Hua Gu
Columbia University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Hua Gu.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2005
Tang-Long Shen; Ann Y J Park; Ana Alcaraz; Xu Peng; Ihnkyung Jang; Pandelakis A. Koni; Richard A. Flavell; Hua Gu; Jun-Lin Guan
Focal adhesion kinase (FAK) is a critical mediator of signal transduction by integrins and growth factor receptors in a variety of cells including endothelial cells (ECs). Here, we describe EC-specific knockout of FAK using a Cre-loxP approach. In contrast to the total FAK knockout, deletion of FAK specifically in ECs did not affect early embryonic development including normal vasculogenesis. However, in late embryogenesis, FAK deletion in the ECs led to defective angiogenesis in the embryos, yolk sac, and placenta, impaired vasculature and associated hemorrhage, edema, and developmental delay, and late embryonic lethal phenotype. Histologically, ECs and blood vessels in the mutant embryos present a disorganized, detached, and apoptotic appearance. Consistent with these phenotypes, deletion of FAK in ECs isolated from the floxed FAK mice led to reduced tubulogenesis, cell survival, proliferation, and migration in vitro. Together, these results strongly suggest a role of FAK in angiogenesis and vascular development due to its essential function in the regulation of multiple EC activities.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2006
Boyi Gan; Xu Peng; Tamas Nagy; Ana Alcaraz; Hua Gu; Jun-Lin Guan
Focal adhesion kinase family interacting protein of 200 kD (FIP200) has been shown to regulate diverse cellular functions such as cell size, proliferation, and migration in vitro. However, the function of FIP200 in vivo has not been investigated. We show that targeted deletion of FIP200 in the mouse led to embryonic death at mid/late gestation associated with heart failure and liver degeneration. We found that FIP200 knockout (KO) embryos show reduced S6 kinase activation and cell size as a result of increased tuberous sclerosis complex function. Furthermore, FIP200 KO embryos exhibited significant apoptosis in heart and liver. Consistent with this, FIP200 KO mouse embryo fibroblasts and liver cells showed increased apoptosis and reduced c-Jun N-terminal kinase phosphorylation in response to tumor necrosis factor (TNF) α stimulation, which might be mediated by FIP200 interaction with apoptosis signal–regulating kinase 1 (ASK1) and TNF receptor–associated factor 2 (TRAF2), regulation of TRAF2–ASK1 interaction, and ASK1 phosphorylation. Together, our results reveal that FIP200 functions as a regulatory node to couple two important signaling pathways to regulate cell growth and survival during mouse embryogenesis.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2005
Xu Peng; Marc S. Kraus; Huijun Wei; Tang-Long Shen; Romain Pariaut; Ana Alcaraz; Guangju Ji; Lihong Cheng; Qinglin Yang; Michael I. Kotlikoff; Ju Chen; Kenneth R. Chien; Hua Gu; Jun-Lin Guan
Focal adhesion kinase (FAK) is a cytoplasmic tyrosine kinase that plays a major role in integrin signaling pathways. Although cardiovascular defects were observed in FAK total KO mice, the embryonic lethality prevented investigation of FAK function in the hearts of adult animals. To circumvent these problems, we created mice in which FAK is selectively inactivated in cardiomyocytes (CFKO mice). We found that CFKO mice develop eccentric cardiac hypertrophy (normal LV wall thickness and increased left chamber dimension) upon stimulation with angiotensin II or pressure overload by transverse aortic constriction as measured by echocardiography. We also found increased heart/body weight ratios, elevated markers of cardiac hypertrophy, multifocal interstitial fibrosis, and increased collagen I and VI expression in CFKO mice compared with control littermates. Spontaneous cardiac chamber dilation and increased expression of hypertrophy markers were found in the older CFKO mice. Analysis of cardiomyocytes isolated from CFKO mice showed increased length but not width. The myocardium of CFKO mice exhibited disorganized myofibrils with increased nonmyofibrillar space filled with swelled mitochondria. Last, decreased tyrosine phosphorylation of FAK substrates p130Cas and paxillin were observed in CFKO mice compared with the control littermates. Together, these results provide strong evidence for a role of FAK in the regulation of heart hypertrophy in vivo.
Genes & Development | 2008
Chozhavendan Rathinam; Christine B.F. Thien; Wallace Y. Langdon; Hua Gu; Richard A. Flavell
Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) are multipotent progenitors that give rise to all types of blood cells. In the present study, we document that HSC development and functions are negatively regulated by the E3 ubiquitin ligase c-Cbl (casitas B-cell lymphoma). HSCs of c-Cbl(-/-) mice exhibit augmented pool size, hyperproliferation, greater competence, and enhanced long-term repopulating capacity. Our mechanistic studies identified that c-Cbl(-/-) HSCs are hyperresponsive to thrombopoietin (TPO) and display elevated levels of STAT5 phosphorylation, thus leading to increased c-Myc expression. In essence, our data unequivocally identify c-Cbl as a novel negative regulator of developmental and functional properties of HSCs.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2010
Ingunn M. Stromnes; Joseph N. Blattman; Xiaoxia Tan; Sara Jeevanjee; Hua Gu; Philip D. Greenberg
The clinical use of adoptive immunotherapy with tumor-reactive T cells to treat established cancers is limited in part by the poor in vivo survival and function of the transferred T cells. Although administration of exogenous cytokines such as IL-2 can promote T cell survival, such strategies have many nonspecific activities and are often associated with toxicity. We show here that abrogating expression of Casitas B-lineage lymphoma b (Cbl-b), a negative regulator of lymphocyte activation, in tumor-reactive CD8(+) T cells expanded ex vivo increased the efficacy of adoptive immunotherapy of disseminated leukemia in mice. Mechanistically, Cbl-b abrogation bypassed the requirement for exogenous IL-2 administration for tumor eradication in vivo. In addition, CD8(+) T cells lacking Cbl-b demonstrated a lower threshold for activation, better survival following target recognition and stimulation, and enhanced proliferative responses as a result of both IL-2-dependent and -independent pathways. Importantly, siRNA knockdown of Cbl-b in human CD8(+)CD28- effector T cell clones similarly restored IL-2 production and proliferation following target recognition independent of exogenous IL-2, enhanced IFN-γ production, and increased target avidity. Thus, abrogating Cbl-b expression in effector T cells may improve the efficacy of adoptive therapy of some human malignancies.
Current Opinion in Immunology | 2003
Ihnkyung Jang; Hua Gu
Protein degradation was previously considered to be a nonspecific cellular process that eradicated abnormal or damaged proteins. Current evidence indicates, however, that T cells use this mechanism to selectively eliminate activated T-cell receptors (TCRs) and signaling molecules, and consequently control the duration and specificity of TCR signaling.
Immunological Reviews | 2009
Ihn Kyung Jang; Jinping Zhang; Hua Gu
Summary: Lymphocyte development, activation, and tolerance depend on antigen receptor signaling transduced via multiple intracellular signalosomes. These signalosomes are assembled by different adapters. Given that signaling molecules can be either positive or negative regulators for a biochemical target, the complex of a target with different regulator may dictate the final signaling outcome. Grb2 is a simple adapter known to be involved in a variety of growth factor receptor signaling. However, its role in antigen receptor signaling as well as lymphocyte development and function has emerged only recently. Despite its simple molecular structure, recent experiments show that Grb2 may play a complex role in T and B‐cell antigen receptor signaling. In this article, we review recent findings about the physiological role of Grb2 in T and B‐cell development and activation and summarize the current mechanistic understanding of how Grb2 exerts its function following T and B‐cell antigen receptor stimulation.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2004
Y. Jeffrey Chiang; Connie L. Sommers; Martha S. Jordan; Hua Gu; Lawrence E. Samelson; Gary A. Koretzky; Richard J. Hodes
c-Cbl is an adaptor protein that negatively regulates signal transduction events involved in thymic-positive selection. To further characterize the function of c-Cbl in T cell development, we analyzed the effect of c-Cbl inactivation in mice deficient in the scaffolding molecule SLP-76. SLP-76–deficient mice show a high frequency of neonatal lethality; and in surviving mice, T cell development is blocked at the DN3 stage. Inactivation of c-cbl completely reversed the neonatal lethality seen in SLP-76–deficient mice and partially reversed the T cell development arrest in these mice. SLP-76−/− Cbl−/− mice exhibited marked expansion of polarized T helper type (Th)1 and Th2 cell peripheral CD4+ T cells, lymphoid infiltrates of parenchymal organs, and premature death. This rescue of T cell development is T cell receptor dependent because it does not occur in recombination activating gene 2−/− SLP-76−/− Cbl−/− triple knockout mice. Analysis of the signal transduction properties of SLP-76−/− Cbl−/− T cells reveals a novel SLP-76– and linker for activation of T cells–independent pathway of extracellular signal–regulated kinase activation, which is normally down-regulated by c-Cbl.
Immunity | 2018
Xin Li; Adeline Gadzinsky; Liying Gong; Haijun Tong; Virginie Calderon; Yue Li; Daisuke Kitamura; Ulf Klein; Wallace Y. Langdon; Fajian Hou; Yong Rui Zou; Hua Gu
&NA; Selective expansion of high‐affinity antigen‐specific B cells in germinal centers (GCs) is a key event in antibody affinity maturation. GC B cells with improved affinity can either continue affinity‐driven selection or exit the GC to differentiate into plasma cells (PCs) or memory B cells. Here we found that deleting E3 ubiquitin ligases Cbl and Cbl‐b (Cbls) in GC B cells resulted in the early exit of high‐affinity antigen‐specific B cells from the GC reaction and thus impaired clonal expansion. Cbls were highly expressed in GC light zone (LZ) B cells, where they promoted the ubiquitination and degradation of Irf4, a transcription factor facilitating PC fate choice. Strong CD40 and BCR stimulation triggered the Cbl degradation, resulting in increased Irf4 expression and exit from GC affinity selection. Thus, a regulatory cascade that is centered on the Cbl ubiquitin ligases ensures affinity‐driven clonal expansion by connecting BCR affinity signals with differentiation programs. Graphical Abstract Figure. No caption available. HighlightsDeletion of Cbl ubiquitin ligases in GC B cells abolishes antibody affinity maturationCbls control the clonal expansion of high‐ but not low‐affinity B cells in GCsCbls prevent early exit of B cells from GC by promoting Irf4 ubiquitinationStrong CD40 and BCR signals trigger degradation of Cbls in LZ B cells, promoting GC exit &NA; Li et al. find that clonal expansion of high affinity B cells in GCs depends on the Cbl ubiquitin ligases, which prevent premature GC exit by promoting the degradation of Irf4 in light zone B cells. Strong CD40 and BCR signals trigger Cbl degradation, thus enabling GC exit.
Immunity | 2008
Hua Gu
The molecular mechanisms that underlie T cell anergy remain unclear. In this issue of Immunity, Teague et al. (2008) report that anergy may occur at the level of T cell receptor complex.