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Dive into the research topics where Weiju Wu is active.

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Featured researches published by Weiju Wu.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2016

Collectin-11 detects stress-induced L-fucose pattern to trigger renal epithelial injury

Conrad A. Farrar; David Tran; Ke Li; Weiju Wu; Qi Peng; Wilhelm J. Schwaeble; Wuding Zhou; Steven H. Sacks

Physiochemical stress induces tissue injury as a result of the detection of abnormal molecular patterns by sensory molecules of the innate immune system. Here, we have described how the recently discovered C-type lectin collectin-11 (CL-11, also known as CL-K1 and encoded by COLEC11) recognizes an abnormal pattern of L-fucose on postischemic renal tubule cells and activates a destructive inflammatory response. We found that intrarenal expression of CL-11 rapidly increases in the postischemic period and colocalizes with complement deposited along the basolateral surface of the proximal renal tubule in association with L-fucose, the potential binding ligand for CL-11. Mice with either generalized or kidney-specific deficiency of CL-11 were strongly protected against loss of renal function and tubule injury due to reduced complement deposition. Ex vivo renal tubule cells showed a marked capacity for CL-11 binding that was induced by cell stress under hypoxic or hypothermic conditions and prevented by specific removal of L-fucose. Further analysis revealed that cell-bound CL-11 required the lectin complement pathway-associated protease MASP-2 to trigger complement deposition. Given these results, we conclude that lectin complement pathway activation triggered by ligand-CL-11 interaction in postischemic tissue is a potent source of acute kidney injury and is amenable to sugar-specific blockade.


American Journal of Ophthalmology | 2008

Study of Macular Function by Multifocal Electroretinography in Patients With Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada Syndrome

Yang Pz; Wang Fang; Li Wang; Feng Wen; Weiju Wu; Aize Kijlstra

PURPOSE We longitudinally investigated macular function by multifocal electroretinography (mfERG) in a cohort of patients with Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada (VKH) syndrome. DESIGN Prospective study. METHODS VKH syndrome was diagnosed in 11 patients (22 eyes) according to history and ocular examinations. They were treated with immunosuppressive agents and the macular function was evaluated using best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) and mfERG before treatment and one, three, six, and 12 months after treatment. RESULTS All investigated patients with VKH syndrome showed active intraocular inflammation at their first visit. A decreased visual acuity (VA) and abnormalities of mfERG were observed in all these patients. VA rapidly improved at one and three months and gradually improved thereafter. All but one eye achieved a BCVA of > or =20/25 at 12 months following treatment. The N1 amplitude and latency were significantly improved at three and six months and continuously improved thereafter. The P1 amplitude and latency were significantly improved at one and three months and progressively improved thereafter. However, the amplitude of N1 and P1 waves was still significantly decreased at 12 months. CONCLUSION Macular function revealed by Snellen chart and mfERG is severely impaired in VKH patients with active uveitis. Treatment with immunosuppressive agents leads to an earlier, faster, and better recovery of VA, and a delayed but limited recovery of macular function as indicated by mfERG at 12 months. MfERG could be an ancillary test that may be useful in guiding therapy of patients with VKH syndrome.


Kidney International | 2016

The complement factor 5a receptor 1 has a pathogenic role in chronic inflammation and renal fibrosis in a murine model of chronic pyelonephritis

Naheed Choudhry; Ke Li; Ting Zhang; Kun-Yi Wu; Yun Song; Conrad A. Farrar; Na Wang; Chengfei Liu; Qi Peng; Weiju Wu; Steven H. Sacks; Wuding Zhou

Complement factor 5a (C5a) interaction with its receptor (C5aR1) contributes to the pathogenesis of inflammatory diseases, including acute kidney injury. However, its role in chronic inflammation, particularly in pathogen-associated disorders, is largely unknown. Here we tested whether the development of chronic inflammation and renal fibrosis is dependent on C5aR1 in a murine model of chronic pyelonephritis. C5aR1-deficient (C5aR1-/-) mice showed a significant reduction in bacterial load, tubule injury and tubulointerstitial fibrosis in the kidneys following infection, compared with C5aR1-sufficient mice. This was associated with reduced renal leukocyte infiltration specifically for the population of Ly6Chi proinflammatory monocytes/macrophages and reduced intrarenal gene expression of key proinflammatory and profibrogenic factors in C5aR1-/- mice following infection. Antagonizing C5aR1 decreased renal bacterial load, tissue inflammation and tubulointerstitial fibrosis. Ex vivo and in vitro studies showed that under infection conditions, C5a/C5aR1 interaction upregulated the production of proinflammatory and profibrogenic factors by renal tubular epithelial cells and monocytes/macrophages, whereas the phagocytic function of monocytes/macrophages was down-regulated. Thus, C5aR1-dependent bacterial colonization of the tubular epithelium, C5a/C5aR1-mediated upregulation of local inflammatory responses to uropathogenic E. coli and impairment of phagocytic function of phagocytes contribute to persistent bacterial colonization of the kidney, chronic renal inflammation and subsequent tubulointerstitial fibrosis.


Experimental Eye Research | 2014

A gradient of matrix-bound FGF-2 and perlecan is available to lens epithelial cells

Weiju Wu; Frederique M.D. Tholozan; Martin W. Goldberg; Leon Bowen; Jun Jie Wu; Roy A. Quinlan

Fibroblast growth factors play a key role in regulating lens epithelial cell proliferation and differentiation via an anteroposterior gradient that exists between the aqueous and vitreous humours. FGF-2 is the most important for lens epithelial cell proliferation and differentiation. It has been proposed that the presentation of FGF-2 to the lens epithelial cells involves the lens capsule as a source of matrix-bound FGF-2. Here we used immunogold labelling to measure the matrix-bound FGF-2 gradient on the inner surface of the lens capsule in flat-mounted preparations to visualize the FGF-2 available to lens epithelial cells. We also correlated FGF-2 levels with levels of its matrix-binding partner perlecan, a heparan sulphate proteoglycan (HSPG) and found the levels of both to be highest at the lens equator. These also coincided with increased levels of phosphorylated extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1 and 2 (pERK1/2) in lens epithelial cells that localised to condensed chromosomes of epithelial cells that were Ki-67 positive. The gradient of matrix-bound FGF-2 (anterior pole: 3.7 ± 1.3 particles/μm2; equator: 8.2 ± 1.9 particles/μm2; posterior pole: 4 ± 0.9 particles/μm2) and perlecan (anterior pole: 2.1 ± 0.4 particles/μm2; equator: 5 ± 2 particles/μm2; posterior pole: 1.9 ± 0.7 particles/μm2) available at the inner lens capsule surface was measured for the bovine lens. These data support the anteroposterior gradient hypothesis and provide the first measurement of the gradient for an important morphogen and its HSPG partner, perlecan, at the epithelial cell-lens capsule interface.


Open Biology | 2015

Nonlinear ionizing radiation-induced changes in eye lens cell proliferation, cyclin D1 expression and lens shape

Ewa Markiewicz; Stephen Barnard; Jackie Haines; Margaret Coster; Orry van Geel; Weiju Wu; Shane A. Richards; Elizabeth A. Ainsbury; Kai Rothkamm; Simon Bouffler; Roy A. Quinlan

Elevated cataract risk after radiation exposure was established soon after the discovery of X-rays in 1895. Today, increased cataract incidence among medical imaging practitioners and after nuclear incidents has highlighted how little is still understood about the biological responses of the lens to low-dose ionizing radiation (IR). Here, we show for the first time that in mice, lens epithelial cells (LECs) in the peripheral region repair DNA double strand breaks (DSB) after exposure to 20 and 100 mGy more slowly compared with circulating blood lymphocytes, as demonstrated by counts of γH2AX foci in cell nuclei. LECs in the central region repaired DSBs faster than either LECs in the lens periphery or lymphocytes. Although DSB markers (γH2AX, 53BP1 and RAD51) in both lens regions showed linear dose responses at the 1 h timepoint, nonlinear responses were observed in lenses for EdU (5-ethynyl-2′-deoxy-uridine) incorporation, cyclin D1 staining and cell density after 24 h at 100 and 250 mGy. After 10 months, the lens aspect ratio was also altered, an indicator of the consequences of the altered cell proliferation and cell density changes. A best-fit model demonstrated a dose-response peak at 500 mGy. These data identify specific nonlinear biological responses to low (less than 1000 mGy) dose IR-induced DNA damage in the lens epithelium.


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2015

A dimensionless ordered pull-through model of the mammalian lens epithelium evidences scaling across species and explains the age-dependent changes in cell density in the human lens

Jun Jie Wu; Weiju Wu; Frederique M.D. Tholozan; Christopher D. Saunter; John M. Girkin; Roy A. Quinlan

We present a mathematical (ordered pull-through; OPT) model of the cell-density profile for the mammalian lens epithelium together with new experimental data. The model is based upon dimensionless parameters, an important criterion for inter-species comparisons where lens sizes can vary greatly (e.g. bovine (approx. 18 mm); mouse (approx. 2 mm)) and confirms that mammalian lenses scale with size. The validated model includes two parameters: β/α, which is the ratio of the proliferation rate in the peripheral and in the central region of the lens; and γGZ, a dimensionless pull-through parameter that accounts for the cell transition and exit from the epithelium into the lens body. Best-fit values were determined for mouse, rat, rabbit, bovine and human lens epithelia. The OPT model accounts for the peak in cell density at the periphery of the lens epithelium, a region where cell proliferation is concentrated and reaches a maximum coincident with the germinative zone. The β/α ratio correlates with the measured FGF-2 gradient, a morphogen critical to lens cell survival, proliferation and differentiation. As proliferation declines with age, the OPT model predicted age-dependent changes in cell-density profiles, which we observed in mouse and human lenses.


Journal of Innate Immunity | 2017

Collectin-11 Is an Important Modulator of Retinal Pigment Epithelial Cell Phagocytosis and Cytokine Production

Xia Dong; Weiju Wu; Liang Ma; Chengfei Liu; Mohajeet B. Bhuckory; Liping Wang; Emeline F. Nandrot; Heping Xu; Ke Li; Yizhi Liu; Wuding Zhou

In this paper, we report previously unknown roles for collectin-11 (CL-11, a soluble C-type lectin) in modulating the retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cell functions of phagocytosis and cytokine production. We found that CL-11 and its carbohydrate ligand are expressed in both the murine and human neural retina; these resemble each other in terms of RPE and photoreceptor cells. Functional analysis of murine RPE cells showed that CL-11 facilitates the opsonophagocytosis of photoreceptor outer segments and apoptotic cells, and also upregulates IL-10 production. Mechanistic analysis revealed that calreticulin on the RPE cells is required for CL-11-mediated opsonophagocytosis whereas signal-regulatory protein α and mannosyl residues on the cells are involved in the CL-11-mediated upregulation of IL-10 production. This study is the first to demonstrate the role of CL-11 and the molecular mechanisms involved in modulating RPE cell phagocytosis and cytokine production. It provides a new insight into retinal health and disease and has implications for other phagocytic cells.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2017

Collectin-11 Promotes the Development of Renal Tubulointerstitial Fibrosis

Weiju Wu; Chengfei Liu; Conrad A. Farrar; Liang Ma; Xia Dong; Steven H. Sacks; Ke Li; Wuding Zhou

Collectin-11 is a recently described soluble C-type lectin, a pattern recognition molecule of the innate immune system that has distinct roles in host defense, embryonic development, and acute inflammation. However, little is known regarding the role of collectin-11 in tissue fibrosis. Here, we investigated collectin-11 in the context of renal ischemia-reperfusion injury. Compared with wild-type littermate controls, Collec11 deficient (CL-11-/- ) mice had significantly reduced renal functional impairment, tubular injury, renal leukocyte infiltration, renal tissue inflammation/fibrogenesis, and collagen deposition in the kidneys after renal ischemia-reperfusion injury. In vitro, recombinant collectin-11 potently promoted leukocyte migration and renal fibroblast proliferation in a carbohydrate-dependent manner. Additionally, compared with wild-type kidney grafts, CL-11-/-mice kidney grafts displayed significantly reduced tubular injury and collagen deposition after syngeneic kidney transplant. Our findings demonstrate a pathogenic role for collectin-11 in the development of tubulointerstitial fibrosis and suggest that local collectin-11 promotes this fibrosis through effects on leukocyte chemotaxis and renal fibroblast proliferation. This insight into the pathogenesis of tubulointerstitial fibrosis may have implications for CKD mediated by other causes as well.


JCI insight | 2017

C5aR1 promotes acute pyelonephritis induced by uropathogenic E. coli

Ke Li; Kun-Yi Wu; Weiju Wu; Na Wang; Ting Zhang; Naheed Choudhry; Yun Song; Conrad A. Farrar; Liang Ma; Lin-lin Wei; Zhao-Yang Duan; Xia Dong; En-Qi Liu; Zongfang Li; Steven H. Sacks; Wuding Zhou

C5a receptor 1 (C5aR1) is a G protein–coupled receptor for C5a and also an N-linked glycosylated protein. In addition to myeloid cells, C5aR1 is expressed on epithelial cells. In this study, we examined the role of C5aR1 in bacterial adhesion/colonization of renal tubular epithelium and addressed the underlying mechanisms of this role. We show that acute kidney infection was significantly reduced in mice with genetic deletion or through pharmacologic inhibition of C5aR1 following bladder inoculation with uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC). This was associated with reduced expression of terminal α-mannosyl residues (Man; a ligand for type 1 fimbriae of E. coli) on the luminal surface of renal tubular epithelium and reduction of early UPEC colonization in these mice. Confocal microscopy demonstrated that UPEC bind to Man on the luminal surface of renal tubular epithelium. In vitro analyses showed that C5a stimulation enhances Man expression in renal tubular epithelial cells and subsequent bacterial adhesion, which, at least in part, is dependent on TNF-α driven by C5aR1-mediated intracellular signaling. Our findings demonstrate a previously unknown pathogenic role for C5aR1 in acute pyelonephritis, proposing a potentially novel mechanism by which C5a/C5aR1 signaling mediates upregulation of carbohydrate ligands on renal tubules to facilitate UPEC adhesion.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2018

Epithelial C5aR1 Signaling Enhances Uropathogenic Escherichia coli Adhesion to Human Renal Tubular Epithelial Cells

Yun Song; Kun-Yi Wu; Weiju Wu; Zhao-Yang Duan; Ya-Feng Gao; Liang-Dong Zhang; Tie Chong; Malgorzata A. Garstka; Wuding Zhou; Ke Li

Recent work in a murine model of ascending urinary tract infection has suggested that C5a/C5aR1 interactions play a pathogenic role in the development of renal infection through enhancement of bacterial adhesion/colonization to renal tubular epithelial cells (RTECs). In the present study, we extended these observations to human. We show that renal tubular epithelial C5aR1 signaling is involved in promoting uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) adhesion/invasion of host cells. Stimulation of primary cultures of RTEC with C5a resulted in significant increases in UPEC adhesion/invasion of the RTEC. This was associated with enhanced expression of terminal α-mannosyl residues (Man) (a ligand for type 1 fimbriae of E. coli) in the RTEC following C5a stimulation. Mechanism studies revealed that C5aR1-mediated activation of ERK1/2/NF-κB and upregulation of proinflammatory cytokine production (i.e., TNF-α) is at least partly responsible for the upregulation of Man expression and bacterial adhesion. Clinical sample studies showed that C5aR1 and Man were clearly detected in the renal tubular epithelium of normal human kidney biopsies, and UPEC bound to the epithelium in a d-mannose-dependent manner. Additionally, C5a levels were significantly increased in urine of urinary tract infection patients compared with healthy controls. Our data therefore demonstrate that, in agreement with observations in mice, human renal tubular epithelial C5aR1 signaling can upregulate Man expression in RTEC, which enhances UPEC adhesion to and invasion of RTEC. It also suggests the in vivo relevance of upregulation of Man expression in renal tubular epithelium by C5a/C5aR1 interactions and its potential impact on renal infection.

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Ke Li

Xi'an Jiaotong University

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Chengfei Liu

Xi'an Jiaotong University

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Liang Ma

King's College London

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Xia Dong

Medical Research Council

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Kun-Yi Wu

Xi'an Jiaotong University

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Yun Song

Xi'an Jiaotong University

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