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Na Xu

LaGuardia Community College

ORCID: 0000-0001-5387-7760

Publishes on Cardiac Valve Diseases and Treatments, Pulmonary Hypertension Research and Treatments, Photosynthetic Processes and Mechanisms. 99 papers and 1.4k citations.

99Publications
1.4kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Protein prenylation and human diseases: a balance of protein farnesylation and geranylgeranylation
Na Xu, Ning Shen, Xiuxing Wang et al.|Science China Life Sciences|2015
Cited by 76Open Access

The protein prenylation is one of the essential post-translational protein modifications, which extensively exists in the eukaryocyte. It includes protein farnesylation and geranylgeranylation, using farnesyl pyrophosphate (FPP) or geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate (GGPP) as the substrate, respectively. The prenylation occurs by covalent addition of these two types of isoprenoids to cysteine residues at or near the carboxyl terminus of the proteins that possess CaaX motif, such as Ras small GTPase family. The attachment of hydrophobic prenyl groups can anchor the proteins to intracellular membranes and trigger downstream cell signaling pathway. Geranylgeranyl biphosphate synthase (GGPPS) catalyzes the synthesis of 20-carbon GGPP from 15-carbon FPP. The abnormal expression of this enzyme will affect the relative content of FPP and GGPP, and thus disrupts the balance between protein farnesylation and geranylgeranylation, which participates into various aspects of cellular physiology and pathology. In this paper, we mainly review the property of this important protein post-translational modification and research progress in its regulation of cigarette smoke induced pulmonary disease, adipocyte insulin sensitivity, the inflammation response of Sertoli cells, the hepatic lipogenesis and the cardiac hypertrophy.

Altered protein prenylation in Sertoli cells is associated with adult infertility resulting from childhood mumps infection
Xiuxing Wang, Pu Ying, Fan Diao et al.|The Journal of Experimental Medicine|2013
Cited by 75Open Access

Mumps commonly affects children 5-9 yr of age, and can lead to permanent adult sterility in certain cases. However, the etiology of this long-term effect remains unclear. Mumps infection results in progressive degeneration of the seminiferous epithelium and, occasionally, Sertoli cell-only syndrome. Thus, the remaining Sertoli cells may be critical to spermatogenesis recovery after orchitis healing. Here, we report that the protein farnesylation/geranylgeranylation balance is critical for patients' fertility. The expression of geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase 1 (GGPPS) was decreased due to elevated promoter methylation in the testes of infertile patients with mumps infection history. When we deleted GGPPS in mouse Sertoli cells, these cells remained intact, whereas the adjacent spermatogonia significantly decreased after the fifth postnatal day. The proinflammatory MAPK and NF-κB signaling pathways were constitutively activated in GGPPS(-/-) Sertoli cells due to the enhanced farnesylation of H-Ras. GGPPS(-/-) Sertoli cells secreted an array of cytokines to stimulate spermatogonia apoptosis, and chemokines to induce macrophage invasion into the seminiferous tubules. Invaded macrophages further blocked spermatogonia development, resulting in a long-term effect through to adulthood. Notably, this defect could be rescued by GGPP administration in EMCV-challenged mice. Our results suggest a novel mechanism by which mumps infection during childhood results in adult sterility.

Csi-let-7a-5p delivered by extracellular vesicles from a liver fluke activates M1-like macrophages and exacerbates biliary injuries
Chao Yan, Qian-Yang Zhou, Jing Wu et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2021
Cited by 69Open Access

Significance Infection with liver flukes (such as Clonorchis sinensi s) can induce severe biliary injuries. But we don’t know how it happens. Here, we find that a microRNA Csi-let-7a-5p delivered by extracellular vesicles from C. sinensis is prone to M1-like activation of macrophages, thus leading to biliary proinflammatory responses and biliary injuries. These findings indicate a molecular mechanism contributing to biliary injuries caused by C. sinensis .