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Kaizhong Lu

Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital

ORCID: 0000-0002-1403-1719

Publishes on Trace Elements in Health, Ferroptosis and cancer prognosis, Drug Transport and Resistance Mechanisms. 3 papers and 351 citations.

3Publications
351Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Ferroptosis inducers enhanced cuproptosis induced by copper ionophores in primary liver cancer
Wei‐Kai Wang, Kaizhong Lu, Xin Jiang et al.|Journal of Experimental & Clinical Cancer Research|2023
Cited by 265Open Access

INTRODUCTION: Cuproptosis and ferroptosis are the two newly defined metal-related regulated cell death. However, the crosstalk between cuproptosis and ferroptosis is obscure. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We analyzed the effect of ferroptosis inducers on copper ionophores-induced cell death through CCK-8 assay. Cuproptosis was studied using immunofluorescence and protein soluble-insoluble fraction isolation. GSH assay, qRT-PCR and western blot were adopted to explore the machinery of ferroptosis inducers enhanced cuproptosis. And mouse xenograft model was built to detect the synergy effect of elesclomol-Cu and sorafenib in vivo. RESULTS: Herein we found that ferroptosis inducers sorafenib and erastin could enhance cuproptosis in primary liver cancer cells by increasing copper dependent lipoylated protein aggregation. Mechanically, sorafenib and erastin upregulated protein lipoylation via suppressing mitochondrial matrix-related proteases mediated ferredoxin 1 (FDX1) protein degradation, and reduced intracellular copper chelator glutathione (GSH) synthesis through inhibiting cystine importing. DISCUSSION/CONCLUSION: Our findings proposed that combination of ferroptosis inducers and copper ionophores to co-targeting ferroptosis and cuproptosis could be a novel therapeutic strategy for primary liver cancer.

TcpC inhibits neutrophil extracellular trap formation by enhancing ubiquitination mediated degradation of peptidylarginine deiminase 4
Qian Ou, Jiaqi Fang, Zhe-sheng Zhang et al.|Nature Communications|2021
Cited by 59Open Access

Abstract TcpC is a multifunctional virulence factor of uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC). Neutrophil extracellular trap formation (NETosis) is a crucial anti-infection mechanism of neutrophils. Here we show the influence of TcpC on NETosis and related mechanisms. We show NETosis in the context of a pyelonephritis mouse model induced by TcpC-secreting wild-type E. coli CFT073 (CFT073 wt ) and LPS-induced in vitro NETosis with CFT073 wt or recombinant TcpC (rTcpC)-treated neutrophils are inhibited. rTcpC enters neutrophils through caveolin-mediated endocytosis and inhibits LPS-induced production of ROS, proinflammatory cytokines and protein but not mRNA levels of peptidylarginine deiminase 4 (PAD4). rTcpC treatment enhances PAD4 ubiquitination and accumulation in proteasomes. Moreover, in vitro ubiquitination kit analyses show that TcpC is a PAD4-targetd E3 ubiquitin-ligase. These data suggest that TcpC inhibits NETosis primarily by serving as an E3 ligase that promotes degradation of PAD4. Our findings provide a novel mechanism underlying TcpC-mediated innate immune evasion.

Cuproplasia and cuproptosis, two sides of the coin
Kaizhong Lu, Chandra Sugiarto Wijaya, Qinghua Yao et al.|Cancer Communications|2025
Cited by 27Open Access

Copper is an essential micronutrient in the human body, mainly acting as a crucial cofactor required for a wide range of physiological processes across nearly all cell types. Recent advances revealed that tumor cells seize copper to fulfill their rapid proliferation, metastasis, immune evasion, and so on by reprogramming the copper regulatory network, defined as cuproplasia. Thus, targeting copper chelation to reduce copper levels has been considered a rational tumor therapy strategy. However, overloaded copper ions could be toxic, which leads to the aggregation of lipoylated mitochondrial proteins and the depletion of iron-sulfur clusters, ultimately resulting in cell death, termed cuproptosis. Upon its discovery, cuproptosis has attracted great interest from oncologists, and targeting cuproptosis by copper ionophores exhibits as a potential anti-tumor therapy. In this review, we present the underlying mechanisms involved in cuproplasia and cuproptosis. Additionally, we sum up the chemicals targeting either cuproplasia or cuproptosis for cancer therapy. Further attention should be paid to distinguishing cancer patients who are suitable for targeting cuproplasia or cuproptosis.