1.DJ-1 is dispensable for human stem cell homeostasis.
Fang CHENG ; Si WANG ; Moshi SONG ; Zunpeng LIU ; Ping LIU ; Lei WANG ; Yanjiang WANG ; Qian ZHAO ; Kaowen YAN ; Piu CHAN ; Weiqi ZHANG ; Jing QU ; Guang-Hui LIU
Protein & Cell 2019;10(11):846-853
2.Single-nucleus transcriptomic landscape of primate hippocampal aging.
Hui ZHANG ; Jiaming LI ; Jie REN ; Shuhui SUN ; Shuai MA ; Weiqi ZHANG ; Yang YU ; Yusheng CAI ; Kaowen YAN ; Wei LI ; Baoyang HU ; Piu CHAN ; Guo-Guang ZHAO ; Juan Carlos Izpisua BELMONTE ; Qi ZHOU ; Jing QU ; Si WANG ; Guang-Hui LIU
Protein & Cell 2021;12(9):695-716
The hippocampus plays a crucial role in learning and memory, and its progressive deterioration with age is functionally linked to a variety of human neurodegenerative diseases. Yet a systematic profiling of the aging effects on various hippocampal cell types in primates is still missing. Here, we reported a variety of new aging-associated phenotypic changes of the primate hippocampus. These include, in particular, increased DNA damage and heterochromatin erosion with time, alongside loss of proteostasis and elevated inflammation. To understand their cellular and molecular causes, we established the first single-nucleus transcriptomic atlas of primate hippocampal aging. Among the 12 identified cell types, neural transiently amplifying progenitor cell (TAPC) and microglia were most affected by aging. In-depth dissection of gene-expression dynamics revealed impaired TAPC division and compromised neuronal function along the neurogenesis trajectory; additionally elevated pro-inflammatory responses in the aged microglia and oligodendrocyte, as well as dysregulated coagulation pathways in the aged endothelial cells may contribute to a hostile microenvironment for neurogenesis. This rich resource for understanding primate hippocampal aging may provide potential diagnostic biomarkers and therapeutic interventions against age-related neurodegenerative diseases.
3.mTORC2/RICTOR exerts differential levels of metabolic control in human embryonic, mesenchymal and neural stem cells.
Qun CHU ; Feifei LIU ; Yifang HE ; Xiaoyu JIANG ; Yusheng CAI ; Zeming WU ; Kaowen YAN ; Lingling GENG ; Yichen ZHANG ; Huyi FENG ; Kaixin ZHOU ; Si WANG ; Weiqi ZHANG ; Guang-Hui LIU ; Shuai MA ; Jing QU ; Moshi SONG
Protein & Cell 2022;13(9):676-682
4.FTO stabilizes MIS12 and counteracts senescence.
Sheng ZHANG ; Zeming WU ; Yue SHI ; Si WANG ; Jie REN ; Zihui YU ; Daoyuan HUANG ; Kaowen YAN ; Yifang HE ; Xiaoqian LIU ; Qianzhao JI ; Beibei LIU ; Zunpeng LIU ; Jing QU ; Guang-Hui LIU ; Weimin CI ; Xiaoqun WANG ; Weiqi ZHANG
Protein & Cell 2022;13(12):954-960
5.Correction to: mTORC2/RICTOR exerts differential levels of metabolic control in human embryonic, mesenchymal and neural stem cells.
Qun CHU ; Feifei LIU ; Yifang HE ; Xiaoyu JIANG ; Yusheng CAI ; Zeming WU ; Kaowen YAN ; Lingling GENG ; Yichen ZHANG ; Huyi FENG ; Kaixin ZHOU ; Si WANG ; Weiqi ZHANG ; Guang-Hui LIU ; Shuai MA ; Jing QU ; Moshi SONG
Protein & Cell 2022;13(12):961-961
6.Single-cell transcriptomic atlas of mouse cochlear aging.
Guoqiang SUN ; Yandong ZHENG ; Xiaolong FU ; Weiqi ZHANG ; Jie REN ; Shuai MA ; Shuhui SUN ; Xiaojuan HE ; Qiaoran WANG ; Zhejun JI ; Fang CHENG ; Kaowen YAN ; Ziyi LIU ; Juan Carlos Izpisua BELMONTE ; Jing QU ; Si WANG ; Renjie CHAI ; Guang-Hui LIU
Protein & Cell 2023;14(3):180-201
Progressive functional deterioration in the cochlea is associated with age-related hearing loss (ARHL). However, the cellular and molecular basis underlying cochlear aging remains largely unknown. Here, we established a dynamic single-cell transcriptomic landscape of mouse cochlear aging, in which we characterized aging-associated transcriptomic changes in 27 different cochlear cell types across five different time points. Overall, our analysis pinpoints loss of proteostasis and elevated apoptosis as the hallmark features of cochlear aging, highlights unexpected age-related transcriptional fluctuations in intermediate cells localized in the stria vascularis (SV) and demonstrates that upregulation of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) chaperon protein HSP90AA1 mitigates ER stress-induced damages associated with aging. Our work suggests that targeting unfolded protein response pathways may help alleviate aging-related SV atrophy and hence delay the progression of ARHL.
Mice
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Animals
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Transcriptome
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Aging/metabolism*
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Cochlea
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Stria Vascularis
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Presbycusis