diseases.
Trends in Molecular Medicine | 2013
Chunsik Lee; Fan Zhang; Zhongshu Tang; Yizhi Liu; Xuri Li
The importance of neurovascular crosstalk in development, normal physiology, and pathologies is increasingly being recognized. Although vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), a prototypic regulator of neurovascular interaction, has been studied intensively, defining other important regulators in this process is warranted. Recent studies have shown that platelet-derived growth factor C (PDGF-C) is both angiogenic and a neuronal survival factor, and it appears to be an important component of neurovascular crosstalk. Importantly, the expression pattern and functional properties of PDGF-C and its receptors differ from those of VEGF, and thus the PDGF-C-mediated neurovascular interaction may represent a new paradigm of neurovascular crosstalk.
Cell Reports | 2012
Fan Zhang; Yang Li; Zhongshu Tang; Anil Kumar; Chunsik Lee; Liping Zhang; Chaoyong Zhu; Anne Klotzsche-von Ameln; Bin Wang; Zhiqin Gao; Shi-Zhuang Zhang; Harald Langer; Xu Hou; Lasse Jensen; Wenxin Ma; Wai T. Wong; Triantafyllos Chavakis; Yizhi Liu; Yihai Cao; Xuri Li
The p53 upregulated modulator of apoptosis (PUMA) is known as an essential apoptosis inducer. Here, we report the seemingly paradoxical finding that PUMA is a proangiogenic factor critically required for the proliferation and survival of vascular and microglia cells. Strikingly, Puma deficiency by genetic deletion or small hairpin RNA knockdown inhibited developmental and pathological angiogenesis and reduced microglia numbers in vivo, whereas Puma gene delivery increased angiogenesis and cell survival. Mechanistically, we revealed that PUMA plays a critical role in regulating autophagy by modulating Erk activation and intracellular calcium level. Our findings revealed an unexpected function of PUMA in promoting angiogenesis and warrant more careful investigations into the therapeutic potential of PUMA in treating cancer and degenerative diseases.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014
Chunsik Lee; Anguo Liu; Alba Miranda-Ribera; Sang Won Hyun; Erik P. Lillehoj; Alan S. Cross; Antonino Passaniti; P. Richard Grimm; Bo-young Kim; Paul A. Welling; Joseph A. Madri; Horace M. DeLisser; Simeon E. Goldblum
Background: Endothelia express NEU1 sialidase and undergo changes in sialylation during angiogenesis. Results: CD31 is a NEU1 substrate, and NEU1 disrupts endothelial cell capillary-like tube formation. Conclusion: NEU1 works through its substrate, CD31, to dysregulate angiogenesis. Significance: Human NEU1 is the first sialidase found to regulate angiogenesis, and the CD31 sialylation state dictates its ability to influence endothelial cell differentiation and tube formation. The highly sialylated vascular endothelial surface undergoes changes in sialylation upon adopting the migratory/angiogenic phenotype. We recently established endothelial cell (EC) expression of NEU1 sialidase (Cross, A. S., Hyun, S. W., Miranda-Ribera, A., Feng, C., Liu, A., Nguyen, C., Zhang, L., Luzina, I. G., Atamas, S. P., Twaddell, W. S., Guang, W., Lillehoj, E. P., Puché, A. C., Huang, W., Wang, L. X., Passaniti, A., and Goldblum, S. E. (2012) NEU1 and NEU3 sialidase activity expressed in human lung microvascular endothelia. NEU1 restrains endothelial cell migration whereas NEU3 does not. J. Biol. Chem. 287, 15966–15980). We asked whether NEU1 might regulate EC capillary-like tube formation on a Matrigel substrate. In human pulmonary microvascular ECs (HPMECs), prior silencing of NEU1 did not alter tube formation. Infection of HPMECs with increasing multiplicities of infection of an adenovirus encoding for catalytically active WT NEU1 dose-dependently impaired tube formation, whereas overexpression of either a catalytically dead NEU1 mutant, NEU1-G68V, or another human sialidase, NEU3, did not. NEU1 overexpression also diminished EC adhesion to the Matrigel substrate and restrained EC migration in a wounding assay. In HPMECs, the adhesion molecule, CD31, also known as platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1, was sialylated via α2,6-linkages, as shown by Sambucus nigra agglutinin lectin blotting. NEU1 overexpression increased CD31 binding to Arachis hypogaea or peanut agglutinin lectin, indicating CD31 desialylation. In the postconfluent state, when CD31 ectodomains are homophilically engaged, NEU1 was recruited to and desialylated CD31. In postconfluent ECs, CD31 was desialylated compared with subconfluent cells, and prior NEU1 silencing completely protected against CD31 desialylation. Prior CD31 silencing and the use of CD31-null ECs each abrogated the NEU1 inhibitory effect on EC tube formation. Sialyltransferase 6 GAL-I overexpression increased α2,6-linked CD31 sialylation and dose-dependently counteracted NEU1-mediated inhibition of EC tube formation. These combined data indicate that catalytically active NEU1 inhibits in vitro angiogenesis through desialylation of its substrate, CD31.