Jingsong Xu
University of Illinois at Chicago
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jingsong Xu.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007
Jingsong Xu; Alexandra Van Keymeulen; Nicole M. Wakida; Peter M. Carlton; Michael W. Berns; Henry R. Bourne
Like blood neutrophils, dHL60 cells respond to a uniform concentration of attractant by polarizing in apparently random directions. How each cell chooses its own direction is unknown. We now find that an arrow drawn from the center of the nucleus of an unpolarized cell to its centrosome strongly predicts the subsequent direction of attractant-induced polarity: Of 60 cells that polarized in response to uniform f-Met-Leu-Phe (fMLP), 42 polarized to the left of this arrow, 6 polarized to the right, and 12 polarized directly toward or away from the centrosome. To investigate this directional bias we perturbed a regulatory pathway, downstream of Cdc42 and partitioning-defective 6 (Par6), which controls centrosome orientation relative to polarity of other cells. Dominant negative Par6 mutants block polarity altogether, as previously shown for disrupting Cdc42 activity. Cells remain able to polarize, but without directional bias, if their microtubules are disrupted with nocodazole, or they express mutant proteins that interfere with activities of PKCζ or dynein. Expressing constitutively active glycogen synthase kinase 3β (GSK3β) causes cells to polarize preferentially to the right. Distributions of most of these polarity regulators localize to the centrosome but show no left–right asymmetry before polarization. Together, these findings suggest that an intrinsically chiral structure, perhaps the centrosome, serves as a template for directing polarity in the absence of spatial cues. Such a template could help to determine left–right asymmetry and planar polarity in development.
Nature Immunology | 2008
Jingsong Xu; Xiao Pei Gao; Ramaswamy Ramchandran; You Yang Zhao; Stephen M. Vogel; Asrar B. Malik
Nonmuscle myosin light-chain kinase (MYLK) mediates increased lung vascular endothelial permeability in lipopolysaccharide-induced lung inflammatory injury, the chief cause of the acute respiratory distress syndrome. In a lung injury model, we demonstrate here that MYLK was also essential for neutrophil transmigration, but that this function was mostly independent of myosin II regulatory light chain, the only known substrate of MYLK. Instead, MYLK in neutrophils was required for the recruitment and activation of the tyrosine kinase Pyk2, which mediated full activation of β2 integrins. Our results demonstrate that MYLK-mediated activation of β2 integrins through Pyk2 links β2 integrin signaling to the actin motile machinery of neutrophils.
Blood | 2010
Jia Chen; Haiyang Tang; Nissim Hay; Jingsong Xu; Richard D. Ye
In neutrophils, the phosphoinositide 3-kinase/Akt signaling cascade is involved in migration, degranulation, and O(2)(-) production. However, it is unclear whether the Akt kinase isoforms have distinct functions in neutrophil activation. Here we report functional differences between the 2 major Akt isoforms in neutrophil activation on the basis of studies in which we used individual Akt1 and Akt2 knockout mice. Akt2(-/-) neutrophils exhibited decreased cell migration, granule enzyme release, and O(2)(-) production compared with wild-type and Akt1(-/-) neutrophils. Surprisingly, Akt2 deficiency and pharmacologic inhibition of Akt also abrogated phorbol ester-induced O(2)(-) production, which was unaffected by treatment with the phosphoinositide 3-kinase inhibitor LY294002. The decreased O(2)(-) production in Akt2(-/-) neutrophils was accompanied by reduced p47(phox) phosphorylation and its membrane translocation, suggesting that Akt2 is important for the assembly of phagocyte nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidase. In wild-type neutrophils, Akt2 but not Akt1 translocated to plasma membrane upon chemoattractant stimulation and to the leading edge in polarized neutrophils. In the absence of Akt2, chemoattractant-induced Akt protein phosphorylation was significantly reduced. These results demonstrate a predominant role of Akt2 in regulating neutrophil functions and provide evidence for differential activation of the 2 Akt isoforms in neutrophils.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Anke Di; Takeshi Kawamura; Xiao Pei Gao; Haiyang Tang; Evgeny Berdyshev; Stephen M. Vogel; You Yang Zhao; Tiffany Sharma; Kurt Bachmaier; Jingsong Xu; Asrar B. Malik
The mechanism underlying the protective effect of sphingosine kinase 1 (SphK1) in inflammatory injury is not clear. We demonstrated using SphK1-null mice (SphK1−/−) the crucial role of SphK1 in suppressing lipopolysaccharide-induced neutrophil oxidant production and sequestration in lungs and mitigating lung inflammatory injury. This effect of SphK1 was independent of the production of sphingosine 1-phosphate, the product of SphK1 activity. The anti-inflammatory effect of SphK1 in the lipopolysaccharide model was mediated through SphK1 interaction with JNK. SphK1 stabilization of JNK in turn inhibited JNK binding to the JNK-interacting protein 3 (JIP3) and thus abrogated the activation of NADPH oxidase and oxidant generation and resultant NF-κB activation. Therefore, SphK1-mediated down-regulation of JNK activity serves to dampen inflammation and tissue injury.
American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2014
Lei Cai; Fan Yi; Zhiyu Dai; Xiaojia Huang; Yidan D. Zhao; Muhammad K. Mirza; Jingsong Xu; Stephen M. Vogel; You Yang Zhao
Excessive reactive oxygen/nitrogen species have been associated with the onset, progression, and outcome of sepsis, both in preclinical and clinical studies. However, the signaling pathways regulating oxidative/nitrative stress in the pathogenesis of sepsis-induced acute lung injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome are not fully understood. Employing the novel mouse model with genetic deletions of both caveolin-1 (Cav1) and adiponectin (ADPN) [double knockout (DKO) mice], we have demonstrated the critical role of Cav1 and ADPN signaling cross talk in regulating oxidative/nitrative stress and resulting inflammatory lung injury following LPS challenge. In contrast to the inhibited inflammatory lung injury in Cav1(-/-) mice, we observed severe lung inflammation and markedly increased lung vascular permeability in DKO mice in response to LPS challenge. Accordingly, the DKO mice exhibited an 80% mortality rate following a sublethal dose of LPS challenge. At basal state, loss of Cav1 and ADPN resulted in a drastic increase of oxidative stress and resultant nitrative stress in DKO lungs. Scavenging of superoxide by pretreating the DKO mice with MnTMPYP (a superoxide dismutase mimetic) restored the inflammatory responses to LPS challenge including reduced lung myeloperoxidase activity and vascular permeability. Thus oxidative/nitrative stress collectively modulated by Cav1 and ADPN signalings is a critical determinant of inflammatory lung injury in response to LPS challenge.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2015
Xiaowen Liu; Tao Yang; Koya Suzuki; Sachiko Tsukita; Masaru Ishii; Shuping Zhou; Gang Wang; Luyang Cao; Feng Qian; Shalina Taylor; Myung Jin Oh; Irena Levitan; Richard D. Ye; Graeme K. Carnegie; Yong Zhao; Asrar B. Malik; Jingsong Xu
Jingsong Xu and colleagues investigate how neutrophils initiate polarized migration toward bacteria or chemoattractants. They find that attractant-induced activation of myosin phosphatase results in the deactivation of moesin at the prospective leading edge and its redistribution to the trailing edge, establishing polarity and directional pseudopod formation.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2015
Xiaowen Liu; Tao Yang; Koya Suzuki; Sachiko Tsukita; Masaru Ishii; Shuping Zhou; Gang Wang; Luyang Cao; Feng Qian; Shalina Taylor; Myung-Jin Oh; Irena Levitan; Richard D. Ye; Graeme K. Carnegie; Yong Zhao; Asrar B. Malik; Jingsong Xu
This is a copy of an article published in the Journal of Experimental Medicine
Developmental Cell | 2016
Gang Wang; Luyang Cao; Xiaowen Liu; Nathan Sieracki; Anke Di; Xi Wen; Yong Chen; Shalina Taylor; Xiaojia Huang; Chinnaswamy Tiruppathi; You Yang Zhao; Yuanlin Song; Xiaopei Gao; Tian Jin; Chunxue Bai; Asrar B. Malik; Jingsong Xu
Blood neutrophils perform an essential host-defense function by directly migrating to bacterial invasion sites to kill bacteria. The mechanisms mediating the transition from the migratory to bactericidal phenotype remain elusive. Here, we demonstrate that TRPM2, a trp superfamily member, senses neutrophil-generated reactive oxygen species and restrains neutrophil migration. The inhibitory function of oxidant sensing by TRPM2 requires the oxidation of Cys549, which then induces TRMP2 binding to formyl peptide receptor 1 (FPR1) and subsequent FPR1 internalization and signaling inhibition. The oxidant sensing-induced termination of neutrophil migration at the site of infection permits a smooth transition to the subsequent microbial killing phase.
Cell | 2003
Jingsong Xu; Fei Wang; Alexandra Van Keymeulen; Paul Herzmark; Aaron F. Straight; Kathleen Kelly; Yoh Takuwa; Naotoshi Sugimoto; Timothy J. Mitchison; Henry R. Bourne
Nature Immunology | 2012
Xiaowen Liu; Bo Ma; Asrar B. Malik; Haiyang Tang; Tao Yang; Bo Sun; Gang Wang; Richard D. Minshall; Yan Li; Yong Zhao; Richard D. Ye; Jingsong Xu