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Featured researches published by Tian Jin.


Nature Communications | 2013

Association between Gαi2 and ELMO1/Dock180 connects chemokine signalling with Rac activation and metastasis

Hongyan Li; Lei Yang; Hui Fu; Jianshe Yan; Ying Wang; Hua Guo; Xishan Hao; Xuehua Xu; Tian Jin; Ning Zhang

The chemokine CXCL12 and its G-protein-coupled receptor CXCR4 control the migration, invasiveness and metastasis of breast cancer cells. Binding of CXCL12 to CXCR4 triggers activation of heterotrimeric Gi proteins that regulate actin polymerization and migration. However, the pathways linking chemokine G-protein-coupled receptor/Gi signalling to actin polymerization and cancer cell migration are not known. Here we show that CXCL12 stimulation promotes interaction between Gαi2 and ELMO1. Gi signalling and ELMO1 are both required for CXCL12-mediated actin polymerization, migration and invasion of breast cancer cells. CXCL12 triggers a Gαi2-dependent membrane translocation of ELMO1, which associates with Dock180 to activate small G-proteins Rac1 and Rac2. In vivo, ELMO1 expression is associated with lymph node and distant metastasis, and knocking down ELMO1 impairs metastasis to the lung. Our findings indicate that a chemokine-controlled pathway, consisting of Gαi2, ELMO1/Dock180, Rac1 and Rac2, regulates the actin cytoskeleton during breast cancer metastasis.


Developmental Cell | 2012

A Gβγ Effector, ElmoE, Transduces GPCR Signaling to the Actin Network during Chemotaxis

Jianshe Yan; Vassil Mihaylov; Xuehua Xu; Joseph A. Brzostowski; Hongyan Li; Lunhua Liu; Timothy D. Veenstra; Carole A. Parent; Tian Jin

Activation of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) leads to the dissociation of heterotrimeric G-proteins into Gα and Gβγ subunits, which go on to regulate various effectors involved in a panoply of cellular responses. During chemotaxis, Gβγ subunits regulate actin assembly and migration, but the protein(s) linking Gβγ to the actin cytoskeleton remains unknown. Here, we identified a Gβγ effector, ElmoE in Dictyostelium, and demonstrated that it is required for GPCR-mediated chemotaxis. Remarkably, ElmoE associates with Gβγ and Dock-like proteins to activate the small GTPase Rac, in a GPCR-dependent manner, and also associates with Arp2/3 complex and F-actin. Thus, ElmoE serves as a link between chemoattractant GPCRs, G-proteins and the actin cytoskeleton. The pathway, consisting of GPCR, Gβγ, Elmo/Dock, Rac, and Arp2/3, spatially guides the growth of dendritic actin networks in pseudopods of eukaryotic cells during chemotaxis.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2007

Locally controlled inhibitory mechanisms are involved in eukaryotic GPCR-mediated chemosensing

Xuehua Xu; Martin Meier-Schellersheim; Jianshe Yan; Tian Jin

Gprotein–coupled receptor (GPCR) signaling mediates a balance of excitatory and inhibitory activities that regulate Dictyostelium chemosensing to cAMP. The molecular nature and kinetics of these inhibitors are unknown. We report that transient cAMP stimulations induce PIP3 responses without a refractory period, suggesting that GPCR-mediated inhibition accumulates and decays slowly. Moreover, exposure to cAMP gradients leads to asymmetric distribution of the inhibitory components. The gradients induce a stable accumulation of the PIP3 reporter PHCrac-GFP in the front of cells near the cAMP source. Rapid withdrawal of the gradient led to the reassociation of G protein subunits, and the return of the PIP3 phosphatase PTEN and PHCrac-GFP to their pre-stimulus distribution. Reapplication of cAMP stimulation produces a clear PHCrac-GFP translocation to the back but not to the front, indicating that a stronger inhibition is maintained in the front of a polarized cell. Our study demonstrates a novel spatiotemporal feature of currently unknown inhibitory mechanisms acting locally on the PI3K activation pathway.


Immunologic Research | 2009

How human leukocytes track down and destroy pathogens: lessons learned from the model organism Dictyostelium discoideum

Tian Jin; Xuehua Xu; Jun Fang; Nilgun Isik; Jianshe Yan; Joseph A. Brzostowski; Dale Hereld

Human leukocytes, including macrophages and neutrophils, are phagocytic immune cells that capture and engulf pathogens and subsequently destroy them in intracellular vesicles. To accomplish this vital task, these leukocytes utilize two basic cell behaviors—chemotaxis for chasing down infectious pathogens and phagocytosis for destroying them. The molecular mechanisms controlling these behaviors are not well understood for immune cells. Interestingly, a soil amoeba, Dictyostelium discoideum, uses these same behaviors to pursue and injest its bacterial food source and to organize its multi-cellular development. Consequently, studies of this model system have provided and will continue to provide us with mechanistic insights into the chemotaxis and phagocytosis of immune cells. Here, we review recent research in these areas that have been conducted in the Chemotaxis Signal Section of NIAID’s Laboratory of Immunogenetics.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005

Ligand-Induced Partitioning of Human CXCR1 Chemokine Receptors with Lipid Raft Microenvironments Facilitates G-Protein-Dependent Signaling

Xuanmao Jiao; Ning Zhang; Xuehua Xu; Joost J. Oppenheim; Tian Jin

ABSTRACT Ligand binding to a chemokine receptor triggers signaling events through heterotrimeric G-proteins. The mechanisms underlying receptor-mediated G-protein activation in the heterogeneous microenvironments of the plasma membrane are unclear. Here, using live-cell fluorescence resonance energy transfer imaging to detect the proximity between CXCR1-cyan fluorescent protein (CFP) and fluorescence probes that label lipid raft or non-lipid raft microdomains and using fluorescence recovery after photobleaching analysis to measure the lateral diffusion of CXCR1-CFP, we found that interleukin-8 induces association between the receptors and lipid raft microenvironments. Disruption of lipid rafts impaired G-protein-dependent signaling, such as Ca2+ responses and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase activation, but had no effect on ligand-binding function and did not completely abolish ligand-induced receptor phosphorylation. Our results suggest a novel mechanism by which ligand binding to CXCR1 promotes lipid raft partitioning of receptors and facilitates activation of heterotrimeric G-proteins.


Science Signaling | 2010

Coupling Mechanism of a GPCR and a Heterotrimeric G Protein During Chemoattractant Gradient Sensing in Dictyostelium

Xuehua Xu; Tobias Meckel; Joseph A. Brzostowski; Jianshe Yan; Martin Meier-Schellersheim; Tian Jin

Imaging analyses and computer simulations suggest that a GPCR and its G protein associate only in the presence of ligand. Ligand-Induced Coupling A long-standing question regarding the activation of heterotrimeric G proteins by G protein–coupled receptors (GPCRs) is whether the association between the GPCR and the G protein is stimulated by the binding of ligand to the receptor, or whether the receptor and G protein are precoupled. Xu et al. addressed this question by measuring the mobilities of fluorescent fusion proteins of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) receptor 1 (cAR1), a GPCR for the chemoattractant cAMP, and the Gβ subunit in live Dictyostelium cells. The receptor and G protein moved independently in the plasma membrane and at different speeds. Whereas exposure of cells to cAMP had no effect on the mobility of cAR1, the mobility of a fraction of the faster-moving G proteins was reduced. Together with computer simulations of the effects of various proposed receptor–G protein coupling mechanisms on downstream signaling, these data suggest that the interaction between cAR1 and its G protein does not occur until the receptor is bound to ligand, and provide a means for investigating the G protein–coupling mechanisms of other GPCRs. The coupling of heterotrimeric guanine nucleotide–binding protein (G protein)–coupled receptors (GPCRs) with G proteins is fundamental for GPCR signaling; however, the mechanism of coupling is still debated. Moreover, how the proposed mechanisms affect the dynamics of downstream signaling remains unclear. Here, through experiments involving fluorescence recovery after photobleaching and single-molecule imaging, we directly measured the mobilities of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) receptor 1 (cAR1), a chemoattractant receptor, and a G protein βγ subunit in live cells. We found that cAR1 diffused more slowly in the plasma membrane than did Gβγ. Upon binding of ligand to the receptor, the mobility of cAR1 was unchanged, whereas the speed of a fraction of the faster-moving Gβγ subunits decreased. Our measurements showed that cAR1 was relatively immobile and Gβγ diffused freely, suggesting that chemoattractant-bound cAR1 transiently interacted with G proteins. Using models of possible coupling mechanisms, we computed the temporal kinetics of G protein activation. Our fluorescence resonance energy transfer imaging data showed that fully activated cAR1 induced the sustained dissociation of G protein α and βγ subunits, which indicated that ligand-bound cAR1 activated G proteins continuously. Finally, simulations indicated that a high-affinity coupling of ligand-bound receptors and G proteins was essential for cAR1 to translate extracellular gradient signals into directional cellular responses. We suggest that chemoattractant receptors use a ligand-induced coupling rather than a precoupled mechanism to control the activation of G proteins during chemotaxis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Dictyostelium Ric8 is a nonreceptor guanine exchange factor for heterotrimeric G proteins and is important for development and chemotaxis

Rama Kataria; Xuehua Xu; Fabrizia Fusetti; Ineke Keizer-Gunnink; Tian Jin; Peter J.M. van Haastert; Arjan Kortholt

Heterotrimeric G proteins couple external signals to the activation of intracellular signal transduction pathways. Agonist-stimulated guanine nucleotide exchange activity of G-protein-coupled receptors results in the exchange of G-protein-bound GDP to GTP and the dissociation and activation of the complex into Gα-GTP and a Gβγ dimer. In Dictyostelium, a basal chemotaxis pathway consisting of heterotrimeric and monomeric G proteins is sufficient for chemotaxis. Symmetry breaking and amplification of chemoattractant sensing occurs between heterotrimeric G protein signaling and Ras activation. In a pull-down screen coupled to mass spectrometry, with Gα proteins as bait, we have identified resistant to inhibitors of cholinesterase 8 (Ric8) as a nonreceptor guanine nucleotide exchange factor for Gα-protein. Ric8 is not essential for the initial activation of heterotrimeric G proteins or Ras by uniform chemoattractant; however, it amplifies Gα signaling, which is essential for Ras-mediated symmetry breaking during chemotaxis and development.


Developmental Cell | 2016

Identification of a Chemoattractant G-Protein-Coupled Receptor for Folic Acid that Controls Both Chemotaxis and Phagocytosis

Miao Pan; Xuehua Xu; Yong Chen; Tian Jin

Eukaryotic phagocytes search and destroy invading microorganisms via chemotaxis and phagocytosis. The social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum is a professional phagocyte that chases bacteria through chemotaxis and engulfs them as food via phagocytosis. G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are known for detecting chemoattractants and directing cell migration, but their roles in phagocytosis are not clear. Here, we developed a quantitative phosphoproteomic technique to discover signaling components. Using this approach, we discovered the long sought after folic acid receptor, fAR1, in D.xa0discoideum. Wexa0showed that the seven-transmembrane receptor fAR1 is required for folic acid-mediated signaling events. Significantly, we discovered that fAR1 is essential for both chemotaxis and phagocytosis of bacteria, thereby representing a chemoattractant GPCR that mediates not only chasing but also ingesting bacteria. We revealed that a phagocyte is able to internalize particles via a chemoattractant-mediated engulfment process. We propose that mammalian phagocytes may also use this mechanism to engulf and ingest bacterial pathogens.


Current protocols in protein science | 2018

Imaging Protein‐Protein Interactions by Förster Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) Microscopy in Live Cells

Joseph A. Brzostowski; Tobias Meckel; Jiang Hong; Alice Chen; Tian Jin

This unit describes an acceptor‐sensitized emission FRET method using a confocal microscope for image acquisition. In contrast to acceptor photobleaching, which is an end‐point assay that destroys the acceptor fluorophore, the sensitized emission method is amenable for FRET measurements in live cells and can be used to measure changes in FRET efficiency over time. The purpose of this unit is to provide a basic starting point for understanding and performing the sensitized emission method with a simple teaching tool for live‐cell imaging. References that discuss the vagaries of acquiring and analyzing FRET between individually tagged molecules are provided. Curr. Protoc. Protein Sci. 56:19.5.1‐19.5.12.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2015

GPCR-mediated PLCβγ/PKCβ/PKD signaling pathway regulates the cofilin phosphatase slingshot 2 in neutrophil chemotaxis

Xuehua Xu; Nidhi Gera; Hongyan Li; Michelle Yun; Liyong Zhang; Youhong Wang; Q. Jane Wang; Tian Jin

A novel signaling pathway consisting of Gai, PLC, PKCβ, PKD, SSH2, and cofilin is crucial for GPCR-mediated chemotaxis in neutrophils. This pathway regulates depolymerization of the actin network that drives the directional migration of neutrophils.

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Xuehua Xu

National Institutes of Health

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Jianshe Yan

National Institutes of Health

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Joseph A. Brzostowski

National Institutes of Health

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Hongyan Li

National Institutes of Health

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Xi Wen

National Institutes of Health

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Dale Hereld

National Institutes of Health

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Miao Pan

National Institutes of Health

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Nidhi Gera

National Institutes of Health

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Nilgun Isik

National Institutes of Health

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