Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Zusen Fan is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Zusen Fan.


Cell | 2003

Tumor Suppressor NM23-H1 Is a Granzyme A-Activated DNase during CTL-Mediated Apoptosis, and the Nucleosome Assembly Protein SET Is Its Inhibitor

Zusen Fan; Paul J. Beresford; David Y. Oh; Dong Zhang; Judy Lieberman

Granzyme A (GzmA) induces a caspase-independent cell death pathway characterized by single-stranded DNA nicks and other features of apoptosis. A GzmA-activated DNase (GAAD) is in an ER associated complex containing pp32 and the GzmA substrates SET, HMG-2, and Ape1. We show that GAAD is NM23-H1, a nucleoside diphosphate kinase implicated in suppression of tumor metastasis, and its specific inhibitor (IGAAD) is SET. NM23-H1 binds to SET and is released from inhibition by GzmA cleavage of SET. After GzmA loading or CTL attack, SET and NM23-H1 translocate to the nucleus and SET is degraded, allowing NM23-H1 to nick chromosomal DNA. GzmA-treated cells with silenced NM23-H1 expression are resistant to GzmA-mediated DNA damage and cytolysis, while cells overexpressing NM23-H1 are more sensitive.


Nature Immunology | 2003

Cleaving the oxidative repair protein Ape1 enhances cell death mediated by granzyme A

Zusen Fan; Paul J. Beresford; Dong Zhang; Zhan Xu; Carl D. Novina; Akira Yoshida; Yves Pommier; Judy Lieberman

The cytolytic T lymphocyte protease granzyme A (GzmA) initiates a caspase-independent cell death pathway. Here we report that the rate-limiting enzyme of DNA base excision repair, apurinic endonuclease-1 (Ape1), which is also known as redox factor-1 (Ref-1), binds to GzmA and is contained in the SET complex, a macromolecular complex of 270–420 kDa that is associated with the endoplasmic reticulum and is targeted by GzmA during cell-mediated death. GzmA cleaves Ape1 after Lys31 and destroys its known oxidative repair functions. In so doing, GzmA may block cellular repair and force apoptosis. In support of this, cells with silenced Ape1 expression are more sensitive, whereas cells overexpressing noncleavable Ape1 are more resistant, to GzmA-mediated death.


Current Opinion in Immunology | 2003

Nuclear war: the granzyme A-bomb.

Judy Lieberman; Zusen Fan

Granzyme A, a serine protease in the cytotoxic granules of natural killer cells and cytotoxic T lymphocytes, induces caspase-independent cell death when introduced into target cells by perforin. Granzyme A induces single-stranded DNA damage as well as rapid loss of cell membrane integrity and mitochondrial transmembrane potential through unknown mechanisms. Granzyme A destroys the nuclear envelope by targeting lamins and opens up DNA for degradation by targeting histones. A special target of the granzyme A cell death pathway is an endoplasmic reticulum-associated complex, called the SET complex, which contains three granzyme A substrates, the nucleosome assembly protein SET, the DNA bending protein HMG-2, and the base excision repair endonuclease Ape1. The SET complex also contains the tumor suppressor protein pp32 and the granzyme A-activated DNase NM23-H1, which is inhibited by SET. Granzyme A cleavage of SET releases the inhibition and unleashes NM23-H1. Cleavage of Ape1 by granzyme A interferes with the ability of the target cell to repair itself. The novel cell death pathway initiated by granzyme A provides a parallel pathway for apoptosis, important in destroying targets that overexpress bcl-2 or are otherwise invulnerable to the caspases.


Cell Stem Cell | 2015

The Long Noncoding RNA lncTCF7 Promotes Self-Renewal of Human Liver Cancer Stem Cells through Activation of Wnt Signaling

Yanying Wang; Lei He; Ying Du; Pingping Zhu; Guanling Huang; Jianjun Luo; Xinlong Yan; Buqing Ye; Chong Li; Pengyan Xia; Geng Zhang; Yong Tian; Runsheng Chen; Zusen Fan

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the most prevalent subtype of liver cancer, and it is characterized by a high rate of recurrence and heterogeneity. Liver cancer stem cells (CSCs) may well contribute to both of these pathological properties, but the mechanisms underlying their self-renewal and maintenance are poorly understood. Here, using transcriptome microarray analysis, we identified a long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) termed lncTCF7 that is highly expressed in HCC tumors and liver CSCs. LncTCF7 is required for liver CSC self-renewal and tumor propagation. Mechanistically, lncTCF7 recruits the SWI/SNF complex to the promoter of TCF7 to regulate its expression, leading to activation of Wnt signaling. Our data suggest that lncTCF7-mediated Wnt signaling primes liver CSC self-renewal and tumor propagation. In sum, therefore, we have identified an lncRNA-based Wnt signaling regulatory circuit that promotes tumorigenic activity in liver cancer stem cells, highlighting the role that lncRNAs can play in tumor growth and propagation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Granzyme A Activates an Endoplasmic Reticulum-associated Caspase-independent Nuclease to Induce Single-stranded DNA Nicks

Paul J. Beresford; Dong Zhang; David Y. Oh; Zusen Fan; Eric L. Greer; Melissa Russo; Madhuri Jaju; Judy Lieberman

The cytotoxic T lymphocyte protease granzyme A (GzmA) initiates a novel caspase-independent cell death pathway characterized by single-stranded DNA nicking. The previously identified GzmA substrate SET is in a multimeric 270–420-kDa endoplasmic reticulum-associated complex that also contains the tumor suppressor protein pp32. GzmA cleaved the nucleosome assembly protein SET after Lys176 and disrupted its nucleosome assembly activity. The purified SET complex required only GzmA to reconstitute single-stranded DNA nicking in isolated nuclei. DNA nicking occurred independently of caspase activation. The SET complex contains a 25-kDa Mg2+-dependent nuclease that degrades calf thymus DNA and plasmid DNA. Thus, GzmA activates a DNase (GzmA-activated DNase) within the SET complex to produce a novel form of DNA damage during cytotoxic T lymphocyte-mediated death.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Heat shock protein 75 (TRAP1) antagonizes reactive oxygen species generation and protects cells from granzyme M-mediated apoptosis.

Guoqiang Hua; Qixiang Zhang; Zusen Fan

Natural killer (NK) cells play an important role in innate immunity against virally infected or transformed cells as the first defense line. Granzyme M (GzmM) is an orphan granzyme that is constitutively highly expressed in NK cells and is consistent with NK cell-mediated cytolysis. We recently demonstrated that GzmM induces caspase-dependent apoptosis with DNA fragmentation through direct cleavage of inhibitor of caspase-activated DNase (ICAD). However, the molecular mechanisms for GzmM-induced apoptosis are unclear. We found GzmM causes mitochondrial swelling and loss of mitochondrial transmembrane potential. Moreover, GzmM initiates reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation and cytochrome c release. Heat shock protein 75 (HSP75, also known as TRAP1) acts as an antagonist of ROS and protects cells from GzmM-mediated apoptosis. GzmM cleaves TRAP1 and abolishes its antagonistic function to ROS, resulting in ROS accumulation. Silencing TRAP1 through RNA interference increases ROS accumulation, whereas TRAP1 overexpression attenuates ROS production. ROS accumulation is in accordance with the release of cytochrome c from mitochondria and enhances GzmM-mediated apoptosis.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2002

HMG2 Interacts with the Nucleosome Assembly Protein SET and Is a Target of the Cytotoxic T-Lymphocyte Protease Granzyme A

Zusen Fan; Paul J. Beresford; Dong Zhang; Judy Lieberman

ABSTRACT The cytotoxic T-lymphocyte protease granzyme A induces caspase-independent cell death in which DNA single-stranded nicking is observed instead of oligonucleosomal fragmentation. A 270- to 420-kDa endoplasmic reticulum-associated complex (SET complex) containing the nucleosome assembly protein SET, the tumor suppressor pp32, and the base excision repair enzyme APE can induce single-stranded DNA damage in isolated nuclei in a granzyme A-dependent manner. The normal functions of the SET complex are unknown, but the functions of its components suggest that it is involved in activating transcription and DNA repair. We now find that the SET complex contains DNA binding and bending activities mediated by the chromatin-associated protein HMG2. HMG2 facilitates assembly of nucleoprotein higher-order structures by bending and looping DNA or by stabilizing underwound DNA. HMG2 is in the SET complex and coprecipitates with SET. By confocal microscopy, it is observed that cytoplasmic HMG2 colocalizes with SET in association with the endoplasmic reticulum, but most nuclear HMG2 is unassociated with SET. This physical association suggests that HMG2 may facilitate the nucleosome assembly, transcriptional activation, and DNA repair functions of SET and/or APE. HMG2, like SET and APE, is a physiologically relevant granzyme A substrate in targeted cells. HMG1, however, is not a substrate. Granzyme A cleavage after Lys65 in the midst of HMG box A destroys HMG2-mediated DNA binding and bending functions. Granzyme A cleavage and functional disruption of key nuclear substrates, including HMG2, SET, APE, lamins, and histones, are likely to cripple the cellular repair response to promote cell death in this novel caspase-independent death pathway.


The EMBO Journal | 2013

WASH inhibits autophagy through suppression of Beclin 1 ubiquitination

Pengyan Xia; Shuo Wang; Ying Du; Zhen-Ao Zhao; Lei Shi; Lei Sun; Guanling Huang; Buqing Ye; Chong Li; Zhonghua Dai; Ning Hou; Xuan Cheng; Qing-Yuan Sun; Lei Li; Xiao Yang; Zusen Fan

Autophagy degrades cytoplasmic proteins and organelles to recycle cellular components that are required for cell survival and tissue homeostasis. However, it is not clear how autophagy is regulated in mammalian cells. WASH (Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome protein (WASP) and SCAR homologue) plays an essential role in endosomal sorting through facilitating tubule fission via Arp2/3 activation. Here, we demonstrate a novel function of WASH in modulation of autophagy. We show that WASH deficiency causes early embryonic lethality and extensive autophagy of mouse embryos. WASH inhibits vacuolar protein sorting (Vps)34 kinase activity and autophagy induction. We identified that WASH is a new interactor of Beclin 1. Beclin 1 is ubiquitinated at lysine 437 through lysine 63 linkage in cells undergoing autophagy. Ambra1 is an E3 ligase for lysine 63‐linked ubiquitination of Beclin 1 that is required for starvation‐induced autophagy. The lysine 437 ubiquitination of Beclin 1 enhances the association with Vps34 to promote Vps34 activity. WASH can suppress Beclin 1 ubiquitination to inactivate Vps34 activity leading to suppression of autophagy.


Cell Stem Cell | 2013

Transient Activation of Autophagy via Sox2-Mediated Suppression of mTOR Is an Important Early Step in Reprogramming to Pluripotency

Shuo Wang; Pengyan Xia; Buqing Ye; Guanling Huang; Jing Liu; Zusen Fan

Autophagy is an essential cellular mechanism that degrades cytoplasmic proteins and organelles to recycle their components. Here we show that autophagy is required for reprogramming of somatic cells to form induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). Our data indicate that mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) is downregulated by Sox2 at an early stage of iPSC generation and that this transient downregulation of mTOR is required for reprogramming to take place. In the absence of Sox2, mTOR remains at a high level and inhibits autophagy. Mechanistically, Sox2 binds to a repressive region on the mTOR promoter and recruits the NuRD complex to mediate transcriptional repression. We also detected enhanced autophagy at the four- to eight-cell stage of embryonic development, and a similar Sox2 and mTOR-mediated regulatory pathway seems to operate in this context as well. Thus, our findings reveal Sox2-dependent temporal regulation of autophagy as a key step in cellular reprogramming processes.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Granzyme K Directly Processes Bid to Release Cytochrome c and Endonuclease G Leading to Mitochondria-dependent Cell Death

Tongbiao Zhao; Honglian Zhang; Yuming Guo; Zusen Fan

Granule-mediated cytolysis is the major pathway for killer lymphocytes to kill pathogens and tumor cells. Little is known about how granzyme K functions in killer lymphocyte-mediated cytolysis. We previously showed that human GzmK triggers rapid cell death independently of caspase activation with single-stranded DNA nicks, similar to GzmA. In this study we found that GzmK can induce rapid reactive oxygen species generation and collapse of mitochondrial inner membrane potential (ΔΨm). Blockade of reactive oxygen species production by antioxidant N-acetylcysteine or superoxide scavenger Tiron inhibits GzmK-induced cell death. Moreover GzmK targets mitochondria by cleaving Bid to generate its active form tBid, which disrupts the outer mitochondrial membrane leading to the release of cytochrome c and endonuclease G. Thus, we showed herein that GzmK-induced caspase-independent death occurs through Bid-dependent mitochondrial damage that is different from GzmA.

Collaboration


Dive into the Zusen Fan's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ying Du

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Buqing Ye

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pengyan Xia

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Shuo Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Chong Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Guanling Huang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pingping Zhu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Honglian Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yanying Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yong Tian

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge