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Dive into the research topics where Haoquan Wu is active.

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Featured researches published by Haoquan Wu.


Nature | 2007

Transvascular delivery of small interfering RNA to the central nervous system

Priti Kumar; Haoquan Wu; Jodi L. McBride; Kyeong Eun Jung; Moon Hee Kim; Beverly L. Davidson; Sang Kyung Lee; Premlata Shankar; N. Manjunath

A major impediment in the treatment of neurological diseases is the presence of the blood–brain barrier, which precludes the entry of therapeutic molecules from blood to brain. Here we show that a short peptide derived from rabies virus glycoprotein (RVG) enables the transvascular delivery of small interfering RNA (siRNA) to the brain. This 29-amino-acid peptide specifically binds to the acetylcholine receptor expressed by neuronal cells. To enable siRNA binding, a chimaeric peptide was synthesized by adding nonamer arginine residues at the carboxy terminus of RVG. This RVG-9R peptide was able to bind and transduce siRNA to neuronal cells in vitro, resulting in efficient gene silencing. After intravenous injection into mice, RVG-9R delivered siRNA to the neuronal cells, resulting in specific gene silencing within the brain. Furthermore, intravenous treatment with RVG-9R-bound antiviral siRNA afforded robust protection against fatal viral encephalitis in mice. Repeated administration of RVG-9R-bound siRNA did not induce inflammatory cytokines or anti-peptide antibodies. Thus, RVG-9R provides a safe and noninvasive approach for the delivery of siRNA and potentially other therapeutic molecules across the blood–brain barrier.


Cell | 2008

T Cell-Specific siRNA Delivery Suppresses HIV-1 Infection in Humanized Mice

Priti Kumar; Hong Seok Ban; Sangsoo Kim; Haoquan Wu; Todd Pearson; Dale L. Greiner; Amale Laouar; Jiahong Yao; Viraga Haridas; Katsuyoshi Habiro; Yong-Guang Yang; Ji Hoon Jeong; Kuen Yong Lee; Yong Hee Kim; Sung Wan Kim; Matthias Peipp; Georg H. Fey; N. Manjunath; Leonard D. Shultz; Sang Kyung Lee; Premlata Shankar

Evaluation of the therapeutic potential of RNAi for HIV infection has been hampered by the challenges of siRNA delivery and lack of suitable animal models. Using a delivery method for T cells, we show that siRNA treatment can dramatically suppress HIV infection. A CD7-specific single-chain antibody was conjugated to oligo-9-arginine peptide (scFvCD7-9R) for T cell-specific siRNA delivery in NOD/SCIDIL2rgamma-/- mice reconstituted with human lymphocytes (Hu-PBL) or CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells (Hu-HSC). In HIV-infected Hu-PBL mice, treatment with anti-CCR5 (viral coreceptor) and antiviral siRNAs complexed to scFvCD7-9R controlled viral replication and prevented the disease-associated CD4 T cell loss. This treatment also suppressed endogenous virus and restored CD4 T cell counts in mice reconstituted with HIV+ peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Moreover, scFvCD7-9R could deliver antiviral siRNAs to naive T cells in Hu-HSC mice and effectively suppress viremia in infected mice. Thus, siRNA therapy for HIV infection appears to be feasible in a preclinical animal model.


PLOS ONE | 2007

miRNA Profiling of Naïve, Effector and Memory CD8 T Cells

Haoquan Wu; Joel R. Neilson; Priti Kumar; Monika Manocha; Premlata Shankar; Phillip A. Sharp; N. Manjunath

microRNAs have recently emerged as master regulators of gene expression during development and cell differentiation. Although profound changes in gene expression also occur during antigen-induced T cell differentiation, the role of miRNAs in the process is not known. We compared the miRNA expression profiles between antigen-specific naïve, effector and memory CD8+ T cells using 3 different methods-small RNA cloning, miRNA microarray analysis and real-time PCR. Although many miRNAs were expressed in all the T cell subsets, the frequency of 7 miRNAs (miR-16, miR-21, miR-142-3p, miR-142-5p, miR-150, miR-15b and let-7f) alone accounted for ∼60% of all miRNAs, and their expression was several fold higher than the other expressed miRNAs. Global downregulation of miRNAs (including 6/7 dominantly expressed miRNAs) was observed in effector T cells compared to naïve cells and the miRNA expression levels tended to come back up in memory T cells. However, a few miRNAs, notably miR-21 were higher in effector and memory T cells compared to naïve T cells. These results suggest that concomitant with profound changes in gene expression, miRNA profile also changes dynamically during T cell differentiation. Sequence analysis of the cloned mature miRNAs revealed an extensive degree of end polymorphism. While 3′end polymorphisms dominated, heterogeneity at both ends, resembling drosha/dicer processing shift was also seen in miR-142, suggesting a possible novel mechanism to generate new miRNA and/or to diversify miRNA target selection. Overall, our results suggest that dynamic changes in the expression of miRNAs may be important for the regulation of gene expression during antigen-induced T cell differentiation. Our study also suggests possible novel mechanisms for miRNA biogenesis and function.


Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews | 2009

Lentiviral delivery of short hairpin RNAs

N. Manjunath; Haoquan Wu; Sandesh Subramanya; Premlata Shankar

In less than a decade after discovery, RNA interference-mediated gene silencing is already being tested as potential therapy in clinical trials for a number of diseases. Lentiviral vectors provide a means to express short hairpin RNA (shRNA) to induce stable and long-term gene silencing in both dividing and non-dividing cells and thus, are being intensively investigated for this purpose. However, induction of long-term shRNA expression can also cause toxicities by inducing off-target effects and interference with the endogenous micro-RNA (miRNA) pathway that regulates cellular gene expression. Recently, several advances have been made in the shRNA vector design to mimic cellular miRNA processing and to express multiplex siRNAs in a tightly regulated and reversible manner to overcome toxicities. In this review we describe some of these advances, focusing on the progress made in the development of lentiviral shRNA delivery strategies to combat viral infections.


Molecular Therapy | 2010

Targeted Delivery of siRNA to Macrophages for Anti-inflammatory Treatment

Sangsoo Kim; Chunting Ye; Priti Kumar; Isaac M. Chiu; Sandesh Subramanya; Haoquan Wu; Premlata Shankar; N. Manjunath

Inflammation mediated by tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and the associated neuronal apoptosis characterizes a number of neurologic disorders. Macrophages and microglial cells are believed to be the major source of TNF-alpha in the central nervous system (CNS). Here, we show that suppression of TNF-alpha by targeted delivery of small interfering RNA (siRNA) to macrophage/microglial cells dramatically reduces lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced neuroinflammation and neuronal apoptosis in vivo. Because macrophage/microglia express the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (AchR) on their surface, we used a short AchR-binding peptide derived from the rabies virus glycoprotein (RVG) as a targeting ligand. This peptide was fused to nona-D-arginine residues (RVG-9dR) to enable siRNA binding. RVG-9dR was able to deliver siRNA to induce gene silencing in macrophages and microglia cells from wild type, but not AchR-deficient mice, confirming targeting specificity. Treatment with anti-TNF-alpha siRNA complexed to RVG-9dR achieved efficient silencing of LPS-induced TNF-alpha production by primary macrophages and microglia cells in vitro. Moreover, intravenous injection with RVG-9dR-complexed siRNA in mice reduced the LPS-induced TNF-alpha levels in blood as well as in the brain, leading to a significant reduction in neuronal apoptosis. These results demonstrate that RVG-9dR provides a tool for siRNA delivery to macrophages and microglia and that suppression of TNF-alpha can potentially be used to suppress neuroinflammation in vivo.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Alternative Processing of Primary microRNA Transcripts by Drosha Generates 5′ End Variation of Mature microRNA

Haoquan Wu; Chunting Ye; Danielle Ramirez; N. Manjunath

Background It is generally believed that the miRNA processing machinery ensures the generation of a mature miRNA with a fixed sequence, particularly at its 5′ end. However, we and others have recently noted that the ends of a given mature miRNA are not absolutely fixed, but subject to variation. Neither the significance nor the mechanism behind the generation of such miRNA polymorphism is understood. miR-142 is an abundantly expressed miRNA in hematopoietic cells and exhibits a high frequency of 5′ end polymorphism. Methodology/Principal Findings Here we show that a shift in the Drosha processing of pri-miRNA generates multiple forms of miR-142s in vivo with differing 5′ ends that might target different genes. Sequence analysis of several pre-miRNA ends cloned from T cells reveals that unlike many other pri-miRNAs that are processed into a single pre-miRNA, pri-miR-142 is processed into 3 distinct pre-miR-142s. Dicer processing studies suggest that each of the 3 pre-miR-142s is processed into a distinct double-stranded miRNA, giving rise to 4 mature miRNA variants that might regulate different target gene pools. Conclusions/Significance Thus, alternative Drosha processing might be a novel mechanism for diversification of the miRNA target gene pool.


Cell Reports | 2015

A CRISPR-based screen identifies genes essential for West Nile virus-induced cell death

Hongming Ma; Ying Dang; Yonggan Wu; Gengxiang Jia; Edgar Anaya; Junli Zhang; Sojan Abraham; Jang Gi Choi; Guojun Shi; Ling Qi; N. Manjunath; Haoquan Wu

West Nile virus (WNV) causes an acute neurological infection attended by massive neuronal cell death. However, the mechanism(s) behind the virus-induced cell death is poorly understood. Using a library containing 77,406 sgRNAs targeting 20,121 genes, we performed a genome-wide screen followed by a second screen with a sub-library. Among the genes identified, seven genes, EMC2, EMC3, SEL1L, DERL2, UBE2G2, UBE2J1, and HRD1, stood out as having the strongest phenotype, whose knockout conferred strong protection against WNV-induced cell death with two different WNV strains and in three cell lines. Interestingly, knockout of these genes did not block WNV replication. Thus, these appear to be essential genes that link WNV replication to downstream cell death pathway(s). In addition, the fact that all of these genes belong to the ER-associated protein degradation (ERAD) pathway suggests that this might be the primary driver of WNV-induced cell death.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Lower and upper stem–single-stranded RNA junctions together determine the Drosha cleavage site

Hongming Ma; Yonggan Wu; Jang-Gi Choi; Haoquan Wu

Significance MicroRNA genes are transcribed as long primary microRNAs (pri-miRNAs) and then processed by the Drosha–DGCR8 (DiGeorge syndrome critical region gene 8) complex into ∼60-nt pre-miRNAs, which is the key step of miRNA biogenesis. How exactly the Drosha–DGCR8 complex recognizes pri-miRNAs and selects the processing site is not well understood. Here we developed a unique approach to examining the details of how this complex chooses the processing site in human cells. Our study yields new knowledge of how the Drosha–DGCR8 complex determines its processing sites and also provides an explanation for how 5′ isomiRs are generated in some miRNAs, which is another interesting but not clearly understood phenomenon in miRNA biogenesis. Microprocessor [Drosha–DGCR8 (DiGeorge syndrome critical region gene 8) complex] processing of primary microRNA (pri-miRNA) is the critical first step in miRNA biogenesis, but how the Drosha cleavage site is determined has been unclear. Previous models proposed that the Drosha–DGCR8 complex measures either ∼22 nt from the upper stem–single-stranded RNA (ssRNA, terminal loop) junction or ∼11 nt from the lower stem–ssRNA junction to determine the cleavage site. Here, using miRNA-offset RNAs to determine the Drosha cleavage site, we show that the Microprocessor measures the distances from both the lower and upper stem–ssRNA junctions to determine the cleavage site in human cells, and optimal distances from both structures are critical to the precision of Drosha processing. If the distances are not optimal, Drosha tends to cleave at multiple sites, which can, in turn, generate multiple 5′ isomiRs. Thus, our results also reveal a mechanism of 5′ isomiR generation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Human macrophage and dendritic cell-specific silencing of high-mobility group protein B1 ameliorates sepsis in a humanized mouse model

Chunting Ye; Jang-Gi Choi; Sojan Abraham; Haoquan Wu; Dolores Diaz; Daniel Terreros; Premlata Shankar; N. Manjunath

Hypersecretion of cytokines by innate immune cells is thought to initiate multiple organ failure in murine models of sepsis. Whether human cytokine storm also plays a similar role is not clear. Here, we show that human hematopoietic cells are required to induce sepsis-induced mortality following cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) in the severely immunodeficient nonobese diabetic (NOD)/SCID/IL2Rγ−/− mice, and siRNA treatment to inhibit HMGB1 release by human macrophages and dendritic cells dramatically reduces sepsis-induced mortality. Following CLP, compared with immunocompetent WT mice, NOD/SCID/IL2Rγ−/− mice did not show high levels of serum HMGB1 or murine proinflammatory cytokines and were relatively resistant to sepsis-induced mortality. In contrast, NOD/SCID/IL2Rγ−/− mice transplanted with human hematopoietic stem cells [humanized bone marrow liver thymic mice (BLT) mice] showed high serum levels of HMGB1, as well as multiple human but not murine proinflammatory cytokines, and died uniformly, suggesting human cytokines are sufficient to induce organ failure in this model. Moreover, targeted delivery of HMGB1 siRNA to human macrophages and dendritic cells using a short acetylcholine receptor (AchR)-binding peptide [rabies virus glycoprotein (RVG)-9R] effectively suppressed secretion of HMGB1, reduced the human cytokine storm, human lymphocyte apoptosis, and rescued humanized mice from CLP-induced mortality. siRNA treatment was also effective when started after the appearance of sepsis symptoms. These results show that CLP in humanized mice provides a model to study human sepsis, HMGB1 siRNA might provide a treatment strategy for human sepsis, and RVG-9R provides a tool to deliver siRNA to human macrophages and dendritic cells that could potentially be used to suppress a variety of human inflammatory diseases.


Molecular therapy. Nucleic acids | 2014

Pol III Promoters to Express Small RNAs: Delineation of Transcription Initiation

Hongming Ma; Yonggan Wu; Ying Dang; Jang-Gi Choi; Junli Zhang; Haoquan Wu

Pol III promoters such as U6 are commonly used to express small RNAs, including small interfering RNA, short hairpin RNA, and guide RNA, for the clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats genome-editing system. However, whether the small RNAs were precisely expressed as desired has not been studied. Here, using deep sequencing to analyze small RNAs, we show that, for mouse U6 promoter, sequences immediately upstream of the putative initiation site, which is often modified to accommodate the restriction enzyme sites that enable easy cloning of small RNAs, are critical for precise transcription initiation. When the promoter is kept unmodified, transcription starts precisely from the first available A or G within the range of positions −1 to +2. In addition, we show that transcription from another commonly used pol III promoter, H1, starts at multiple sites, which results in variability at the 5′ end of the transcripts. Thus, inaccuracy of 5′ end of small RNA transcripts might be a common problem when using these promoters to express small RNAs based on currently believed concepts. Our study provides general guidelines for minimizing the variability of initiation, thereby enabling more accurate expression of small RNAs.

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N. Manjunath

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center at El Paso

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Premlata Shankar

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center at El Paso

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Hongming Ma

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center at El Paso

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Chunting Ye

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center at El Paso

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Sojan Abraham

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center at El Paso

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Ying Dang

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center at El Paso

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Junli Zhang

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center at El Paso

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Edgar Anaya

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center at El Paso

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