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Naikang Li

Bio: Naikang Li is an academic researcher from Protein Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Ubiquitin. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 2 publications receiving 22 citations.

Papers
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Posted ContentDOI
06 May 2020-medRxiv
TL;DR: This study demonstrates the COVID-19 pathophysiology related molecular alterations could be detected in the urine and the potential application of urinary proteome in auxiliary diagnosis, severity determination and therapy development of CO VID-19.
Abstract: SUMMARY The atypical pneumonia (COVID-19) caused by SARS-CoV-2 is an ongoing pandemic and a serious threat to global public health. The COVID-19 patients with severe symptoms account for a majority of mortality of this disease. However, early detection and effective prediction of patients with mild to severe symptoms remains challenging. In this study, we performed proteomic profiling of urine samples from 32 healthy control individuals and 6 COVID-19 positive patients (3 mild and 3 severe). We found that urine proteome samples from the mild and severe COVID-19 patients with comorbidities can be clearly differentiated from healthy proteome samples based on the clustering analysis. Multiple pathways have been compromised after the COVID-19 infection, including the dysregulation of immune response, complement activation, platelet degranulation, lipoprotein metabolic process and response to hypoxia. We further validated our finding by directly comparing the same patients’ urine proteome after recovery. This study demonstrates the COVID-19 pathophysiology related molecular alterations could be detected in the urine and the potential application of urinary proteome in auxiliary diagnosis, severity determination and therapy development of COVID-19.

32 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2020
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors demonstrated the COVID-19 pathophysiology related molecular alterations could be detected in the urine and the potential application in auxiliary diagnosis of COVID19.
Abstract: The atypical pneumonia (COVID-19) caused by SARS-CoV-2 is a serious threat to global public health. However, early detection and effective prediction of patients with mild to severe symptoms remain challenging. The proteomic profiling of urine samples from healthy individuals, mild and severe COVID-19 positive patients with comorbidities can be clearly differentiated. Multiple pathways have been compromised after the COVID-19 infection, including the dysregulation of complement activation, platelet degranulation, lipoprotein metabolic process and response to hypoxia. This study demonstrates the COVID-19 pathophysiology related molecular alterations could be detected in the urine and the potential application in auxiliary diagnosis of COVID-19.

13 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors verified the ability of trypsin in cleaving K6 and K63 besides K48 chains, and suggested that the cleaved K-ε-GG sites with high post-translational modification probability (≥ 0.75) should be considered as true positives in future ubiquitome analyses.
Abstract: Trypsin specifically cleaves the C-terminus of lysine and arginine residues but often fails to cleave modified lysines, such as ubiquitination, therefore resulting in the uncleaved K-ε-GG peptides. Therefore, the cleaved ubiquitinated peptide identification was often regarded as false positives and discarded. Interestingly, unexpected cleavage at the K48-linked ubiquitin chain has been reported, suggesting the latent ability of trypsin to cleave ubiquitinated lysine residues. However, it remains unclear whether other trypsin-cleavable ubiquitinated sites are present. In this study, we verified the ability of trypsin in cleaving K6 and K63 besides K48 chains. The uncleaved K-ε-GG peptide was quickly and efficiently generated during trypsin digestion, whereas cleaved ones were produced with much lower efficiency. Then, the K-ε-GG antibody was proved to efficiently enrich the cleaved K-ε-GG peptides and several published large-scale ubiquitylation datasets were re-analyzed to interrogate the cleaved sequence features. In total, more than 2400 cleaved ubiquitinated peptides were identified in the K-ε-GG and UbiSite antibody-based datasets. The frequency of lysine upstream of the cleaved modified K was significantly enriched. The kinetic activity of trypsin in cleaving ubiquitinated peptides was further elucidated. We suggest that the cleaved K-ε-GG sites with high post-translational modification probability (≥0.75) should be considered as true positives in future ubiquitome analyses.

3 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper , the expression of nutrition and autophagy-related genes was upregulated in the midguts of honey bee workers, compared with that in nurse workers by RNA-sequencing.
Abstract: Tissue phenotypic plasticity facilitates rapid adaptation of organisms to biotic and/or abiotic pressure. The reproductive capacity of honey bee workers (Apis mellifera) is plastic and responsive to pheromones produced by broods and the queen. Egg laying workers (ELWs), which could reactivate their ovaries and lay haploid eggs upon queen lost, have been commonly discussed from many aspects. However, it remains unclear whether midgut homeostasis in ELWs is affected during plastic changes. Here, we found that the expression of nutrition- and autophagy-related genes was up-regulated in the midguts of ELWs, compared with that in nurse workers (NWs) by RNA-sequencing. Furthermore, the area and number of autophagosomes were increased, along with significantly increased cell death in the midguts of ELWs. Moreover, cell cycle progression in the midguts of ELWs was increased compared with that in NWs. Consistent with the up-regulation of nutrition-related genes, the body and midgut sizes, and the number of intestinal proliferation cells of larvae reared with royal jelly (RJ) obviously increased more than those reared without RJ in vitro. Finally, cell proliferation was dramatically suppressed in the midguts of ELWs when autophagy was inhibited. Altogether, our data suggested that autophagy was induced and required to sustain cell proliferation in ELWs’ midguts, thereby revealing the critical role of autophagy played in the intestines during phenotypic plasticity changes.

1 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
07 Jul 2022-Analyst
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the previously developed tandem hybrid ubiquitin-binding domain (ThUBD) chemically labeled with a reporter group such as horseradish peroxidase (Thubi-HRP) could significantly improve the robustness and sensitivity of polyubiquitination signal detection.
Abstract: Polyubiquitination signal deliver diverse cellular signal, which have been recognized as a sophisticated ubiquitin code. The perception and transduction of ubiquitination signal depend on the specificity and sensitivity of the ubiquitin-binding domain. Accurate and sensitive detection of polyubiquitination signal is crucial for revealing the dynamic cellular ubiquitin-regulated events. Western blotting (WB) and immunohistochemistry (IHC) are the most widely used biochemical strategies to detect ubiquitination signal on substrates under diverse physiological and pathological conditions. However, anti-ubiquitin antibodies fail to reflect polyubiquitination signal unbiasedly because of their strong preference for K63-linked ubiquitin chains. Herein, we demonstrated that our previously developed tandem hybrid ubiquitin-binding domain (ThUBD) chemically labeled with a reporter group such as horseradish peroxidase (ThUBD-HRP) could significantly improve the robustness and sensitivity of polyubiquitination signal detection. This advanced method was named TUF-WB Plus (TUF-WB+). The TUF-WB+ method significantly increases the sensitivity and accuracy of ubiquitin detection and requires a shorter experimental operation time. Furthermore, it enables the ThUBD-HRP probe to function as a powerful tool for spatial in situ polyubiquitination detection in cells by immunohistochemistry. Our newly developed ThUBD-HRP probe and TUF-WB+ method provide a robust and powerful tool for ubiquitination signal detection with hypersensitivity in an unbiased manner.

1 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proposed that the combined effects of complement activation, dysregulated neutrophilia, endothelial injury, and hypercoagulability appear to be intertwined to drive the severe features of COVID-19 and create a basis for clinical trials of complement inhibitors in life-threatening illness.
Abstract: Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), the disease caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) has resulted in a global pandemic and a disruptive health crisis. COVID-19-related morbidity and mortality have been attributed to an exaggerated immune response. The role of complement activation and its contribution to illness severity is being increasingly recognized. Here, we summarize current knowledge about the interaction of coronaviruses with the complement system. We posit that (a) coronaviruses activate multiple complement pathways; (b) severe COVID-19 clinical features often resemble complementopathies; (c) the combined effects of complement activation, dysregulated neutrophilia, endothelial injury, and hypercoagulability appear to be intertwined to drive the severe features of COVID-19; (d) a subset of patients with COVID-19 may have a genetic predisposition associated with complement dysregulation; and (e) these observations create a basis for clinical trials of complement inhibitors in life-threatening illness.

280 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Applications of proteomics to COVID-19 and SARS are reviewed and how pipelines involving technologies such as artificial intelligence could be of value for research on these diseases are outlined.
Abstract: The emergence of novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), caused by the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus, has necessitated the urgent development of new diagnostic and therapeutic strategies. Rapid research and development, on an international scale, has already generated assays for detecting SARS-CoV-2 RNA and host immunoglobulins. However, the complexities of COVID-19 are such that fuller definitions of patient status, trajectory, sequelae, and responses to therapy are now required. There is accumulating evidence-from studies of both COVID-19 and the related disease SARS-that protein biomarkers could help to provide this definition. Proteins associated with blood coagulation (D-dimer), cell damage (lactate dehydrogenase), and the inflammatory response (e.g., C-reactive protein) have already been identified as possible predictors of COVID-19 severity or mortality. Proteomics technologies, with their ability to detect many proteins per analysis, have begun to extend these early findings. To be effective, proteomics strategies must include not only methods for comprehensive data acquisition (e.g., using mass spectrometry) but also informatics approaches via which to derive actionable information from large data sets. Here we review applications of proteomics to COVID-19 and SARS and outline how pipelines involving technologies such as artificial intelligence could be of value for research on these diseases.

62 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A brief of the existing knowledge, current challenges, and opportunities for MS-based techniques as a promising avenue in studying emerging pathogen outbreaks such as COVID-19 is given.

54 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a mass spectrometry-based approach that employed an enrichment step to capture and detect SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid protein directly from urine of COVID-19 patients without any culture was employed.
Abstract: SARS-CoV-2 infection has become a major public health burden and affects many organs including lungs, kidneys, the liver, and the brain. Although the virus is readily detected and diagnosed using nasopharyngeal swabs by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), detection of its presence in body fluids is fraught with difficulties. A number of published studies have failed to detect viral RNA by RT-PCR methods in urine. Although microbial identification in clinical microbiology using mass spectrometry is undertaken after culture, here we undertook a mass spectrometry-based approach that employed an enrichment step to capture and detect SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid protein directly from urine of COVID-19 patients without any culture. We detected SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid protein-derived peptides from 13 out of 39 urine samples. Further, a subset of COVID-19 positive and COVID-19 negative urine samples validated by mass spectrometry were used for the quantitative proteomics analysis. Proteins with increased abundance in urine of SARS-CoV-2 positive individuals were enriched in the acute phase response, regulation of complement system, and immune response. Notably, a number of renal proteins such as podocin (NPHS2), an amino acid transporter (SLC36A2), and sodium/glucose cotransporter 5 (SLC5A10), which are intimately involved in normal kidney function, were decreased in the urine of COVID-19 patients. Overall, the detection of viral antigens in urine using mass spectrometry and alterations of the urinary proteome could provide insights into understanding the pathogenesis of COVID-19.

26 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Based on the unique affinity between dermatan sulfate and autoantigens, the authors identified 348 proteins from human lung A549 cells, of which 198 are known targets of autoantibodies.

22 citations