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Dive into the research topics where Xuejun Jiang is active.

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Featured researches published by Xuejun Jiang.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

ULK1·ATG13·FIP200 Complex Mediates mTOR Signaling and Is Essential for Autophagy

Ian G. Ganley; Du H. Lam; Junru Wang; Xiaojun Ding; She Chen; Xuejun Jiang

Autophagy is a degradative process that recycles long-lived and faulty cellular components. It is linked to many diseases and is required for normal development. ULK1, a mammalian serine/threonine protein kinase, plays a key role in the initial stages of autophagy, though the exact molecular mechanism is unknown. Here we report identification of a novel protein complex containing ULK1 and two additional protein factors, FIP200 and ATG13, all of which are essential for starvation-induced autophagy. Both FIP200 and ATG13 are critical for correct localization of ULK1 to the pre-autophagosome and stability of ULK1 protein. Additionally, we demonstrate by using both cellular experiments and a de novo in vitro reconstituted reaction that FIP200 and ATG13 can enhance ULK1 kinase activity individually but both are required for maximal stimulation. Further, we show that ATG13 and ULK1 are phosphorylated by the mTOR pathway in a nutrient starvation-regulated manner, indicating that the ULK1·ATG13·FIP200 complex acts as a node for integrating incoming autophagy signals into autophagosome biogenesis.


Molecular Cell | 2002

Three-dimensional structure of the apoptosome: Implications for assembly, procaspase-9 binding, and activation

Devrim Acehan; Xuejun Jiang; David Gene Morgan; John E. Heuser; Xiaodong Wang; Christopher W. Akey

The apoptosome is an Apaf-1 cytochrome c complex that activates procaspase-9. The three-dimensional structure of the apoptosome has been determined at 27 A resolution, to reveal a wheel-like particle with 7-fold symmetry. Molecular modeling was used to identify the caspase recruitment and WD40 domains within the apoptosome and to infer likely positions of the CED4 homology motif and cytochrome c. This analysis suggests a plausible role for cytochrome c in apoptosome assembly. In a subsequent structure, a noncleavable mutant of procaspase-9 was localized to the central region of the apoptosome. This complex promotes the efficient activation of procaspase-3. Therefore, the cleavage of procaspase-9 is not required to form an active cell death complex.


Cell | 2007

Ubiquitination Regulates PTEN Nuclear Import and Tumor Suppression

Lloyd C. Trotman; Xinjiang Wang; Andrea Alimonti; Zhenbang Chen; Julie Teruya-Feldstein; Haijuan Yang; Nikola P. Pavletich; Brett S. Carver; Carlos Cordon-Cardo; Hediye Erdjument-Bromage; Paul Tempst; Sung Gil Chi; Hyo Jong Kim; Tom Misteli; Xuejun Jiang; Pier Paolo Pandolfi

The PTEN tumor suppressor is frequently affected in cancer cells, and inherited PTEN mutation causes cancer-susceptibility conditions such as Cowden syndrome. PTEN acts as a plasma-membrane lipid-phosphatase antagonizing the phosphoinositide 3-kinase/AKT cell survival pathway. However, PTEN is also found in cell nuclei, but mechanism, function, and relevance of nuclear localization remain unclear. We show that nuclear PTEN is essential for tumor suppression and that PTEN nuclear import is mediated by its monoubiquitination. A lysine mutant of PTEN, K289E associated with Cowden syndrome, retains catalytic activity but fails to accumulate in nuclei of patient tissue due to an import defect. We identify this and another lysine residue as major monoubiquitination sites essential for PTEN import. While nuclear PTEN is stable, polyubiquitination leads to its degradation in the cytoplasm. Thus, we identify cancer-associated mutations of PTEN that target its posttranslational modification and demonstrate how a discrete molecular mechanism dictates tumor progression by differentiating between degradation and protection of PTEN.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004

Apoptotic and autophagic cell death induced by histone deacetylase inhibitors

Yufang Shao; Zhonghua Gao; Paul A. Marks; Xuejun Jiang

Histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors can induce programmed cell death in cancer cells, although the underlying mechanism is obscure. In this study, we show that two distinct HDAC inhibitors, butyrate and suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA), induced caspase-3 activation and cell death in multiple human cancer cell lines. The activation of caspase-3 was via the mitochondria/cytochrome c-mediated apoptotic pathway because it was abrogated in mouse embryonic fibroblasts with knockout of Apaf-1, the essential mediator of the pathway. Overexpression of Bcl-XL in HeLa cells also blocked caspase activation by the HDAC inhibitors. Nevertheless, Apaf-1 knockout, overexpression of Bcl-XL, and pharmacological inhibition of caspase activity did not prevent SAHA and butyrate-induced cell death. The cells undergoing such caspase-independent death had unambiguous morphological features of autophagic cell death. Therefore, HDAC inhibitors can induce both mitochondria-mediated apoptosis and caspase-independent autophagic cell death. Induction of autophagic cell death by HDAC inhibitors has clear clinical implications in treating cancers with apoptotic defects.


Cell | 2007

NEDD4-1 Is a Proto-Oncogenic Ubiquitin Ligase for PTEN

Xinjiang Wang; Lloyd C. Trotman; Theresa M. Koppie; Andrea Alimonti; Zhenbang Chen; Zhonghua Gao; Junru Wang; Hediye Erdjument-Bromage; Paul Tempst; Carlos Cordon-Cardo; Pier Paolo Pandolfi; Xuejun Jiang

The tumor suppressor PTEN, a critical regulator for multiple cellular processes, is mutated or deleted frequently in various human cancers. Subtle reductions in PTEN expression levels have profound impacts on carcinogenesis. Here we show that PTEN level is regulated by ubiquitin-mediated proteasomal degradation, and purified its ubiquitin ligase as HECT-domain protein NEDD4-1. In cells NEDD4-1 negatively regulates PTEN stability by catalyzing PTEN polyubiquitination. Consistent with the tumor-suppressive role of PTEN, overexpression of NEDD4-1 potentiated cellular transformation. Strikingly, in a mouse cancer model and multiple human cancer samples where the genetic background of PTEN was normal but its protein levels were low, NEDD4-1 was highly expressed, suggesting that aberrant upregulation of NEDD4-1 can posttranslationally suppress PTEN in cancers. Elimination of NEDD4-1 expression inhibited xenotransplanted tumor growth in a PTEN-dependent manner. Therefore, NEDD4-1 is a potential proto-oncogene that negatively regulates PTEN via ubiquitination, a paradigm analogous to that of Mdm2 and p53.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Cytochrome c Promotes Caspase-9 Activation by Inducing Nucleotide Binding to Apaf-1

Xuejun Jiang; Xiaodong Wang

We report here the biochemical analysis of the reconstituted de novo procaspase-9 activation using highly purified cytochrome c, recombinant apoptotic protease-activating factor-1 (Apaf-1), and recombinant procaspase-9. Using a nucleotide binding assay, we found that Apaf-1 alone bound dATP poorly and the nucleotide binding to Apaf-1 was significantly stimulated by cytochrome c. The binding of dATP to Apaf-1 induces the formation of a multimeric Apaf-1·cytochromec complex, apoptosome. Procaspase-9 also synergistically promotes dATP binding to Apaf-1 in a cytochromec-dependent manner. The dATP bound to apoptosome remained as dATP, not dADP. A nonhydrolyzable ATP analog, ADPCP (β,γ-methylene adenosine 5′-triphosphate), was able to support apoptosome formation and caspase activation in place of dATP or ATP. These data indicate that the key event in Apaf-1-mediated caspase-9 activation is cytochrome c-induced dATP binding to Apaf-1.


Cell | 2011

SNARE proteins are required for macroautophagy

Usha Nair; Anjali Jotwani; Jiefei Geng; Noor Gammoh; Diana Richerson; Wei Lien Yen; Janice Griffith; Shanta Nag; Ke Wang; Tyler J. Moss; Misuzu Baba; James A. McNew; Xuejun Jiang; Fulvio Reggiori; Thomas J. Melia; Daniel J. Klionsky

Macroautophagy mediates the degradation of long-lived proteins and organelles via the de novo formation of double-membrane autophagosomes that sequester cytoplasm and deliver it to the vacuole/lysosome; however, relatively little is known about autophagosome biogenesis. Atg8, a phosphatidylethanolamine-conjugated protein, was previously proposed to function in autophagosome membrane expansion, based on the observation that it mediates liposome tethering and hemifusion in vitro. We show here that with physiological concentrations of phosphatidylethanolamine, Atg8 does not act as a fusogen. Rather, we provide evidence for the involvement of exocytic Q/t-SNAREs in autophagosome formation, acting in the recruitment of key autophagy components to the site of autophagosome formation, and in regulating the organization of Atg9 into tubulovesicular clusters. Additionally, we found that the endosomal Q/t-SNARE Tlg2 and the R/v-SNAREs Sec22 and Ykt6 interact with Sso1-Sec9, and are required for normal Atg9 transport. Thus, multiple SNARE-mediated fusion events are likely to be involved in autophagosome biogenesis.


Molecular Cell | 2011

Distinct Autophagosomal-Lysosomal Fusion Mechanism Revealed by Thapsigargin-Induced Autophagy Arrest

Ian G. Ganley; Pui-Mun Wong; Noor Gammoh; Xuejun Jiang

Autophagy, a catabolic pathway that delivers cellular components to lysosomes for degradation, can be activated by stressful conditions such as nutrient starvation and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress. We report that thapsigargin, an ER stressor widely used to induce autophagy, in fact blocks autophagy. Thapsigargin does not affect autophagosome formation but leads to accumulation of mature autophagosomes by blocking autophagosome fusion with the endocytic system. Strikingly, thapsigargin has no effect on endocytosis-mediated degradation of epidermal growth factor receptor. Molecularly, while both Rab7 and Vps16 are essential regulatory components for endocytic fusion with lysosomes, we found that Rab7 but not Vps16 is required for complete autophagy flux, and that thapsigargin blocks recruitment of Rab7 to autophagosomes. Therefore, autophagosomal-lysosomal fusion must be governed by a distinct molecular mechanism compared to general endocytic fusion.


Autophagy | 2013

The ULK1 complex: Sensing nutrient signals for autophagy activation

Pui-Mun Wong; Cindy Puente; Ian G. Ganley; Xuejun Jiang

The Atg1/ULK1 complex plays a central role in starvation-induced autophagy, integrating signals from upstream sensors such as MTOR and AMPK and transducing them to the downstream autophagy pathway. Much progress has been made in the last few years in understanding the mechanisms by which the complex is regulated through protein-protein interactions and post-translational modifications, providing insights into how the cell modulates autophagy, particularly in response to nutrient status. However, how the ULK1 complex transduces upstream signals to the downstream central autophagy pathway is still unclear. Although the protein kinase activity of ULK1 is required for its autophagic function, its protein substrate(s) responsible for autophagy activation has not been identified. Furthermore, examples of potential ULK1-independent autophagy have emerged, indicating that under certain specific contexts, the ULK1 complex might be dispensable for autophagy activation. This raises the question of how the autophagic machinery is activated independent of the ULK1 complex and what are the biological functions of such noncanonical autophagy pathways.


Cell Cycle | 2005

Histone deacetylase inhibitors in programmed cell death and cancer therapy.

Paul A. Marks; Xuejun Jiang

Histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors, such as suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA), are targeted anticancer agents that have significant anticancer activity at doses well tolerated by patients.1 Recently, we found that HDAC inhibitors can trigger both mitochondria-mediated apoptosis and caspase-independent autophagic cell death, indicating potential benefit of HDAC inhibitors in treating cancers with apoptotic defects.2 We also found that thioredoxin (TRX) might play a significant role in HDAC inhibitor-induced cell death, and HDAC inhibitors increase TRX levels in normal cells but not transformed cells, which is likely to be one of the reasons why HDAC inhibitors preferentially kill cancer cells.3 In this review, we discuss the study of HDAC inhibitors in cell death and cancer research, the implications of our recent findings, and some outstanding questions that need to be addressed.

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Dive into the Xuejun Jiang's collaboration.

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Zhonghua Gao

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Hao Wu

Boston Children's Hospital

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Pui-Mun Wong

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Junru Wang

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Paul C. Sternweis

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Xinjiang Wang

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Hediye Erdjument-Bromage

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Michael Overholtzer

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Prashant Monian

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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William D. Singer

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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