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Featured researches published by Zhiying Zou.


Blood | 2010

Platelets regulate lymphatic vascular development through CLEC-2–SLP-76 signaling

Cara C. Bertozzi; Alec A. Schmaier; Patricia Mericko; Paul R. Hess; Zhiying Zou; Mei Chen; Chiu-Yu Chen; Bin Xu; MinMin Lu; Diane Zhou; Eric Sebzda; Matthew T. Santore; Demetri J. Merianos; Matthias Stadtfeld; Alan W. Flake; Thomas Graf; Radek C. Skoda; Jonathan S. Maltzman; Gary A. Koretzky; Mark L. Kahn

Although platelets appear by embryonic day 10.5 in the developing mouse, an embryonic role for these cells has not been identified. The SYK-SLP-76 signaling pathway is required in blood cells to regulate embryonic blood-lymphatic vascular separation, but the cell type and molecular mechanism underlying this regulatory pathway are not known. In the present study we demonstrate that platelets regulate lymphatic vascular development by directly interacting with lymphatic endothelial cells through C-type lectin-like receptor 2 (CLEC-2) receptors. PODOPLANIN (PDPN), a transmembrane protein expressed on the surface of lymphatic endothelial cells, is required in nonhematopoietic cells for blood-lymphatic separation. Genetic loss of the PDPN receptor CLEC-2 ablates PDPN binding by platelets and confers embryonic lymphatic vascular defects like those seen in animals lacking PDPN or SLP-76. Platelet factor 4-Cre-mediated deletion of Slp-76 is sufficient to confer lymphatic vascular defects, identifying platelets as the cell type in which SLP-76 signaling is required to regulate lymphatic vascular development. Consistent with these genetic findings, we observe SLP-76-dependent platelet aggregate formation on the surface of lymphatic endothelial cells in vivo and ex vivo. These studies identify a nonhemostatic pathway in which platelet CLEC-2 receptors bind lymphatic endothelial PDPN and activate SLP-76 signaling to regulate embryonic vascular development.


Nature Medicine | 2009

Regulation of cardiovascular development and integrity by the heart of glass–cerebral cavernous malformation protein pathway

Benjamin Kleaveland; Xiangjian Zheng; Jian J. Liu; Yannick Blum; Jennifer J. Tung; Zhiying Zou; Shawn M. Sweeney; Mei Chen; Lili Guo; MinMin Lu; Diane Zhou; Jan Kitajewski; Markus Affolter; Mark H. Ginsberg; Mark L. Kahn

Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) are human vascular malformations caused by mutations in three genes of unknown function: KRIT1, CCM2 and PDCD10. Here we show that the heart of glass (HEG1) receptor, which in zebrafish has been linked to ccm gene function, is selectively expressed in endothelial cells. Heg1−/− mice showed defective integrity of the heart, blood vessels and lymphatic vessels. Heg1−/−; Ccm2lacZ/+ and Ccm2lacZ/lacZ mice had more severe cardiovascular defects and died early in development owing to a failure of nascent endothelial cells to associate into patent vessels. This endothelial cell phenotype was shared by zebrafish embryos deficient in heg, krit1 or ccm2 and reproduced in CCM2-deficient human endothelial cells in vitro. Defects in the hearts of zebrafish lacking heg or ccm2, in the aortas of early mouse embryos lacking CCM2 and in the lymphatic vessels of neonatal mice lacking HEG1 were associated with abnormal endothelial cell junctions like those observed in human CCMs. Biochemical and cellular imaging analyses identified a cell-autonomous pathway in which the HEG1 receptor couples to KRIT1 at these cell junctions. This study identifies HEG1-CCM protein signaling as a crucial regulator of heart and vessel formation and integrity.


Nature Immunology | 2008

Transcription factor KLF2 regulates the migration of naive T cells by restricting chemokine receptor expression patterns

Eric Sebzda; Zhiying Zou; John S. Lee; Tao Wang; Mark L. Kahn

The migration patterns of naive and activated T cells are associated with the expression of distinct sets of chemokine receptors, but the molecular basis for this regulation is unknown. Here we identify Krupple-like factor 2 (KLF2) as a key transcriptional factor needed to prevent naive T cells from expressing inflammatory chemokine receptors and acquiring the migration patterns of activated T cells. Lineage-specific deletion of KLF2 resulted in fewer naive T cells in the blood and secondary lymphoid organs, whereas it expanded naive T cell numbers in nonlymphoid tissues; these effects were associated with altered expression of inflammatory chemokine receptors on naive T cells. KLF2 repressed the expression of several chemokine receptors, including CCR3 and CCR5. We thus conclude that KLF2 maintains proper T cell migration patterns by linking T cell movement and transcriptional regulation of chemokine receptor expression patterns.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2010

CCM3 signaling through sterile 20–like kinases plays an essential role during zebrafish cardiovascular development and cerebral cavernous malformations

Xiangjian Zheng; Chong Xu; Annarita Di Lorenzo; Benjamin Kleaveland; Zhiying Zou; Christoph Seiler; Mei Chen; Lan Cheng; Jiping Xiao; Jie He; Michael Pack; William C. Sessa; Mark L. Kahn

Cerebral cavernous malformation is a common human vascular disease that arises due to loss-of-function mutations in genes encoding three intracellular adaptor proteins, cerebral cavernous malformations 1 protein (CCM1), CCM2, and CCM3. CCM1, CCM2, and CCM3 interact biochemically in a pathway required in endothelial cells during cardiovascular development in mice and zebrafish. The downstream effectors by which this signaling pathway regulates endothelial function have not yet been identified. Here we have shown in zebrafish that expression of mutant ccm3 proteins (ccm3Delta) known to cause cerebral cavernous malformation in humans confers cardiovascular phenotypes identical to those associated with loss of ccm1 and ccm2. CCM3Delta proteins interacted with CCM1 and CCM2, but not with other proteins known to bind wild-type CCM3, serine/threonine protein kinase MST4 (MST4), sterile 20-like serine/threonine kinase 24 (STK24), and STK25, all of which have poorly defined biological functions. Cardiovascular phenotypes characteristic of CCM deficiency arose due to stk deficiency and combined low-level deficiency of stks and ccm3 in zebrafish embryos. In cultured human endothelial cells, CCM3 and STK25 regulated barrier function in a manner similar to CCM2, and STKs negatively regulated Rho by directly activating moesin. These studies identify STKs as essential downstream effectors of CCM signaling in development and disease that may regulate both endothelial and epithelial cell junctions.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Small-molecule inhibitors of integrin α2β1 that prevent pathological thrombus formation via an allosteric mechanism

Meredith W. Miller; Sandeep Basra; Daniel W. Kulp; Paul C. Billings; Sungwook Choi; Mary Pat Beavers; Owen J. T. McCarty; Zhiying Zou; Mark L. Kahn; Joel S. Bennett; William F. DeGrado

There is a grave need for safer antiplatelet therapeutics to prevent heart attack and stroke. Agents targeting the interaction of platelets with the diseased vessel wall could impact vascular disease with minimal effects on normal hemostasis. We targeted integrin α2β1, a collagen receptor, because its overexpression is associated with pathological clot formation whereas its absence does not cause severe bleeding. Structure–activity studies led to highly potent and selective small-molecule inhibitors. Responses of integrin α2β1 mutants to these compounds are consistent with a computational model of their mode of inhibition and shed light on the activation mechanism of I-domain-containing integrins. A potent compound was proven efficacious in an animal model of arterial thrombosis, which demonstrates in vivo efficacy for inhibition of this platelet receptor. These results suggest that targeting integrin α2β1 could be a potentially safe, effective approach to long-term therapy for cardiovascular disease.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Molecular priming of Lyn by GPVI enables an immune receptor to adopt a hemostatic role

Alec A. Schmaier; Zhiying Zou; Arunas Kazlauskas; Lori A. Emert-Sedlak; Karen P. Fong; Keith B. Neeves; Sean F. Maloney; Scott L. Diamond; Satya P. Kunapuli; Jerry Ware; Lawrence F. Brass; Thomas E. Smithgall; Kalle Saksela; Mark L. Kahn

The immune receptor signaling pathway is used by nonimmune cells, but the molecular adaptations that underlie its functional diversification are not known. Circulating platelets use the immune receptor homologue glycoprotein VI (GPVI) to respond to collagen exposed at sites of vessel injury. In contrast to immune cell responses, platelet activation must take place within seconds to successfully form thrombi in flowing blood. Here, we show that the GPVI receptor utilizes a unique intracellular proline-rich domain (PRD) to accelerate platelet activation, a requirement for efficient platelet adhesion to collagen under flow. The GPVI PRD specifically binds the Src-family kinase Lyn and directly activates it, presumably through SH3 displacement. In resting platelets, Lyn is constitutively bound to GPVI in an activated state and platelets lacking Lyn exhibit defective collagen adhesion like that of platelets with GPVI receptors lacking the PRD. These findings define a molecular priming mechanism that enables an immune-type receptor to adopt a hemostatic function. These studies also demonstrate that active kinases can constitutively associate with immune-type receptors without initiating signal transduction before receptor ligation, consistent with a recent molecular model of immune receptor signaling in which receptor ligation is required to bring active kinases to their receptor substrates.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012

Blood flow reprograms lymphatic vessels to blood vessels

Chiu Yu Chen; Cara C. Bertozzi; Zhiying Zou; Lijun Yuan; John S. Lee; Min Min Lu; Stan J. Stachelek; Sathish Srinivasan; Lili Guo; Andres Vincente; Patricia Mericko; Robert J. Levy; Taija Makinen; Guillermo Oliver; Mark L. Kahn

Human vascular malformations cause disease as a result of changes in blood flow and vascular hemodynamic forces. Although the genetic mutations that underlie the formation of many human vascular malformations are known, the extent to which abnormal blood flow can subsequently influence the vascular genetic program and natural history is not. Loss of the SH2 domain-containing leukocyte protein of 76 kDa (SLP76) resulted in a vascular malformation that directed blood flow through mesenteric lymphatic vessels after birth in mice. Mesenteric vessels in the position of the congenital lymphatic in mature Slp76-null mice lacked lymphatic identity and expressed a marker of blood vessel identity. Genetic lineage tracing demonstrated that this change in vessel identity was the result of lymphatic endothelial cell reprogramming rather than replacement by blood endothelial cells. Exposure of lymphatic vessels to blood in the absence of significant flow did not alter vessel identity in vivo, but lymphatic endothelial cells exposed to similar levels of shear stress ex vivo rapidly lost expression of PROX1, a lymphatic fate-specifying transcription factor. These findings reveal that blood flow can convert lymphatic vessels to blood vessels, demonstrating that hemodynamic forces may reprogram endothelial and vessel identity in cardiovascular diseases associated with abnormal flow.


Blood | 2009

Negative regulation of activated α2 integrins during thrombopoiesis

Zhiying Zou; Alec A. Schmaier; Lan Cheng; Patricia Mericko; S. Kent Dickeson; Thomas Stricker; Samuel A. Santoro; Mark L. Kahn

Circulating platelets exhibit rapid signaling and adhesive responses to collagen that facilitate hemostasis at sites of vessel injury. Because platelets are anuclear, their collagen receptors must be expressed by megakaryocytes, platelet precursors that arise in the collagen-rich environment of the bone marrow. Whether and how megakaryocytes regulate collagen adhesion during their development in the bone marrow are unknown. We find that surface expression of activated, but not wild-type, alpha2 integrins in hematopoietic cells in vivo results in the generation of platelets that lack surface alpha2 receptors. Culture of hematopoietic progenitor cells ex vivo reveals that surface levels of activated, but not wild-type, alpha2 integrin receptors are rapidly down-regulated during cell growth on collagen but reach wild-type levels when cells are grown in the absence of collagen. Progenitor cells that express activated alpha2 integrins are normally distributed in the bone marrow in vivo and exhibit normal migration across a collagen-coated membrane ex vivo. This migration is accompanied by rapid down-regulation of activated surface integrins. These studies identify ligand-dependent removal of activated alpha2 receptors from the cell surface as a mechanism by which integrin function can be negatively regulated in hematopoietic cells during migration between the adhesive environment of the bone marrow and the nonadhesive environment of the circulating blood.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2014

Lymphatic function is required prenatally for lung inflation at birth

Zoltán Jakus; Jason P. Gleghorn; David R. Enis; Aslihan Sen; Stephanie Chia; Xi Liu; David R. Rawnsley; Yiqing Yang; Paul R. Hess; Zhiying Zou; Jisheng Yang; Susan H. Guttentag; Celeste M. Nelson; Mark L. Kahn

Neonatal mice lacking lymphatic vessels due to loss of lymphangiogenic factor CCBE1 or VEGFR3 function fail to inflate their lungs, suggestive of respiratory failure in infants with congenital pulmonary lymphangiectasia.


Blood | 2013

The secreted lymphangiogenic factor CCBE1 is essential for fetal liver erythropoiesis

Zhiying Zou; David R. Enis; Hung Bui; Eugene Khandros; Vinayak Kumar; Zoltán Jakus; Christopher S. Thom; Yiqing Yang; Veerpal Dhillon; Mei Chen; MinMin Lu; Mitchell J. Weiss; Mark L. Kahn

The secreted protein CCBE1 is required for lymphatic vessel growth in fish and mice, and mutations in the CCBE1 gene cause Hennekam syndrome, a primary human lymphedema. Here we show that loss of CCBE1 also confers severe anemia in midgestation mouse embryos due to defective definitive erythropoiesis. Fetal liver erythroid precursors of Ccbe1 null mice exhibit reduced proliferation and increased apoptosis. Colony-forming assays and hematopoietic reconstitution studies suggest that CCBE1 promotes fetal liver erythropoiesis cell nonautonomously. Consistent with these findings, Ccbe1(lacZ) reporter expression is not detected in hematopoietic cells and conditional deletion of Ccbe1 in hematopoietic cells does not confer anemia. The expression of the erythropoietic factors erythropoietin and stem cell factor is preserved in CCBE1 null embryos, but erythroblastic island (EBI) formation is reduced due to abnormal macrophage function. In contrast to the profound effects on fetal liver erythropoiesis, postnatal deletion of Ccbe1 does not confer anemia, even under conditions of erythropoietic stress, and EBI formation is normal in the bone marrow of adult CCBE1 knockout mice. Our findings reveal that CCBE1 plays an essential role in regulating the fetal liver erythropoietic environment and suggest that EBI formation is regulated differently in the fetal liver and bone marrow.

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Mark L. Kahn

University of Pennsylvania

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Alec A. Schmaier

University of Pennsylvania

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Mei Chen

University of Pennsylvania

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Hong Chen

University of Pennsylvania

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Diane Zhou

University of Pennsylvania

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Lili Guo

University of Pennsylvania

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Patricia Mericko

University of Pennsylvania

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Richard O. Hynes

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Xiangjian Zheng

Georgia Regents University

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