Qinxi Li
Xiamen University
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Featured researches published by Qinxi Li.
Science | 2012
Shu-Yong Lin; Terytty Yang Li; Qing Liu; Cixiong Zhang; Xiaotong Li; Yan Chen; Guili Lian; Qi Liu; Ka Ruan; Zhen Wang; Chen-Song Zhang; Kun-Yi Chien; Jia-Wei Wu; Qinxi Li; Jiahuai Han; Sheng-Cai Lin
Acetylation and Autophagy Autophagy allows cells to digest their own components when necessary to survive stressful conditions. Lin et al. (p. 477) and Yi et al. (p. 474) describe signaling mechanisms in mammalian cells and yeast, respectively, by which autophagy is regulated by protein acetylation. In mammalian cells deprived of serum, the acetyltransferase TIP60 was activated by phosphorylation by the protein kinase GSK3 (glycogen synthase kinase 3). TIP60s target appeared to be a protein kinase central to autophagy regulation, ULK1. This activating pathway was required for autophagy in the absence of serum, but was not needed for autophagy in cells deprived of glucose. In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae starved of nitrogen, another acetylation mechanism was uncovered. Starvation led to activation of the histone acetyltransferase Esa1, which acetylated the protein Atg3, a key component of the autophagy machinery, thus increasing its interaction with another autophagy protein, Atg8. A signaling pathway is involved in cellular responses to serum starvation but not glucose starvation. In metazoans, cells depend on extracellular growth factors for energy homeostasis. We found that glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK3), when deinhibited by default in cells deprived of growth factors, activates acetyltransferase TIP60 through phosphorylating TIP60-Ser86, which directly acetylates and stimulates the protein kinase ULK1, which is required for autophagy. Cells engineered to express TIP60S86A that cannot be phosphorylated by GSK3 could not undergo serum deprivation–induced autophagy. An acetylation-defective mutant of ULK1 failed to rescue autophagy in ULK1−/− mouse embryonic fibroblasts. Cells used signaling from GSK3 to TIP60 and ULK1 to regulate autophagy when deprived of serum but not glucose. These findings uncover an activating pathway that integrates protein phosphorylation and acetylation to connect growth factor deprivation to autophagy.
The EMBO Journal | 2004
Yanning Rui; Zhen Xu; Shu-Yong Lin; Qinxi Li; Hongliang Rui; Wen Luo; Hai Meng Zhou; Po Yan Cheung; Zhenguo Wu; Zhiyun Ye; Peng Li; Jiahuai Han; Sheng-Cai Lin
Axin and p53 are tumor suppressors, controlling cell growth, apoptosis, and development. We show that Axin interacts with homeodomain‐interacting protein kinase‐2 (HIPK2), which is linked to UV‐induced p53‐dependent apoptosis by interacting with, and phosphorylating Ser 46 of, p53. In addition to association with p53 via HIPK2, Axin contains a separate domain that directly interacts with p53 at their physiological concentrations. Axin stimulates p53‐dependent reporter transcription in 293 cells, but not in 293T, H1299, or SaOS‐2 cells that are defective in p53 signaling. Axin, but not AxinΔHIPK2, activates HIPK2‐mediated p53 phosphorylation at Ser 46, facilitating p53‐dependent transcriptional activity and apoptosis. Specific knockdown of Axin by siRNA reduced UV‐induced Ser‐46 phosphorylation and apoptosis. Kinase‐dead HIPK2 reduced Axin‐induced p53‐dependent transcriptional activity, indicating that Axin stimulates p53 function through HIPK2 kinase activity. Interestingly, HIPK2ΔAxin that lacks its Axin‐binding region acts as a dominant‐positive form in p53 activation, suggesting that the Axin‐binding region of HIPK2 is a putative autoinhibitory domain. These results show that Axin acts as a tumor suppressor by facilitating p53 function through integration of multiple factors.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2008
Yan-yan Zhan; Xiping Du; Hang-zi Chen; Jingjing Liu; Bi-xing Zhao; Danhong Huang; Gui-deng Li; Qingyan Xu; Mingqing Zhang; Bart C. Weimer; Dong Chen; Zhe Cheng; Lianru Zhang; Qinxi Li; Shaowei Li; Zhonghui Zheng; Siyang Song; Yaojian Huang; Zhiyun Ye; Wenjin Su; Sheng-Cai Lin; Yuemao Shen; Qiao Wu
Nuclear orphan receptor Nur77 has important roles in many biological processes. However, a physiological ligand for Nur77 has not been identified. Here, we report that the octaketide cytosporone B (Csn-B) is a naturally occurring agonist for Nur77. Csn-B specifically binds to the ligand-binding domain of Nur77 and stimulates Nur77-dependent transactivational activity towards target genes including Nr4a1 (Nur77) itself, which contains multiple consensus response elements allowing positive autoregulation in a Csn-B-dependent manner. Csn-B also elevates blood glucose levels in fasting C57 mice, an effect that is accompanied by induction of multiple genes involved in gluconeogenesis. These biological effects were not observed in Nur77-null (Nr4a1-/-) mice, which indicates that Csn-B regulates gluconeogenesis through Nur77. Moreover, Csn-B induced apoptosis and retarded xenograft tumor growth by inducing Nur77 expression, translocating Nur77 to mitochondria to cause cytochrome c release. Thus, Csn-B may represent a promising therapeutic drug for cancers and hypoglycemia, and it may also be useful as a reagent to increase understanding of Nur77 biological function.
The EMBO Journal | 2006
Wei Liu; Hongliang Rui; Jifeng Wang; Shu-Yong Lin; Ying He; Mingliang Chen; Qinxi Li; Zhiyun Ye; Suping Zhang; Siu Chiu Chan; Ye-Guang Chen; Jiahuai Han; Sheng-Cai Lin
TGF‐β signaling involves a wide array of signaling molecules and multiple controlling events. Scaffold proteins create a functional proximity of signaling molecules and control the specificity of signal transduction. While many components involved in the TGF‐β pathway have been elucidated, little is known about how those components are coordinated by scaffold proteins. Here, we show that Axin activates TGF‐β signaling by forming a multimeric complex consisting of Smad7 and ubiquitin E3 ligase Arkadia. Axin depends on Arkadia to facilitate TGF‐β signaling, as their small interfering RNAs reciprocally abolished the stimulatory effect on TGF‐β signaling. Specific knockdown of Axin or Arkadia revealed that Axin and Arkadia cooperate with each other in promoting Smad7 ubiquitination. Pulse‐chase experiments further illustrated that Axin significantly decreased the half‐life of Smad7. Axin also induces nuclear export of Smad7. Interestingly, Axin associates with Arkadia and Smad7 independently of TGF‐β signal, in contrast to its transient association with inactive Smad3. However, coexpression of Wnt‐1 reduced Smad7 ubiquitination by downregulating Axin levels, underscoring the importance of Axin as an intrinsic regulator in TGF‐β signaling.
Nature Cell Biology | 2009
Qinxi Li; Shu-Yong Lin; Xuan Wang; Guili Lian; Zailian Lu; Huiling Guo; Ka Ruan; Yanhai Wang; Zhiyun Ye; Jiahuai Han; Sheng-Cai Lin
Cells can undergo either cell-cycle arrest or apoptosis after genotoxic stress, based on p53 activity. Here we show that cellular fate commitment depends on Axin forming distinct complexes with Pirh2, Tip60, HIPK2 and p53. In cells treated with sublethal doses of ultra-violet (UV) radiation or doxorubicin (Dox), Pirh2 abrogates Axin-induced p53 phosphorylation at Ser 46 catalysed by HIPK2, by competing with HIPK2 for binding to Axin. However, on lethal treatment, Tip60 interacts with Axin and abrogates Pirh2–Axin binding, forming an Axin–Tip60–HIPK2–p53 complex that allows maximal p53 activation to trigger apoptosis. We also provide evidence that the ATM/ATR pathway mediates the Axin–Tip60 complex assembly. An axin mutation promotes carcinogenesis in AxinFu/+ (Axin-Fused) mice, consistent with a dominant-negative role for AxinFu in p53 activation. Thus, Axin is a critical determinant in p53-dependent tumour suppression in which Pirh2 and Tip60 have different roles in triggering cell-cycle arrest or apoptosis depending on the severity of genotoxic stress.
Cancer Research | 2007
Qinxi Li; Xuan Wang; Xiaoling Wu; Yanning Rui; Wei Liu; Jifeng Wang; Xinghao Wang; Yih-Cherng Liou; Zhiyun Ye; Sheng-Cai Lin
Daxx, a death domain-associated protein, has been implicated in proapoptosis, antiapoptosis, and transcriptional regulation. Many factors known to play critically important roles in controlling apoptosis and gene transcription have been shown to associate with Daxx, including the Ser/Thr protein kinase HIPK2, promyelocytic leukemia protein, histone deacetylases, and the chromatin remodeling protein ATRX. Although it is clear that Daxx may exert multiple functions, the underlying mechanisms remain far from clear. Here, we show that Axin, originally identified for its scaffolding role to control beta-catenin levels in Wnt signaling, strongly associates with Daxx at endogenous levels. The Daxx/Axin complex formation is enhanced by UV irradiation. Axin tethers Daxx to the tumor suppressor p53, and cooperates with Daxx, but not DaxxDeltaAxin, which is unable to interact with Axin, to stimulate HIPK2-mediated Ser(46) phosphorylation and transcriptional activity of p53. Interestingly, Axin and Daxx seem to selectively activate p53 target genes, with strong activation of PUMA, but not p21 or Bax. Daxx-stimulated p53 transcriptional activity was significantly diminished by small interfering RNA against Axin; Daxx fails to inhibit colony formation in Axin(-/-) cells. Moreover, UV-induced cell death was attenuated by the knockdown of Axin and Daxx. All these results show that Daxx cooperates with Axin to stimulate p53, and implicate a direct role for Axin, HIPK2, and p53 in the proapoptotic function of Daxx. We have hence unraveled a novel aspect of p53 activation and shed new light on the ultimate understanding of the Daxx protein, perhaps most pertinently, in relation to stress-induced cell death.
Journal of Cell Science | 2004
Jinquan Li; Qinxi Li; Changchuan Xie; Huamin Zhou; Yuqian Wang; Na Zhang; Hanjuan Shao; Siu Chiu Chan; Xuanxian Peng; Sheng-Cai Lin; Jiahuai Han
Tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α induces caspase-independent cell death in the fibrosarcoma cell line L929. This cell death has a necrotic phenotype and is dependent on production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the mitochondria. To identify genes involved in this TNF-induced, ROS-dependent cell death pathway, we utilized retrovirus insertion-mediated random mutagenesis to generate TNF-resistant L929 cell lines and we subsequently identified genes whose mutations are responsible for the TNF-resistant phenotype. In one such resistant line, β-actin was disrupted by viral insertion, and subsequent reconstitution of β-actin expression levels in the mutant line Actinmut restored its sensitivity to TNF. Resistance to TNF in Actinmut cells is signal specific since the sensitivity to other death stimuli is either unchanged or even increased. Comparable NF-κB activation and p38 phosphorylation in TNF-treated wild-type and Actinmut cells also indicates that reduced expression of actin only selectively blocked some of the TNF-induced cellular changes. Actin cleavage involved in apoptosis does not occur in TNF-treated L929 cell death, as in HeLa cells. Consistent over-expression of a caspase-cleaved product, a 15 kDa actin fragment, had no effect on TNF-induced necrosis of L929 cell. By contrast, TNF-induced mitochondria clustering and ROS production were dramatically reduced in Actinmut cells, indicating that actin-deficiency-mediated TNF resistance is most likely due to impaired mitochondrial responses to TNF stimulation. Our findings suggest that a full complement of actin is required for transduction of a cell death signal to mitochondria in TNF-treated L929 cells.
Cancer Cell | 2016
Satoshi Inoue; Wanda Y. Li; Isabel Beerman; Andrew J. Elia; Sean C. Bendall; François Lemonnier; Ken Kron; David W. Cescon; Zhenyue Hao; Evan F. Lind; Naoya Takayama; Aline C. Planello; Shu Yi Shen; Alan H. Shih; Dana M. Larsen; Qinxi Li; Bryan E. Snow; Andrew Wakeham; Jillian Haight; Chiara Gorrini; Christian Bassi; Kelsie L. Thu; Kiichi Murakami; Alisha R. Elford; Takeshi Ueda; Kimberly Straley; Katharine E. Yen; Gerry Melino; Luisa Cimmino; Iannis Aifantis
Mutations in the isocitrate dehydrogenase-1 gene (IDH1) are common drivers of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) but their mechanism is not fully understood. It is thought that IDH1 mutants act by inhibiting TET2 to alter DNA methylation, but there are significant unexplained clinical differences between IDH1- and TET2-mutant diseases. We have discovered that mice expressing endogenous mutant IDH1 have reduced numbers of hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), in contrast to Tet2 knockout (TET2-KO) mice. Mutant IDH1 downregulates the DNA damage (DD) sensor ATM by altering histone methylation, leading to impaired DNA repair, increased sensitivity to DD, and reduced HSC self-renewal, independent of TET2. ATM expression is also decreased in human IDH1-mutated AML. These findings may have implications for treatment of IDH-mutant leukemia.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005
Changchuan Xie; Na Zhang; Huamin Zhou; Jinquan Li; Qinxi Li; Tyler Zarubin; Sheng-Cai Lin; Jiahuai Han
ABSTRACT Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) alpha is a cytokine capable of inducing caspase-dependent (apoptotic) cell death in some cells and caspase-independent (necrosis-like) cell death in others. Here, using a mutagenesis screen for genes critical in TNF-induced death in L929 cells, we have found that H-ferritin deficiency is responsible for TNF resistance in a mutant line and that, upon treatment with TNF, this line fails to elevate levels of labile iron pool (LIP), critical for TNF-induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) production and ROS-dependent cell death. Since we found that TNF-induced LIP in L929 cells is primarily furnished by intracellular storage iron, the lesser induction of LIP in H-ferritin-deficient cells results from a reduction of intracellular iron storage caused by less H-ferritin. Different from some other cell lines, the H-ferritin gene in L929 cells is not TNF inducible; however, when H-ferritin is expressed in L929 cells under a TNF-inducible system, the TNF-induced LIP and subsequent ROS production and cell death were all prevented. Thus, LIP is a common denominator of ferritin both in the enhancement of cell death by basal steady-state H-ferritin and in protection against cell death by induced H-ferritin, thereby acting as a key determinant of TNF-induced cell death.
Cell Research | 2012
Huiling Guo; Cixiong Zhang; Qi Liu; Qinxi Li; Guili Lian; Di Wu; Xuebin Li; Wei Zhang; Yuemao Shen; Zhiyun Ye; Shu-Yong Lin; Sheng-Cai Lin
Insulin-stimulated glucose uptake by the glucose transporter GLUT4 plays a central role in whole-body glucose homeostasis, dysregulation of which leads to type 2 diabetes. However, the molecular components and mechanisms regulating insulin-stimulated glucose uptake remain largely unclear. Here, we demonstrate that Axin interacts with the ADP-ribosylase tankyrase 2 (TNKS2) and the kinesin motor protein KIF3A, forming a ternary complex crucial for GLUT4 translocation in response to insulin. Specific knockdown of the individual components of the complex attenuated insulin-stimulated GLUT4 translocation to the plasma membrane. Importantly, TNKS2−/− mice exhibit reduced insulin sensitivity and higher blood glucose levels when re-fed after fasting. Mechanistically, we demonstrate that in the absence of insulin, Axin, TNKS and KIF3A are co-localized with GLUT4 on the trans-Golgi network. Insulin treatment suppresses the ADP-ribosylase activity of TNKS, leading to a reduction in ADP ribosylation and ubiquitination of both Axin and TNKS, and a concurrent stabilization of the complex. Inhibition of Akt, the major effector kinase of insulin signaling, abrogates the insulin-mediated complex stabilization. We have thus elucidated a new protein complex that is directly associated with the motor protein kinesin in insulin-stimulated GLUT4 translocation.