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Dive into the research topics where Zilin Nie is active.

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Featured researches published by Zilin Nie.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2003

Vpr R77Q is associated with long-term nonprogressive HIV infection and impaired induction of apoptosis

Julian J. Lum; Oren Cohen; Zilin Nie; Joel G. R. Weaver; Timothy S. Gomez; Xiao Jian Yao; David H. Lynch; André A. Pilon; Nanci Hawley; John E. Kim; Zhaoxia Chen; Michael Montpetit; Jaime Sanchez-Dardon; Éric A. Cohen; Andrew D. Badley

The absence of immune defects that occurs in the syndrome of long-term nonprogressive (LTNP) HIV infection offers insights into the pathophysiology of HIV-induced immune disease. The (H[F/S]RIG)(2) domain of viral protein R (Vpr) induces apoptosis and may contribute to HIV-induced T cell depletion. We demonstrate a higher frequency of R77Q Vpr mutations in patients with LTNP than in patients with progressive disease. In addition, T cell infections using vesicular stomatitis virus G (VSV-G) pseudotyped HIV-1 Vpr R77Q result in less (P = 0.01) T cell death than infections using wild-type Vpr, despite similar levels of viral replication. Wild-type Vpr-associated events, including procaspase-8 and -3 cleavage, loss of mitochondrial transmembrane potential (deltapsi(m)), and DNA fragmentation factor activation are attenuated by R77Q Vpr. These data highlight the pathophysiologic role of Vpr in HIV-induced immune disease and suggest a novel mechanism of LTNP.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Protease Cleaves Procaspase 8 In Vivo

Zilin Nie; Gary D. Bren; Stacey R. Vlahakis; Alicia Algeciras Schimnich; Jason M. Brenchley; Sergey Trushin; Sarah Warren; David J. Schnepple; Colin Kovacs; Mona Loutfy; Andrew D. Badley

ABSTRACT Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection causes apoptosis of infected CD4 T cells as well as uninfected (bystander) CD4 and CD8 T cells. It remains unknown what signals cause infected cells to die. We demonstrate that HIV-1 protease specifically cleaves procaspase 8 to create a novel fragment termed casp8p41, which independently induces apoptosis. casp8p41 is specific to HIV-1 protease-induced death but not other caspase 8-dependent death stimuli. In HIV-1-infected patients, casp8p41 is detected only in CD4+ T cells, predominantly in the CD27+ memory subset, its presence increases with increasing viral load, and it colocalizes with both infected and apoptotic cells. These data indicate that casp8p41 independently induces apoptosis and is a specific product of HIV-1 protease which may contribute to death of HIV-1-infected cells.


Journal of Virology | 2004

Differential Effects of Interleukin-7 and Interleukin-15 on NK Cell Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Activity

Julian J. Lum; David J. Schnepple; Zilin Nie; Jaime Sanchez-Dardon; Georgina Mbisa; Jennifer Mihowich; Nanci Hawley; Shanil Narayan; John E. Kim; David H. Lynch; Andrew D. Badley

ABSTRACT The ability of interleukin-7 (IL-7) and IL-15 to expand and/or augment effector cell functions may be of therapeutic benefit to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients. The functional effects of these cytokines on innate HIV-specific immunity and their impact on cells harboring HIV are unknown. We demonstrate that both IL-7 and IL-15 augment natural killer (NK) function by using cells (CD3− CD16+ CD56+) from both HIV-positive and -negative donors. Whereas IL-7 enhances NK function through upregulation of Fas ligand, the effect of IL-15 is mediated through upregulation of tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand. The difference in these effector mechanisms is reflected by the ability of IL-15-treated but not IL-7-treated NK cells to reduce the burden of replication-competent HIV in autologous peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) (infectious units per million for control NK cells, 6.79; for IL-7-treated NK cells, 236.17; for IL-15-treated cells, 1.01; P = 0.01 versus control). In addition, the treatment of PBMC with IL-15-treated but not IL-7-treated NK cells causes undetectable HIV p24 (five of five cases), HIV RNA (five of five cases), or HIV DNA (three of five cases). These results support the concept of adjuvant immunotherapy of HIV infection with either IL-7 or IL-15 but suggest that the NK-mediated antiviral effect of IL-15 may be superior.


The Open Virology Journal | 2008

HIV Protease Cleavage of Procaspase 8 is Necessary for Death of HIV-Infected Cells

Zilin Nie; Gary D. Bren; Stacey A. Rizza; Andrew D. Badley

Numerous host and viral factors are capable of causing death of HIV infected cells, uninfected bystander cells, or both. We assessed the relevance of HIV protease in infected cell killing by mutating its obligate substrate for death, procaspase 8. VSV pseudotyped HIV infection of cells expressing WT caspase 8 resulted in apoptotic cell death and generation of the HIV protease specific cleavage product of procaspase 8, casp8p41. Conversely, both cell death and casp8p41 production were inhibited in cells expressing procaspase 8 engineered to be resistant to HIV protease cleavage. Lymph nodes from HIV-infected patients with ongoing viral replication also selectively expressed casp8p41, which colocalized with both infected and apoptotic cells. HIV protease cleavage of procaspase 8 appears to be a necessary event for infected cell killing, which is responsible for infected cell death within lymphoid tissues from HIV-infected patients.


The Open Virology Journal | 2008

Analysis of HIV Protease Killing Through Caspase 8 Reveals a Novel Interaction Between Caspase 8 and Mitochondria

Alicia Algeciras-Schimnich; Anne-Sophie Belzacq-Casagrande; Gary D. Bren; Zilin Nie; Julie A. Taylor; Stacey A. Rizza; Catherine Brenner; Andrew D. Badley

Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) protease initiates apoptosis of HIV-infected cells by proteolytic cleavage of procaspase 8, creating a novel peptide termed casp8p41. Expression of casp8p41 alone is sufficient to initiate caspase-dependent cell death associated with mitochondrial depolarization. Since casp8p41 does not contain the catalytic cysteine at position 360, the mechanism by which casp8p41 initiates apoptosis is unclear. We demonstrate that casp8p41 directly causes mitochondrial depolarization and release of cytochrome c with downstream caspase 9 activation. Moreover, death induced by casp8p41 requires the presence of mitochondria, and in intact cells, casp8p41 colocalizes with mitochondria. These results illuminate a novel mechanism of cell death induced by a caspase 8 cleavage fragment whereby mitochondrial interaction leads to depolarization and cytochrome c release.


Journal of Immunology | 2018

Both HIV-Infected and Uninfected Cells Express TRAILshort, Which Confers TRAIL Resistance upon Bystander Cells within the Microenvironment

Zilin Nie; Fatma Aboulnasr; Sekar Natesampillai; Stephen P. Burke; Ashton Krogman; Gary D. Bren; Thomas Dy Chung; Jeff R. Anderson; Michele Smart; David J. Katzmann; Govindarajan Rajagopalan; Nathan W. Cummins; Andrew D. Badley

TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) was initially described to induce apoptosis of tumor cells and/or virally infected cells, although sparing normal cells, and has been implicated in the pathogenesis of HIV disease. We previously identified TRAILshort, a TRAIL splice variant, in HIV-infected patients and characterized it as being a dominant negative ligand to subvert TRAIL-mediated killing. Herein, using single-cell genomics we demonstrate that TRAILshort is produced by HIV-infected cells, as well as by uninfected bystander cells, and that the dominant stimulus which induces TRAILshort production are type I IFNs and TLR7, TLR8, and TLR9 agonists. TRAILshort has a short t1/2 by virtue of containing a PEST domain, which targets the protein toward the ubiquitin proteasome pathway for degradation. Further we show that TRAILshort binds preferentially to TRAIL receptors 1 and 2 with significantly reduced interaction with the decoy TRAIL receptors 3 and 4. Recombinant TRAILshort is sufficient to protect cells against TRAIL-induced killing, whereas immunodepletion of TRAILshort with a specific Ab restores TRAIL sensitivity. Importantly we show that TRAILshort is shed in microvesicles into the cellular microenvironment and therefore confers TRAIL resistance not only on the cell which produces it, but also upon neighboring bystander cells. These results establish a novel paradigm for understanding and overcoming TRAIL resistance, in particular how HIV-infected cells escape immune elimination by the TRAIL:TRAILshort receptor axis.


Journal of Virology | 2018

HIV Protease-Generated Casp8p41, When Bound and Inactivated by Bcl2, Is Degraded by the Proteasome

Sekar Natesampillai; Nathan W. Cummins; Zilin Nie; Rahul Sampath; Jason V. Baker; Keith Henry; Marilia Rita Pinzone; Una O'Doherty; Eric C. Polley; Gary D. Bren; David J. Katzmann; Andrew D. Badley

ABSTRACT HIV protease is known to cause cell death, which is dependent upon cleavage of procaspase 8. HIV protease cleavage of procaspase 8 generates Casp8p41, which directly binds Bak with nanomolar affinity, causing Bak activation and consequent cell death. Casp8p41 can also bind Bcl2 with nanomolar affinity, in which case cell death is averted. Central memory CD4 T cells express high levels of Bcl2, possibly explaining why those cells do not die when they reactivate HIV. Here, we determine that the Casp8p41-Bcl2 complex is polyubiquitinated and degraded by the proteasome. Ixazomib, a proteasome inhibitor in clinical use, blocks this pathway, increasing the abundance of Casp8p41 and causing more cells to die in a Casp8p41-dependent manner. IMPORTANCE The Casp8p41 pathway of cell death is unique to HIV-infected cells yet is blocked by Bcl2. Once bound by Bcl2, Casp8p41 is polyubiquitinated and degraded by the proteasome. Proteasome inhibition blocks degradation of Casp8p41, increasing Casp8p41 levels and causing more HIV-infected cells to die.


Journal of Virology | 1998

The Putative Alpha Helix 2 of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Vpr Contains a Determinant Which Is Responsible for the Nuclear Translocation of Proviral DNA in Growth-Arrested Cells

Zilin Nie; Dominique Bergeron; Ramu A. Subbramanian; Xiaojian Yao; Florent Checroune; Nicole Rougeau; Éric A. Cohen


Journal of Virology | 1998

Virion-Targeted Viral Inactivation of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 by Using Vpr Fusion Proteins

Gary P. Kobinger; Alessandra Borsetti; Zilin Nie; Johanne Mercier; Nesrine Daniel; Heinrich G. Göttlinger; Éric A. Cohen


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2005

Ritonavir does not inhibit calpain in vitro

Dominic Cuerrier; Zilin Nie; Andrew D. Badley; Peter L. Davies

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Jaime Sanchez-Dardon

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

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Julian J. Lum

Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

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Éric A. Cohen

Université de Montréal

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