J

Jin Zhang

Beihang University

ORCID: 0000-0002-3276-203X

Publishes on Advanced Measurement and Detection Methods, Dynamics and Control of Mechanical Systems, Energy Efficient Wireless Sensor Networks. 57 papers and 401 citations.

57Publications
401Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Systems analysis of PKA-mediated phosphorylation gradients in live cardiac myocytes
Jeffrey J. Saucerman, Jin Zhang, Jody Martin et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2006
Cited by 149Open Access

Compartmentation and dynamics of cAMP and PKA signaling are important determinants of specificity among cAMP's myriad cellular roles. Both cardiac inotropy and the progression of heart disease are affected by spatiotemporal variations in cAMP/PKA signaling, yet the dynamic patterns of PKA-mediated phosphorylation that influence differential responses to agonists have not been characterized. We performed live-cell imaging and systems modeling of PKA-mediated phosphorylation in neonatal cardiac myocytes in response to G-protein coupled receptor stimuli and UV photolysis of "caged" cAMP. cAMP accumulation was rate-limiting in PKA-mediated phosphorylation downstream of the beta-adrenergic receptor. Prostaglandin E1 stimulated higher PKA activity in the cytosol than at the sarcolemma, whereas isoproterenol triggered faster sarcolemmal responses than cytosolic, likely due to restricted cAMP diffusion from submembrane compartments. Localized UV photolysis of caged cAMP triggered gradients of PKA-mediated phosphorylation, enhanced by phosphodiesterase activity and PKA-mediated buffering of cAMP. These findings indicate that combining live-cell FRET imaging and mechanistic computational models can provide quantitative understanding of spatiotemporal signaling.

HK-2 Human Renal Proximal Tubule Cells as a Model for G Protein–Coupled Receptor Kinase Type 4–Mediated Dopamine 1 Receptor Uncoupling
John J Gildea, Ishan T. Shah, Ryan Weiss et al.|Hypertension|2010
Cited by 38

HK-2 human renal proximal tubule cells (RPTC) are commonly used in the in vitro study of "normal" RPTCs. We discovered recently that HK-2 cells are uncoupled from dopamine 1 receptor (D(1)R) adenylyl cyclase (AC) stimulation. We hypothesized that G protein-coupled receptor kinase type 4 (GRK4) single nucleotide polymorphisms may be responsible for the D(1)R/AC uncoupling in HK-2. This hypothesis was tested by genotyping GRK4 single nucleotide polymorphisms, measuring D(1)-like receptor agonist (fenoldopam)-stimulated cAMP accumulation, quantifying D(1)R inhibition of sodium transport, and testing the ability of GRK4 small interfering RNA to reverse the D(1)R/AC uncoupling. We compared HK-2 with 2 normally coupled human RPTC cell lines and 2 uncoupled RPTC cell lines. The HK-2 cell line was found to have 4 of 6 potential GRK4 single nucleotide polymorphisms known to uncouple the D(1)R from AC (namely, R65L, A142V, and A486V). AC response to fenoldopam stimulation was increased in the 2 normally coupled human RPTC cell lines (FEN: 2.02+/-0.05-fold and 2.33+/-0.19-fold over control; P<0.001; n=4) but not in the 2 uncoupled or HK-2 cell lines. GRK4 small interfering RNA rescued the fenoldopam-mediated AC stimulation in the uncoupled cells, including HK-2. The expected fenoldopam-mediated inhibition of sodium hydrogen exchanger type 3 was absent in HK-2 (n=6) and uncoupled RPTC cell lines (n=6) but was observed in the 2 normally coupled human RPTC cell lines (-25.41+/-4.7% and -27.36+/-2.70%; P<0.001; n=6), which express wild-type GRK4. Despite the fact that HK-2 cells retain many functional characteristics of RPTCs, they are not normal from the perspective of dopaminergic function.

Efficiently Boosting Moisture Retention Capacity of Porous Superprotonic Conducting MOF-802 at Ambient Humidity via Forming a Hydrogel Composite Strategy
Jin Zhang, Xin He, Ya-Ru Kong et al.|ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces|2021
Cited by 36

Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) provided a versatile platform for the development of new solid protonic electrolytes but faced great challenges regarding their low chemical stability and poor moisture retention capacity. Herein, we presented the proton-conducting study for zirconium-based MOF-802, revealing that MOF-802 possessed excellent features of extra aqueous and acidic stabilities and room-temperature superprotonic conduction with a proton conductivity of 1.05 × 10–2 S cm–1 at 288 K under 98% relative humidity (RH). Unfortunately, due to the liberation of water molecules from pores/channels, the proton conductivity of MOF-802 dropped significantly at the temperature above 318 K. To solve this issue, for the first time, MOF-802 was hybridized with poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) to form MOF-802@PVA hydrogel composites, where the moisture retention capacity of MOF-802 was greatly improved, giving the high room-temperature proton conductivity over 10–3 S cm–1 under ambient humidity. This work paves a new way to improve the moisture retention capacity and proton-conducting performances of porous proton conductors.