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Dive into the research topics where Guo-Sheng Xiao is active.

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Featured researches published by Guo-Sheng Xiao.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2015

Roles of store-operated Ca2+ channels in regulating cell cycling and migration of human cardiac c-kit+ progenitor cells.

Hui Che; Gang Li; Hai-Ying Sun; Guo-Sheng Xiao; Yan Wang; Gui-Rong Li

Cardiac c-kit(+) progenitor cells are important for maintaining cardiac homeostasis and can potentially contribute to myocardial repair. However, cellular physiology of human cardiac c-kit(+) progenitor cells is not well understood. The present study investigates the functional store-operated Ca(2+) entry (SOCE) channels and the potential role in regulating cell cycling and migration using confocal microscopy, RT-PCR, Western blot, coimmunoprecipitation, cell proliferation, and migration assays. We found that SOCE channels mediated Ca(2+) influx, and TRPC1, STIM1, and Orai1 were involved in the formation of SOCE channels in human cardiac c-kit(+) progenitor cells. Silencing TRPC1, STIM1, or Orai1 with the corresponding siRNA significantly reduced the Ca(2+) signaling through SOCE channels, decreased cell proliferation and migration, and reduced expression of cyclin D1, cyclin E, and/or p-Akt. Our results demonstrate the novel information that Ca(2+) signaling through SOCE channels regulates cell cycling and migration via activating cyclin D1, cyclin E, and/or p-Akt in human cardiac c-kit(+) cells.


Pharmacological Research | 2016

SKF-96365 blocks human ether-à-go-go-related gene potassium channels stably expressed in HEK 293 cells.

Hui Liu; Lei Yang; Kui-Hao Chen; Hai-Ying Sun; Man-Wen Jin; Guo-Sheng Xiao; Yan Wang; Gui-Rong Li

SKF-96365 is a TRPC channel antagonist commonly used to characterize the potential functions of TRPC channels in different systems, which was recently reported to induce QTc prolongation on ECG by inhibiting TRPC channels. The present study investigates whether the blockade of cardiac repolarization currents would be involved in the increase of QTc interval. Cardiac repolarization currents were recorded in HEK 293 cells stably expressing human ether-à-go-go-related gene potassium (hERG or hKv11.1) channels, hKCNQ1/hKCNE1 channels (IKs) or hKir2.1 channels and cardiac action potentials were recorded in guinea pig ventricular myocytes using a whole-cell patch technique. The potential effect of SKF-96365 on QT interval was evaluated in ex vivo guinea pig hearts. It was found that SKF-96365 inhibited hERG current in a concentration-dependent manner (IC50, 3.4μM). The hERG mutants S631A in the pore helix and F656V of the S6 region reduced the inhibitory sensitivity with IC50s of 27.4μM and 11.0μM, suggesting a channel pore blocker. In addition, this compound inhibited IKs and hKir2.1currents with IC50s of 10.8 and 8.7μM. SKF-96365 (10μM) significantly prolonged ventricular APD90 in guinea pig ventricular myocytes and QTc interval in ex vivo guinea pig hearts. These results indicate that the TRPC channel antagonist SKF-96365 exerts blocking effects on hERG, IKs, and hKir2.1 channels. Prolongation of ventricular APD and QT interval is related to the inhibition of multiple repolarization potassium currents, especially hERG channels.


Heart Rhythm | 2016

Distinctive property and pharmacology of voltage-gated sodium current in rat atrial vs ventricular myocytes

Kui-Hao Chen; Xiao-Hui Xu; Hai-Ying Sun; Xin-Ling Du; Hui Liu; Lei Yang; Guo-Sheng Xiao; Yan Wang; Man-Wen Jin; Gui-Rong Li

BACKGROUND Several mammalian species display distinct biophysical properties between atrial and ventricular voltage-gated sodium current (INa); however, the potential mechanism behind this phenomenon is unknown. OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to investigate the potential molecular identities of the different INa in atrial and ventricular myocytes of rat hearts. METHODS Whole-cell patch voltage-clamp and molecular biology techniques were used in the study. RESULTS Ventricular INa exhibited a slower inactivation, more positive potential of inactivation, and quicker recovery from inactivation compared to atrial INa. Real-time polymerase chain reaction and western blot analysis revealed that mRNA and protein levels of NaVβ2 and NaVβ4 subunits, but not NaV1.5, were greater in ventricular myocytes than in atrial myocytes. INa in heterologous HEK 293 cell expression system with coexpressing hNaV1.5 and hNaVβ2/hNaVβ4 showed similar biophysical properties to ventricular INa. Greater protein expression of NaVβ2 and NaVβ4 subunits was also observed in human ventricles. Interestingly, pharmacologic study revealed that the antiarrhythmic drug dronedarone (10 μM) inhibited atrial INa more (by 73%) than ventricular INa (by 42%), and shifted its inactivation to more negative voltages (-4.6 mV) compared to ventricular INa. CONCLUSION The results of this study demonstrate the novel information that the distinctive biophysical properties of INa in atrial and ventricular myocytes can be attributed to inhomogeneous expression of NaVβ2 and NaVβ4 subunits, and that atrial INa is more sensitive to inhibition by dronedarone.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Effects of BKCa and Kir2.1 Channels on Cell Cycling Progression and Migration in Human Cardiac c-kit+ Progenitor Cells.

Ying-Ying Zhang; Gang Li; Hui Che; Hai-Ying Sun; Guo-Sheng Xiao; Yan Wang; Gui-Rong Li

Our previous study demonstrated that a large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ current (BKCa), a voltage-gated TTX-sensitive sodium current (INa.TTX), and an inward rectifier K+ current (IKir) were heterogeneously present in most of human cardiac c-kit+ progenitor cells. The present study was designed to investigate the effects of these ion channels on cell cycling progression and migration of human cardiac c-kit+ progenitor cells with approaches of cell proliferation and mobility assays, siRNA, RT-PCR, Western blots, flow cytometry analysis, etc. It was found that inhibition of BKCa with paxilline, but not INa.TTX with tetrodotoxin, decreased both cell proliferation and migration. Inhibition of IKir with Ba2+ had no effect on cell proliferation, while enhanced cell mobility. Silencing KCa.1.1 reduced cell proliferation by accumulating the cells at G0/G1 phase and decreased cell mobility. Interestingly, silencing Kir2.1 increased the cell migration without affecting cell cycling progression. These results demonstrate the novel information that blockade or silence of BKCa channels, but not INa.TTX channels, decreases cell cycling progression and mobility, whereas inhibition of Kir2.1 channels increases cell mobility without affecting cell cycling progression in human cardiac c-kit+ progenitor cells.


Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine | 2016

Functional TRPV2 and TRPV4 channels in human cardiac c-kit+ progenitor cells

Hui Che; Guo-Sheng Xiao; Hai-Ying Sun; Yan Wang; Gui-Rong Li

The cellular physiology and biology of human cardiac c‐kit+ progenitor cells has not been extensively characterized and remains an area of active research. This study investigates the functional expression of transient receptor potential vanilloid (TRPV) and possible roles for this ion channel in regulating proliferation and migration of human cardiac c‐kit+ progenitor cells. We found that genes coding for TRPV2 and TRPV4 channels and their proteins are significantly expressed in human c‐kit+ cardiac stem cells. Probenecid, an activator of TRPV2, induced an increase in intracellular Ca2+ (Ca2+i), an effect that may be attenuated or abolished by the TRPV2 blocker ruthenium red. The TRPV4 channel activator 4α‐phorbol 12‐13‐dicaprinate induced Ca2+i oscillations, which can be inhibited by the TRPV4 blocker RN‐1734. The alteration of Ca2+i by probenecid or 4α‐phorbol 12‐13‐dicprinate was dramatically inhibited in cells infected with TRPV2 short hairpin RNA (shRNA) or TRPV4 shRNA. Silencing TRPV2, but not TRPV4, significantly reduced cell proliferation by arresting cells at the G0/G1 boundary of the cell cycle. Cell migration was reduced by silencing TRPV2 or TRPV4. Western blot revealed that silencing TRPV2 decreased expression of cyclin D1, cyclin E, pERK1/2 and pAkt, whereas silencing TRPV4 only reduced pAkt expression. Our results demonstrate for the first time that functional TRPV2 and TRPV4 channels are abundantly expressed in human cardiac c‐kit+ progenitor cells. TRPV2 channels, but not TRPV4 channels, participate in regulating cell cycle progression; moreover, both TRPV2 and TRPV4 are involved in migration of human cardiac c‐kit+ progenitor cells.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Synthesis of a highly water-soluble acacetin prodrug for treating experimental atrial fibrillation in beagle dogs.

Hui Liu; Ya-Jing Wang; Lei Yang; Mei Zhou; Man-Wen Jin; Guo-Sheng Xiao; Yan Wang; Hai-Ying Sun; Gui-Rong Li

We previously reported that duodenal administration of the natural flavone acacetin can effectively prevent the induction of experimental atrial fibrillation (AF) in canines; however, it may not be used intravenously to terminate AF due to its poor water-solubility. The present study was to design a water-soluble prodrug of acacetin and investigate its anti-AF effect in beagle dogs. Acacetin prodrug was synthesized by a three-step procedure. Aqueous solubility, bioconversion and anti-AF efficacy of acacetin prodrug were determined with different methodologies. Our results demonstrated that the synthesized phosphate sodium salt of acacetin prodrug had a remarkable increase of aqueous solubility in H2O and clinically acceptable solution (5% glucose or 0.9% NaCl). The acacetin prodrug was effectively converted into acacetin in ex vivo rat plasma and liver microsome, and in vivo beagle dogs. Intravenous infusion of acacetin prodrug (3, 6 and 12 mg/kg) terminated experimental AF without increasing ECG QTc interval in beagle dogs. The intravenous LD50 of acacetin prodrug was 721 mg/kg in mice. Our preclinical study indicates that the synthesized acacetin prodrug is highly water-soluble and safe; it effectively terminates experimental AF in beagle dogs and therefore may be a promising drug candidate for clinical trial to treat patients with acute AF.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Water-soluble acacetin prodrug confers significant cardioprotection against ischemia/reperfusion injury

Hui Liu; Lei Yang; Hui-Jun Wu; Kui-Hao Chen; Feng Lin; Gang Li; Hai-Ying Sun; Guo-Sheng Xiao; Yan Wang; Gui-Rong Li

The morbidity and mortality of patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy resulted from ischemia/reperfusion injury are very high. The present study investigates whether our previously synthesized water-soluble phosphate prodrug of acacetin was cardioprotective against ischemia/reperfusion injury in an in vivo rat model. We found that intravenous administration of acacetin prodrug (10 mg/kg) decreased the ventricular arrhythmia score and duration, reduced ventricular fibrillation and infarct size, and improved the impaired heart function induced by myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury in anesthetized rats. The cardioprotective effects were further confirmed with the parent compound acacetin in an ex vivo rat regional ischemia/reperfusion heart model. Molecular mechanism analysis revealed that acacetin prevented the ischemia/reperfusion-induced reduction of the anti-oxidative proteins SOD-2 and thioredoxin, suppressed the release of inflammation cytokines TLR4, IL-6 and TNFα, and decreased myocyte apoptosis induced by ischemia/reperfusion. Our results demonstrate the novel evidence that acacetin prodrug confer significant in vivo cardioprotective effect against ischemia/reperfusion injury by preventing the reduction of endogenous anti-oxidants and the release of inflammatory cytokines, thereby inhibiting cardiomyocytes apoptosis, which suggests that the water-soluble acacetin prodrug is likely useful in the future as a new drug candidate for treating patients with acute coronary syndrome.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2017

Clemizole hydrochloride blocks cardiac potassium currents stably expressed in HEK 293 cells

Ling-Jun Jie; Weiyin Wu; Gang Li; Guo-Sheng Xiao; Shetuan Zhang; Gui-Rong Li; Yan Wang

Clemizole, a histamine H1 receptor antagonist has a potential therapeutic effect on hepatitis C infection and also potently inhibits TRPC5 ion channels. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether clemizole blocks cardiac K+ currents and thus affects cardiac repolarization.


Frontiers in Pharmacology | 2017

The Natural Flavone Acacetin Blocks Small Conductance Ca2+-Activated K+ Channels Stably Expressed in HEK 293 Cells

Kui-Hao Chen; Hui Liu; Hai-Ying Sun; Man-Wen Jin; Guo-Sheng Xiao; Yan Wang; Gui-Rong Li

The natural flavone acacetin inhibits several voltage-gated potassium currents in atrial myocytes, and has anti-atrial fibrillation (AF) effect in experimental AF models. The present study investigates whether acacetin inhibits the Ca2+-activated potassium (KCa) currents, including small conductance (SKCa1, SKCa2, and SKCa3), intermediate conductance (IKCa), and large-conductance (BKCa) channels stably expressed in HEK 293 cells. The effects of acacetin on these KCa channels were determined with a whole-cell patch voltage-clamp technique. The results showed that acacetin inhibited the three subtype SKCa channel currents in concentration-dependent manner with IC50 of 12.4 μM for SKCa1, 10.8 μM for SKCa2, and 11.6 μM for SKCa3. Site-directed mutagenesis of SKCa3 channels generated the mutants H490N, S512T, H521N, and A537V. Acacetin inhibited the mutants with IC50 of 118.5 μM for H490N, 275.2 μM for S512T, 15.3 μM for H521N, and 10.6 μM for A537V, suggesting that acacetin interacts with the P-loop helix of SKCa3 channel. However, acacetin at 3–10 μM did not decrease, but induced a slight increase of BKCa (+70 mV) by 8% at 30 μM. These results demonstrate the novel information that acacetin remarkably inhibits SKCa channels, but not IKCa or BKCa channels, which suggests that blockade of SKCa by acacetin likely contributes to its anti-AF property previously observed in experimental AF.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2017

Genistein and tyrphostin AG556 decrease human atrial ultra-rapidly activating delayed rectifier potassium current by inhibiting EGFR tyrosine kinase.

Guo-Sheng Xiao; Yan-Hui Zhang; Weiyin Wu; Hai-Ying Sun; Yan Wang; Gang Li

The ultra‐rapidly activating delayed rectifier K+ current IKur (encoded by Kv1.5 or KCNA5) plays an important role in human atrial repolarization. The present study investigates the regulation of this current by protein tyrosine kinases (PTKs).

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Gui-Rong Li

Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine

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Hui Liu

Huazhong University of Science and Technology

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Lei Yang

Huazhong University of Science and Technology

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Kui-Hao Chen

Huazhong University of Science and Technology

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Man-Wen Jin

Huazhong University of Science and Technology

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Xiu-Ling Deng

Xi'an Jiaotong University

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