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Featured researches published by Youhua Xie.


Hepatology | 2013

PROX1 promotes hepatocellular carcinoma metastasis by way of up-regulating hypoxia-inducible factor 1α expression and protein stability.

Yanfeng Liu; Ju-Bo Zhang; Yi Qin; Wei Wang; Lili Wei; Yigang Teng; Lei Guo; Bo Zhang; Zhenhai Lin; Jing Liu; Zheng-Gang Ren; Qing-Hai Ye; Youhua Xie

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is one of the most common cancers and the third leading cause of death from cancer worldwide. HCC has a very poor prognosis because of tumor invasiveness, frequent intrahepatic spread, and extrahepatic metastasis. The molecular mechanism of HCC invasiveness and metastasis is poorly understood. The homeobox protein PROX1 is required for hepatocyte migration during mouse embryonic liver development. In this study, we show that high PROX1 protein expression in primary HCC tissues is associated with significantly worse survival and early tumor recurrence in postoperative HCC patients. Knockdown of PROX1 expression in HCC cells inhibited cell migration and invasiveness in vitro and HCC metastasis in nude mice while overexpression of PROX1 in HCC cells promoted these processes. PROX1s pro‐metastasis activity is most likely attributed to its up‐regulation of hypoxia‐inducible factor 1α (HIF‐1α) transcription and stabilization of HIF‐1α protein by recruiting histone deacetylase 1 (HDAC1) to prevent the acetylation of HIF‐1α, which subsequently induces an epithelial‐mesenchymal transition response in HCC cells. We further demonstrated the prognostic value of using the combination of PROX1 and HDAC1 levels to predict postoperative survival and early recurrence of HCC. Conclusion: PROX1 is a critical factor that promotes HCC metastasis. (Hepatology 2013;58:692‐705)


Journal of Virology | 2010

Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) Surface Antigen Interacts with and Promotes Cyclophilin A Secretion: Possible Link to Pathogenesis of HBV Infection

Xiaochen Tian; Chao Zhao; Hongguang Zhu; Weimin She; Jiming Zhang; Jing Liu; Lanjuan Li; Shusen Zheng; Yu-Mei Wen; Youhua Xie

ABSTRACT Cyclophilin A (CypA), predominantly located intracellularly, is a multifunctional protein. We previously reported decreased CypA levels in hepatocytes of transgenic mice expressing hepatitis B virus (HBV) surface antigen (HBsAg). In this study, we found that expression of HBV small surface protein (SHBs) in human hepatoma cell lines specifically triggered CypA secretion, whereas SHBs added extracellularly to culture medium did not. Moreover, CypA secretion was not promoted by the expression of a secretion deficient SHBs mutant, suggesting a close association between secretion of CypA and SHBs. Interaction between CypA and SHBs was observed by using coimmunoprecipitation and glutathione S-transferase pull-down assays. Hydrodynamic injection of the SHBs expression construct into C57BL/6J mice resulted in increased serum CypA levels and ALT/AST levels, as well as the infiltration of inflammatory cells surrounding SHBs-positive hepatocytes. The inflammatory response and serum ALT/AST level were reduced when the chemotactic effect of CypA was inhibited by cyclosporine and anti-CD147 antibody. Furthermore, higher serum CypA levels were detected in chronic hepatitis B patients than in healthy individuals. In HBV patients who had received liver transplantation, serum CypA levels declined dramatically after the loss of HBsAg as a consequence of liver transplantation. Taken together, these results indicate that expression and secretion of SHBs can promote CypA secretion, which may contribute to the pathogenesis of HBV infection.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Identification and Characterization of Peptides That Interact with Hepatitis B Virus via the Putative Receptor Binding Site

Qiang Deng; Jianwei Zhai; Marie-Louise Michel; Jun Zhang; Jun Qin; Yu-ying Kong; Xinxin Zhang; Agata Budkowska; Pierre Tiollais; Yuan Wang; Youhua Xie

ABSTRACT A direct involvement of the PreS domain of the hepatitis B virus (HBV) large envelope protein, and in particular amino acid residues 21 to 47, in virus attachment to hepatocytes has been suggested by many previous studies. Several PreS-interacting proteins have been identified. However, they share few common sequence motifs, and a bona fide cellular receptor for HBV remains elusive. In this study, we aimed to identify PreS-interacting motifs and to search for novel HBV-interacting proteins and the long-sought receptor. PreS fusion proteins were used as baits to screen a phage display library of random peptides. A group of PreS-binding peptides were obtained. These peptides could bind to amino acids 21 to 47 of PreS1 and shared a linear motif (W1T2X3W4W5) sufficient for binding specifically to PreS and viral particles. Several human proteins with such a motif were identified through BLAST search. Analysis of their biochemical and structural properties suggested that lipoprotein lipase (LPL), a key enzyme in lipoprotein metabolism, might interact with PreS and HBV particles. The interaction of HBV with LPL was demonstrated by in vitro binding, virus capture, and cell attachment assays. These findings suggest that LPL may play a role in the initiation of HBV infection. Identification of peptides and protein ligands corresponding to LPL that bind to the HBV envelope will offer new therapeutic strategies against HBV infection.


Journal of Virology | 2014

Recombinant Covalently Closed Circular Hepatitis B Virus DNA Induces Prolonged Viral Persistence in Immunocompetent Mice

Zhihua Qi; Gaiyun Li; Hao Hu; Chunhui Yang; Xiaoming Zhang; Qibin Leng; Youhua Xie; Demin Yu; Xinxin Zhang; Yueqiu Gao; Ke Lan; Qiang Deng

ABSTRACT It remains crucial to develop a laboratory model for studying hepatitis B virus (HBV) chronic infection. We hereby produced a recombinant covalently closed circular DNA (rcccDNA) in view of the key role of cccDNA in HBV persistence. A loxP-chimeric intron was engineered into a monomeric HBV genome in a precursor plasmid (prcccDNA), which was excised using Cre/loxP-mediated DNA recombination into a 3.3-kb rcccDNA in the nuclei of hepatocytes. The chimeric intron was spliced from RNA transcripts without interrupting the HBV life cycle. In cultured hepatoma cells, cotransfection of prcccDNA and pCMV-Cre (encoding Cre recombinase) resulted in accumulation of nuclear rcccDNA that was heat stable and epigenetically organized as a minichromosome. A mouse model of HBV infection was developed by hydrodynamic injection of prcccDNA. In the presence of Cre recombinase, rcccDNA was induced in the mouse liver with effective viral replication and expression, triggering a compromised T-cell response against HBV. Significant T-cell hyporesponsiveness occurred in mice receiving 4 μg prcccDNA, resulting in prolonged HBV antigenemia for up to 9 weeks. Persistent liver injury was observed as elevated alanine transaminase activity in serum and sustained inflammatory infiltration in the liver. Although a T-cell dysfunction was induced similarly, mice injected with a plasmid containing a linear HBV replicon showed rapid viral clearance within 2 weeks. Collectively, our study provides an innovative approach for producing a cccDNA surrogate that established HBV persistence in immunocompetent mice. It also represents a useful model system in vitro and in vivo for evaluating antiviral treatments against HBV cccDNA. IMPORTANCE (i) Unlike plasmids that contain a linear HBV replicon, rcccDNA established HBV persistence with sustained liver injury in immunocompetent mice. This method could be a prototype for developing a mouse model of chronic HBV infection. (ii) An exogenous intron was engineered into the HBV genome for functionally seamless DNA recombination. This original approach could be also extended to other viral studies. (iii) rcccDNA was substantially induced in the nuclei of hepatocytes and could be easily distinguished by its exogenous intron using PCR. This convenient model system affords the opportunity to test antivirals directly targeting HBV cccDNA.


Journal of Virology | 2013

Novel Recombinant Hepatitis B Virus Vectors Efficiently Deliver Protein and RNA Encoding Genes into Primary Hepatocytes

Ran Hong; Weiya Bai; Jianwei Zhai; Wei Liu; Xinyan Li; Jiming Zhang; Xiaoxian Cui; Xue Zhao; Xiaoli Ye; Qiang Deng; Pierre Tiollais; Yu-Mei Wen; Jing Liu; Youhua Xie

ABSTRACT Hepatitis B virus (HBV) has extremely restricted host and hepatocyte tropism. HBV-based vectors could form the basis of novel therapies for chronic hepatitis B and other liver diseases and would also be invaluable for the study of HBV infection. Previous attempts at developing HBV-based vectors encountered low yields of recombinant viruses and/or lack of sufficient infectivity/cargo gene expression in primary hepatocytes, which hampered follow-up applications. In this work, we constructed a novel vector based on a naturally occurring, highly replicative HBV mutant with a 207-bp deletion in the preS1/polymerase spacer region. By applying a novel insertion strategy that preserves the continuity of the polymerase open reading frame (ORF), recombinant HBV (rHBV) carrying protein or small interfering RNA (siRNA) genes were obtained that replicated and were packaged efficiently in cultured hepatocytes. We demonstrated that rHBV expressing a fluorescent reporter (DsRed) is highly infective in primary tree shrew hepatocytes, and rHBV expressing HBV-targeting siRNA successfully inhibited antigen expression from coinfected wild-type HBV. This novel HBV vector will be a powerful tool for hepatocyte-targeting gene delivery, as well as the study of HBV infection.


FEBS Letters | 2008

Modulation of transcriptional corepressor activity of prospero‐related homeobox protein (Prox1) by SUMO modification

Shifang Shan; Linfang Wang; Jianwei Zhai; Yi Qin; Huafang Ouyang; Yu-Ying Kong; Jing Liu; Yuan Wang; Youhua Xie

MINT‐6787569: PROX1 (uniprotkb:Q92786) physically interacts (MI:0218) with HDAC3 (uniprotkb:O15379) by anti tag coimmunoprecipitation (MI:0007) MINT‐6787767: PROX1 (uniprotkb:Q92786) physically interacts (MI:0218) with SUMO‐1 (uniprotkb:P63165) by anti tag coimmunoprecipitation (MI:0007)


Vaccine | 2010

Serum HBeAg sero-conversion correlated with decrease of HBsAg and HBV DNA in chronic hepatitis B patients treated with a therapeutic vaccine

Xuan-Yi Wang; Xin-Xin Zhang; Xin Yao; Jie-Hong Jiang; Youhua Xie; Zhenghong Yuan; Yu-Mei Wen

Currently, there are various approaches for developing therapeutic vaccines for chronic hepatitis B patients. Previously, an antigen-antibody-based therapeutic vaccine (YIC) has been conducted in a double-blind placebo controlled phase IIb clinical trial in 242 chronic hepatitis B patients. At the end of follow-up for 24 weeks, HBeAg sero-conversion rate was 21.6% in the 60 μg immunized group, compared to 9% in the alum immunized control group (p=0.03). To analyze the correlation between HBeAg-seroconversion, and decrease of serum HBsAg and HBV DNA, serum samples were back quantified for serum HBsAg and HBV DNA collected at baseline, end of treatment, and end of follow-up from patients who were treated either with 60 μg of YIC, or with placebo. Patients were dichotomized to HBeAg sero-converted and non-converted groups in comparison with patients in the placebo group. The correlations between HBeAg seroconversion and the decrease of HBsAg, HBV DNA and ALT levels during study period were analyzed using a logistic regression model. Results showed marked and sustained reduction of HBsAg, HBV DNA and ALT level in HBeAg sero-converted patients compared to those in patients of HBeAg non-converted and placebo groups. Reduction of HBV DNA and elevation of ALT was markedly associated with HBeAg seroconversion with an adjusted OR of 0.09 (95%CI: 0.01-0.62) and 0.08 (95%CI: 0.02-0.37) respectively after adjusted by age and sex, while reduction of HBsAg level was close to of significance (p=0.054). Analysis indicated that HBeAg sero-conversion was a reasonable endpoint for therapeutic vaccination.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Prox1 Directly Interacts with LSD1 and Recruits the LSD1/NuRD Complex to Epigenetically Co-Repress CYP7A1 Transcription

Huafang Ouyang; Yi Qin; Yanfeng Liu; Youhua Xie; Jing Liu

Cholesterol 7α-hydroxylase (CYP7A1) catalyzes the first and rate-limiting step in the classical pathway of bile acids synthesis in liver and is crucial for maintaining lipid homeostasis. Hepatocyte nuclear factor 4α (HNF4α) and α1-fetoprotein transcription factor (FTF) are two major transcription factors driving CYP7A1 promoter activity in hepatocytes. Previous researches have shown that Prospero-related homeobox (Prox1) directly interacts with both HNF4α and FTF and potently co-represses CYP7A1 transcription and bile acid synthesis through unidentified mechanisms. In this work, mechanisms involved in Prox1-mediated co-repression were explored by identifying Prox1-associated proteins using immunoprecipitation followed by mass spectrometry (IP-MS) methodology. Multiple components of the epigenetically repressive lysine-specific demethylase 1 (LSD1)/nucleosome remodeling and histone deacetylase (NuRD) complex, most notably LSD1 and histone deacetylase 2 (HDAC2), were found to be associated with Prox1 and GST pulldown assay demonstrated that Prox1 directly interacts with LSD1. Sequential chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays showed that Prox1 co-localizes with HNF4α, LSD1 and HDAC2 on CYP7A1 promoter in HepG2 cells. Furthermore, by using ChIP assay on HepG2 cells with endogenous Prox1 knocked down by RNA interference, Prox1 was shown to recruit LSD1 and HDAC2 onto CYP7A1 promoter and cause increased H3K4 demethylation. Finally, bile acids treatment of HepG2 cells, which significantly repressed CYP7A1 transcription, resulted in increased Prox1 and LSD1/NuRD complex occupancy on CYP7A1 promoter with a concurrent increase in H3K4 demethylation and H3/H4 deacetylation. These results showed that Prox1 interacts with LSD1 to recruit the repressive LSD1/NuRD complex to CYP7A1 promoter and co-represses transcription through epigenetic mechanisms. In addition, such Prox1-mediated epigenetic repression is involved in the physiologically essential negative feedback inhibition of CYP7A1 transcription by bile acids.


Virus Genes | 2010

Identification of recombination between subgenotypes IA and IB of hepatitis A virus

Wei Liu; Jianwei Zhai; Jing Liu; Youhua Xie

Co-circulation of subgenotypes IA and IB of hepatitis A virus (HAV) has been reported in South Africa, South America, Europe, and the United States. In this study, phylogenetic and recombination analyses were performed for the first time on 31 complete HAV genomes from infected humans and simians. Three potentially significant intra-genotypic recombination events (I–III) were identified by recombination detection analysis. Recombination events I and II occurred between the lineages represented, respectively, by the Japanese isolate AH2 (AB020565, subgenotype IA) and the North African isolate MBB (M20273, subgenotype IB), giving rise to the recombinant Uruguayan isolate HAV5 (EU131373). Recombination event III occurred between the lineages represented, respectively, by the North African isolate MBB (M20273, subgenotype IB) and the German isolate GBM (X75215, subgenotype IA), resulting in the Italian isolate FG (X83302). The findings demonstrate that humans can be co-infected with different HAV subgenotypes and provide valuable hints for future research on HAV diversity.


Cell Research | 2008

Repression of interferon-gamma expression in T cells by Prospero-related Homeobox protein

Linfang Wang; Jianmei Zhu; Shifang Shan; Yi Qin; Yuying Kong; Jing Liu; Yuan Wang; Youhua Xie

Interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) is a major proinflammatory effector and regulatory cytokine produced by activated T cells and NK cells. IFN-γ has been shown to play pivotal roles in fundamental immunological processes such as inflammatory reactions, cell-mediated immunity and autoimmunity. A variety of human disorders have now been linked to irregular IFN-γ expression. In order to achieve proper IFN-γ-mediated immunological effects, IFN-γ expression in T cells is subject to both positive and negative regulation. In this study, we report for the first time the negative regulation of IFN-γ expression by Prospero-related Homeobox (Prox1). In Jurkat T cells and primary human CD4+ T cells, Prox1 expression decreases quickly upon T cell activation, concurrent with a dramatic increase in IFN-γ expression. Reporter analysis and chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) revealed that Prox1 associates with and inhibits the transcription activity of IFN-γ promoter in activated Jurkat T cells. Co-immunoprecipitation and GST pull-down assay demonstrated a direct binding between Prox1 and the nuclear receptor peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARγ), which is also an IFN-γ repressor in T cells. By introducing deletions and mutations into Prox1, we show that the repression of IFN-γ promoter by Prox1 is largely dependent upon the physical interaction between Prox1 and PPARγ. Furthermore, PPARγ antagonist treatment removes Prox1 from IFN-γ promoter and attenuates repression of IFN-γ expression by Prox1. These findings establish Prox1 as a new negative regulator of IFN-γ expression in T cells and will aid in the understanding of IFN-γ transcription regulation mechanisms.

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Wei Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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