Lida Guo
University of Pittsburgh
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Featured researches published by Lida Guo.
American Journal of Pathology | 2001
Lida Guo; Paul W. Sanders; Anne Woods; Chuanyue Wu
Alteration in cell adhesion and extracellular matrix deposition is a hallmark of diabetic glomerulosclerosis. Integrin-linked kinase (ILK) is a recently identified integrin cytoplasmic-binding protein that has been implicated in the regulation of cell adhesion and extracellular matrix deposition. To begin to investigate whether ILK is involved in the pathogenesis of diabetic glomerulosclerosis, we have analyzed the distribution and regulation of ILK in normal and diabetic kidneys as well as in isolated mesangial cells. We have found that ILK is normally expressed at high concentration in visceral epithelial cells. In diabetic glomeruli, ILK expression in the mesangium is dramatically increased. The increase in ILK level is associated with diffuse mesangial expansion. In glomeruli where advanced nodular sclerosis and global sclerosis were dominant, ILK level was reduced, suggesting that the increase in ILK expression likely associates with relatively early glomerulosclerosis. Additionally, we have found that exposure of mesangial cells to high concentrations of glucose significantly increased the ILK level. Finally, we show that ILK localizes to regions of cell membranes that are in close contact with mesangial fibronectin matrix. These results suggest that ILK is likely involved in mesangial matrix expansion in response to hyperglycemia in the pathogenesis of diabetic glomerulosclerosis.
The FASEB Journal | 2002
Lida Guo; Chuanyue Wu
Alteration in renal glomerular mesangial cell growth and fibronectin matrix deposition is a hallmark of glomerulosclerosis, which ultimately leads to end‐stage renal failure. We have previously shown that the expression of integrin‐linked kinase (ILK), a cytoplasmic component of the cell–extracellular matrix contacts, is increased in mesangial cells in human patients with diabetic nephropathy. We show here that ILK forms a complex with PINCH and CH‐ILKBP in primary mesangial cells, which are co‐clustered at fibrillar adhesions, sites that are involved in fibronectin matrix deposition. To investigate functional significance of the PINCH‐ILK‐CHILKBP complex formation, we expressed the PINCH‐binding N‐terminal fragment and the CHILKBP‐binding C‐terminal fragment of ILK, respectively, in mesangial cells by using an adenoviral expression system. Overexpression of either the N‐terminal fragment or the C‐terminal fragment of ILK effectively inhibited the PINCH‐ILK‐CH‐ILKBP complex formation. Inhibition of the PINCH‐ILK‐CH‐ILKBP complex formation significantly reduced fibronectin matrix deposition and inhibited cell proliferation. These results indicate that the PINCH‐ILKCH‐ILKBP complex is critically involved in the regulation of mesangial fibronectin matrix deposition and cell proliferation, and suggest that it may potentially serve as a useful target in the therapeutic control of progressive renal failure and other pathological processes involving abnormal cell proliferation and fibronectin matrix deposition.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2003
Tomohiko Fukuda; Lida Guo; Xiaohua Shi; Chuanyue Wu
Cell survival depends on proper propagation of protective signals through intracellular signaling intermediates. We report here that calponin homology domain–containing integrin-linked kinase (ILK)–binding protein (CH-ILKBP), a widely expressed adaptor protein localized at plasma membrane-actin junctions, is essential for transmission of survival signals. Cells that are depleted of CH-ILKBP undergo extensive apoptosis despite the presence of cell–extracellular matrix contacts and soluble growth factors. The activating phosphorylation of protein kinase B (PKB/Akt), a key regulator of apoptosis, is impaired in the absence of CH-ILKBP. Importantly, loss of CH-ILKBP prevents the membrane translocation of PKB/Akt. Furthermore, forced membrane targeting of PKB/Akt bypasses the requirement of CH-ILKBP for the activating phosphorylation of PKB/Akt, suggesting that CH-ILKBP is required for the membrane translocation but not the subsequent phosphorylation of PKB/Akt. Finally, we show that loss of CH-ILKBP is also required for the full activation of extracellular signal–regulated kinase (ERK)1/2. However, restoration of the PKB/Akt activation is sufficient for protection of cells from apoptosis induced by the depletion of CH-ILKBP despite the persistent suppression of the ERK1/2 activation. Thus, CH-ILKBP is an important component of the prosurvival signaling pathway functioning primarily by facilitating the membrane translocation of PKB/Akt and consequently the activation of PKB/Akt in response to extracellular survival signals.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Ling-Ling Zhu; Harry C. Blair; Jay Cao; Tony Yuen; Rauf Latif; Lida Guo; Irina L. Tourkova; Jianhua Li; Terry F. Davies; Li Sun; Zhuan Bian; Clifford J. Rosen; Alberta Zallone; Maria I. New; Mone Zaidi
Low estrogen levels undoubtedly underlie menopausal bone thinning. However, rapid and profuse bone loss begins 3 y before the last menstrual period, when serum estrogen is relatively normal. We have shown that the pituitary hormone FSH, the levels of which are high during late perimenopause, directly stimulates bone resorption by osteoclasts. Here, we generated and characterized a polyclonal antibody to a 13-amino-acid-long peptide sequence within the receptor-binding domain of the FSH β-subunit. We show that the FSH antibody binds FSH specifically and blocks its action on osteoclast formation in vitro. When injected into ovariectomized mice, the FSH antibody attenuates bone loss significantly not only by inhibiting bone resorption, but also by stimulating bone formation, a yet uncharacterized action of FSH that we report herein. Mesenchymal cells isolated from mice treated with the FSH antibody show greater osteoblast precursor colony counts, similarly to mesenchymal cells isolated from FSH receptor (FSHR)−/− mice. This suggests that FSH negatively regulates osteoblast number. We confirm that this action is mediated by signaling-efficient FSHRs present on mesenchymal stem cells. Overall, the data prompt the future development of an FSH-blocking agent as a means of uncoupling bone formation and bone resorption to a therapeutic advantage in humans.
Experimental Cell Research | 2009
Lisa J. Robinson; Reed D. Griswold; Eva V. Zadorozny; Lida Guo; Irina L. Tourkova; Harry C. Blair
The effects of estrogen on osteoclast survival and differentiation were studied using CD14-selected mononuclear osteoclast precursors from peripheral blood. Estradiol at approximately 1 nM reduced RANKL-dependent osteoclast differentiation by 40-50%. Osteoclast differentiation was suppressed 14 days after addition of RANKL even when estradiol was withdrawn after 18 h. In CD14+ cells apoptosis was rare and was not augmented by RANKL or by 17-beta-estradiol. Estrogen receptor-alpha (ERalpha) expression was strongly down-regulated by RANKL, whether or not estradiol was present. Mature human osteoclasts thus cannot respond to estrogen via ERalpha. However, ERalpha was present in CD14+ osteoclast progenitors, and a scaffolding protein, BCAR1, which binds ERalpha in the presence of estrogen, was abundant. Immunoprecipitation showed rapid (approximately 5 min) estrogen-dependent formation of ERalpha-BCAR1 complexes, which were increased by RANKL co-treatment. The RANKL-signaling intermediate Traf6, which regulates NF-kappaB activity, precipitated with this complex. Reduction of NF-kappaB nuclear localization occurred within 30 min of RANKL stimulation, and estradiol inhibited the phosphorylation of IkappaB in response to RANKL. Inhibition by estradiol was abolished by siRNA knockdown of BCAR1. We conclude that estrogen directly, but only partially, curtails human osteoclast formation. This effect requires BCAR1 and involves a non-genomic interaction with ERalpha.
Laboratory Investigation | 2005
Hua Chen; Xueyin N. Huang; Wen Yan; Ka Chen; Lida Guo; Lekha Tummalapali; Shoukat Dedhar; René St-Arnaud; Chuanyue Wu; Jorge L. Sepulveda
Outside-in signaling from fibronectin (FN) through integrin receptors has been shown to play an important role in promoting cardiac myocyte hypertrophy and synergizes with other hypertrophic stimuli such as the alpha-adrenergic agonist phenylephrine (PE) and mechanical strain. The integrin-linked kinase (ILK) is a critical molecule involved in cell adhesion, motility and survival in nonmyocytes such as fibroblasts and epithelial cells. Its role in cardiac myocytes is unclear. In this study, we demonstrate that (1) ILK forms a complex with PINCH1 and alpha-parvin proteins (IPAP1 complex) in neonatal rat ventricular myocytes; (2) localization of IPAP1 complex proteins to costameres in cardiac myocytes is stimulated by FN, PE and synergistically by the combination of FN and PE in an integrin β1-dependent manner; (3) a dominant-negative mutant lacking the PINCH-binding N-terminus of ILK (ILK-C) prevents costamere association of ILK and alpha-parvin, but not PINCH1; (4) FN- and PE-induced hypertrophy, measured by increased protein/DNA ratio, beating frequency and atrial natriuretic peptide expression, is stimulated by low levels of ILK-C but repressed by high ILK-C expression; and (5) overexpression of ILK-C, as well as deletion of the ILK gene in mouse neonatal ventricular myocytes, induces marked apoptosis of cardiac myocytes. These results suggest that the IPAP1 complex plays an important role in mediating integrin-signaling pathways that regulate cardiac myocyte hypertrophy and resistance to apoptosis.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Ling-Ling Zhu; Jay Cao; Merry Sun; Tony Yuen; Raymond Zhou; Jianhua Li; Yuanzhen Peng; Surinder S. Moonga; Lida Guo; Jeffrey I. Mechanick; Jameel Iqbal; Liu Peng; Harry C. Blair; Zhuan Bian; Mone Zaidi
Epidemiologic studies correlate low vitamin C intake with bone loss. The genetic deletion of enzymes involved in de novo vitamin C synthesis in mice, likewise, causes severe osteoporosis. However, very few studies have evaluated a protective role of this dietary supplement on the skeleton. Here, we show that the ingestion of vitamin C prevents the low-turnover bone loss following ovariectomy in mice. We show that this prevention in areal bone mineral density and micro-CT parameters results from the stimulation of bone formation, demonstrable in vivo by histomorphometry, bone marker measurements, and quantitative PCR. Notably, the reductions in the bone formation rate, plasma osteocalcin levels, and ex vivo osteoblast gene expression 8 weeks post-ovariectomy are all returned to levels of sham-operated controls. The study establishes vitamin C as a skeletal anabolic agent.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012
Li Liu; Verónica Alonso; Lida Guo; Irina L. Tourkova; Sarah E. Henderson; Alejandro J. Almarza; Peter A. Friedman; Harry C. Blair
Background: The bone phenotype of NHERF1-null mice was ascribed to indirect actions. Results: With dietary supplementation to maintain normal serum phosphate, NHERF1-deficient mice showed aberrant bone mineralization and decreased bone quality. Osteoblast differentiation from mesenchymal stem cells was impaired. Conclusion: NHERF1 is expressed in mineralizing osteoblasts and directly regulates bone formation. Significance: We provide an experimentally validated mechanistic model of NHERF1 regulating bone formation. Bone formation requires synthesis, secretion, and mineralization of matrix. Deficiencies in these processes produce bone defects. The absence of the PDZ domain protein Na+/H+ exchange regulatory factor 1 (NHERF1) in mice, or its mutation in humans, causes osteomalacia believed to reflect renal phosphate wasting. We show that NHERF1 is expressed by mineralizing osteoblasts and organizes Na+/H+ exchangers (NHEs) and the PTH receptor. NHERF1-null mice display reduced bone formation and wide mineralizing fronts despite elimination of phosphate wasting by dietary supplementation. Bone mass was normal, reflecting coordinated reduction of bone resorption and formation. NHERF1-null bone had decreased strength, consistent with compromised matrix quality. Mesenchymal stem cells from NHERF1-null mice showed limited osteoblast differentiation but enhanced adipocyte differentiation. PTH signaling and Na+/H+ exchange were dysregulated in these cells. Osteoclast differentiation from monocytes was unaffected. Thus, NHERF1 is required for normal osteoblast differentiation and matrix synthesis. In its absence, compensatory mechanisms maintain bone mass, but bone strength is reduced.
Laboratory Investigation | 2009
Harry C. Blair; Lisa J. Robinson; Markus Y. Mapara; Alessandra Pangrazio; Lida Guo; Ka Chen; Paolo Vezzoni; Jakub Tolar; Paul J. Orchard
In vitro differentiated monocytes were used to characterize the cellular defect in a type of osteopetrosis with minimally functional osteoclasts, in which defects associated with common causes of osteopetrosis were excluded by gene sequencing. Monocytes from the blood of a 28-year-old patient were differentiated in media with RANKL and CSF-1. Cell fusion, acid compartments within cells, and tartrate resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP) activity were normal. However, the osteoclasts made abnormally small pits on the dentine. Phalloidin labeling showed that the cell attachments lacked the peripheral ring structure that supports lacunar resorption. Instead, the osteoclasts had clusters of podosomes near the center of cell attachments. Antibody to the αvβ3 integrin pair or to the C-terminal of β3 did not label podosomes, but antibody to αv labeled them. Western blots using antibody to the N-terminal of β3 showed a protein of reduced size. Integrins β1 and β5 were upregulated, but, in contrast to observations in β3 defects, α2 had not increased. The ρ-GTP exchange protein Vav3, a key attachment organizing protein, did not localize normally with peripheral attachment structures. Vav3 forms of 70 kD and 90 kD were identified on western blots. However, the proteins β3 integrin, Vav3, Plekhm1, and Src, implicated in attachment defects, had normal exon sequences. In this new type of osteopetrosis, the integrin-organizing complex is dysfunctional, and at least two attachment proteins may be partially degraded.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002
Yongjun Zhang; Lida Guo; Ka Chen; Chuanyue Wu