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Dive into the research topics where Songfeng Wu is active.

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Featured researches published by Songfeng Wu.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2007

Proteome Analysis of Hepatocellular Carcinoma by Two-dimensional Difference Gel Electrophoresis Novel Protein Markers in Hepatocellular Carcinoma Tissues

Wei Sun; Baocai Xing; Yi Sun; Xiaojuan Du; Min Lu; Chunyi Hao; Zhuang Lu; Wei Mi; Songfeng Wu; Handong Wei; Xue Gao; Yunping Zhu; Ying Jiang; Xiaohong Qian; Fuchu He

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a highly malignant tumor, and chronic infection with hepatitis B virus is one of its major risk factors. To identify the proteins involved in HCC carcinogenesis, we used two-dimensional fluorescence DIGE to study the differentially expressed proteins in tumor and adjacent nontumor tissue samples. Samples from 12 hepatitis B virus-associated HCC patients were analyzed. A total of 61 spots were significantly up-regulated (ratio ≥ 2, p ≤ 0.01) in tumor samples, whereas 158 spots were down-regulated (ratio ≤ −2, p ≤ 0.01). Seventy-one gene products were identified among these spots. Members of the heat shock protein 70 and 90 families were simultaneously up-regulated, whereas metabolism-associated proteins were decreased in HCC samples. The down-regulation of mitochondrial and peroxisomal proteins in these results suggested loss of special organelle functions during HCC carcinogenesis. Four metabolic enzymes involved in the methylation cycle in the liver were down-regulated in HCC tissues, indicating S-adenosylmethionine deficiency in HCC. Two gene products, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and formimidoyltransferase-cyclodeaminase, were identified from inversely altered spots, suggesting that different isoforms or post-translational modifications of these two proteins might play different roles in HCC. For the first time, the overexpression of Hcp70/Hsp90-organizing protein and heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins C1/C2 in HCC tissues was confirmed by Western blot and then by immunohistochemistry staining in 70 HCC samples, suggesting their potential as protein tumor markers. In summary, we profiled proteome alterations in HCC tissues, and these results may provide useful insights for understanding the mechanism involved in the process of HCC carcinogenesis.


Proteomics | 2004

Proteomic analysis on structural proteins of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus

Wantao Ying; Yunwei Hao; Yangjun Zhang; Wenming Peng; E-De Qin; Yun Cai; Kaihua Wei; Jie Wang; Guohui Chang; Wei Sun; Shujia Dai; Xiaohai Li; Yunping Zhu; Jianqi Li; Songfeng Wu; Lihai Guo; Jingquan Dai; Jinglan Wang; Ping Wan; Tinggui Chen; Chunjuan Du; Dong Li; Jia Wan; Xuezhang Kuai; Weihua Li; Rong Shi; Handong Wei; Cheng Cao; Man Yu; Liu H

Recently, a new coronavirus was isolated from the lung tissue of autopsy sample and nasal/throat swabs of the patients with Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) and the causative association with SARS was determined. To reveal further the characteristics of the virus and to provide insight about the molecular mechanism of SARS etiology, a proteomic strategy was utilized to identify the structural proteins of SARS coronavirus (SARS‐CoV) isolated from Vero E6 cells infected with the BJ‐01 strain of the virus. At first, Western blotting with the convalescent sera from SARS patients demonstrated that there were various structural proteins of SARS‐CoV in the cultured supernatant of virus infected‐Vero E6 cells and that nucleocaspid (N) protein had a prominent immunogenicity to the convalescent sera from the patients with SARS, while the immune response of spike (S) protein probably binding with membrane (M) glycoprotein was much weaker. Then, sodium dodecyl sulfate‐polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS‐PAGE) was used to separate the complex protein constituents, and the strategy of continuous slicing from loading well to the bottom of the gels was utilized to search thoroughly the structural proteins of the virus. The proteins in sliced slots were trypsinized in‐gel and identified by mass spectrometry. Three structural proteins named S, N and M proteins of SARS‐CoV were uncovered with the sequence coverage of 38.9, 93.1 and 28.1% respectively. Glycosylation modification in S protein was also analyzed and four glycosylation sites were discovered by comparing the mass spectra before and after deglycosylation of the peptides with PNGase F digestion. Matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization‐mass spectrometry determination showed that relative molecular weight of intact N protein is 45 929 Da, which is very close to its theoretically calculated molecular weight 45 935 Da based on the amino acid sequence deduced from the genome with the first amino acid methionine at the N‐terminus depleted and second, serine, acetylated, indicating that phosphorylation does not happen at all in the predicted phosphorylation sites within infected cells nor in virus particles. Intriguingly, a series of shorter isoforms of N protein was observed by SDS‐PAGE and identified by mass spectrometry characterization. For further confirmation of this phenomenon and its related mechanism, recombinant N protein of SARS‐CoV was cleaved in vitro by caspase‐3 and ‐6 respectively. The results demonstrated that these shorter isoforms could be the products from cleavage of caspase‐3 rather than that of caspase‐6. Further, the relationship between the caspase cleavage and the viral infection to the host cell is discussed.


Hepatology | 2010

Functional proteomic analysis of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease in rat models: enoyl-coenzyme a hydratase down-regulation exacerbates hepatic steatosis.

Xuequn Zhang; Juntao Yang; Yuanbiao Guo; Hua Ye; Chaohui Yu; Chengfu Xu; Lei Xu; Songfeng Wu; Wei Sun; Hangdong Wei; Xue Gao; Yunping Zhu; Xiaohong Qian; Ying Jiang; Youming Li; Fuchu He

Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) has emerged as a common public health problem that can progress to end‐stage liver disease. A high‐fat diet (HFD) may promote the development of NAFLD through a mechanism that is poorly understood. We adopted a proteomic approach to examine the effect of HFD on the liver proteome during the progression of NAFLD. Male Sprague‐Dawley rats fed an HFD for 4, 12, and 24 weeks replicated the progression of human NAFLD: steatosis, nonspecific inflammation, and steatohepatitis. Using two‐dimensional difference gel electrophoresis (DIGE) combined with matrix‐assisted laser desorption ionization time of flight/time of flight analysis, 95 proteins exhibiting significant changes (ratio ≥ 1.5 or ≤−1.5, P < 0.05) during the development of NAFLD were identified. Biological functions for these proteins reflected phase‐specific characteristics during the progression of the disease. The potential role of enoyl–coenzyme A hydratase (ECHS1), an enzyme that catalyzes the second step of mitochondrial fatty acid beta‐oxidation, received further investigation. First, the reduced protein level of ECHS1 was validated both in rat models and in patients with biopsy‐proven hepatic simple steatosis via immunoblotting or immunohistochemical analysis. Then the small interfering RNA (siRNA)–mediated knockdown of ECHS1 in the murine hepatocyte cell line alpha mouse liver 12 (AML12) demonstrated increased cellular lipid accumulation induced by free fatty acid (FFA) overload. Furthermore, using a hydradynamic transfection method, the in vivo silencing effect of siRNA duplexes targeting ECHS1 was further investigated in mice. Administering ECHS1 siRNA specifically reduced the expression of ECHS1 protein in mice liver, which significantly exacerbated the hepatic steatosis induced by an HFD. Conclusion: Our results revealed that ECHS1 down‐regulation contributed to HFD‐induced hepatic steatosis, which may help clarify the pathogenesis of NAFLD and point to potential targets for therapeutic interventions. (HEPATOLOGY 2010.)


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2006

A Dataset of Human Fetal Liver Proteome Identified by Subcellular Fractionation and Multiple Protein Separation and Identification Technology

Wantao Ying; Ying Jiang; Lihai Guo; Yunwei Hao; Yangjun Zhang; Songfeng Wu; Fan Zhong; Jinglan Wang; Rong Shi; Dong Li; Ping Wan; Xiaohai Li; Handong Wei; Jianqi Li; Zhongsheng Wang; Xiaofang Xue; Yun Cai; Yunping Zhu; Xiaohong Qian; Fuchu He

A high throughput process including subcellular fractionation and multiple protein separation and identification technology allowed us to establish the protein expression profile of human fetal liver, which was composed of at least 2,495 distinct proteins and 568 non-isoform groups identified from 64,960 peptides and 24,454 distinct peptides. In addition to the basic protein identification mentioned above, the MS data were used for complementary identification and novel protein mining. By doing the analysis with integrated protein, expressed sequence tag, and genome datasets, 223 proteins and 15 peptides were complementarily identified with high quality MS/MS data.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2014

Systematic Analyses of the Transcriptome, Translatome, and Proteome Provide a Global View and Potential Strategy for the C‑HPP

Cheng Chang; Liwei Li; Chengpu Zhang; Songfeng Wu; Kun Guo; Jin Zi; Zhipeng Chen; Jing Jiang; Jie Ma; Qing Yu; Fengxu Fan; Peibin Qin; Mingfei Han; Na Su; Tao Chen; Kang Wang; Linhui Zhai; Tao Zhang; Wantao Ying; Zhongwei Xu; Yang Zhang; Yinkun Liu; Xiaohui Liu; Fan Zhong; Huali Shen; Q. Wang; Guixue Hou; Haiyi Zhao; Guilin Li; Siqi Liu

To estimate the potential of the state-of-the-art proteomics technologies on full coverage of the encoding gene products, the Chinese Human Chromosome Proteome Consortium (CCPC) applied a multiomics strategy to systematically analyze the transciptome, translatome, and proteome of the same cultured hepatoma cells with varied metastatic potential qualitatively and quantitatively. The results provide a global view of gene expression profiles. The 9064 identified high confident proteins covered 50.2% of all gene products in the translatome. Those proteins with function of adhesion, development, reproduction, and so on are low abundant in transcriptome and translatome but absent in proteome. Taking the translatome as the background of protein expression, we found that the protein abundance plays a decisive role and hydrophobicity has a greater influence than molecular weight and isoelectric point on protein detectability. Thus, the enrichment strategy used for low-abundant transcription factors helped to identify missing proteins. In addition, those peptides with single amino acid polymorphisms played a significant role for the disease research, although they might negligibly contribute to new protein identification. The proteome raw and metadata of proteome were collected using the iProX submission system and submitted to ProteomeXchange (PXD000529, PXD000533, and PXD000535). All detailed information in this study can be accessed from the Chinese Chromosome-Centric Human Proteome Database.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2009

Bayesian Nonparametric Model for the Validation of Peptide Identification in Shotgun Proteomics

Jiyang Zhang; Jie Ma; Lei Dou; Songfeng Wu; Xiaohong Qian; Hongwei Xie; Yunping Zhu; Fuchu He

Tandem mass spectrometry combined with database searching allows high throughput identification of peptides in shotgun proteomics. However, validating database search results, a problem with a lot of solutions proposed, is still advancing in some aspects, such as the sensitivity, specificity, and generalizability of the validation algorithms. Here a Bayesian nonparametric (BNP) model for the validation of database search results was developed that incorporates several popular techniques in statistical learning, including the compression of feature space with a linear discriminant function, the flexible nonparametric probability density function estimation for the variable probability structure in complex problem, and the Bayesian method to calculate the posterior probability. Importantly the BNP model is compatible with the popular target-decoy database search strategy naturally. We tested the BNP model on standard proteins and real, complex sample data sets from multiple MS platforms and compared it with PeptideProphet, the cutoff-based method, and a simple nonparametric method (proposed by us previously). The performance of the BNP model was shown to be superior for all data sets searched on sensitivity and generalizability. Some high quality matches that had been filtered out by other methods were detected and assigned with high probability by the BNP model. Thus, the BNP model could be able to validate the database search results effectively and extract more information from MS/MS data.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2010

Characterization of the liver tissue interstitial fluid (TIF) proteome indicates potential for application in liver disease biomarker discovery.

Wei Sun; Jie Ma; Songfeng Wu; Dong Yang; Yujuan Yan; Kehui Liu; Jinglan Wang; Longqin Sun; Ning Chen; Handong Wei; Yunping Zhu; Baocai Xing; Xiaohang Zhao; Xiaohong Qian; Ying Jiang; Fuchu He

Tissue interstitial fluid (TIF) forms the interface between circulating body fluids and intracellular fluid. Pathological alterations of liver cells could be reflected in TIF, making it a promising source of liver disease biomarkers. Mouse liver TIF was extracted, separated by SDS-PAGE, analyzed by linear ion trap mass spectrometer, and 1450 proteins were identified. These proteins may be secreted, shed from membrane vesicles, or represent cellular breakdown products. They show different profiling patterns, quantities, and possibly modification/cleavage of intracellular proteins. The high solubility and even distribution of liver TIF supports its suitability for proteome analysis. Comparison of mouse liver TIF data with liver tissue and plasma proteome data identified major proteins that might be released from liver to plasma and serve as blood biomarkers of liver origin. This result was partially supported by comparison of human liver TIF data with human liver and plasma proteome data. Paired TIFs from tumor and nontumor liver tissues of a hepatocellular carcinoma patient were analyzed and the profile of subtracted differential proteins supports the potential for biomarker discovery in TIF. This study is the first analysis of the liver TIF proteome and provides a foundation for further application of TIF in liver disease biomarker discovery.


Proteomics | 2010

The Asia Oceania Human Proteome Organisation Membrane Proteomics Initiative. Preparation and characterisation of the carbonate‐washed membrane standard

Lifeng Peng; Eugene A. Kapp; David Fenyö; Min-Seok Kwon; Pu Jiang; Songfeng Wu; Ying Jiang; Marie-Isabel Aguilar; Nikhat Ahmed; Mark S. Baker; Zongwei Cai; Yu-Ju Chen; Phan Van Chi; Maxey C. M. Chung; Fuchu He; Alice C. L. Len; Pao-Chi Liao; Kazuyuki Nakamura; Sai-Ming Ngai; Young-Ki Paik; Tai-Long Pan; Terence C.W. Poon; Ghasem Hosseini Salekdeh; Richard J. Simpson; Ravi Sirdeshmukh; Chantragan Srisomsap; Jisnuson Svasti; Yu-Chang Tyan; Florian S. Dreyer; Danyl McLauchlan

The Asia Oceania Human Proteome Organisation (AOHUPO) has embarked on a Membrane Proteomics Initiative with goals of systematic comparison of strategies for analysis of membrane proteomes and discovery of membrane proteins. This multilaboratory project is based on the analysis of a subcellular fraction from mouse liver that contains endoplasmic reticulum and other organelles. In this study, we present the strategy used for the preparation and initial characterization of the membrane sample, including validation that the carbonate‐washing step enriches for integral and lipid‐anchored membrane proteins. Analysis of 17 independent data sets from five types of proteomic workflows is in progress.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2013

First proteomic exploration of protein-encoding genes on chromosome 1 in human liver, stomach, and colon.

Songfeng Wu; Ning Li; Jie Ma; Huali Shen; Dahai Jiang; Cheng Chang; Chengpu Zhang; Liwei Li; Hongxing Zhang; Jing Jiang; Zhongwei Xu; Lingyan Ping; Tao Chen; Wei Zhang; Tao Zhang; Xiaohua Xing; Tailong Yi; Yanchang Li; Fengxu Fan; Xiaoqian Li; Fan Zhong; Q. Wang; Yang Zhang; Bo Wen; Guoquan Yan; Liang Lin; Jun Yao; Zhilong Lin; Feifei Wu; Liqi Xie

The launch of the Chromosome-Centric Human Proteome Project provides an opportunity to gain insight into the human proteome. The Chinese Human Chromosome Proteome Consortium has initiated proteomic exploration of protein-encoding genes on human chromosomes 1, 8, and 20. Collaboration within the consortium has generated a comprehensive proteome data set using normal and carcinomatous tissues from human liver, stomach, and colon and 13 cell lines originating in these organs. We identified 12,101 proteins (59.8% coverage against Swiss-Prot human entries) with a protein false discovery rate of less than 1%. On chromosome 1, 1,252 proteins mapping to 1,227 genes, representing 60.9% of Swiss-Prot entries, were identified; however, 805 proteins remain unidentified, suggesting that analysis of more diverse samples using more advanced proteomic technologies is required. Genes encoding the unidentified proteins were concentrated in seven blocks, located at p36, q12-21, and q42-44, partly consistent with correlation of these blocks with cancers of the liver, stomach, and colon. Combined transcriptome, proteome, and cofunctionality analyses confirmed 23 coexpression clusters containing 165 genes. Biological information, including chromosome structure, GC content, and protein coexpression pattern was analyzed using multilayered, circular visualization and tabular visualization. Details of data analysis and updates are available in the Chinese Chromosome-Centric Human Proteome Database ( http://proteomeview.hupo.org.cn/chromosome/ ).


Journal of Proteome Research | 2013

CAPER: a chromosome-assembled human proteome browsER.

Feifei Guo; Dan Wang; Zhongyang Liu; Liang Lu; Wei Zhang; Haiyan Sun; Hongxing Zhang; Jie Ma; Songfeng Wu; Ning Li; Ying Jiang; Weimin Zhu; Jun Qin; Ping Xu; Dong Li; Fuchu He

High-throughput mass spectrometry and antibody-based experiments have begun to produce a large amount of proteomic data sets. Chromosome-based visualization of these data sets and their annotations can help effectively integrate, organize, and analyze them. Therefore, we developed a web-based, user-friendly Chromosome-Assembled human Proteome browsER (CAPER). To display proteomic data sets and related annotations comprehensively, CAPER employs two distinct visualization strategies: track-view for the sequence/site information and the correspondence between proteome, transcriptome, genome, and chromosome and heatmap-view for the qualitative and quantitative functional annotations. CAPER supports data browsing at multiple scales through Google Map-like smooth navigation, zooming, and positioning with chromosomes as the reference coordinate. Both track-view and heatmap-view can mutually switch, providing a high-quality user interface. Taken together, CAPER will greatly facilitate the complete annotation and functional interpretation of the human genome by proteomic approaches, thereby making a significant contribution to the Chromosome-Centric Human Proteome Project and even the human physiology/pathology research. CAPER can be accessed at http://www.bprc.ac.cn/CAPE .

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Jie Ma

Capital Medical University

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Xiaohong Qian

Capital Medical University

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Handong Wei

Chinese National Human Genome Center

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Wantao Ying

Capital Medical University

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Chengpu Zhang

Capital Medical University

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Jiyang Zhang

National University of Defense Technology

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