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Dive into the research topics where Junqi Wang is active.

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Featured researches published by Junqi Wang.


The Plant Cell | 2010

EXPO, an Exocyst-Positive Organelle Distinct from Multivesicular Endosomes and Autophagosomes, Mediates Cytosol to Cell Wall Exocytosis in Arabidopsis and Tobacco Cells

Juan Wang; Yu Ding; Junqi Wang; Stefan Hillmer; Yansong Miao; Sze Wan Lo; Xiangfeng Wang; David G. Robinson; Liwen Jiang

Protein secretion in plant cells is generally thought to be achieved by vesicle-mediated traffic between the endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, trans-Golgi network, and the plasma membrane. This study describes an unconventional secretory pathway involving a double-membrane exocyst-positive organelle that mediates exocytosis directly from the cytosol to cell wall. The exocyst protein complex mediates vesicle fusion with the plasma membrane. By expressing an (X)FP-tagged Arabidopsis thaliana homolog of the exocyst protein Exo70 in suspension-cultured Arabidopsis and tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) BY-2 cells, and using antibodies specific for Exo70, we detected a compartment, which we term EXPO (for exocyst positive organelles). Standard markers for the Golgi apparatus, the trans-Golgi network/early endosome, and the multivesicular body/late endosome in plants do not colocalize with EXPO. Inhibitors of the secretory and endocytic pathways also do not affect EXPO. Exo70E2-(X)FP also locates to the plasma membrane (PM) as discrete punctae and is secreted outside of the cells. Immunogold labeling of sections cut from high-pressure frozen samples reveal EXPO to be spherical double membrane structures resembling autophagosomes. However, unlike autophagosomes, EXPOs are not induced by starvation and do not fuse with the lytic compartment or with endosomes. Instead, they fuse with the PM, releasing a single membrane vesicle into the cell wall. EXPOs are also found in other cell types, including root tips, root hair cells, and pollen grains. EXPOs therefore represent a form of unconventional secretion unique to plants.


Trends in Plant Science | 2012

Unconventional protein secretion

Yu Ding; Juan Wang; Junqi Wang; York-Dieter Stierhof; David G. Robinson; Liwen Jiang

It is generally believed that protein secretion or exocytosis is achieved via a conventional ER (endoplasmic reticulum)-Golgi-TGN (trans-Golgi network)-PM (plasma membrane) pathway in the plant endomembrane system. However, such signal peptide (SP)-dependent protein secretion cannot explain the increasing number of SP-lacking proteins which are found outside of the PM in plant cells. The process by which such leaderless secretory proteins (LSPs) gain access to the cell exterior is termed unconventional protein secretion (UPS) and has been well-studied in animal and yeast cells, but largely ignored by the plant community. Here, we review the evidence for UPS in plants especially in regard to the recently discovered EXPO (exocyst-positive-organelle).


Cell Research | 2012

Isolation and proteomic analysis of the SYP61 compartment reveal its role in exocytic trafficking in Arabidopsis

Georgia Drakakaki; Wilhelmina van de Ven; Songqin Pan; Yansong Miao; Junqi Wang; Nana F. Keinath; Brent Weatherly; Liwen Jiang; Karin Schumacher; Glenn R. Hicks; Natasha V. Raikhel

The endomembrane system is a complex and dynamic intracellular trafficking network. It is very challenging to track individual vesicles and their cargos in real time; however, affinity purification allows vesicles to be isolated in their natural state so that their constituent proteins can be identified. Pioneering this approach in plants, we isolated the SYP61 trans-Golgi network compartment and carried out a comprehensive proteomic analysis of its contents with only minimal interference from other organelles. The proteome of SYP61 revealed the association of proteins of unknown function that have previously not been ascribed to this compartment. We identified a complete SYP61 SNARE complex, including regulatory proteins and validated the proteome data by showing that several of these proteins associated with SYP61 in planta. We further identified the SYP121-complex and cellulose synthases, suggesting that SYP61 plays a role in the exocytic trafficking and the transport of cell wall components to the plasma membrane. The presence of proteins of unknown function in the SYP61 proteome including ECHIDNA offers the opportunity to identify novel trafficking components and cargos. The affinity purification of plant vesicles in their natural state provides a basis for further analysis and dissection of complex endomembrane networks. The approach is widely applicable and can afford the study of several vesicle populations in plants, which can be compared with the SYP61 vesicle proteome.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2009

Wortmannin induces homotypic fusion of plant prevacuolar compartments

Junqi Wang; Yi Cai; Yansong Miao; Sheung Kwan Lam; Liwen Jiang

Wortmannin, a specific inhibitor of phosphatidyl-inositol 3-kinase, is a useful tool for studying protein trafficking and identifying organelles in the plant secretory and endocytic pathways. It has recently been demonstrated that wortmannin at 16.5 μM or 33 μM caused the prevacuolar compartments (PVCs), identified as multivesicular bodies (MVBs) by their enrichment in vacuolar sorting receptor (VSRs) proteins and the BP-80 reporter, to form small vacuoles rapidly. However, the source(s) of the membrane needed for the rapid enlargement of PVCs/MVBs has been unclear. Using both confocal immunofluorescence and immunogold EM with high pressure freeze substitution of plant samples, it has been demonstrated here that wortmannin induces homotypic fusions of PVCs/MVBs thus providing an explanation for the demand for extra membrane. In addition, possible wortmannin-induced fusions between the trans-Golgi network (TGN) and PVC, as well as between the small internal vesicles and PVC membrane, were also observed and they may also contribute to the membranes needed for PVC enlargement. In contrast to mammalian cells and yeast, wortmannin-induced fusion of PVCs appears to be unique to plants.


Plant Physiology | 2007

Protein Mobilization in Germinating Mung Bean Seeds Involves Vacuolar Sorting Receptors and Multivesicular Bodies

Junqi Wang; Yubing Li; Sze Wan Lo; Stefan Hillmer; Samuel S.M. Sun; David G. Robinson; Liwen Jiang

Plants accumulate and store proteins in protein storage vacuoles (PSVs) during seed development and maturation. Upon seed germination, these storage proteins are mobilized to provide nutrients for seedling growth. However, little is known about the molecular mechanisms of protein degradation during seed germination. Here we test the hypothesis that vacuolar sorting receptor (VSR) proteins play a role in mediating protein degradation in germinating seeds. We demonstrate that both VSR proteins and hydrolytic enzymes are synthesized de novo during mung bean (Vigna radiata) seed germination. Immunogold electron microscopy with VSR antibodies demonstrate that VSRs mainly locate to the peripheral membrane of multivesicular bodies (MVBs), presumably as recycling receptors in day 1 germinating seeds, but become internalized to the MVB lumen, presumably for degradation at day 3 germination. Chemical cross-linking and immunoprecipitation with VSR antibodies have identified the cysteine protease aleurain as a specific VSR-interacting protein in germinating seeds. Further confocal immunofluorescence and immunogold electron microscopy studies demonstrate that VSR and aleurain colocalize to MVBs as well as PSVs in germinating seeds. Thus, MVBs in germinating seeds exercise dual functions: as a storage compartment for proteases that are physically separated from PSVs in the mature seed and as an intermediate compartment for VSR-mediated delivery of proteases from the Golgi apparatus to the PSV for protein degradation during seed germination.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Essential role for TrpC5-containing extracellular vesicles in breast cancer with chemotherapeutic resistance

Xin Ma; Zhen Chen; Dong Hua; Dongxu He; Linjun Wang; Peng Zhang; Junqi Wang; Yanfei Cai; Caiji Gao; Xiaodong Zhang; Fangfang Zhang; Teng Wang; Tingting Hong; Linfang Jin; Xiaowei Qi; Shu‐Xian Chen; Xiao-Ting Gu; Dangtong Yang; Qiongxi Pan; Yifei Zhu; Yun Chen; Daozhen Chen; Liwen Jiang; Xiaofeng Han; Yanyun Zhang; Jian Jin; Xiaoqiang Yao

Significance A critical challenge for chemotherapy is development of chemoresistance, but underlying molecular mechanisms remain unclear. In this study, we found that drug-resistant adriamycin-resistant human breast cancer cells possessed numerous transient receptor potential channel 5 (TrpC5) -containing extracellular vesicles (EVs) on the cell surface. Suppressing TrpC5 expression diminished the formation of EVs. Incubation of drug-sensitive recipient cells with EVs endowed recipients with drug-resistant properties. In both human samples and a mouse model of breast cancer, the expression of TrpC5 proteins was high in the tumor, and the levels of TrpC5-positive EVs were high in the circulation. These data suggest a critical role of TrpC5-containing EVs in the transfer of drug resistance. In the future, monitoring TrpC5-containing EVs in the circulation could potentially be used to predict the clinical outcome of chemotherapy. A critical challenge for chemotherapy is the development of chemoresistance in breast cancer. However, the underlying mechanisms and validated predictors remain unclear. Extracellular vesicles (EVs) have gained attention as potential means for cancer cells to share intracellular contents. In adriamycin-resistant human breast cancer cells (MCF-7/ADM), we analyzed the role of transient receptor potential channel 5 (TrpC5) in EV formation and transfer as well as the diagnostic implications. Up-regulated TrpC5, accumulated in EVs, is responsible for EV formation and trapping of adriamycin (ADM) in EVs. EV-mediated intercellular transfer of TrpC5 allowed recipient cells to acquire TrpC5, consequently stimulating multidrug efflux transporter P-glycoprotein production through a Ca2+- and activated T-cells isoform c3-mediated mechanism and thus, conferring chemoresistance on nonresistant cells. TrpC5-containing circulating EVs were detected in nude mice bearing MCF-7/ADM tumor xenografts, and the level was lower after TrpC5–siRNA treatment. In breast cancer patients who underwent chemotherapy, TrpC5 expression in the tumor was significantly higher in patients with progressive or stable disease than in patients with a partial or complete response. TrpC5-containing circulating EVs were found in peripheral blood from patients who underwent chemotherapy but not patients without chemotherapy. Taken together, we found that TrpC5-containing circulating EVs may transfer chemoresistance property to nonchemoresistant recipient cells. It may be worthwhile to further explore the potential of using TrpC5-containing EVs as a diagnostic biomarker for chemoresistant breast cancer.


Traffic | 2012

Vacuolar Degradation of Two Integral Plasma Membrane Proteins, AtLRR84A and OsSCAMP1, Is Cargo Ubiquitination‐Independent and Prevacuolar Compartment‐Mediated in Plant Cells

Yi Cai; Xiaohong Zhuang; Junqi Wang; Hao Wang; Sheung Kwan Lam; Caiji Gao; Xiangfeng Wang; Liwen Jiang

In plant cells, how integral plasma membrane (PM) proteins are degraded in a cargo ubiquitination‐independent manner remains elusive. Here, we studied the degradative pathway of two plant PM proteins: AtLRR84A, a type I integral membrane protein belonging to the leucine‐rich repeat receptor‐like kinase protein family, and OsSCAMP1 (rice secretory carrier membrane protein 1), a tetraspan transmembrane protein located on the PM and trans‐Golgi network (TGN) or early endosome (EE). Using wortmannin and ARA7(Q69L) mutant that could enlarge the multivesicular body (MVB) or prevacuolar compartment (PVC) as tools, we demonstrated that, when expressed as green fluorescent protein (GFP) fusions in tobacco BY‐2 or Arabidopsis protoplasts, both AtLRR84A and OsSCAMP1 were degraded in the lytic vacuole via the internal vesicles of MVB/PVC in a cargo ubiquitination‐independent manner. Such MVB/PVC‐mediated vacuolar degradation of PM proteins was further supported by immunocytochemical electron microscopy (immunoEM) study showing the labeling of the fusions on the internal vesicles of the PVC/MVB. Thus, cargo ubiquitination‐independent and PVC‐mediated degradation of PM proteins in the vacuole is functionally operated in plant cells.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2011

QUASIMODO 3 (QUA3) is a putative homogalacturonan methyltransferase regulating cell wall biosynthesis in Arabidopsis suspension-cultured cells

Yansong Miao; Hong-Ye Li; Jinbo Shen; Junqi Wang; Liwen Jiang

Pectins are complex polysaccharides that are essential components of the plant cell wall. In this study, a novel putative Arabidopsis S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM)-dependent methyltransferase, termed QUASIMODO 3 (QUA3, At4g00740), has been characterized and it was demonstrated that it is a Golgi-localized, type II integral membrane protein that functions in methylesterification of the pectin homogalacturonan (HG). Although transgenic Arabidopsis seedlings with overexpression, or knock-down, of QUA3 do not show altered phenotypes or changes in pectin methylation, this enzyme is highly expressed and abundant in Arabidopsis suspension-cultured cells. In contrast, in cells subjected to QUA3 RNA interference (RNAi) knock-down there is less pectin methylation as well as altered composition and assembly of cell wall polysaccharides. Taken together, these observations point to a Golgi-localized QUA3 playing an essential role in controlling pectin methylation and cell wall biosynthesis in Arabidopsis suspension cell cultures.


New Phytologist | 2010

OsNOA1/RIF1 is a functional homolog of AtNOA1/RIF1: implication for a highly conserved plant cGTPase essential for chloroplast function

Hongjia Liu; Edward Lau; Maggie P. Y. Lam; Hung Chu; Sujuan Li; Guo Huang; Peng Guo; Junqi Wang; Liwen Jiang; Ivan K. Chu; Clive Lo; Yuezhi Tao

*The bacterial protein YqeH is a circularly permuted GTPase with homologs encoded by plant nuclear genomes. The rice homolog OsNOA1/RIF1 is encoded by the single-copy gene Os02g01440. OsNOA1/RIF1 is expressed in different tissues and is light-inducible. The OsNOA1/RIF1-EYFP fusion protein was targeted to chloroplasts in transgenic Arabidopsis plants. In addition, the rice homolog was able to rescue most of the growth phenotypes in an Arabidopsis rif1 mutant. *Rice (Oryza sativa) OsNOA1/RIF1 RNAi mutant seedlings were chlorotic with reduced pigment contents and lower photosystem II (PSII) efficiency. However, the expressions of the chloroplast-encoded genes rbcL, atpB, psaA and psbA were not affected. By contrast, reduced abundance of the chloroplast 16S rRNA was observed in the mutant. *Quantitative iTRAQ-LC-MS/MS proteomics investigations revealed proteome changes in the rice mutant consistent with the expected functional role of OsNOA1/RIF1 in chloroplast translation. The RNAi mutant showed significantly decreased expression levels of chloroplast-encoded proteins as well as nuclear-encoded components of chloroplast enzyme complexes. Conversely, upregulation of some classes of nonchloroplastic proteins, such as glycolytic and phenylpropanoid pathway enzymes, was detected. *Our work provides independent indications that a highly conserved nuclear-encoded cGTPase of likely prokaryotic origin is essential for proper chloroplast ribosome assembly and/or translation in plants.


Molecular Plant | 2011

The rice RMR1 associates with a distinct prevacuolar compartment for the protein storage vacuole pathway.

Yun Shen; Junqi Wang; Yu Ding; Sze Wan Lo; Guillaume Gouzerh; Jean-Marc Neuhaus; Liwen Jiang

Transport of vacuolar proteins from Golgi apparatus or trans-Golgi network (TGN) to vacuoles is a receptor-mediated process via an intermediate membrane-bound prevacuolar compartment (PVC) in plant cells. Both vacuolar sorting receptor (VSR) and receptor homology region-transmembrane domain-RING-H2 (RMR) proteins have been shown to function in transporting storage proteins to protein storage vacuole (PSV), but little is known about the nature of the PVC for the PSV pathway. Here, we use the rice RMR1 (OsRMR1) as a probe to study the PSV pathway in plants. Immunogold electron microscopy (EM) with specific OsRMR1 antibodies showed that OsRMR1 proteins were found in the Golgi apparatus, TGN, and a distinct organelle with characteristics of PVC in both rice culture cells and developing rice seeds, as well as the protein body type II (PBII) or PSV in developing rice seeds. This organelle, also found in both tobacco BY-2 and Arabidopsis suspension cultured cells, is morphologically distinct from the VSR-positive multivesicular lytic PVC or multivesicular body (MVB) and thus represent a PVC for the PSV pathway that we name storage PVC (sPVC). Further in vivo and in vitro interaction studies using truncated OsRMR1 proteins secreted into the culture media of transgenic BY-2 suspension cells demonstrated that OsRMR1 functions as a sorting receptor in transporting vicilin-like storage proteins.

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Liwen Jiang

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Yansong Miao

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Caiji Gao

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Sze Wan Lo

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Yi Cai

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Yu Ding

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Jinbo Shen

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Sheung Kwan Lam

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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Yu Chung Tse

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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