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Dive into the research topics where Yuanyuan Cui is active.

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Featured researches published by Yuanyuan Cui.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Voltage- and calcium-dependent gating of TMEM16A/Ano1 chloride channels are physically coupled by the first intracellular loop

Qinghuan Xiao; Kuai Yu; Patricia Pérez-Cornejo; Yuanyuan Cui; Jorge Arreola; H. Criss Hartzell

Ca2+-activated Cl− channels (CaCCs) are exceptionally well adapted to subserve diverse physiological roles, from epithelial fluid transport to sensory transduction, because their gating is cooperatively controlled by the interplay between ionotropic and metabotropic signals. A molecular understanding of the dual regulation of CaCCs by voltage and Ca2+ has recently become possible with the discovery that Ano1 (TMEM16a) is an essential subunit of CaCCs. Ano1 can be gated by Ca2+ or by voltage in the absence of Ca2+, but Ca2+- and voltage-dependent gating are very closely coupled. Here we identify a region in the first intracellular loop that is crucial for both Ca2+ and voltage sensing. Deleting 448EAVK in the first intracellular loop dramatically decreases apparent Ca2+ affinity. In contrast, mutating the adjacent amino acids 444EEEE abolishes intrinsic voltage dependence without altering the apparent Ca2+affinity. Voltage-dependent gating of Ano1 measured in the presence of intracellular Ca2+ was facilitated by anions with high permeability or by an increase in [Cl−]e. Our data show that the transition between closed and open states is governed by Ca2+ in a voltage-dependent manner and suggest that anions allosterically modulate Ca2+-binding affinity. This mechanism provides a unified explanation of CaCC channel gating by voltage and ligand that has long been enigmatic.


Circulation Research | 2012

Explaining Calcium-Dependent Gating of Anoctamin-1 Chloride Channels Requires a Revised Topology

Kuai Yu; Charity Duran; Zhiqiang Qu; Yuanyuan Cui; H. Criss Hartzell

Rationale: Ca2+-activated Cl channels play pivotal roles in the cardiovascular system. They regulate vascular smooth muscle tone and participate in cardiac action potential repolarization in some species. Ca2+-activated Cl channels were recently discovered to be encoded by members of the anoctamin (Ano, also called Tmem16) superfamily, but the mechanisms of Ano1 gating by Ca2+ remain enigmatic. Objective: The objective was to identify regions of Ano1 involved in channel gating by Ca2+. Methods and Results: The Ca2+ sensitivity of Ano1 was estimated from rates of current activation, and deactivation in excised patches rapidly switched between zero and high Ca2+ on the cytoplasmic side. Mutation of glutamates E702 and E705 dramatically altered Ca2+ sensitivity. E702 and E705 are predicted to be in an extracellular loop, but antigenic epitopes introduced into this loop are not accessible to extracellular antibodies, suggesting this loop is intracellular. Cytoplasmically applied membrane-impermeant sulfhydryl reagents alter the Ca2+ sensitivity of Ano1 E702C and E705C as expected if E702 and E705 are intracellular. Substituted cysteine accessibility mutagenesis of the putative re-entrant loop suggests that E702 and E705 are located adjacent to the Cl conduction pathway. Conclusions: We propose an alternative model of Ano1 topology based on mutagenesis, epitope accessibility, and cysteine-scanning accessibility. These data contradict the popular re-entrant loop model by showing that the putative fourth extracellular loop (ECL 4) is intracellular and may contain a Ca2+ binding site. These studies provide new perspectives on regulation of Ano1 by Ca2+.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2012

ANOs 3-7 in the anoctamin/Tmem16 Cl- channel family are intracellular proteins.

Charity Duran; Zhiqiang Qu; Adeboye O. Osunkoya; Yuanyuan Cui; H. Criss Hartzell

Ca(2+)-activated Cl(-) channels (CaCCs) participate in numerous physiological functions such as neuronal excitability, sensory transduction, and transepithelial fluid transport. Recently, it was shown that heterologously expressed anoctamins ANO1 and ANO2 generate currents that resemble native CaCCs. The anoctamin family (also called Tmem16) consists of 10 members, but it is not known whether all members of the family are CaCCs. Expression of ANOs 3-7 in HEK293 cells did not generate Cl(-) currents activated by intracellular Ca(2+), as determined by whole cell patch clamp electrophysiology. With the use of confocal imaging, only ANO1 and ANO2 traffic to the plasma membrane when expressed heterologously. Furthermore, endogenously expressed ANO7 in the human prostate is predominantly intracellular. We took a chimeric approach to identify regions critical for channel trafficking and function. However, none of the chimeras of ANO1 and ANO5/7 that we made trafficked to the plasma membrane. Our results suggest that intracellular anoctamins may be endoplasmic reticulum proteins, although it remains unknown whether these family members are CaCCs. Determining the role of anoctamin family members in ion transport will be critical to understanding their functions in physiology and disease.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Anoctamin 1 (Tmem16A) Ca2+-activated chloride channel stoichiometrically interacts with an ezrin–radixin–moesin network

Patricia Pérez-Cornejo; Avanti Gokhale; Charity Duran; Yuanyuan Cui; Qinghuan Xiao; H. Criss Hartzell; Victor Faundez

The newly discovered Ca2+-activated Cl− channel (CaCC), Anoctamin 1 (Ano1 or TMEM16A), has been implicated in vital physiological functions including epithelial fluid secretion, gut motility, and smooth muscle tone. Overexpression of Ano1 in HEK cells or Xenopus oocytes is sufficient to generate Ca2+-activated Cl− currents, but the details of channel composition and the regulatory factors that control channel biology are incompletely understood. We used a highly sensitive quantitative SILAC proteomics approach to obtain insights into stoichiometric protein networks associated with the Ano1 channel. These studies provide a comprehensive footprint of putative Ano1 regulatory networks. We find that Ano1 associates with the signaling/scaffolding proteins ezrin, radixin, moesin, and RhoA, which link the plasma membrane to the cytoskeleton with very high stoichiometry. Ano1, ezrin, and moesin/radixin colocalize apically in salivary gland epithelial cells, and overexpression of moesin and Ano1 in HEK cells alters the subcellular localization of both proteins. Moreover, interfering RNA for moesin modifies Ano1 current without affecting its surface expression level. Another network associated with Ano1 includes the SNARE and SM proteins VAMP3, syntaxins 2 and -4, and syntaxin-binding proteins munc18b and munc18c, which are integral to translocation of vesicles to the plasma membrane. A number of other regulatory proteins, including GTPases, Ca2+-binding proteins, kinases, and lipid-interacting proteins are enriched in the Ano1 complex. These data provide stoichiometrically prioritized information about mechanisms regulating Ano1 function and trafficking to polarized domains of the plasma membrane.


The Journal of General Physiology | 2008

Regulation of Bestrophin Cl Channels by Calcium: Role of the C Terminus

Qinghuan Xiao; Andrew Prussia; Kuai Yu; Yuanyuan Cui; H. Criss Hartzell

Human bestrophin-1 (hBest1), which is genetically linked to several kinds of retinopathy and macular degeneration in both humans and dogs, is the founding member of a family of Cl− ion channels that are activated by intracellular Ca2+. At present, the structures and mechanisms responsible for Ca2+ sensing remain unknown. Here, we have used a combination of molecular modeling, density functional–binding energy calculations, mutagenesis, and patch clamp to identify the regions of hBest1 involved in Ca2+ sensing. We identified a cluster of a five contiguous acidic amino acids in the C terminus immediately after the last transmembrane domain, followed by an EF hand and another regulatory domain that are essential for Ca2+ sensing by hBest1. The cluster of five amino acids (293–308) is crucial for normal channel gating by Ca2+ because all but two of the 35 mutations we made in this region rendered the channel incapable of being activated by Ca2+. Using homology models built on the crystal structure of calmodulin (CaM), an EF hand (EF1) was identified in hBest1. EF1 was predicted to bind Ca2+ with a slightly higher affinity than the third EF hand of CaM and lower affinity than the second EF hand of troponin C. As predicted by the model, the D312G mutation in the putative Ca2+-binding loop (312–323) reduced the apparent Ca2+ affinity by 20-fold. In addition, the D312G and D323N mutations abolished Ca2+-dependent rundown of the current. Furthermore, analysis of truncation mutants of hBest1 identified a domain adjacent to EF1 that is rich in acidic amino acids (350–390) that is required for Ca2+ activation and plays a role in current rundown. These experiments identify a region of hBest1 (312–323) that is involved in the gating of hBest1 by Ca2+ and suggest a model in which Ca2+ binding to EF1 activates the channel in a process that requires the acidic domain (293–308) and another regulatory domain (350–390). Many of the ∼100 disease-causing mutations in hBest1 are located in this region that we have implicated in Ca2+ sensing, suggesting that these mutations disrupt hBest1 channel gating by Ca2+.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

The Anion-Selective Pore of the Bestrophins, a Family of Chloride Channels Associated with Retinal Degeneration

Zhiqiang Qu; Li-Ting Chien; Yuanyuan Cui; H. Criss Hartzell

Mutations in human bestrophin-1 (VMD2) are genetically linked to a juvenile form of macular degeneration and autosomal dominant vitreoretinochoroidopathy. Recently, it has been proposed that bestrophins are Cl− channels and that the putative second transmembrane domain participates in forming the bestrophin pore. However, the structural determinants of Cl− ion permeation through the channel pore are not known. Here we systematically replaced every amino acid in mouse bestrophin-2 (mBest2) between positions 69 and 104 with cysteine. We then measured the effects on the relative permeability and conductance of the channel to Cl− and SCN− (thiocyanate) and determined the accessibility of the cysteine-substituted amino acids to extracellularly applied, membrane-impermeant sulfhydryl reagents. Unlike K+ channels, the amino acids forming the mBest2 selectivity filter are not discretely localized but are distributed over ∼20 amino acids within the transmembrane domain. Cysteine-substituted amino acids in the selectivity filter are easily accessible to extracellularly applied sulfhydryl reagents and select for anionic sulfhydryl reagents over cationic ones. Understanding the structure of the anion conduction pathway of bestrophins provides insights into how mutations produce channel dysfunction and may provide important information for development of therapeutic strategies for treating macular degeneration.


The Journal of General Physiology | 2014

Activation of the Ano1 (TMEM16A) chloride channel by calcium is not mediated by calmodulin

Kuai Yu; Jinqiu Zhu; Zhiqiang Qu; Yuanyuan Cui; H. Criss Hartzell

Calcium-mediated activation of the TMEM16A chloride channel does not depend on changes in phosphorylation status or the calcium-binding protein calmodulin.


The Journal of Physiology | 2009

Dysregulation of human bestrophin-1 by ceramide-induced dephosphorylation.

Qinghuan Xiao; Kuai Yu; Yuanyuan Cui; H. Criss Hartzell

Best vitelliform macular dystrophy is an inherited autosomal dominant, juvenile onset form of macular degeneration caused by mutations in a chloride ion channel, human bestrophin‐1 (hBest1). Mutations in Best1 have also been linked to several other forms of retinopathy. In addition to mutations, hBest1 dysfunction might come about by disruption of other processes that regulate Best1 function. Here we show that hBest1 chloride channel activity is regulated by ceramide and phosphorylation. We have identified a protein kinase C (PKC) phosphorylation site (serine 358) in hBest1 that is important for sustained channel function. Channel activity is maintained by PKC activators, protein phosphatase inhibitors, or pseudo‐phosphorylation by substitution of glutamic acid for serine 358. When ceramide levels are elevated by exogenous addition of ceramide to the bath, by addition of bacterial sphingomyelinase, or by hypertonic stress, S358 is rapidly dephosphorylated. The dephosphorylation is mediated by protein phosphatase 2A. Hypertonic stress‐induced dephosphorylation is blocked by a dihydroceramide, an inactive form of ceramide, and manumycin, an inhibitor of neutral sphingomyelinase. Our results support a model in which ceramide accumulation during early stages of retinopathy inhibits hBest1 function, leading to abnormal fluid transport across the retina, and enhanced inflammation.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2007

Chloride Channel Activity of Bestrophin Mutants Associated with Mild or Late-Onset Macular Degeneration

Kuai Yu; Zhiqiang Qu; Yuanyuan Cui; H. Criss Hartzell


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2006

The Bestrophin Mutation A243V, Linked to Adult-Onset Vitelliform Macular Dystrophy, Impairs Its Chloride Channel Function

Kuai Yu; Yuanyuan Cui; H. Criss Hartzell

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Patricia Pérez-Cornejo

Universidad Autónoma de San Luis Potosí

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