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Dive into the research topics where Akira Tsujino is active.

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Featured researches published by Akira Tsujino.


Annals of Neurology | 2008

TDP-43 mutation in familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

Akio Yokoseki; Atsushi Shiga; Chun-Feng Tan; Asako Tagawa; Hiroyuki Kaneko; Akihide Koyama; Hiroto Eguchi; Akira Tsujino; Takeshi Ikeuchi; Akiyoshi Kakita; Koichi Okamoto; Masatoyo Nishizawa; Hitoshi Takahashi; Osamu Onodera

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurodegenerative disorder. Accumulating evidence has shown that 43kDa TAR‐DNA–binding protein (TDP‐43) is the disease protein in ALS and frontotemporal lobar degeneration. We previously reported a familial ALS with Bumina bodies and TDP‐43‐positive skein‐like inclusions in the lower motor neurons; these findings are indistinguishable from those of sporadic ALS. In three affected individuals in two generations of one family, we found a single base‐pair change from A to G at position 1028 in TDP‐43, which resulted in a Gln‐to‐Arg substitution at position 343. Our findings provide a new insight into the molecular pathogenesis of ALS. Ann Neurol 2008;63:538–542


Acta Neuropathologica | 2007

TDP-43 immunoreactivity in neuronal inclusions in familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis with or without SOD1 gene mutation

Chun-Feng Tan; Hiroto Eguchi; Asako Tagawa; Osamu Onodera; Takuya Iwasaki; Akira Tsujino; Masatoyo Nishizawa; Akiyoshi Kakita; Hitoshi Takahashi

Recently, 43-kDa TAR DNA-binding protein (TDP-43) was identified as a component of ubiquitinated inclusions (UIs) in sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (SALS). To clarify whether TDP-43 immunoreactivity is present in neuronal inclusions in familial ALS (FALS), we examined immunohistochemically the brains and spinal cords from four cases of FALS, two with Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1) gene mutation and two without, together with three cases of SALS and three control subjects, using two antibodies, one polyclonal and one monoclonal, against TDP-43. Neuropathologically, the SOD1-related FALS cases were characterized by Lewy body-like hyaline inclusions (LBHIs) in the lower motor neurons. On the other hand, the SOD1-unrelated FALS cases showed degeneration restricted to the upper and lower motor neuron systems, with Bunina bodies (BBs) and UIs in the lower motor neurons, being indistinguishable from SALS. No cytoplasmic TDP-43 immunoreactivity was observed in the control subjects or SOD1-related FALS cases; LBHIs were ubiquitinated, but negative for TDP-43. UIs observed in the SALS and SOD1-unrelated FALS cases were clearly positive for TDP-43. BBs were negative for this protein. Interestingly, in these SALS and FALS cases, glial cells were also found to have cytoplasmic TDP-43-positive inclusions. These findings indicate that the histological and molecular pathology of SALS can occur as a phenotype of FALS without SOD1 mutation.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2002

Rapsyn Mutations in Humans Cause Endplate Acetylcholine-Receptor Deficiency and Myasthenic Syndrome

Kinji Ohno; Andrew G. Engel; Xin Ming Shen; Duygu Selcen; Joan M. Brengman; C. Michel Harper; Akira Tsujino; Margherita Milone

Congenital myasthenic syndromes (CMSs) stem from genetic defects in endplate (EP)-specific presynaptic, synaptic, and postsynaptic proteins. The postsynaptic CMSs identified to date stem from a deficiency or kinetic abnormality of the acetylcholine receptor (AChR). All CMSs with a kinetic abnormality of AChR, as well as many CMSs with a deficiency of AChR, have been traced to mutations in AChR-subunit genes. However, in a subset of patients with EP AChR deficiency, the genetic defect has remained elusive. Rapsyn, a 43-kDa postsynaptic protein, plays an essential role in the clustering of AChR at the EP. Seven tetratricopeptide repeats (TPRs) of rapsyn subserve self-association, a coiled-coil domain binds to AChR, and a RING-H2 domain associates with beta-dystroglycan and links rapsyn to the subsynaptic cytoskeleton. Rapsyn self-association precedes recruitment of AChR to rapsyn clusters. In four patients with EP AChR deficiency but with no mutations in AChR subunits, we identify three recessive rapsyn mutations: one patient carries L14P in TPR1 and N88K in TPR3; two are homozygous for N88K; and one carries N88K and 553ins5, which frameshifts in TPR5. EP studies in each case show decreased staining for rapsyn and AChR, as well as impaired postsynaptic morphological development. Expression studies in HEK cells indicate that none of the mutations hinders rapsyn self-association but that all three diminish coclustering of AChR with rapsyn.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Proteasome assembly defect due to a proteasome subunit beta type 8 (PSMB8) mutation causes the autoinflammatory disorder, Nakajo-Nishimura syndrome

Kazuhiko Arima; Akira Kinoshita; Hiroyuki Mishima; Nobuo Kanazawa; Takeumi Kaneko; Tsunehiro Mizushima; Kunihiro Ichinose; Hideki Nakamura; Akira Tsujino; Atsushi Kawakami; Masahiro Matsunaka; Shimpei Kasagi; Seiji Kawano; Shunichi Kumagai; Koichiro Ohmura; Tsuneyo Mimori; Makito Hirano; Satoshi Ueno; Keiko Tanaka; Masami Tanaka; Itaru Toyoshima; Hirotoshi Sugino; Akio Yamakawa; Keiji Tanaka; Norio Niikawa; Fukumi Furukawa; Shigeo Murata; Katsumi Eguchi; Hiroaki Ida; Koh-ichiro Yoshiura

Nakajo-Nishimura syndrome (NNS) is a disorder that segregates in an autosomal recessive fashion. Symptoms include periodic fever, skin rash, partial lipomuscular atrophy, and joint contracture. Here, we report a mutation in the human proteasome subunit beta type 8 gene (PSMB8) that encodes the immunoproteasome subunit β5i in patients with NNS. This G201V mutation disrupts the β-sheet structure, protrudes from the loop that interfaces with the β4 subunit, and is in close proximity to the catalytic threonine residue. The β5i mutant is not efficiently incorporated during immunoproteasome biogenesis, resulting in reduced proteasome activity and accumulation of ubiquitinated and oxidized proteins within cells expressing immunoproteasomes. As a result, the level of interleukin (IL)-6 and IFN-γ inducible protein (IP)-10 in patient sera is markedly increased. Nuclear phosphorylated p38 and the secretion of IL-6 are increased in patient cells both in vitro and in vivo, which may account for the inflammatory response and periodic fever observed in these patients. These results show that a mutation within a proteasome subunit is the direct cause of a human disease and suggest that decreased proteasome activity can cause inflammation.


Lancet Neurology | 2010

Efficacy and safety of leuprorelin in patients with spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (JASMITT study): a multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

Masahisa Katsuno; Haruhiko Banno; Keisuke Suzuki; Yu Takeuchi; Motoshi Kawashima; Ichiro Yabe; Hidenao Sasaki; Masashi Aoki; Mitsuya Morita; Imaharu Nakano; Kazuaki Kanai; Shoichi Ito; Kinya Ishikawa; Hidehiro Mizusawa; Tomotaka Yamamoto; Shoji Tsuji; Kazuko Hasegawa; Takayoshi Shimohata; Masatoyo Nishizawa; Hiroaki Miyajima; Fumio Kanda; Yasuhiro Watanabe; Kenji Nakashima; Akira Tsujino; Taro Yamashita; Makoto Uchino; Yasushi Fujimoto; Fumiaki Tanaka; Gen Sobue

BACKGROUND Spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy is a hereditary motor neuron disease caused by the expansion of a polyglutamine tract in the androgen receptor. At present there are no treatments for spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy, although leuprorelin suppressed the accumulation of pathogenic androgen receptors in a phase 2 trial. We aimed to assess the efficacy and safety of leuprorelin for spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy. METHODS The Japan SBMA Interventional Trial for TAP-144-SR (JASMITT) was a 48-week, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial done at 14 hospitals between August, 2006, and March, 2008. Patients with spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy were randomly assigned (1:1) by minimisation to subcutaneous 11.25 mg leuprorelin or identical placebo every 12 weeks. Patients and investigators were masked to treatment allocation. The primary endpoint was pharyngeal barium residue, which indicates incomplete bolus clearance, measured at week 48 by videofluorography. All patients who were randomly assigned and who were assessed with videofluorography at least once were included in the analyses. This study is registered with the JMACCT clinical trials registry, number JMA-IIA00009, and the UMIN clinical trials registry, number UMIN000000465. FINDINGS 204 patients were randomly assigned and 199 started treatment: 100 with leuprorelin and 99 with placebo. At week 48, the pharyngeal barium residue after initial swallowing had changed by -5.1% (SD 21.0) in the leuprorelin group and by 0.2% (18.2) in the placebo group (difference between groups -5.3%; 95% CI -10.8 to 0.3; p=0.063). The mean difference in pharyngeal barium residue after piecemeal deglutition at week 48 was -3.2% (-6.4 to 0.0; p=0.049), but there was no significant difference between the groups after covariate adjustment for the baseline data (-4.1 to 1.6; p=0.392). In a predefined subgroup analysis, leuprorelin treatment was associated with a greater reduction in barium residue after initial swallowing than was placebo in patients with a disease duration less than 10 years (difference between groups -9.8, -17.1 to -2.5; p=0.009). There were no significant differences in the number of drug-related adverse events between groups (57 of 100 in the leuprorelin group and 54 of 99 in the placebo group; p=0.727). INTERPRETATION 48 weeks of treatment with leuprorelin did not show significant effects on swallowing function in patients with spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy, although it was well tolerated. Disease duration might influence the efficacy of leuprorelin and thus further clinical trials with sensitive outcome measures should be done in subpopulations of patients. FUNDING Large Scale Clinical Trial Network Project, Japan and Takeda Pharmaceuticals.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Myasthenic syndrome caused by mutation of the SCN4A sodium channel.

Akira Tsujino; Chantal Maertens; Kinji Ohno; Xin-Ming Shen; Taku Fukuda; C. Michael Harper; Stephen C. Cannon; Andrew G. Engel

In a myasthenic syndrome associated with fatigable generalized weakness and recurrent attacks of respiratory and bulbar paralysis since birth, nerve stimulation at physiologic rates rapidly decremented the compound muscle action potential. Intercostal muscle studies revealed no abnormality of the resting membrane potential, evoked quantal release, synaptic potentials, acetylcholine receptor channel kinetics, or endplate ultrastructure, but endplate potentials depolarizing the resting potential to -40 mV failed to excite action potentials. Pursuing this clue, we sequenced SCN4A encoding the skeletal muscle sodium channel (Nav1.4) and detected two heteroallelic mutations involving conserved residues not present in 400 normal alleles: S246L in the S4/S5 cytoplasmic linker in domain I, and V1442E in the S3/S4 extracellular linker in domain IV. The genetically engineered V1442E-Na channel expressed in HEK cells shows marked enhancement of fast inactivation close to the resting potential, and enhanced use-dependent inactivation on high-frequency stimulation; S246L is likely a benign polymorphism. The V1442E mutation in SCN4A defines a novel disease mechanism and a novel phenotype with myasthenic features.


Nature Neuroscience | 1999

Acetylcholine receptor M3 domain: stereochemical and volume contributions to channel gating.

Hai Long Wang; Margherita Milone; Kinji Ohno; Xing Ming Shen; Akira Tsujino; Anna Paola Batocchi; Pietro Tonali; Joan M. Brengman; Andrew G. Engel; Steven M. Sine

By defining the functional defect in a congenital myasthenic syndrome (CMS), we show that the third transmembrane domain (M3) of the muscle acetylcholine receptor governs the speed and efficiency of gating of its channel. The clinical phenotype of this CMS results from the mutation V285I in M3 of the α subunit, which attenuates endplate currents, accelerates their decay and causes abnormally brief acetylcholine-induced single-channel currents. Kinetic analysis of engineered αV285I receptors demonstrated a predominant effect on channel gating, with abnormally slow opening and rapid closing rates. Analysis of site-directed mutations revealed stereochemical and volume-dependent contributions of αV285 to channel gating. Thus, we demonstrate a functional role for the M3 domain as a key component of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor channel-gating mechanism.By defining the functional defect in a congenital myasthenic syndrome (CMS), we show that the third transmembrane domain (M3) of the muscle acetylcholine receptor governs the speed and efficiency of gating of its channel. The clinical phenotype of this CMS results from the mutation V285I in M3 of the α subunit, which attenuates endplate currents, accelerates their decay and causes abnormally brief acetylcholine-induced single-channel currents. Kinetic analysis of engineered αV285I receptors demonstrated a predominant effect on channel gating, with abnormally slow opening and rapid closing rates. Analysis of site-directed mutations revealed stereochemical and volume-dependent contributions of αV285 to channel gating. Thus, we demonstrate a functional role for the M3 domain as a key component of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor channel-gating mechanism.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2003

Mutation causing severe myasthenia reveals functional asymmetry of AChR signature cystine loops in agonist binding and gating

Xin Ming Shen; Kinji Ohno; Akira Tsujino; Joan M. Brengman; Monique Gingold; Steven M. Sine; Andrew G. Engel

We describe a highly disabling congenital myasthenic syndrome (CMS) associated with rapidly decaying, low-amplitude synaptic currents, and trace its cause to a valine to leucine mutation in the signature cystine loop (cys-loop) of the AChR alpha subunit. The recently solved crystal structure of an ACh-binding protein places the cys-loop at the junction between the extracellular ligand-binding and transmembrane domains where it may couple agonist binding to channel gating. We therefore analyzed the kinetics of ACh-induced single-channel currents to identify elementary steps in the receptor activation mechanism altered by the alphaV132L mutation. The analysis reveals that alphaV132L markedly impairs ACh binding to receptors in the resting closed state, decreasing binding affinity for the second binding step 30-fold, but attenuates gating efficiency only about twofold. By contrast, mutation of the equivalent valine residue in the delta subunit impairs channel gating approximately fourfold with little effect on ACh binding, while corresponding mutations in the beta and epsilon subunits are without effect. The unique functional contribution of the alpha subunit cys-loop likely owes to its direct connection via a beta strand to alphaW149 at the center of the ligand-binding domain. The overall findings reveal functional asymmetry between cys-loops of the different AChR subunits in contributing to ACh binding and channel gating.


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2002

Congenital myasthenic syndrome associated with episodic apnea and sudden infant death

R.F Byring; Helena Pihko; Akira Tsujino; Xin-Ming Shen; B Gustafsson; Peter Hackman; Kinji Ohno; Andrew G. Engel; Bjarne Udd

The sudden infant death syndrome has multiple etiologies. Some congenital myasthenic syndromes can cause sudden infant death syndrome by apnea, but the frequency of this etiology is unknown. We report here a young patient with sudden respiratory crises culminating in apnea followed by recovery, against a background of no or variable myasthenic symptoms without dyspnea. One sib without myasthenic symptoms and one sib who only had mild ptosis died previously during febrile episodes. Studies reported by us elsewhere traced the probands illness to mutations in choline acetyltransferase. Here, we describe in detail the morphologic investigations and electrophysiologic findings, which point to a presynaptic defect in acetylcholine resynthesis or vesicular filling, in the proband. Analysis of DNA from a sib who previously died of sudden infant death syndrome revealed the same choline acetyltransferase mutation. Thus, mutations in choline acetyltransferase may be a cause of sudden infant death syndrome as, theoretically, could other presynaptic myasthenic disorders.


Cellular and Molecular Neurobiology | 2006

14-3-3 Protein, Total Tau and Phosphorylated Tau in Cerebrospinal Fluid of Patients with Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease and Neurodegenerative Disease in Japan

Katsuya Satoh; Susumu Shirabe; Hiroto Eguchi; Akira Tsujino; Katsumi Eguchi; Akira Satoh; Mitsuhiro Tsujihata; Masami Niwa; Shigeru Katamine; Saiko Kurihara; Hidenori Matsuo

Summary1.Sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) is a rapidly progressive and fatal disease. Patients with CJD usually become akinetic mutism within approximately 6 months. In addition, clinical signs and symptoms at early stage of sporadic CJD may not be easy to distinguish from other neurodegenerative diseases by neurological findings. However, diagnostic biochemical parameters including 14-3-3 protein, S100, neuron-specific enorase in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) have been used as diagnostic markers, elevated titers of these markers can also be observed in CSF in other neurodegenerative diseases. Therefore, we examined other biochemical markers to discriminate CJD from other neurodegenerative diseases in CSF.2.We analyzed CSF samples derived from 100 patients with various neurodegenerative disorders by Western blot of 14-3-3 protein, quantification of total tau (t-tau) protein, and phosphorylated tau (p-tau) protein. All patients with CJD in this study showed positive 14-3-3 protein and elevated t-tau protein (>1000 pg/mL) in CSF. We also detected positive 14-3-3 protein bands in two patients in non-CJD group (patients with dementia of Alzheimers type; DAT) and also detected elevated t-tau protein in three patients in non-CJD group. Elevated t-tau protein levels were observed in two patients with DAT and in one patient with cerevrovascular disease in acute phase.3.To distinguish patients with CJD from non-CJD patients with elevated t-tau protein in CSF, we compared the ratio of p-tau and t-tau proteins. The p-/t-tau ratio was dramatically and significantly higher in DAT patients rather than in CJD patients.4.Therefore, we concluded that the assay of t-tau protein may be useful as 1st screening and the ratio of p-tau protein/t-tau protein would be useful as 2nd screening to discriminate CJD from other neurodegenerative diseases.

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