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Dive into the research topics where Zhuzhen Zhang is active.

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Featured researches published by Zhuzhen Zhang.


Blood | 2011

Ferroportin1 deficiency in mouse macrophages impairs iron homeostasis and inflammatory responses

Zhuzhen Zhang; Fan Zhang; Peng An; Xin Guo; Yuanyuan Shen; Yunlong Tao; Qian Wu; Yuchao Zhang; Yu Yu; Bo Ning; Guangjun Nie; Mitchell D. Knutson; Gregory J. Anderson; Fudi Wang

Systemic iron requirements are met predominantly through the recycling of iron from senescent erythrocytes by macrophages, a process in which the iron exporter ferroportin (Fpn1) is considered to be essential. Yet the role of Fpn1 in macrophage iron recycling and whether it influences innate immune responses are poorly understood in vivo. We inactivated Fpn1 in macrophages by crossing Fpn1-floxed animals with macrophage-targeted LysM-Cre or F4/80-Cre transgenic mice. Macrophage Fpn1 deletion mice were overtly normal; however, they displayed a mild anemia and iron accumulation in splenic, hepatic, and bone marrow macrophages when fed a standard diet. Iron loading was exacerbated after the administration of iron dextran or phenylhydrazine. When Fpn1(LysM/LysM) mice were challenged with an iron-deficient diet, they developed a more severe anemia and strikingly higher splenic iron levels than control mice, indicating significantly impaired iron mobilization from macrophages. Because immune responses can be altered by modulating iron status, we also examined the expression of proinflammatory cytokines. We found that expression levels of TNF-α and IL-6 were significantly enhanced in Fpn1(LysM/LysM) macrophages lacking Fpn1. These studies demonstrate that Fpn1 plays important roles in macrophage iron release in vivo and in modulating innate immune responses.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2011

Iron Deprivation Suppresses Hepatocellular Carcinoma Growth in Experimental Studies

Qian Ba; Miao Hao; He Huang; Junmei Hou; Shichao Ge; Zhuzhen Zhang; Jun Yin; Ruiai Chu; Hualiang Jiang; Fudi Wang; Kaixian Chen; Hong Liu; Hui Wang

Purpose: Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the third most common cause of cancer-related death, and iron overload is a significant risk factor in the development of HCC. In this study, we investigated the potential application of depriving iron by a novel iron chelator, thiosemicarbazone-24 (TSC24), in HCC treatment. Experimental Design: Two HCC cell lines and HFE knockout (HFE−/−) mice were used to determine iron chelation efficiency of TSC24. The anticancer effects of TSC24 on HCC were analyzed in vitro and in athymic xenograft mouse models. Results: Treatment with TSC24 significantly decreased the cellular iron concentration in hepatoma cells and the serum iron concentration in HFE−/− mice by blocking iron uptake and interfering with normal regulation of iron levels. Moreover, the viability of HCC cell lines was reduced by TSC24. Confirming the mechanism of the agent, this decrease in viability could be partially rescued by addition of exogenous iron. TSC24 also suppressed tumor growth in athymic mice bearing human HCC xenografts in a concentration-dependent manner, without apparent toxicity in parallel with a decrease in the serum iron level. Further studies revealed that TSC24 efficiently triggered cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis in Hep3B and HepG2 cell lines. Conclusions: TSC24 is a potent iron chelator that suppresses human HCC tumor growth by disrupting iron homeostasis, reducing available iron, and triggering cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis, without apparent host toxicity at effective doses. Thus, TSC24 shows great potential for the treatment of HCC. Clin Cancer Res; 17(24); 7625–33. ©2011 AACR.


Hepatology | 2012

Ferroportin1 in hepatocytes and macrophages is required for the efficient mobilization of body iron stores in mice

Zhuzhen Zhang; Fan Zhang; Xin Guo; Peng An; Yunlong Tao; Fudi Wang

The liver is a major site of iron storage where sequestered iron can be actively mobilized for utilization when needed elsewhere in the body. Currently, hepatocyte iron efflux mechanisms and their relationships to macrophage iron recycling during the control of whole‐body iron homeostasis are unclear. We hypothesized that the iron exporter, ferroportin1 (Fpn1), is critical for both iron mobilization from hepatocytes and iron recycling from macrophages. To test this, we generated hepatocyte‐specific Fpn1 deletion mice (Fpn1Alb/Alb) and mice that lacked Fpn1 in both hepatocytes and macrophages (Fpn1Alb/Alb;LysM/LysM). When fed a standard diet, Fpn1Alb/Alb mice showed mild hepatocyte iron retention. However, red blood cell (RBC) counts and hemoglobin (Hb) levels were normal, indicating intact erythropoiesis. When fed an iron‐deficient diet, Fpn1Alb/Alb mice showed impaired liver iron mobilization and anemia, with much lower RBC and Hb levels than Fpn1flox/flox mice on the same diet. Using a strategy where mice were preloaded with differing amounts of dietary iron before iron deprivation, we determined that erythropoiesis in Fpn1Alb/Alb and Fpn1flox/flox mice depended on the balance between storage iron and iron demands. On a standard diet, Fpn1Alb/Alb;LysM/LysM mice displayed substantial iron retention in hepatocytes and macrophages, yet maintained intact erythropoiesis, implying a compensatory role for intestinal iron absorption. In contrast, when Fpn1Alb/Alb;LysM/LysM mice were fed an iron‐deficient diet, they developed severe iron‐deficiency anemia, regardless of their iron storage status. Thus, Fpn1 is critical for both hepatocyte iron mobilization and macrophage iron recycling during conditions of dietary iron deficiency. Conclusion: Our data reveal new insights into the relationships between Fpn1‐mediated iron mobilization, iron storage, and intestinal iron absorption and how these processes interact to maintain systemic iron homeostasis. (HEPATOLOGY 2012;56:961–971)


Hepatology | 2017

Characterization of ferroptosis in murine models of hemochromatosis

Hao Wang; Peng An; Enjun Xie; Qian Wu; Xuexian Fang; Hong Gao; Zhuzhen Zhang; Yuzhu Li; Xudong Wang; Jiaying Zhang; Guoli Li; Lei Yang; Wei Liu; Junxia Min; Fudi Wang

Ferroptosis is a recently identified iron‐dependent form of nonapoptotic cell death implicated in brain, kidney, and heart pathology. However, the biological roles of iron and iron metabolism in ferroptosis remain poorly understood. Here, we studied the functional role of iron and iron metabolism in the pathogenesis of ferroptosis. We found that ferric citrate potently induces ferroptosis in murine primary hepatocytes and bone marrow–derived macrophages. Next, we screened for ferroptosis in mice fed a high‐iron diet and in mouse models of hereditary hemochromatosis with iron overload. We found that ferroptosis occurred in mice fed a high‐iron diet and in two knockout mouse lines that develop severe iron overload (Hjv–/– and Smad4Alb/Alb mice) but not in a third line that develops only mild iron overload (Hfe–/– mice). Moreover, we found that iron overload–induced liver damage was rescued by the ferroptosis inhibitor ferrostatin‐1. To identify the genes involved in iron‐induced ferroptosis, we performed microarray analyses of iron‐treated bone marrow–derived macrophages. Interestingly, solute carrier family 7, member 11 (Slc7a11), a known ferroptosis‐related gene, was significantly up‐regulated in iron‐treated cells compared with untreated cells. However, genetically deleting Slc7a11 expression was not sufficient to induce ferroptosis in mice. Next, we studied iron‐treated hepatocytes and bone marrow–derived macrophages isolated from Slc7a11–/– mice fed a high‐iron diet. Conclusion: We found that iron treatment induced ferroptosis in Slc7a11–/– cells, indicating that deleting Slc7a11 facilitates the onset of ferroptosis specifically under high‐iron conditions; these results provide compelling evidence that iron plays a key role in triggering Slc7a11‐mediated ferroptosis and suggest that ferroptosis may be a promising target for treating hemochromatosis‐related tissue damage. (Hepatology 2017;66:449–465).


Haematologica | 2012

Metalloreductase Steap3 coordinates the regulation of iron homeostasis and inflammatory responses

Fan Zhang; Yunlong Tao; Zhuzhen Zhang; Xin Guo; Peng An; Yuanyuan Shen; Qian Wu; Yu Yu; Fudi Wang

Background Iron and its homeostasis are intimately related to inflammatory responses, but the underlying molecular mechanisms are poorly understood. We investigated the role of Steap3 in regulating iron homeostasis in macrophages, and the effects of Steap3 depletion on host inflammatory responses. Design and Methods We analyzed bone marrow-derived macrophages and primary cultured hepatocytes from Steap3-/- mouse models to investigate the roles of Steap3 in coordinately regulating iron homeostasis and inflammatory responses. First, we examined iron distribution and iron status in cells deficient in Steap3, as well as the requirement for the Steap3 gene during inflammatory responses. Secondly, we analyzed the regulation of Steap3 expression by inflammatory stimuli and thus, the influence of these stimuli on iron distribution and homeostasis. Results We found that Steap3 mRNA was expressed at high levels in macrophages and hepatocytes. Steap3 deficiency led to impaired iron homeostasis, causing abnormal iron distribution and a decreased availability of cytosolic iron in macrophages. Among STEAP family members, Steap3 mRNA was uniquely down-regulated in macrophages stimulated by lipopolysaccharides. To determine whether Steap3 regulated iron homeostasis during inflammatory stress, we treated Steap3-/- mice with lipopolysaccharide, which produced greater iron accumulation in the vital tissues of these mice compared to in the tissues of wild-type controls. Furthermore, Steap3 depletion led to impaired induction of interferon-β, monocyte chemoattractant protein-5, and interferon induced protein-10 in macrophages via the TLR4-mediated signaling pathway. Conclusions Steap3 is important in regulating both iron homeostasis and TLR4-mediated inflammatory responses in macrophages. Steap3 deficiency causes abnormal iron status and homeostasis, which leads to impaired TLR4-mediated inflammatory responses in macrophages. Following inflammatory stimuli, Steap3 depletion causes dysregulated iron sequestration and distribution. Our results provide important insights into the function of Steap3 as a coordinate regulator of both iron homeostasis and innate immunity.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Slc39a7/zip7 Plays a Critical Role in Development and Zinc Homeostasis in Zebrafish

Guang Yan; Yuchao Zhang; Junlei Yu; Yu Yu; Fan Zhang; Zhuzhen Zhang; Aimin Wu; Xianghua Yan; Yi Zhou; Fudi Wang

Background Slc39a7/Zip7, also known as Ke4, is a member of solute carrier family 39 (Slc39a) and plays a critical role in regulating cell growth and death. Because the function of Zip7 in vivo was unclear, the present study investigated the function of zip7 in vertebrate development and zinc metabolism using zebrafish as a model organism. Principal Finding Using real-time PCR to determine the gene expression pattern of zip7 during zebrafish development, we found that zip7 mRNA is expressed throughout embryonic development and into maturity. Interestingly, whole mount in situ hybridization revealed that while zip7 mRNA is ubiquitously expressed until 12 hours post-fertilization (hpf); at 24 hpf and beyond, zip7 mRNA was specifically detected only in eyes. Morpholino-antisense (MO) gene knockdown assay revealed that downregulation of zip7 expression resulted in several morphological defects in zebrafish including decreased head size, smaller eyes, shorter palates, and shorter and curved spinal cords. Analysis by synchrotron radiation X-ray fluorescence (SR-XRF) showed reduced concentrations of zinc in brain, eyes, and gills of zip7-MO-injected embryos. Furthermore, incubation of the zip7 knockdown embryos in a zinc-supplemented solution was able to rescue the MO-induced morphological defects. Significance Our data suggest that zip7 is required for eye, brain, and skeleton formation during early embryonic development in zebrafish. Moreover, zinc supplementation can partially rescue defects resulting from zip7 gene knockdown. Taken together, our data provide critical insight into a novel function of zip7 in development and zinc homeostasis in vivo in zebrafish.


PLOS Genetics | 2015

CCNYL1, but Not CCNY, Cooperates with CDK16 to Regulate Spermatogenesis in Mouse.

Zhenzhen Zi; Zhuzhen Zhang; Qingrun Li; Weiwei An; Liyong Zeng; Dayuan Gao; Ying Yang; Xueliang Zhu; Rong Zeng; Winnie W. C. Shum; Jiarui Wu

Cyclin Y-like 1 (Ccnyl1) is a newly-identified member of the cyclin family and is highly similar in protein sequences to Cyclin Y (Ccny). However, the function of Ccnyl1 is poorly characterized in any organism. Here we found that Ccnyl1 was most abundantly expressed in the testis of mice and was about seven times higher than the level of Ccny. Male Ccnyl1-/- mice were infertile, whereas both male and female Ccny-/- mice displayed normal fertility. These results suggest that Ccnyl1, but not Ccny, is indispensable for male fertility. Spermatozoa obtained from Ccnyl1-/- mice displayed significantly impaired motility, and represented a thinned annulus region and/or a bent head. We found that the protein, but not the mRNA, level of cyclin-dependent kinase 16 (CDK16) was decreased in the testis of Ccnyl1-/- mice. Further study demonstrated that CCNYL1 interacted with CDK16 and this interaction mutually increased the stability of these two proteins. Moreover, the interaction increased the kinase activity of CDK16. In addition, we observed an alteration of phosphorylation levels of CDK16 in the presence of CCNYL1. We identified the phosphorylation sites of CDK16 by mass spectrometry and revealed that several phosphorylation modifications on the N-terminal region of CDK16 were indispensable for the CCNYL1 binding and the modulation of CDK16 kinase activity. Our results therefore reveal a previously unrecognized role of CCNYL1 in regulating spermatogenesis through the interaction and modulation of CDK16.


Journal of Nutrition | 2013

Screening Identifies the Chinese Medicinal Plant Caulis Spatholobi as an Effective HAMP Expression Inhibitor

Yu Guan; Peng An; Zhuzhen Zhang; Fan Zhang; Yu Yu; Qian Wu; Yanbo Shi; Xin Guo; Yunlong Tao; Fudi Wang

Hepcidin, the pivotal regulator of iron metabolism, plays a critical role in multiple diseases including anemia of chronic disease and hemochromatosis. Recent studies have focused on identifying antagonists of hepcidin. We hypothesized that bioactive extracts from Chinese medicinal plants may be efficacious in the inhibition of expression of the hepcidin-encoding gene (HAMP) product, hepcidin. To test this, we measured the level of hepcidin expression in cultured cells treated with 16 different medicinal plant extracts, all of which are used to treat anemia-related disorders in traditional Chinese medicine. Among the extracts tested, that of Caulis Spatholobi (CS; also called Jixueteng, the stem of Spatholobus suberectus Dunn) showed the most potent inhibitory effect on HAMP expression in the Huh7 cell line and was therefore selected for further mechanistic study. In cells treated with 400 μg/mL of extract, phosphorylated mothers against decapentaplegic homolog proteins 1/5/8 levels were 80% less than those of controls (P < 0.001), and the inhibitory effect on interleukin-6-induced HAMP expression (65% inhibition) was weaker than the strong inhibition on bone morphogenetic protein 6-induced HAMP expression (97% inhibition). Seven-week-old C57BL/6 female mice were fed an AIN-76A diet containing 10.8% dried CS and then analyzed on d 0, 5, 10, or 15. On d 5, there was a 60% decrease in hepatic HAMP expression (P < 0.05), an 18% decrease in hepatic iron concentration, and a 100% increase in serum iron concentration (P < 0.05) compared with the d 0 group. In conclusion, we identify the extract of CS as a novel, potent HAMP expression inhibitor, which may be further modified and optimized to become a dietary supplement or a therapeutic option for the amelioration of hepcidin-overexpression-related diseases, including iron deficiency anemia.


British Journal of Haematology | 2014

MBD5 regulates iron metabolism via methylation‐independent genomic targeting of Fth1 through KAT2A in mice

Yunlong Tao; Qian Wu; Xin Guo; Zhuzhen Zhang; Yuanyuan Shen; Fudi Wang

Ferritin plays important roles in iron metabolism and controls iron absorption in the intestine. The ferritin subunits ferritin heavy chain (Fth1) and ferritin light chain (Ftl1) are tightly regulated at both the transcriptional and post‐transcriptional levels. However, mechanisms of maintaining stable, basal expression of Fth1 are poorly understood. Here, we show that global deletion of Mbd5 in mice induces an iron overload phenotype. Liver and serum iron levels in Mbd5−/− mice were 3·2‐fold and 1·5‐fold higher respectively, than wild‐type littermates; moreover, serum ferritin was increased >5‐fold in the Mbd5−/− mice. Mbd5 encodes a member of the methyl‐CpG binding domain family; however, the precise function of this gene is poorly understood. Here, we found that intestinal Fth1 mRNA levels were decreased in Mbd5−/− mice. Loss of Fth1 expression in the intestine could lead to iron over‐absorption. Furthermore, deleting Mbd5 specifically in the intestine resulted in a phenotype similar to that of conditional deletion of Fth1 mice. An Fth1 promoter‐report luciferase assay indicated that overexpression of Mbd5 enhanced Fth1 transcription in a dose‐dependent manner. Histone H4 acetylation of the Fth1 promoter was reduced in the intestine of Mbd5−/− mice and further analysis showed that histone acetyltransferase KAT2A was essential for MBD5‐induced Fth1 transcription.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2016

Glutathione Depletion, Pentose Phosphate Pathway Activation, and Hemolysis in Erythrocytes Protecting Cancer Cells from Vitamin C-induced Oxidative Stress

Zhuzhen Zhang; Eunice E. Lee; Jessica Sudderth; Yangbo Yue; Ayesha Zia; Donald A. Glass; Ralph J. DeBerardinis; Richard C. Wang

The discovery that oxidized vitamin C, dehydroascorbate (DHA), can induce oxidative stress and cell death in cancer cells has rekindled interest in the use of high dose vitamin C (VC) as a cancer therapy. However, high dose VC has shown limited efficacy in clinical trials, possibly due to the decreased bioavailability of oral VC. Because human erythrocytes express high levels of Glut1, take up DHA, and reduce it to VC, we tested how erythrocytes might impact high dose VC therapies. Cancer cells are protected from VC-mediated cell death when co-cultured with physiologically relevant numbers of erythrocytes. Pharmacological doses of VC induce oxidative stress, GSH depletion, and increased glucose flux through the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) in erythrocytes. Incubation of erythrocytes with VC induced hemolysis, which was exacerbated in erythrocytes from glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) patients and rescued by antioxidants. Thus, erythrocytes protect cancer cells from VC-induced oxidative stress and undergo hemolysis in vitro, despite activation of the PPP. These results have implications on the use of high dose VC in ongoing clinical trials and highlight the importance of the PPP in the response to oxidative stress.

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Yunlong Tao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Fan Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xin Guo

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yu Yu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yuanyuan Shen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Eunice E. Lee

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Richard C. Wang

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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