Hanzhi Wu
Wake Forest University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Hanzhi Wu.
Redox biology | 2016
Nadeem Wajih; Xiaohua Liu; Pragna Shetty; Swati Basu; Hanzhi Wu; Neil Hogg; Rakesh P. Patel; Cristina M. Furdui; Daniel B. Kim-Shapiro
Previous work has shown that red blood cells (RBCs) reduce nitrite to NO under conditions of low oxygen. Strong support for the ability of red blood cells to promote nitrite bioactivation comes from using platelet activation as a NO-sensitive process. Whereas addition of nitrite to platelet rich plasma in the absence of RBCs has no effect on inhibition of platelet activation, when RBCs are present platelet activation is inhibited by an NO-dependent mechanism that is potentiated under hypoxia. In this paper, we demonstrate that nitrite bioactivation by RBCs is blunted by physiologically-relevant concentrations of nutrients including glucose and the important signaling amino acid leucine. Our mechanistic investigations demonstrate that RBC mediated nitrite bioactivation is largely dependent on nitrosation of RBC surface proteins. These data suggest a new expanded paradigm where RBC mediated nitrite bioactivation not only directs blood flow to areas of low oxygen but also to areas of low nutrients. Our findings could have profound implications for normal physiology as well as pathophysiology in a variety of diseases including diabetes, sickle cell disease, and arteriosclerosis.
Scientific Reports | 2017
David L. Long; Hanzhi Wu; Allen W. Tsang; Leslie B. Poole; Barbara K. Yoza; Xianfeng Wang; Vidula Vachharajani; Cristina M. Furdui; Charles E. McCall
Control of glucose homeostasis plays a critical role in health and lifespan and its dysregulation contributes to inflammation, cancer and aging. NAD + dependent Sirtuin 6 (SIRT6) is a glucose homeostasis regulator in animals and humans and its regulation at the molecular level is unknown. Here, we report that a cysteine thiol redox sensor contributes to the role of SIRT6 in controlling glucose homeostasis. Sulfenylation of SIRT6 occurs in THP1 cells and primary human promonocytes during inflammation and in splenocytes from mice with sepsis. Inhibiting xanthine oxidase, a major reactive oxygen species (ROS) contributor during acute inflammation, reduces sulfenylation of SIRT6, glucose transporter Glut1 expression, glucose uptake, and glycolysis. A block in glycolysis associated with monocyte deactivation by endotoxin, a process contributing to immunometabolic paralysis in human and mouse sepsis monocytes, can be reversed by increasing H2O2 and sulfenylating SIRT6. Mutation analysis of SIRT6 Cys144, which lies in its phylogenetically conserved zinc-associated Cys-X-X-Cys motif near the catalytic domain of the protein, decreases SIRT6 deacetylase activity and promotes glycolysis. These results suggest that direct and reversible cysteine thiol 144 may play a functional role in SIRT6-dependent control over monocyte glycolysis, an important determinant of effector innate immune responses.
ACS Chemical Biology | 2017
Xiaofei Chen; Hanzhi Wu; Chung-Min Park; Thomas Poole; Gizem Keceli; Nelmi O. Devarie-Baez; Allen W. Tsang; W. Todd Lowther; Leslie B. Poole; S. Bruce King; Ming Xian; Cristina M. Furdui
The selective reaction of chemical reagents with reduced protein thiols is critical to biological research. This reaction is utilized to prevent cross-linking of cysteine-containing peptides in common proteomics workflows and is applied widely in discovery and targeted redox investigations of the mechanisms underlying physiological and pathological processes. However, known and commonly used thiol blocking reagents like iodoacetamide, N-ethylmaleimide, and others were found to cross-react with oxidized protein sulfenic acids (-SOH) introducing significant errors in studies employing these reagents. We have investigated and are reporting here a new heteroaromatic alkylsulfone, 4-(5-methanesulfonyl-[1,2,3,4]tetrazol-1-yl)-phenol (MSTP), as a selective and highly reactive -SH blocking reagent compatible with biological applications.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Reetta J. Holmila; Stephen A. Vance; Xiaofei Chen; Hanzhi Wu; Kirtikar Shukla; Manish S. Bharadwaj; Jade Mims; Zack Wary; Glen S. Marrs; Ravi Singh; Anthony J.A. Molina; Leslie B. Poole; S. Bruce King; Cristina M. Furdui
Mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) are essential regulators of cellular signaling, metabolism and epigenetics underlying the pathophysiology of numerous diseases. Despite the critical function of redox regulation in mitochondria, currently there are limited methods available to monitor protein oxidation in this key subcellular organelle. Here, we describe compounds for imaging sulfenylated proteins in mitochondria: DCP-NEt2-Coumarin (DCP-NEt2C) and rhodamine-based DCP-Rho1. Side-by-side comparison studies are presented on the reactivity of DCP-NEt2C and DCP-Rho1 with a model protein sulfenic acid (AhpC-SOH) and mitochondrial localization to identify optimized experimental conditions for labeling and visualization of protein sulfenylation that would be independent of mitochondria membrane potential and would not impact mitochondrial function. These probes are applied to image mitochondrial protein sulfenylation under conditions of serum starvation and in a cell culture model of lung cancer exposed to ionizing radiation and silver nanoparticles, agents serving dual functions as environmental stressors and cancer therapeutics.
Protein Science | 2018
Daniel Saez; Rosine Dushime; Hanzhi Wu; Lourdes Beatriz Ramos Cordova; Kirtikar Shukla; Heather Brown-Harding; Cristina M. Furdui; Allen W. Tsang
Sulforaphane (SFN), a phytochemical found in broccoli and other cruciferous vegetables, is a potent antioxidant and anti‐inflammatory agent with reported effects in cancer chemoprevention and suppression of infection with intracellular pathogens. Here we report on the impact of SFN on infection with Chlamydia trachomatis (Ct), a common sexually transmitted pathogen responsible for 131 million new cases annually worldwide. Astoundingly, we find that SFN as well as broccoli sprouts extract (BSE) promote Ct infection of human host cells. Both the number and size of Ct inclusions were increased when host cells were pretreated with SFN or BSE. The initial investigations presented here point to both the antioxidant and thiol alkylating properties of SFN as regulators of Ct infection. SFN decreased mitochondrial protein sulfenylation and promoted Ct development, which were both reversed by treatment with mitochondria‐targeted paraquat (MitoPQ). Inhibition of the complement component 3 (complement C3) by SFN was also identified as a mechanism by which SFN promotes Ct infections. Mass spectrometry analysis found alkylation of cysteine 1010 (Cys1010) in complement C3 by SFN. The studies reported here raise awareness of the Ct infection promoting activity of SFN, and also identify potential mechanisms underlying this activity.
Journals of Gerontology Series A-biological Sciences and Medical Sciences | 2016
Andrea Pereyra; Zhong-Min Wang; María Laura Messi; Tan Zhang; Hanzhi Wu; Thomas C. Register; Elizabeth Forbes; Nelmi O. Devarie-Baez; Daniel Clark Files; Martin C. Abba; Cristina M. Furdui; Osvaldo Delbono
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2018
Kimberly J. Nelson; Jesalyn A. Bolduc; Hanzhi Wu; John A. Collins; Elizabeth A. Burke; Julie A. Reisz; Chananat Klomsiri; Scott T. Wood; Raghunatha R. Yammani; Leslie B. Poole; Cristina M. Furdui; Richard F. Loeser
Chemical Communications | 2018
Mu Yang; Hanzhi Wu; Julie Chu; Lucas A. Gabriel; Youngjoo Kim; Karen S. Anderson; Cristina M. Furdui; Ulrich Bierbach
Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2016
Reetta J. Holmila; Hanzhi Wu; Xiaofei Chen; Thomas Poole; Chung-Min Park; Leslie B. Poole; Ming Xian; Allen W. Tsang; S. Bruce King; Cristina M. Furdui
Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2015
Gizem Keceli; Hanzhi Wu; Nelmi O. Devarie-Baez; S. Bruce King; Leslie B. Poole; Cristina M. Furdui