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Featured researches published by Haidan Sun.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2010

The nitrated proteome in heart mitochondria of the db/db mouse model: characterization of nitrated tyrosine residues in SCOT.

Yuan Wang; Fuli Peng; Wei Tong; Haidan Sun; Ningzhi Xu; Siqi Liu

A proteomic strategy combining 2DE, Western blot, and mass spectrometry was implemented to survey the status of tyrosine nitration in mouse heart mitochondria. Compared to normal mice, nitrated proteins in the heart mitochondria of the db/db mouse model were significantly augmented due to diabetic development. A total of 18 proteins were identified as the nitration targets. Of the nitrated proteins, succinyl-CoA:3-oxoacid CoA-transferase (SCOT) is a key enzyme involved in ketolysis and has yet to be explored how its catalysis is affected by nitration. We therefore initiated a systematic investigation toward the nitrated site(s) and the corresponding changes of SCOT catalysis. To monitor modification kinetics and nitrated residue(s), recombinant SCOT was incubated with peroxynitrite followed by examination of nitration development as well as catalytic activity changes. The nitration of recombinant SCOT steadily increased in response to increasing concentrations of peroxynitrite, while its catalysis was gradually attenuated. The nitrated sites of modified SCOT were further identified by LC-ESI-MS/MS. The MS/MS spectra indicated a +45 mass unit ion shift from [M + H](+) m/z at Tyr(4) and Tyr(76). Through site-directed mutagenesis, we found that mutation of tyrosine residues at Tyr(4) or Tyr(76) did not only significantly protect SCOT from peroxynitrite modification, but it also dramatically prevented loss of enzymatic activity. Taken together, these results indicate that the two tyrosine residues of SCOT are the priority sites attacked by NO, and their nitration status is a causal factor leading to inhibition of SCOT catalysis.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2013

Quantitative Analysis of the Human AKR Family Members in Cancer Cell Lines Using the mTRAQ/MRM Approach

Shenyan Zhang; Bo Wen; Baojin Zhou; Lei Yang; Chao Cha; Shaoxing Xu; Xuemei Qiu; Q. Wang; Haidan Sun; Xiaomin Lou; Jin Zi; Yong Zhang; Liang Lin; Siqi Liu

Members of human aldo-keto reductase (AKR) superfamily have been reported to be involved in cancer progression, whereas the final conclusion is not generally accepted. Herein, we propose a quantitative method to measure human AKR proteins in cells using mTRAQ-based multiple reaction monitoring (MRM). AKR peptides with multiple transitions were carefully selected upon tryptic digestion of the recombinant AKR proteins, while AKR proteins were identified by SDS-PAGE fractionation coupled with LC-MS/MS. Utilizing mTRAQ triplex labeling to produce the derivative peptides, calibration curves were generated using the mixed lysate as background, and no significantly different quantification of AKRs was elicited from the two sets of calibration curves under the mixed and single lysate as background. We employed this approach to quantitatively determine the 6 AKR proteins, AKR1A1, AKR1B1, AKR1B10, AKR1C1/C2, AKR1C3, and AKR1C4, in 7 different cancer cell lines and for the first time to obtain the absolute quantities of all the AKR proteins in each cell. The cluster plot revealed that AKR1A and AKR1B were widely distributed in most cancer cells with relatively stable abundances, whereas AKR1Cs were unevenly detected among these cells with diverse dynamic abundances. The AKR quantitative distribution in different cancer cells, therefore, may assist further exploration toward how the AKR proteins are involved in tumorigenesis.


PLOS ONE | 2015

The S-Nitrosylation Status of PCNA Localized in Cytosol Impacts the Apoptotic Pathway in a Parkinson’s Disease Paradigm

Liang Yin; Yingying Xie; Songyue Yin; Xiaolei Lv; Jia Zhang; Zezong Gu; Haidan Sun; Siqi Liu

It is generally accepted that nitric oxide (NO) or its derivatives, reactive nitrogen species (RNS), are involved in the development of Parkinson’s disease (PD). Recently, emerging evidence in the study of PD has indicated that protein S-nitrosylation triggers the signaling changes in neurons. In this study, SH-SY5Y cells treated with rotenone were used as a model of neuronal death in PD. The treated cells underwent significant apoptosis, which was accompanied by an increase in intracellular NO in a rotenone dose-dependent manner. The CyDye switch approach was employed to screen for changes in S-nitrosylated (SNO) proteins in response to the rotenone treatment. Seven proteins with increased S-nitrosylation were identified in the treated SH-SY5Y cells, which included proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA). Although PCNA is generally located in the nucleus and participates in DNA replication and repair, significant PCNA was identified in the SH-SY5Y cytosol. Using immunoprecipitation and pull-down approaches, PCNA was found to interact with caspase-9; using mass spectrometry, the two cysteine residues PCNA-Cys81 and -Cys162 were identified as candidate S-nitrosylated residues. In addition, the evidence obtained from in vitro and the cell model studies indicated that the S-nitrosylation of PCNA-Cys81 affected the interaction between PCNA and caspase-9. Furthermore, the interaction of PCNA and caspase-9 partially blocked caspase-9 activation, indicating that the S-nitrosylation of cytosolic PCNA may be a mediator of the apoptotic pathway.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2014

Omics evidence: single nucleotide variants transmissions on chromosome 20 in liver cancer cell lines.

Q. Wang; Bo Wen; Tong Wang; Zhongwei Xu; Xuefei Yin; Shaohang Xu; Zhe Ren; Guixue Hou; Ruo Zhou; Haiyi Zhao; Jin Zi; Shenyan Zhang; Huan Gao; Xiaomin Lou; Haidan Sun; Qiang Feng; Cheng Chang; Peibin Qin; Chengpu Zhang; Ning Li; Yunping Zhu; Wei Gu; Jiayong Zhong; Gong Zhang; Pengyuan Yang; Guoquan Yan; Huali Shen; Xiaohui Liu; Haojie Lu; Fan Zhong

Cancer genomics unveils many cancer-related mutations, including some chromosome 20 (Chr.20) genes. The mutated messages have been found in the corresponding mRNAs; however, whether they could be translated to proteins still requires more evidence. Herein, we proposed a transomics strategy to profile the expression status of human Chr.20 genes (555 in Ensembl v72). The data of transcriptome and translatome (the mRNAs bound with ribosome, translating mRNAs) revealed that ∼80% of the coding genes on Chr.20 were detected with mRNA signals in three liver cancer cell lines, whereas of the proteome identified, only ∼45% of the Chr.20 coding genes were detected. The high amount of overlapping of identified genes in mRNA and RNC-mRNA (ribosome nascent-chain complex-bound mRNAs, translating mRNAs) and the consistent distribution of the abundance averages of mRNA and RNC-mRNA along the Chr.20 subregions in three liver cancer cell lines indicate that the mRNA information is efficiently transmitted from transcriptional to translational stage, qualitatively and quantitatively. Of the 457 genes identified in mRNAs and RNC-mRNA, 136 were found to contain SNVs with 213 sites, and >40% of these SNVs existed only in metastatic cell lines, suggesting them as the metastasis-related SNVs. Proteomics analysis showed that 16 genes with 20 SNV sites were detected with reliable MS/MS signals, and some SNVs were further validated by the MRM approach. With the integration of the omics data at the three expression phases, therefore, we are able to achieve the overall view of the gene expression of Chr.20, which is constructive in understanding the potential trend of encoding genes in a cell line and exploration of a new type of markers related to cancers.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2013

Qualitative and Quantitative Expression Status of the Human Chromosome 20 Genes in Cancer Tissues and the Representative Cell Lines

Q. Wang; Bo Wen; Guang-Rong Yan; Junying Wei; Liqi Xie; Shaohang Xu; Dahai Jiang; Tingyou Wang; Liang Lin; Jin Zi; Ju Zhang; Ruo Zhou; Haiyi Zhao; Zhe Ren; Nengrong Qu; Xiaomin Lou; Haidan Sun; Chaoqin Du; Chuangbin Chen; Shenyan Zhang; Fengji Tan; Youqi Xian; Zhibo Gao; Minghui He; Longyun Chen; Xiaohang Zhao; Ping Xu; Yunping Zhu; Xing-Feng Yin; Huali Shen

Under the guidance of the Chromosome-centric Human Proteome Project (C-HPP), (1, 2) we conducted a systematic survey of the expression status of genes located at human chromosome 20 (Chr.20) in three cancer tissues, gastric, colon, and liver carcinoma, and their representative cell lines. We have globally profiled proteomes in these samples with combined technology of LC-MS/MS and acquired the corresponding mRNA information upon RNA-seq and RNAchip. In total, 323 unique proteins were identified, covering 60% of the coding genes (323/547) in Chr.20. With regards to qualitative information of proteomics, we overall evaluated the correlation of the identified Chr.20 proteins with target genes of transcription factors or of microRNA, conserved genes and cancer-related genes. As for quantitative information, the expression abundances of Chr.20 genes were found to be almost consistent in both tissues and cell lines of mRNA in all individual chromosome regions, whereas those of Chr.20 proteins in cells are different from tissues, especially in the region of 20q13.33. Furthermore, the abundances of Chr.20 proteins were hierarchically evaluated according to tissue- or cancer-related distribution. The analysis revealed several cancer-related proteins in Chr.20 are tissue- or cell-type dependent. With integration of all the acquired data, for the first time we established a solid database of the Chr.20 proteome.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Quantitative Evaluation of the Mitochondrial Proteomes of Drosophila melanogaster Adapted to Extreme Oxygen Conditions

Songyue Yin; Jin Xue; Haidan Sun; Bo Wen; Q. Wang; Guy A. Perkins; Huiwen W. Zhao; Mark H. Ellisman; Yu-hsin Hsiao; Liang Yin; Yingying Xie; Guixue Hou; Jin Zi; Liang Lin; Gabriel G. Haddad; Dan Zhou; Siqi Liu

Mitochondria are the primary organelles that consume oxygen and provide energy for cellular activities. To investigate the mitochondrial mechanisms underlying adaptation to extreme oxygen conditions, we generated Drosophila strains that could survive in low- or high-oxygen environments (LOF or HOF, respectively), examined their mitochondria at the ultrastructural level via transmission electron microscopy, studied the activity of their respiratory chain complexes, and quantitatively analyzed the protein abundance responses of the mitochondrial proteomes using Isobaric tag for relative and absolute quantitation (iTRAQ). A total of 718 proteins were identified with high confidence, and 55 and 75 mitochondrial proteins displayed significant differences in abundance in LOF and HOF, respectively, compared with the control flies. Importantly, these differentially expressed mitochondrial proteins are primarily involved in respiration, calcium regulation, the oxidative response, and mitochondrial protein translation. A correlation analysis of the changes in the levels of the mRNAs corresponding to differentially regulated mitochondrial proteins revealed two sets of proteins with different modes of regulation (transcriptional vs. post-transcriptional) in both LOF and HOF. We believe that these findings will not only enhance our understanding of the mechanisms underlying adaptation to extreme oxygen conditions in Drosophila but also provide a clue in studying human disease induced by altered oxygen tension in tissues and cells.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2012

A micropreparation of mitochondria from cells using magnetic beads with immunoaffinity.

Yawei Ru; Liang Yin; Haidan Sun; Songyue Yin; Qin Pan; Hanfu Wei; Lin Wu; Siqi Liu

Mitochondrial preparation is a key technique in the study of mitochondria. Growing evidence has demonstrated that mitochondrial proteins are tissue or cell type dependent. Locating the proteins in the global presence of mitochondrial membranes is a primary consideration in adopting antibodies for affinity enrichment of mitochondria on a micro scale. Two proteins located on the outer membrane of mitochondria, cytochrome b5 type B (CYB5B) and synaptojanin-2-binding protein (SYNJ2BP), were selected as candidates based on a survey of databases and the literature. The polyclonal antibodies against the truncated CYB5B and SYNJ2BP exhibited specific recognition to mitochondria and wider sensitivity to several tested mouse tissues and cell lines, whereas the antibody 22-kDa translocase of the outer mitochondrial membrane (TOM22) nearly missed detection of mitochondria in the liver and responded minimally to mitochondria from H9C2 and L-02 cells. Through the affinity enrichment for cellular mitochondria using magnetic beads coated with anti-CYB5B or anti-SYNJ2BP, we found that the anti-CYB5B beads could enrich mitochondria more efficiently even on a scale of 10,000 cultured cells. For the integrity and protein components, the enriched mitochondria on anti-CYB5B were carefully examined and were accepted in further functional study. We propose that an anti-CYB5B immunomagnetic approach is feasible in the micropreparation of mitochondria from cultured cells.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2011

Monitoring succinyl-CoA:3-oxoacid CoA transferase nitration in mitochondria using monoclonal antibodies.

Haidan Sun; Jingxuan He; Yawei Ru; Songyue Yin; Yingying Xie; Liang Yin; Hanfu Wei; Lin Wu; Siqi Liu

Two tyrosine residues (Tyr(4) and Tyr(76)) of succinyl-CoA:3-oxoacid CoA transferase (SCOT) are sensitive to nitric oxide (NO) stress, as assessed by mass spectrometry and site-direct mutagenesis. However, monitoring the SCOT nitration in tissue or cells is challenging. Herein, we describe the development of an assay to detect nitrated SCOT directly using site-specific antibodies; the monoclonal antibodies were generated and screened against nitrated peptides of SCOT. After stringent filtration, two antibodies, anti-SCOT4N and anti-SCOT76N, which specifically recognise Tyr(4) or Tyr(76) of SCOT, respectively, were successfully selected. In a cell model over-expressing iNOS in the mitochondria, nitrated SCOT was significantly increased compared with control cells. In addition, in a mouse model of diabetes, nitrated Tyr(4) and Tyr(76) in the heart and kidney were higher compared to the control animals. Our results using monoclonal antibodies against nitrated SCOT peptides are in good agreement with the proteomic data.


World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2012

Proteomic analysis of glutathione S-transferase isoforms in mouse liver mitochondria.

Haidan Sun; Yawei Ru; Dongjuan Zhang; Song-Yue Yin; Liang Yin; Yingying Xie; Youfei Guan; Siqi Liu


Clinical Proteomics | 2017

The serum protein responses to treatment with Xiaoke Pill and Glibenclamide in type 2 diabetes patients

Xiuying Zhang; Haidan Sun; Sanjoy K. Paul; Q. Wang; Xiaomin Lou; Guixue Hou; Bo Wen; Linong Ji; Siqi Liu

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Siqi Liu

Beijing Institute of Genomics

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Q. Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jin Zi

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xiaomin Lou

Beijing Institute of Genomics

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Liang Yin

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Shenyan Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Songyue Yin

Beijing Institute of Genomics

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Yingying Xie

Beijing Institute of Genomics

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Guixue Hou

Beijing Institute of Genomics

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Yawei Ru

Beijing Institute of Genomics

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