Weihong Feng
University of Pittsburgh
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Featured researches published by Weihong Feng.
Nature Nanotechnology | 2010
Valerian E. Kagan; Nagarjun V. Konduru; Weihong Feng; Brett L. Allen; Jennifer Conroy; Yuri Volkov; Irina I. Vlasova; Natalia A. Belikova; Naveena Yanamala; Alexander A. Kapralov; Yulia Y. Tyurina; Jingwen Shi; Elena R. Kisin; Ashley R. Murray; Jonathan Franks; Donna B. Stolz; Pingping Gou; Judith Klein-Seetharaman; Bengt Fadeel; Alexander Star; Anna A. Shvedova
We have shown previously that single-walled carbon nanotubes can be catalytically biodegraded over several weeks by the plant-derived enzyme, horseradish peroxidase. However, whether peroxidase intermediates generated inside human cells or biofluids are involved in the biodegradation of carbon nanotubes has not been explored. Here, we show that hypochlorite and reactive radical intermediates of the human neutrophil enzyme myeloperoxidase catalyse the biodegradation of single-walled carbon nanotubes in vitro, in neutrophils and to a lesser degree in macrophages. Molecular modelling suggests that interactions of basic amino acids of the enzyme with the carboxyls on the carbon nanotubes position the nanotubes near the catalytic site. Importantly, the biodegraded nanotubes do not generate an inflammatory response when aspirated into the lungs of mice. Our findings suggest that the extent to which carbon nanotubes are biodegraded may be a major determinant of the scale and severity of the associated inflammatory responses in exposed individuals.
PLOS ONE | 2009
Nagarjun V. Konduru; Yulia Y. Tyurina; Weihong Feng; Liana V. Basova; Natalia A. Belikova; Hülya Bayır; Katherine A. Clark; Marc Rubin; Donna B. Stolz; Helen Vallhov; Annika Scheynius; Erika Witasp; Bengt Fadeel; Padmakar D. Kichambare; Alexander Star; Elena R. Kisin; Ashley R. Murray; Anna A. Shvedova; Valerian E. Kagan
Broad applications of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNT) dictate the necessity to better understand their health effects. Poor recognition of non-functionalized SWCNT by phagocytes is prohibitive towards controlling their biological action. We report that SWCNT coating with a phospholipid “eat-me” signal, phosphatidylserine (PS), makes them recognizable in vitro by different phagocytic cells - murine RAW264.7 macrophages, primary monocyte-derived human macrophages, dendritic cells, and rat brain microglia. Macrophage uptake of PS-coated nanotubes was suppressed by the PS-binding protein, Annexin V, and endocytosis inhibitors, and changed the pattern of pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokine secretion. Loading of PS-coated SWCNT with pro-apoptotic cargo (cytochrome c) allowed for the targeted killing of RAW264.7 macrophages. In vivo aspiration of PS-coated SWCNT stimulated their uptake by lung alveolar macrophages in mice. Thus, PS-coating can be utilized for targeted delivery of SWCNT with specified cargoes into professional phagocytes, hence for therapeutic regulation of specific populations of immune-competent cells.
Small | 2013
Fernando T. Andón; Alexandr A. Kapralov; Naveena Yanamala; Weihong Feng; Arjang Baygan; Benedict J. Chambers; Kjell Hultenby; Fei Ye; Muhammet S. Toprak; Birgit D. Brandner; Judith Klein-Seetharaman; Gregg P. Kotchey; Alexander Star; Anna A. Shvedova; Bengt Fadeel; Valerian E. Kagan
Eosinophil peroxidase (EPO) is one of the major oxidant-producing enzymes during inflammatory states in the human lung. The degradation of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) upon incubation with human EPO and H₂O₂ is reported. Biodegradation of SWCNTs is higher in the presence of NaBr, but neither EPO alone nor H₂O₂ alone caused the degradation of nanotubes. Molecular modeling reveals two binding sites for SWCNTs on EPO, one located at the proximal side (same side as the catalytic site) and the other on the distal side of EPO. The oxidized groups on SWCNTs in both cases are stabilized by electrostatic interactions with positively charged residues. Biodegradation of SWCNTs can also be executed in an ex vivo culture system using primary murine eosinophils stimulated to undergo degranulation. Biodegradation is proven by a range of methods including transmission electron microscopy, UV-visible-NIR spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy, and confocal Raman imaging. Thus, human EPO (in vitro) and ex vivo activated eosinophils mediate biodegradation of SWCNTs: an observation that is relevant to pulmonary responses to these materials.
Nature Communications | 2011
Jeffrey Atkinson; Alexandr A. Kapralov; Naveena Yanamala; Yulia Y. Tyurina; Andrew A. Amoscato; Linda L. Pearce; Jim Peterson; Zhentai Huang; Jianfei Jiang; Alejandro K. Samhan-Arias; Akihiro Maeda; Weihong Feng; Karla Wasserloos; Natalia A. Belikova; Vladimir A. Tyurin; Hong Wang; Jackie Fletcher; Y. Wang; Irina I. Vlasova; Judith Klein-Seetharaman; Detcho A. Stoyanovsky; Hülya Bayır; Bruce R. Pitt; Michael W. Epperly; Joel S. Greenberger; Valerian E. Kagan
The risk of radionuclide release in terrorist acts or exposure of healthy tissue during radiotherapy demand potent radioprotectants/radiomitigators. Ionizing radiation induces cell death by initiating the selective peroxidation of cardiolipin in mitochondria by the peroxidase activity of its complex with cytochrome c leading to release of hemoprotein into the cytosol and commitment to the apoptotic program. Here we design and synthesize mitochondria-targeted triphenylphosphonium-conjugated imidazole-substituted oleic and stearic acids which blocked peroxidase activity of cytochrome c/cardiolipin complex by specifically binding to its heme-iron. We show that both compounds inhibit pro-apoptotic oxidative events, suppress cyt c release, prevent cell death, and protect mice against lethal doses of irradiation. Significant radioprotective/radiomitigative effects of imidazole-substituted oleic acid are observed after pretreatment of mice from 1 hr before through 24 hrs after the irradiation.
Journal of Neurochemistry | 2008
Vladimir A. Tyurin; Yulia Y. Tyurina; Weihong Feng; Alexandra Mnuskin; Jianfei Jiang; Minke Tang; Xiaojing Zhang; Qing Zhao; Patrick M. Kochanek; Robert S. B. Clark; Hülya Bayır; Valerian E. Kagan
The molecular diversity of phospholipids is essential for their structural and signaling functions in cell membranes. In the current work, we present, the results of mass spectrometric characterization of individual molecular species in major classes of phospholipids – phosphatidylcholine (PtdCho), phosphatidylethanolamine (PtdEtn), phosphatidylserine (PtdSer), phosphatidylinositol (PtdIns), sphingomyelin (CerPCho), and cardiolipin (Ptd2Gro) – and their oxidation products during apoptosis induced in neurons by staurosporine (STS). The diversity of molecular species of phospholipids in rat cortical neurons followed the order Ptd2Gro > PtdEtn >> PtdCho >> PtdSer > PtdIns > CerPCho. The number of polyunsaturated oxidizable species decreased in the order Ptd2Gro >> PtdEtn > PtdCho > PtdSer > PtdIns > CerPCho. Thus a relatively minor class of phospholipids, Ptd2Gro, was represented in cortical neurons by the greatest variety of both total and peroxidizable molecular species. Quantitative fluorescence HPLC analysis employed to assess the oxidation of different classes of phospholipids in neuronal cells during intrinsic apoptosis induced by STS revealed that three anionic phospholipids – Ptd2Gro >> PtdSer > PtdIns – underwent robust oxidation. No significant oxidation in the most dominant phospholipid classes – PtdCho and PtdEtn – was detected. MS‐studies revealed the presence of hydroxy‐, hydroperoxy‐ as well as hydroxy‐/hydroperoxy‐species of Ptd2Gro, PtdSer, and PtdIns. Experiments in model systems where total cortex Ptd2Gro and PtdSer fractions were incubated in the presence of cytochrome c (cyt c) and H2O2, confirmed that molecular identities of the products formed were similar to the ones generated during STS‐induced neuronal apoptosis. The temporal sequence of biomarkers of STS‐induced apoptosis and phospholipid peroxidation combined with recently demonstrated redox catalytic properties of cyt c realized through its interactions with Ptd2Gro and PtdSer suggest that cyt c acts as a catalyst of selective peroxidation of anionic phospholipids yielding Ptd2Gro and PtdSer peroxidation products. These oxidation products participate in mitochondrial membrane permeability transition and in PtdSer externalization leading to recognition and uptake of apoptotic cells by professional phagocytes.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2008
Jianfei Jiang; Zhentai Huang; Qing Zhao; Weihong Feng; Natalia A. Belikova; Valerian E. Kagan
Bax/Bak activation and cardiolipin peroxidation are essential for cytochrome c release during apoptosis, yet, the link between them remains elusive. We report that sequence of events after exposure of mouse embryonic fibroblast (MEF) cells to actinomycin D followed the order: Bax translocation-->superoxide production-->cardiolipin peroxidation. Genetic ablation of Bax/Bak inhibited actinomycin D induced superoxide production and cardiolipin peroxidation. Rotenone caused robust superoxide generation but did not trigger cardiolipin peroxidation in Bax/Bak double knockout MEF cells. This suggests that, in addition to participating in ROS generation, Bax/Bak play another specific role in cardiolipin oxidation. In isolated mitochondria, recombinant Bax enhanced succinate induced cardiolipin oxidation and cytochrome c release. Mitochondrial peroxidase activity, likely involved in cardiolipin peroxidation, was enhanced upon incubation with recombinant Bax. Thus, cardiolipin peroxidation may be causatively and time-dependently related to Bax/Bak effects on ROS generation and peroxidase activation of cytochrome c.
Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2008
Zhentai Huang; Jianfei Jiang; Vladimir A. Tyurin; Qing Zhao; Alexandra Mnuskin; Jin Ren; Natalia A. Belikova; Weihong Feng; Igor V. Kurnikov; Valerian E. Kagan
Cardiolipin (CL), a unique mitochondrial phospholipid synthesized by CL synthase (CLS), plays important, yet not fully understood, roles in mitochondria-dependent apoptosis. We manipulated CL levels in HeLa cells by knocking down CLS using RNA interference and selected a clone of CL-deficient cells with approximately 45% of its normal content. ESI-MS analysis showed that the CL molecular species were the same in CL-deficient and CL-sufficient cells. CL deficiency did not change mitochondrial functions (membrane potential, reactive oxygen species generation, cellular ATP levels) but conferred resistance to apoptosis induced by actinomycin D (ActD), rotenone, or gamma-irradiation. During ActD-induced apoptosis, decreased CL peroxidation along with suppressed cytochrome (cyt) c release was observed in CL-deficient cells, whereas Bax translocation to mitochondria remained similar to that in CL-sufficient HeLa cells. The amounts of loosely bound cyt c (releasable under high ionic strength conditions) were the same in CL-deficient and CL-sufficient cells. Given that CL peroxidation during apoptosis is catalyzed by CL/cyt c complexes and CL oxidation products are essential for cyt c release from mitochondria, our results suggest that CL deficiency prevents adequate assembly of productive CL/cyt c complexes and CL peroxidation, resulting in increased resistance to apoptosis.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009
Alexandr A. Kapralov; Irina I. Vlasova; Weihong Feng; Akihiro Maeda; Karen Walson; Vladimir A. Tyurin; Zhentai Huang; Rajesh Aneja; Joseph A. Carcillo; Hülya Bayır; Valerian E. Kagan
As a hemoprotein, hemoglobin (Hb) can, in the presence of H2O2, act as a peroxidase. In red blood cells, this activity is regulated by the reducing environment. For stroma-free Hb this regulation is lost, and the potential for Hb to become a peroxidase is high and further increased by inflammatory cells generating superoxide. The latter can be converted into H2O2 and feed Hb peroxidase activity. Haptoglobins (Hp) bind with extracellular Hb and reportedly weaken Hb peroxidase activity. Here we demonstrate that: (i) Hb peroxidase activity is retained upon binding with Hp; (ii) in the presence of H2O2, Hb·Hp peroxidase complexes undergo covalent cross-linking; (iii) peroxidase activity of Hb·Hp complexes and aggregates consumes reductants such as ascorbate and nitric oxide; (iv) cross-linked Hb·Hp aggregates are taken up by macrophages at rates exceeding those for noncovalently cross-linked Hb·Hp complexes; (v) the engulfed Hb·Hp aggregates activate superoxide production and induce intracellular oxidative stress (deplete endogenous glutathione and stimulate lipid peroxidation); (vi) Hb·Hp aggregates cause cytotoxicity to macrophages; and (vii) Hb·Hp aggregates are present in septic plasma. Overall, our data suggest that under conditions of severe inflammation and oxidative stress, peroxidase activity of Hb·Hp covalent aggregates may cause macrophage dysfunction and microvascular vasoconstriction, which are commonly seen in severe sepsis and hemolytic diseases.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012
Alejandro K. Samhan-Arias; Jing Ji; Olga M. Demidova; Louis J. Sparvero; Weihong Feng; Vladimir A. Tyurin; Yulia Y. Tyurina; Michael W. Epperly; Anna A. Shvedova; Joel S. Greenberger; Hülya Bayır; Valerian E. Kagan; Andrew A. Amoscato
Oxidized phospholipid species are important, biologically relevant, lipid signaling molecules that usually exist in low abundance in biological tissues. Along with their inherent stability issues, these oxidized lipids present themselves as a challenge in their detection and identification. Often times, oxidized lipid species can co-chromatograph with non-oxidized species making the detection of the former extremely difficult, even with the use of mass spectrometry. In this study, a normal-phase and reverse-phase two dimensional high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC)-mass spectrometric system was applied to separate oxidized phospholipids from their non-oxidized counterparts, allowing unambiguous detection in a total lipid extract. We have utilized bovine heart cardiolipin as well as commercially available tetralinoleoyl cardiolipin oxidized with cytochrome c (cyt c) and hydrogen peroxide as well as with lipoxygenase to test the separation power of the system. Our findings indicate that oxidized species of not only cardiolipin, but other phospholipid species, can be effectively separated from their non-oxidized counterparts in this two dimensional system. We utilized three types of biological tissues and oxidative insults, namely rotenone treatment of lymphocytes to induce mitochondrial damage and cell death, pulmonary inhalation exposure to single walled carbon nanotubes, as well as total body irradiation, in order to identify cardiolipin oxidation products, critical to the cell damage/cell death pathways in these tissues following cellular stress/injury. Our results indicate that selective cardiolipin (CL) oxidation is a result of a non-random free radical process. In addition, we assessed the ability of the system to identify CL oxidation products in the brain, a tissue known for its extreme complexity and diversity of CL species. The ability of the two dimensional HPLC-mass spectrometric system to detect and characterize oxidized lipid products will allow new studies to be formulated to probe the answers to biologically important questions with regard to oxidative lipidomics and cellular insult. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Oxidized phospholipids - their properties and interactions with proteins.
Journal of Neurotrauma | 2012
Jing Ji; Yulia Y. Tyurina; Minke Tang; Weihong Feng; Donna B. Stolz; Robert Clark; David F. Meaney; Patrick M. Kochanek; Valerian E. Kagan; Hülya Bayır
Mechanical injury of neurites accompanied by rupture of mitochondrial membranes may lead to immediate nonspecific release and spreading of pro-apoptotic factors and activation of proteases, that is, execution of apoptotic program. In the current work, we studied the time course of the major biomarkers of apoptosis as they are induced by exposure of rat cortical neurons to mechanical stretch. By using transmission electron microscopy, we found that mitochondria in the neurites were damaged early (1 h) after mechanical stretch injury whereas somal mitochondria were significantly more resistant and demonstrated structural damage and degenerative mitochondrial changes at a later time point after stretch (12 h). We also report that the stretch injury caused immediate activation of reactive oxygen species production followed by selective oxidation of a mitochondria-specific phospholipid, cardiolipin, whose individual peroxidized molecular species have been identified and quantified by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry analysis. Most abundant neuronal phospholipids - phosphatidylcholine, phophatidylethanolamine - did not undergo oxidative modification. Simultaneously, a small-scale release of cytochrome c was observed. Notably, caspase activation and phosphatidylserine externalization - two irreversible apoptotic events designating a point of no return - are substantially delayed and do not occur until 6-12 h after the initial impact. The early onset of reactive oxygen species production and cytochrome c release may be relevant to direct stretch-induced damage to mitochondria. The delayed emergence of apoptotic neuronal death after the immediate mechanical damage to mitochondria suggests a possible window of opportunity for targeted therapies.