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Featured researches published by Yizhi Liu.


Cell Metabolism | 2013

Cold Exposure Promotes Atherosclerotic Plaque Growth and Instability via UCP1-Dependent Lipolysis

Mei Dong; Xiaoyan Yang; Sharon Lim; Ziquan Cao; Jennifer Honek; Huixia Lu; Cheng Zhang; Takahiro Seki; Kayoko Hosaka; Eric Wahlberg; Jianmin Yang; Lei Zhang; Toste Länne; Baocun Sun; Xuri Li; Yizhi Liu; Yun Zhang; Yihai Cao

Summary Molecular mechanisms underlying the cold-associated high cardiovascular risk remain unknown. Here, we show that the cold-triggered food-intake-independent lipolysis significantly increased plasma levels of small low-density lipoprotein (LDL) remnants, leading to accelerated development of atherosclerotic lesions in mice. In two genetic mouse knockout models (apolipoprotein E−/− [ApoE−/−] and LDL receptor−/− [Ldlr−/−] mice), persistent cold exposure stimulated atherosclerotic plaque growth by increasing lipid deposition. Furthermore, marked increase of inflammatory cells and plaque-associated microvessels were detected in the cold-acclimated ApoE−/− and Ldlr−/− mice, leading to plaque instability. Deletion of uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1), a key mitochondrial protein involved in thermogenesis in brown adipose tissue (BAT), in the ApoE−/− strain completely protected mice from the cold-induced atherosclerotic lesions. Cold acclimation markedly reduced plasma levels of adiponectin, and systemic delivery of adiponectin protected ApoE−/− mice from plaque development. These findings provide mechanistic insights on low-temperature-associated cardiovascular risks.


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

Tumor cell-derived placental growth factor sensitizes antiangiogenic and antitumor effects of anti-VEGF drugs

Eva Hedlund; Xiaojuan Yang; Yin Zhang; Yunlong Yang; Weide Zhong; Baocun Sun; Yizhi Liu; Kayoko Hosaka; Yihai Cao

The role of placental growth factor (PlGF) in modulation of tumor angiogenesis and tumor growth remains an enigma. Furthermore, anti-PlGF therapy in tumor angiogenesis and tumor growth remains controversial in preclinical tumor models. Here we show that in both human and mouse tumors, PlGF induced the formation of dilated and normalized vascular networks that were hypersensitive to anti-VEGF and anti–VEGFR-2 therapy, leading to dormancy of a substantial number of avascular tumors. Loss-of-function using plgf shRNA in a human choriocarcinoma significantly accelerated tumor growth rates and acquired resistance to anti-VEGF drugs, whereas gain-of-function of PlGF in a mouse tumor increased anti-VEGF sensitivity. Further, we show that VEGFR-2 and VEGFR-1 blocking antibodies displayed opposing effects on tumor angiogenesis. VEGFR-1 blockade and genetic deletion of the tyrosine kinase domain of VEGFR-1 resulted in enhanced tumor angiogenesis. These findings demonstrate that tumor-derived PlGF negatively modulates tumor angiogenesis and tumor growth and may potentially serve as a predictive marker of anti-VEGF cancer therapy.


Nature Communications | 2016

Endothelial PDGF-CC regulates angiogenesis-dependent thermogenesis in beige fat.

Takahiro Seki; Kayoko Hosaka; Sharon Lim; Carina Fischer; Jennifer Honek; Yunlong Yang; Patrik Andersson; Masaki Nakamura; Erik Näslund; Seppo Ylä-Herttuala; Meili Sun; Hideki Iwamoto; Xuri Li; Yizhi Liu; Nilesh J. Samani; Yihai Cao

Cold- and β3-adrenoceptor agonist-induced sympathetic activation leads to angiogenesis and UCP1-dependent thermogenesis in mouse brown and white adipose tissues. Here we show that endothelial production of PDGF-CC during white adipose tissue (WAT) angiogenesis regulates WAT browning. We find that genetic deletion of endothelial VEGFR2, knockout of the Pdgf-c gene or pharmacological blockade of PDGFR-α impair the WAT-beige transition. We further show that PDGF-CC stimulation upregulates UCP1 expression and acquisition of a beige phenotype in differentiated mouse WAT-PDGFR-α+ progenitor cells, as well as in human WAT-PDGFR-α+ adipocytes, supporting the physiological relevance of our findings. Our data reveal a paracrine mechanism by which angiogenic endothelial cells modulate adipocyte metabolism, which may provide new targets for the treatment of obesity and related metabolic diseases.


Trends in Molecular Medicine | 2013

PDGF-C: a new performer in the neurovascular interplay

Chunsik Lee; Fan Zhang; Zhongshu Tang; Yizhi Liu; Xuri Li

The importance of neurovascular crosstalk in development, normal physiology, and pathologies is increasingly being recognized. Although vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), a prototypic regulator of neurovascular interaction, has been studied intensively, defining other important regulators in this process is warranted. Recent studies have shown that platelet-derived growth factor C (PDGF-C) is both angiogenic and a neuronal survival factor, and it appears to be an important component of neurovascular crosstalk. Importantly, the expression pattern and functional properties of PDGF-C and its receptors differ from those of VEGF, and thus the PDGF-C-mediated neurovascular interaction may represent a new paradigm of neurovascular crosstalk.


Cell Reports | 2012

Proliferative and Survival Effects of PUMA Promote Angiogenesis

Fan Zhang; Yang Li; Zhongshu Tang; Anil Kumar; Chunsik Lee; Liping Zhang; Chaoyong Zhu; Anne Klotzsche-von Ameln; Bin Wang; Zhiqin Gao; Shi-Zhuang Zhang; Harald Langer; Xu Hou; Lasse Jensen; Wenxin Ma; Wai T. Wong; Triantafyllos Chavakis; Yizhi Liu; Yihai Cao; Xuri Li

The p53 upregulated modulator of apoptosis (PUMA) is known as an essential apoptosis inducer. Here, we report the seemingly paradoxical finding that PUMA is a proangiogenic factor critically required for the proliferation and survival of vascular and microglia cells. Strikingly, Puma deficiency by genetic deletion or small hairpin RNA knockdown inhibited developmental and pathological angiogenesis and reduced microglia numbers in vivo, whereas Puma gene delivery increased angiogenesis and cell survival. Mechanistically, we revealed that PUMA plays a critical role in regulating autophagy by modulating Erk activation and intracellular calcium level. Our findings revealed an unexpected function of PUMA in promoting angiogenesis and warrant more careful investigations into the therapeutic potential of PUMA in treating cancer and degenerative diseases.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Invasiveness and metastasis of retinoblastoma in an orthotopic zebrafish tumor model

Xiaoyun Chen; Jian Wang; Ziquan Cao; Kayoko Hosaka; Lasse Jensen; Huasheng Yang; Yuping Sun; Rujie Zhuang; Yizhi Liu; Yihai Cao

Retinoblastoma is a highly invasive malignant tumor that often invades the brain and metastasizes to distal organs through the blood stream. Invasiveness and metastasis of retinoblastoma can occur at the early stage of tumor development. However, an optimal preclinical model to study retinoblastoma invasiveness and metastasis in relation to drug treatment has not been developed. Here, we developed an orthotopic zebrafish model in which retinoblastoma invasion and metastasis can be monitored at a single cell level. We took the advantages of immune privilege and transparent nature of developing zebrafish embryos. Intravitreal implantation of color-coded retinoblastoma cells allowed us to kinetically monitor tumor cell invasion and metastasis. Further, interactions between retinoblastoma cells and surrounding microvasculatures were studied using a transgenic zebrafish that exhibited green fluorescent signals in blood vessels. We discovered that tumor cells invaded neighboring tissues and blood stream when primary tumors were at the microscopic sizes. These findings demonstrate that retinoblastoma metastasis occurs at the early stage and antiangiogenic drugs such as Vegf morpholino and sunitinib could potentially interfere with tumor invasiveness and metastasis. Thus, this orthotopic retinoblastoma model offers a new and unique opportunity to study the early events of tumor invasion, metastasis and drug responses.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Vasoprotective effect of PDGF-CC mediated by HMOX1 rescues retinal degeneration

Chang He; Chen Zhao; Anil Kumar; Chunsik Lee; Mingquan Chen; Lijuan Huang; Jing Wang; Xiangrong Ren; Yida Jiang; Wei Chen; Bin Wang; Zhiqin Gao; Zheng Zhong; Zijing Huang; Fan Zhang; Bing Huang; Hao Ding; Rong Ju; Zhongshu Tang; Yizhi Liu; Yihai Cao; Xuri Li; Xialin Liu

Significance PDGF-CC plays critical roles in many biological processes, such as development, tumor growth, and angiogenesis. However, its role in blood vessel survival/regression and the underlying mechanisms remain unknown. Here, using different loss- and gain-of-function assays and multiple model systems, we show that PDGF-CC is a critical vascular protective factor required to maintain blood vessel survival. Mechanistically, we found that heme oxygenase-1 (HMOX1) activity is crucial for the vascular protective/survival effect of PDGF-CC. Given the general involvement of vascular degeneration in most degenerative diseases, PDGF-CC may be of therapeutic use in treating different types of degenerative disorders. Our findings point out that the PDGF-CC level should be monitored closely in various pathological conditions to ensure normal blood vessel survival. Blood vessel degeneration is critically involved in nearly all types of degenerative diseases. Therefore strategies to enhance blood vessel protection and survival are highly needed. In this study, using different animal models and cultured cells, we show that PDGF-CC is a potent vascular protective and survival factor. PDGF-CC deficiency by genetic deletion exacerbated blood vessel regression/degeneration in various animal models. Importantly, treatment with PDGF-CC protein not only increased the survival of retinal blood vessels in a model of oxygen-induced blood vessel regression but also markedly rescued retinal and blood vessel degeneration in a disease model of retinitis pigmentosa. Mechanistically, we revealed that heme oxygenase-1 (HMOX1) activity is critically required for the vascular protective/survival effect of PDGF-CC, because blockade of HMOX1 completely abolished the protective effect of PDGF-CC in vitro and in vivo. We further found that both PDGF receptors, PDGFR-β and PDGFR-α, are required for the vasoprotective effect of PDGF-CC. Thus our data show that PDGF-CC plays a pivotal role in maintaining blood vessel survival and may be of therapeutic value in treating various types of degenerative diseases.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

VEGF-B-Neuropilin-1 signaling is spatiotemporally indispensable for vascular and neuronal development in zebrafish

Lasse Jensen; Masaki Nakamura; Lars Bräutigam; Xuri Li; Yizhi Liu; Nilesh J. Samani; Yihai Cao

Significance We provide one of the few examples of spatiotemporal expression of VEGF-A and VEGF-B, which determine vascular development in zebrafish embryos. Nonoverlapping vascular functions of VEGF-A and VEGF-B are regulated by environmental oxygen tension. We show, for the first time to our knowledge, that downregulation of VEGF-B in zebrafish but not in mouse embryos produces a lethal phenotype owing to vascular defects. These findings indicate that different species use distinct mechanisms by the same factor for vascular development. Our data imply previously unidentified mechanisms for angiogenesis under pathological conditions as compared with healthy counterparts. Thus, differential targeting of the same VEGF-B in pathological and physiological angiogenesis may be potentially achieved by understanding spatiotemporal mechanisms of VEGF-B in relation to VEGF-A. Physiological functions of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-B remain an enigma, and deletion of the Vegfb gene in mice lacks an overt phenotype. Here we show that knockdown of Vegfba, but not Vegfbb, in zebrafish embryos by specific morpholinos produced a lethal phenotype owing to vascular and neuronal defects in the brain. Vegfba morpholinos also markedly prevented development of hyaloid vasculatures in the retina, but had little effects on peripheral vascular development. Consistent with phenotypic defects, Vegfba, but not Vegfaa, mRNA was primarily expressed in the brain of developing zebrafish embryos. Interestingly, in situ detection of Neuropilin1 (Nrp1) mRNA showed an overlapping expression pattern with Vegfba, and knockdown of Nrp1 produced a nearly identically lethal phenotype as Vegfba knockdown. Furthermore, zebrafish VEGF-Ba protein directly bound to NRP1. Importantly, gain-of-function by exogenous delivery of mRNAs coding for NRP1-binding ligands VEGF-B or VEGF-A to the zebrafish embryos rescued the lethal phenotype by normalizing vascular development. Similarly, exposure of zebrafish embryos to hypoxia also rescued the Vegfba morpholino-induced vascular defects in the brain by increasing VEGF-A expression. Independent evidence of VEGF-A gain-of-function was provided by using a functionally defective Vhl-mutant zebrafish strain, which again rescued the Vegfba morpholino-induced vascular defects. These findings show that VEGF-B is spatiotemporally required for vascular development in zebrafish embryos and that NRP1, but not VEGFR1, mediates the essential signaling.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2017

MicroRNA-26a and -26b inhibit lens fibrosis and cataract by negatively regulating Jagged-1/Notch signaling pathway

Xiaoyun Chen; Wei Xiao; Weirong Chen; Xialin Liu; Mingxing Wu; Qu Bo; Yan Luo; Shaobi Ye; Yihai Cao; Yizhi Liu

Fibrosis is a chronic process involving development and progression of multiple diseases in various organs and is responsible for almost half of all known deaths. Epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) is the vital process in organ fibrosis. Lens is an elegant biological tool to investigate the fibrosis process because of its unique biological properties. Using gain- and loss-of-function assays, and different lens fibrosis models, here we demonstrated that microRNA (miR)-26a and miR-26b, members of the miR-26 family have key roles in EMT and fibrosis. They can significantly inhibit proliferation, migration, EMT of lens epithelial cells and lens fibrosis in vitro and in vivo. Interestingly, we revealed that the mechanisms of anti-EMT effects of miR-26a and -26b are via directly targeting Jagged-1 and suppressing Jagged-1/Notch signaling. Furthermore, we provided in vitro and in vivo evidence that Jagged-1/Notch signaling is activated in TGFβ2-stimulated EMT, and blockade of Notch signaling can reverse lens epithelial cells (LECs) EMT and lens fibrosis. Given the general involvement of EMT in most fibrotic diseases, cancer metastasis and recurrence, miR-26 family and Notch pathway may have therapeutic uses in treating fibrotic diseases and cancers.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Critical role of caveolin-1 in ocular neovascularization and multitargeted antiangiogenic effects of cavtratin via JNK

Yida Jiang; Xianchai Lin; Zhongshu Tang; Chunsik Lee; Geng Tian; Yuxiang Du; Xiangke Yin; Xiangrong Ren; Lijuan Huang; Zhimin Ye; Wei Chen; Fan Zhang; Jia Mi; Zhiqin Gao; Shasha Wang; Qishan Chen; Liying Xing; Bin Wang; Yihai Cao; William C. Sessa; Rong Ju; Yizhi Liu; Xuri Li

Significance Caveolin-1 (Cav-1) is a major structural protein of caveolae found in cell membranes and is critical for numerous cellular functions. However, it remains unclear whether Cav-1 plays a role in ocular neovascularization, a major cause of blindness. In this study, we found that the gene deletion of Cav-1 exacerbates ocular neovascularization, and cavtratin, a cell permeable peptide mimicking Cav-1 function, inhibits ocular neovascularization by targeting multiple critical components of angiogenesis. Importantly, combined administration of cavtratin and anti–VEGF-A inhibits neovascularization more effectively, suggesting at least a partially VEGF-A–independent effect of cavtratin. Our findings reveal multitargeted effects of caveolin-1 and cavtratin in ocular neovascularization that may be of great therapeutic value for antiangiogenic therapy. Ocular neovascularization is a devastating pathology of numerous ocular diseases and is a major cause of blindness. Caveolin-1 (Cav-1) plays important roles in the vascular system. However, little is known regarding its function and mechanisms in ocular neovascularization. Here, using comprehensive model systems and a cell permeable peptide of Cav-1, cavtratin, we show that Cav-1 is a critical player in ocular neovascularization. The genetic deletion of Cav-1 exacerbated and cavtratin administration inhibited choroidal and retinal neovascularization. Importantly, combined administration of cavtratin and anti–VEGF-A inhibited neovascularization more effectively than monotherapy, suggesting the existence of other pathways inhibited by cavtratin in addition to VEGF-A. Indeed, we found that cavtratin suppressed multiple critical components of pathological angiogenesis, including inflammation, permeability, PDGF-B and endothelial nitric oxide synthase expression (eNOS). Mechanistically, we show that cavtratin inhibits CNV and the survival and migration of microglia and macrophages via JNK. Together, our data demonstrate the unique advantages of cavtratin in antiangiogenic therapy to treat neovascular diseases.

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Yihai Cao

Karolinska Institutet

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Xuri Li

Sun Yat-sen University

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Chunsik Lee

National Institutes of Health

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Fan Zhang

National Institutes of Health

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