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Dive into the research topics where Xueqing Fu is active.

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Featured researches published by Xueqing Fu.


Molecular Plant | 2015

A Basic Leucine Zipper Transcription Factor, AabZIP1, Connects Abscisic Acid Signaling with Artemisinin Biosynthesis in Artemisia annua

Fangyuan Zhang; Xueqing Fu; Zongyou Lv; Xu Lu; Qian Shen; Ling Zhang; Mengmeng Zhu; Guofeng Wang; Xiaofen Sun; Zhihua Liao; Kexuan Tang

Artemisinin is a sesquiterpenoid especially synthesized in the Chinese herbal plant, Artemisia annua, which is widely used in the treatment of malaria. Artemisinin accumulation can be enhanced by exogenous abscisic acid (ABA) treatment. However, it is not known how ABA signaling regulates artemisinin biosynthesis. A global expression profile and phylogenetic analysis as well as the dual-LUC screening revealed that a basic leucine zipper family transcription factor from A. annua (namely AabZIP1) was involved in ABA signaling to regulate artemisinin biosynthesis. AabZIP1 had a higher expression level in the inflorescences than in other tissues; ABA treatment, drought, and salt stress strongly induced the expression of AabZIP1. Yeast one-hybrid assay and electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA) showed that AabZIP1 bound to the ABA-responsive elements (ABRE) in the promoter regions of the amorpha-4,11-diene synthase (ADS) gene and CYP71AV1, which are two key structural genes of the artemisinin biosynthetic pathway. A mutagenesis assay showed that the C1 domain in the N-terminus of AabZIP1 was important for its transactivation activity. Furthermore, the activation of ADS and CYP71AV1 promoters by AabZIP1 was enhanced by ABA treatment in transient dual-LUC analysis. The AabZIP1 variant with C1 domain deletion lost the ability to activate ADS and CYP71AV1 promoters regardless of ABA treatment. Notably, overexpression of AabZIP1 in A. annua resulted in significantly increased accumulation of artemisinin. Our results indicate that ABA promotes artemisinin biosynthesis, likely through 1 activation of ADS and CYP71AV1 expression by AabZIP in A. annua. Meanwhile, our findings reveal the potential value of AabZIP1 in genetic engineering of artemisinin production.


Plant Cell Reports | 2014

Transgenic approach to increase artemisinin content in Artemisia annua L.

Kexuan Tang; Qian Shen; Tingxiang Yan; Xueqing Fu

Artemisinin, the endoperoxide sesquiterpene lactone, is an effective antimalarial drug isolated from the Chinese medicinal plant Artemisia annua L. Due to its effectiveness against multi-drug-resistant cerebral malaria, it becomes the essential components of the artemisinin-based combination therapies which are recommended by the World Health Organization as the preferred choice for malaria tropica treatments. To date, plant A. annua is still the main commercial source of artemisinin. Although semi-synthesis of artemisinin via artemisinic acid in yeast is feasible at present, another promising approach to reduce the price of artemisinin is using plant metabolic engineering to obtain a higher content of artemisinin in transgenic plants. In the past years, an Agrobacterium-mediated transformation system of A. annua has been established by which a number of genes related to artemisinin biosynthesis have been successfully transferred into A. annua plants. In this review, the progress on increasing artemisinin content in A. annua by transgenic approach and its future prospect are summarized and discussed.


Plant Molecular Biology Reporter | 2014

Molecular Cloning and Characterization of a Trichome-Specific Promoter of Artemisinic Aldehyde Δ11(13) Reductase (DBR2) in Artemisia annua

Weimin Jiang; Xu Lu; Bo Qiu; Fangyuan Zhang; Qian Shen; Zongyou Lv; Xueqing Fu; Tingxiang Yan; Erdi Gao; Mengmeng Zhu; Lingxian Chen; Ling Zhang; Guofeng Wang; Xiaofen Sun; Kexuan Tang

Artemisinin is widely used as an antimalarial drug around the world. Artemisinic aldehyde Δ11(13) reductase (DBR2) is a key enzyme which reduces artemisinic aldehyde to dihydroartemisinic aldehyde in the biosynthesis of artemisinin. In this study, two fragments encompassing a putative promoter of DBR2, designated as DBR2pro1 and DBR2pro2, were isolated using genomic DNA walking. The transcription start site and the putative cis-elements of each version of promoter were predicted using bioinformatic analysis. In order to study the function of the cloned promoter, Artemisia annua was transformed with β-glucuronidase (GUS) reporter gene driven by DBR2pro1 and DBR2pro2, respectively. GUS staining results demonstrated that both DBR2pro1 and DBR2pro2 were strongly expressed in glandular secretory trichomes (GSTs) of leaf primordia and flower buds, but were not obviously expressed in roots, stems, old leaves, and fully developed flowers, thus indicating that the two versions of promoter were functional and specifically expressed in GSTs.


Plant and Cell Physiology | 2016

Branch Pathway Blocking in Artemisia annua is a Useful Method for Obtaining High Yield Artemisinin.

Zongyou Lv; Fangyuan Zhang; Qifang Pan; Xueqing Fu; Weimin Jiang; Qian Shen; Tingxiang Yan; Pu Shi; Xu Lu; Xiaofen Sun; Kexuan Tang

There are many biosynthetic pathways competing for the metabolic flux with the artemisinin biosynthetic pathway in Artemisia annua L. To study the relationship between genes encoding enzymes at branching points and the artemisinin biosynthetic pathway, β-caryophyllene, β-farnesene and squalene were sprayed on young seedlings of A. annua. Transient expression assays indicated that the transcription levels of β-caryophyllene synthase (CPS), β-farnesene synthase (BFS) and squalene synthase (SQS) were inhibited by β-caryophyllene, β-farnesene and squalene, respectively, while expression of some artemisinin biosynthetic pathway genes increased. Thus, inhibition of these genes encoding enzymes at branching points may be helpful to improve the artemisinin content. For further study, the expression levels of four branch pathway genes CPS, BFS, germacrene A synthase (GAS) and SQS were down-regulated by the antisense method in A. annua. In anti-CPS transgenic plants, mRNA levels of BFS and ADS were increased, and the contents of β-farnesene, artemisinin and dihydroartemisinic acid (DHAA) were increased by 212, 77 and 132%, respectively. The expression levels of CPS, SQS, GAS, amorpha-4,11-diene synthase (ADS), amorphadiene 12-hydroxylase (CYP71AV1) and aldehyde dehydrogenase 1 (ALDH1) were increased in anti-BFS transgenic plants and, at the same time, the contents of artemisinin and DHAA were increased by 77% and 54%, respectively, and the content of squalene was increased by 235%. In anti-GAS transgenic plants, mRNA levels of CPS, BFS, ADS and ALDH1 were increased. The contents of artemisinin and DHAA were enhanced by 103% and 130%, respectively. In anti-SQS transgenic plants, the transcription levels of BFS, GAS, CPS, ADS, CYP71AV1 and ALDH1 were all increased. Contents of artemisinin and DHAA were enhanced by 71% and 223%, respectively, while β-farnesene was raised to 123%. The mRNA level of artemisinic aldehyde Δ11(13) reductase (DBR2) had changed little in almost all transgenic plants.


Plant and Cell Physiology | 2016

Overexpression of a Novel NAC Domain-Containing Transcription Factor Gene (AaNAC1) Enhances the Content of Artemisinin and Increases Tolerance to Drought and Botrytis cinerea in Artemisia annua.

Zongyou Lv; Shu Wang; Fangyuan Zhang; Lingxian Chen; Xiaolong Hao; Qifang Pan; Xueqing Fu; Ling Li; Xiaofen Sun; Kexuan Tang

The NAC (NAM, ATAF and CUC) superfamily is one of the largest plant-specific transcription factor families. NAC transcription factors always play important roles in response to various abiotic stresses. A NAC transcription factor gene AaNAC1 containing a complete open reading frame (ORF) of 864 bp was cloned from Artemisia annua. The expression of AaNAC1 could be induced by dehydration, cold, salicylic acid (SA) and methyl jasmonate (MJ), suggesting that it might be a key regulator of stress signaling pathways in A. annua. AaNAC1 was shown to be localized to the nuclei by transforming tobacco leaf epidermal cells. When AaNAC1 was overexpressed in A. annua, the content of artemisinin and dihydroartemisinic acid was increased by 79% and 150%, respectively. The expression levels of artemisinin biosynthetic pathway genes, i.e. amorpha-4,11-diene synthase (ADS), artemisinic aldehyde Δ11(13) reductase (DBR2) and aldehyde dehydrogenase 1 (ALDH1), were increased. Dual luciferase (dual-LUC) assays showed that AaNAC1 could activate the transcription of ADS in vivo. The transgenic A. annua exhibited increased tolerance to drought and resistance to Botrytis cinerea. When AaNAC1 was overexpressed in Arabidopsis, the transgenic Arabidopsis were markedly more tolerant to drought. The transgenic Arabidopsis showed increased resistance to B. cinerea. These results indicate that AaNAC1 can potentially be used in transgenic breeding for improving the content of artemisinin and drought tolerance in A. annua.


BioMed Research International | 2016

Overexpression of AaWRKY1 Leads to an Enhanced Content of Artemisinin in Artemisia annua

Weimin Jiang; Xueqing Fu; Qifang Pan; Yueli Tang; Qian Shen; Zongyou Lv; Tingxiang Yan; Pu Shi; Ling Li; Lida Zhang; Guofeng Wang; Xiaofen Sun; Kexuan Tang

Artemisinin is an effective component of drugs against malaria. The regulation of artemisinin biosynthesis is at the forefront of artemisinin research. Previous studies showed that AaWRKY1 can regulate the expression of ADS, which is the first key enzyme in artemisinin biosynthetic pathway. In this study, AaWRKY1 was cloned, and it activated ADSpro and CYPpro in tobacco using dual-LUC assay. To further study the function of AaWRKY1, pCAMBIA2300-AaWRKY1 construct under 35S promoter was generated. Transgenic plants containing AaWRKY1 were obtained, and four independent lines with high expression of AaWRKY1 were analyzed. The expression of ADS and CYP, the key enzymes in artemisinin biosynthetic pathway, was dramatically increased in AaWRKY1-overexpressing A. annua plants. Furthermore, the artemisinin yield increased significantly in AaWRKY1-overexpressing A. annua plants. These results showed that AaWRKY1 increased the content of artemisinin by regulating the expression of both ADS and CYP. It provides a new insight into the mechanism of regulation on artemisinin biosynthesis via transcription factors in the future.


BioMed Research International | 2014

Type 2C Phosphatase 1 of Artemisia annua L. Is a Negative Regulator of ABA Signaling

Fangyuan Zhang; Xueqing Fu; Zongyou Lv; Qian Shen; Tingxian Yan; Weiming Jiang; Guofeng Wang; Xiaofen Sun; Kexuan Tang

The phytohormone abscisic acid (ABA) plays an important role in plant development and environmental stress response. Additionally, ABA also regulates secondary metabolism such as artemisinin in the medicinal plant Artemisia annua L. Although an earlier study showed that ABA receptor, AaPYL9, plays a positive role in ABA-induced artemisinin content improvement, many components in the ABA signaling pathway remain to be elucidated in Artemisia annua L. To get insight of the function of AaPYL9, we isolated and characterized an AaPYL9-interacting partner, AaPP2C1. The coding sequence of AaPP2C1 encodes a deduced protein of 464 amino acids, with all the features of plant type clade A PP2C. Transcriptional analysis showed that the expression level of AaPP2C1 is increased after ABA, salt, and drought treatments. Yeast two-hybrid and bimolecular fluorescence complementation assays (BiFC) showed that AaPYL9 interacted with AaPP2C1. The P89S, H116A substitution in AaPYL9 as well as G199D substitution or deletion of the third phosphorylation site-like motif in AaPP2C1 abolished this interaction. Furthermore, constitutive expression of AaPP2C1 conferred ABA insensitivity compared with the wild type. In summary, our data reveals that AaPP2C1 is an AaPYL9-interacting partner and involved in the negative modulation of the ABA signaling pathway in A. annua L.


Plant Molecular Biology Reporter | 2014

Characterization of the Promoter of Artemisia annua Amorpha-4,11-diene Synthase (ADS) Gene Using Homologous and Heterologous Expression as well as Deletion Analysis

Mengmeng Zhu; Fangyuan Zhang; Zongyou Lv; Qian Shen; Ling Zhang; Xu Lu; Weimin Jiang; Xueqing Fu; Tingxiang Yan; Lingxian Chen; Guofeng Wang; Kexuan Tang

Amorpha-4,11-diene synthase (ADS) is the first key enzyme of artemisinin biosynthetic pathway in Artemisia annua L. In this study, the promoter region of the ADS gene has been cloned and used to demonstrate the expression of GUS reporter gene in both glandular trichomes of A. annua and non-glandular trichomes of Arabidopsis thaliana following homologous and heterologous expression of ADS promoter–GUS fusion. Subsequently, 5′ sequential deletion analysis of the ADS promoter revealed that a short sequence, −350 upstream of the transcription start site, was sufficient for trichome-specific expression in A. thaliana and that the region from −350 to −300 contained essential elements for this observed specificity. However, frequencies of transgenic A. thaliana plants displaying trichome-specific expressions varied between different lines, and all the lines with deleted fragments of the ADS promoter showed lower frequencies than the line with full-length ADS promoter. Most lines with deleted ADS promoter–GUS fusions showed GUS expressions in the guard cells of stomata as well, which was not observed in A. thaliana plants transformed with the full-length ADS promoter. GUS activities varied among different transgenic lines as well, both in transiently transformed Nicotiana benthamiana and stably transformed A. thaliana, with promoter–deletion lines exhibiting higher GUS activities than the full-length ADS promoter line.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2017

Transcriptome Analysis of Genes Associated with the Artemisinin Biosynthesis by Jasmonic Acid Treatment under the Light in Artemisia annua

Xiaolong Hao; Yijun Zhong; Xueqing Fu; Zongyou Lv; Qian Shen; Tingxiang Yan; Pu Shi; Yanan Ma; Minghui Chen; Xueying Lv; Zhangkuanyu Wu; Jingya Zhao; Xiaofen Sun; Ling Li; Kexuan Tang

Artemisinin is a sesquiterpene lactone endoperoxide extracted from a traditional Chinese medicinal plant Artemisia annua. Artemisinin-based combination therapies (ACTs) are recommended as the best treatment of malaria by the World Health Organization (WHO). Both the phytohormone jasmonic acid (JA) and light promote artemisinin biosynthesis in A. annua. Interestingly, we found that the increase of artemisinin biosynthesis by JA was dependent on light. However, the relationship between the two signal pathways mediated by JA and light remains unclear. Here, we collected the A. annua seedlings of 24 h continuous light (Light), 24 h dark treatment (Dark), 4 h MeJA treatment under the continuous light conditions (Light-MeJA-4h) and 4 h MeJA treatment under the dark conditions (Dark-MeJA-4h) and performed the transcriptome sequencing using Illumina HiSeq 4000 System. A total of 266.7 million clean data were produced and assembled into 185,653 unigenes, with an average length of 537 bp. Among them, 59,490 unigenes were annotated and classified based on the public information. Differential expression analyses were performed between Light and Dark, Light and Light-MeJA-4h, Dark and Dark-MeJA-4h, Light-MeJA-4h, and Dark-MeJA-4h, respectively. Furthermore, transcription factor (TF) analysis revealed that 1588 TFs were identified and divided into 55 TF families, with 284 TFs down-regulated in the Dark relative to Light and 96 TFs up-regulated in the Light-MeJA-4h relative to Light. 8 TFs were selected as candidates for regulating the artemisinin biosynthesis and one of them was validated to be involved in artemisinin transcriptional regulation by Dual-Luciferase (Dual-LUC) assay. The transcriptome data shown in our study offered a comprehensive transcriptional expression pattern influenced by the MeJA and light in A. annua seedling, which will serve as a valuable resource for further studies on transcriptional regulation mechanisms underlying artemisinin biosynthesis.


Plant Cell Tissue and Organ Culture | 2017

Promotion of artemisinin content in Artemisia annua by overexpression of multiple artemisinin biosynthetic pathway genes

Pu Shi; Xueqing Fu; Meng Liu; Qian Shen; Weimin Jiang; Ling Li; Xiaofen Sun; Kexuan Tang

Artemisinin, isolated from an annual herbaceous plant Artemisia annua L., is an effective antimalarial compound. However, artemisinin is accumulated in small amounts (0.01–0.1% leaf dry weight) in A. annua, resulting in constant high artemisinin price. Although metabolic engineering of partial artemisinin metabolic pathway in yeast achieved great success, artemisinin from A. annua is still the important business resource. Here, we report on the generation of transgenic plants with simultaneously overexpressing four artemisinin biosynthetic pathway genes, amorpha-4,11-diene synthase gene (ADS), amorpha-4,11-diene 12-monooxygenase gene (CYP71AV1), cytochrome P450 reductase gene (CPR), and aldehyde dehydrogenase 1 gene (ALDH1) via Agrobacterium-mediated transformation. The qRT-PCR analysis demonstrated that the introduced four genes of the transgenic lines were all highly expressed. Through high-performance liquid chromatography analysis, the artemisinin contents were increased markedly in transformants, with the highest being 3.4-fold higher compared with non-converter. These results indicate that overexpression of multiple artemisinin biosynthetic pathway genes is a promising approach to improve artemisinin yield in A. annua.

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Kexuan Tang

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Qian Shen

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Tingxiang Yan

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Zongyou Lv

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Xiaofen Sun

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Pu Shi

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Weimin Jiang

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Ling Li

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Fangyuan Zhang

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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Qifang Pan

Shanghai Jiao Tong University

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