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Dive into the research topics where Su Zhou is active.

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Featured researches published by Su Zhou.


Science Translational Medicine | 2015

A microRNA-Hippo pathway that promotes cardiomyocyte proliferation and cardiac regeneration in mice

Ying Tian; Ying Liu; Tao Wang; Ning Zhou; Jun Kong; Li Chen; Melinda Snitow; Michael Morley; Deqiang Li; Nataliya B. Petrenko; Su Zhou; MinMin Lu; Erhe Gao; Walter J. Koch; Kathleen M. Stewart; Edward E. Morrisey

A microRNA-based therapeutic approach could be used to promote cardiac regeneration through the transient activation of cardiomyocyte proliferation. Heart regeneration: Small cues from development With limited ability to repair itself after injury, the mature heart may need to look to development for some lessons. By reactivating pathways that are present during mammalian development, it may be possible to encourage cardiac regeneration. In mice, Tian et al. found that the microRNA cluster mir302-367 stimulates cardiomyocyte proliferation during early heart development by inhibiting the Hippo pathway. Transient treatment with miR302-367 mimics promoted cardiac regeneration in mice after myocardial infarction, suggesting that such small RNAs can be harnessed therapeutically to repair the adult heart. In contrast to lower vertebrates, the mammalian heart has limited capacity to regenerate after injury in part due to ineffective reactivation of cardiomyocyte proliferation. We show that the microRNA cluster miR302-367 is important for cardiomyocyte proliferation during development and is sufficient to induce cardiomyocyte proliferation in the adult and promote cardiac regeneration. In mice, loss of miR302-367 led to decreased cardiomyocyte proliferation during development. In contrast, increased miR302-367 expression led to a profound increase in cardiomyocyte proliferation, in part through repression of the Hippo signal transduction pathway. Postnatal reexpression of miR302-367 reactivated the cell cycle in cardiomyocytes, resulting in reduced scar formation after experimental myocardial infarction. However, long-term expression of miR302-367 induced cardiomyocyte dedifferentiation and dysfunction, suggesting that persistent reactivation of the cell cycle in postnatal cardiomyocytes is not desirable. This limitation can be overcome by transient systemic application of miR302-367 mimics, leading to increased cardiomyocyte proliferation and mass, decreased fibrosis, and improved function after injury. Our data demonstrate the ability of microRNA-based therapeutic approaches to promote mammalian cardiac repair and regeneration through the transient activation of cardiomyocyte proliferation.


Nature | 2015

Hedgehog actively maintains adult lung quiescence and regulates repair and regeneration

Tien Peng; David B. Frank; Rachel S. Kadzik; Michael P. Morley; Komal S. Rathi; Tao Wang; Su Zhou; Lan Cheng; Min Min Lu; Edward E. Morrisey

Postnatal tissue quiescence is thought to be a default state in the absence of a proliferative stimulus such as injury. Although previous studies have demonstrated that certain embryonic developmental programs are reactivated aberrantly in adult organs to drive repair and regeneration, it is not well understood how quiescence is maintained in organs such as the lung, which displays a remarkably low level of cellular turnover. Here we demonstrate that quiescence in the adult lung is an actively maintained state and is regulated by hedgehog signalling. Epithelial-specific deletion of sonic hedgehog (Shh) during postnatal homeostasis in the murine lung results in a proliferative expansion of the adjacent lung mesenchyme. Hedgehog signalling is initially downregulated during the acute phase of epithelial injury as the mesenchyme proliferates in response, but returns to baseline during injury resolution as quiescence is restored. Activation of hedgehog during acute epithelial injury attenuates the proliferative expansion of the lung mesenchyme, whereas inactivation of hedgehog signalling prevents the restoration of quiescence during injury resolution. Finally, we show that hedgehog also regulates epithelial quiescence and regeneration in response to injury via a mesenchymal feedback mechanism. These results demonstrate that epithelial–mesenchymal interactions coordinated by hedgehog actively maintain postnatal tissue homeostasis, and deregulation of hedgehog during injury leads to aberrant repair and regeneration in the lung.


Cell | 2017

Distinct mesenchymal lineages and niches promote epithelial self-renewal and myofibrogenesis in the lung

Jarod A. Zepp; William Zacharias; David B. Frank; Christina A. Cavanaugh; Su Zhou; Michael P. Morley; Edward E. Morrisey

The lung is an architecturally complex organ comprising a heterogeneous mixture of various epithelial and mesenchymal lineages. We use single-cell RNA sequencing and signaling lineage reporters to generate a spatial and transcriptional map of the lung mesenchyme. We find that each mesenchymal lineage has a distinct spatial address and transcriptional profile leading to unique niche regulatory functions. The mesenchymal alveolar niche cell is Wnt responsive, expresses Pdgfrα, and is critical for alveolar epithelial cell growth and self-renewal. In contrast, the Axin2+ myofibrogenic progenitor cell preferentially generates pathologically deleterious myofibroblasts after injury. Analysis of the secretome and receptome of the alveolar niche reveals functional pathways that mediate growth and self-renewal of alveolar type 2 progenitor cells, including IL-6/Stat3, Bmp, and Fgf signaling. These studies define the cellular and molecular framework of lung mesenchymal niches and reveal the functional importance of developmental pathways in promoting self-renewal versus a pathological response to tissue injury.


Nature | 2018

Regeneration of the lung alveolus by an evolutionarily conserved epithelial progenitor

William Zacharias; David B. Frank; Jarod A. Zepp; Michael P. Morley; Farrah A. Alkhaleel; Jun Kong; Su Zhou; Edward Cantu; Edward E. Morrisey

Functional tissue regeneration is required for the restoration of normal organ homeostasis after severe injury. Some organs, such as the intestine, harbour active stem cells throughout homeostasis and regeneration; more quiescent organs, such as the lung, often contain facultative progenitor cells that are recruited after injury to participate in regeneration. Here we show that a Wnt-responsive alveolar epithelial progenitor (AEP) lineage within the alveolar type 2 cell population acts as a major facultative progenitor cell in the distal lung. AEPs are a stable lineage during alveolar homeostasis but expand rapidly to regenerate a large proportion of the alveolar epithelium after acute lung injury. AEPs exhibit a distinct transcriptome, epigenome and functional phenotype and respond specifically to Wnt and Fgf signalling. In contrast to other proposed lung progenitor cells, human AEPs can be directly isolated by expression of the conserved cell surface marker TM4SF1, and act as functional human alveolar epithelial progenitor cells in 3D organoids. Our results identify the AEP lineage as an evolutionarily conserved alveolar progenitor that represents a new target for human lung regeneration strategies.


Developmental Cell | 2016

HDAC3-Dependent Epigenetic Pathway Controls Lung Alveolar Epithelial Cell Remodeling and Spreading via miR-17-92 and TGF-β Signaling Regulation

Yi Wang; David B. Frank; Michael P. Morley; Su Zhou; Xiaoru Wang; Min Min Lu; Mitchell A. Lazar; Edward E. Morrisey

The terminal stages of pulmonary development, called sacculation and alveologenesis, involve both differentiation of distal lung endoderm progenitors and extensive cellular remodeling of the resultant epithelial lineages. These processes are coupled with dramatic expansion of distal airspace and surface area. Despite the importance of these late developmental processes and their relation to neonatal respiratory diseases, little is understood about the molecular and cellular pathways critical for their successful completion. We show that a histone deacetylase 3 (Hdac3)-mediated epigenetic pathway is critical for the proper remodeling and expansion of the distal lung saccules into primitive alveoli. Loss of Hdac3 in the developing lung epithelium leads to a reduction of alveolar type 1 cell spreading and a disruption of lung sacculation. Hdac3 represses miR-17-92 expression, a microRNA cluster that regulates transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) signaling. De-repression of miR-17-92 in Hdac3-deficient lung epithelium results in decreased TGF-β signaling activity. Importantly, inhibition of TGF-β signaling and overexpression of miR-17-92 can phenocopy the defects observed in Hdac3 null lungs. Conversely, loss of miR-17-92 expression rescues many of the defects caused by loss of Hdac3 in the lung. These studies reveal an intricate epigenetic pathway where Hdac3 is required to repress miR-17-92 expression to allow for proper TGF-β signaling during lung sacculation.


Development | 2016

Ezh2 restricts the smooth muscle lineage during mouse lung mesothelial development.

Melinda Snitow; MinMin Lu; Lan Cheng; Su Zhou; Edward E. Morrisey

During development, the lung mesoderm generates a variety of cell lineages, including airway and vascular smooth muscle. Epigenetic changes in adult lung mesodermal lineages are thought to contribute towards diseases such as idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, although the factors that regulate early lung mesoderm development are unknown. We show in mouse that the PRC2 component Ezh2 is required to restrict smooth muscle differentiation in the developing lung mesothelium. Mesodermal loss of Ezh2 leads to the formation of ectopic smooth muscle in the submesothelial region of the developing lung mesoderm. Loss of Ezh2 specifically in the developing mesothelium reveals a mesothelial cell-autonomous role for Ezh2 in repression of the smooth muscle differentiation program. Loss of Ezh2 derepresses expression of myocardin and Tbx18, which are important regulators of smooth muscle differentiation from the mesothelium and related cell lineages. Together, these findings uncover an Ezh2-dependent mechanism to restrict the smooth muscle gene expression program in the developing mesothelium and allow appropriate cell fate decisions to occur in this multipotent mesoderm lineage. Summary: The PRC component Ezh2 acts cell-autonomously in the developing mouse lung mesothelium to repress smooth muscle differentiation and allow appropriate cell fate decisions to occur.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2016

Epithelium-generated neuropeptide Y induces smooth muscle contraction to promote airway hyperresponsiveness

Shanru Li; Cynthia Koziol-White; Joseph A. Jude; Meiqi Jiang; Hengjiang Zhao; Gaoyuan Cao; Edwin J. Yoo; William Jester; Michael P. Morley; Su Zhou; Yi Wang; Min Min Lu; Reynold A. Panettieri; Edward E. Morrisey

Asthma is one of the most common chronic diseases globally and can be divided into presenting with or without an immune response. Current therapies have little effect on nonimmune disease, and the mechanisms that drive this type of asthma are poorly understood. Here, we have shown that loss of the transcription factors forkhead box P1 (Foxp1) and Foxp4, which are critical for lung epithelial development, in the adult airway epithelium evokes a non-Th2 asthma phenotype that is characterized by airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) without eosinophilic inflammation. Transcriptome analysis revealed that loss of Foxp1 and Foxp4 expression induces ectopic expression of neuropeptide Y (Npy), which has been reported to be present in the airways of asthma patients, but whose importance in disease pathogenesis remains unclear. Treatment of human lung airway explants with recombinant NPY increased airway contractility. Conversely, loss of Npy in Foxp1- and Foxp4-mutant airway epithelium rescued the AHR phenotype. We determined that NPY promotes AHR through the induction of Rho kinase activity and phosphorylation of myosin light chain, which induces airway smooth muscle contraction. Together, these studies highlight the importance of paracrine signals from the airway epithelium to the underlying smooth muscle to induce AHR and suggest that therapies targeting epithelial induction of this phenotype may prove useful in treatment of noneosinophilic asthma.


Developmental Biology | 2016

Foxp transcription factors suppress a non-pulmonary gene expression program to permit proper lung development.

Shanru Li; Michael Morley; MinMin Lu; Su Zhou; Kathleen M. Stewart; Catherine A. French; Haley O. Tucker; Simon E. Fisher; Edward E. Morrisey

The inhibitory mechanisms that prevent gene expression programs from one tissue to be expressed in another are poorly understood. Foxp1/2/4 are forkhead transcription factors that repress gene expression and are individually important for endoderm development. We show that combined loss of all three Foxp1/2/4 family members in the developing anterior foregut endoderm leads to a loss of lung endoderm lineage commitment and subsequent development. Foxp1/2/4 deficient lungs express high levels of transcriptional regulators not normally expressed in the developing lung, including Pax2, Pax8, Pax9 and the Hoxa9-13 cluster. Ectopic expression of these transcriptional regulators is accompanied by decreased expression of lung restricted transcription factors including Nkx2-1, Sox2, and Sox9. Foxp1 binds to conserved forkhead DNA binding sites within the Hoxa9-13 cluster, indicating a direct repression mechanism. Thus, Foxp1/2/4 are essential for promoting lung endoderm development by repressing expression of non-pulmonary transcription factors.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2018

Novel Molecular and Phenotypic Insights into Congenital Lung Malformations

Daniel T. Swarr; William H. Peranteau; Jennifer Pogoriler; David B. Frank; N. Scott Adzick; Holly L. Hedrick; Michael Morley; Su Zhou; Edward E. Morrisey

Rationale: Disruption of normal pulmonary development is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in infants. Congenital lung malformations are a unique model to study the molecular pathogenesis of isolated structural birth defects, as they are often surgically resected. Objectives: To provide insight into the molecular pathogenesis of congenital lung malformations through analysis of cell‐type and gene expression changes in these lesions. Methods: Clinical data, and lung tissue for DNA, RNA, and histology, were obtained from 58 infants undergoing surgical resection of a congenital lung lesion. Transcriptome‐wide gene expression analysis was performed on paired affected and unaffected samples from a subset of infants (n = 14). A three‐dimensional organoid culture model was used to assess isolated congenital lung malformation epithelium (n = 3). Measurements and Main Results: Congenital lung lesions express higher levels of airway epithelial related genes, and dysregulated expression of genes related to the Ras and PI3K‐AKT‐mTOR (phosphatidylinositol 3‐kinase‐AKT‐mammalian target of rapamycin) signaling pathways. Immunofluorescence confirmed differentiated airway epithelial cell types throughout all major subtypes of congenital lung lesions, and three‐dimensional cell culture demonstrated a cell‐autonomous defect in the epithelium of these lesions. Conclusions: This study provides the first comprehensive analysis of the congenital lung malformation transcriptome and suggests that disruptions in Ras or PI3K‐AKT‐mTOR signaling may contribute to the pathology through an epithelial cell‐autonomous defect.


Cell Reports | 2016

Emergence of a Wave of Wnt Signaling that Regulates Lung Alveologenesis by Controlling Epithelial Self-Renewal and Differentiation

David B. Frank; Tien Peng; Jarod A. Zepp; Melinda Snitow; Tiffaney Vincent; Ian Penkala; Zheng Cui; Michael J. Herriges; Michael P. Morley; Su Zhou; Min Min Lu; Edward E. Morrisey

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David B. Frank

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Michael P. Morley

University of Pennsylvania

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Min Min Lu

University of Pennsylvania

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MinMin Lu

University of Pennsylvania

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Jarod A. Zepp

University of Pennsylvania

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Melinda Snitow

University of Pennsylvania

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Michael Morley

University of Pennsylvania

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Jun Kong

University of Pennsylvania

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