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Dive into the research topics where Akiyo Hayashi is active.

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Featured researches published by Akiyo Hayashi.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2012

Two different replication factor C proteins, Ctf18 and RFC1, separately control PCNA-CRL4Cdt2-mediated Cdt1 proteolysis during S phase and following UV irradiation.

Yasushi Shiomi; Akiyo Hayashi; Takashi Ishii; Kaori Shinmyozu; Jun-ichi Nakayama; Kaoru Sugasawa; Hideo Nishitani

ABSTRACT Recent work identified the E3 ubiquitin ligase CRL4Cdt2 as mediating the timely degradation of Cdt1 during DNA replication and following DNA damage. In both cases, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) loaded on chromatin mediates the CRL4Cdt2-dependent proteolysis of Cdt1. Here, we demonstrate that while replication factor C subunit 1 (RFC1)-RFC is required for Cdt1 degradation after UV irradiation during the nucleotide excision repair process, another RFC complex, Ctf18-RFC, which is known to be involved in the establishment of cohesion, has a key role in Cdt1 degradation in S phase. Cdt1 segments having only the degron, a specific sequence element in target protein for ubiquitination, for CRL4Cdt2 were stabilized during S phase in Ctf18-depleted cells. Additionally, endogenous Cdt1 was stabilized when both Skp2 and Ctf18 were depleted. Since a substantial amount of PCNA was detected on chromatin in Ctf18-depleted cells, Ctf18 is required in addition to loaded PCNA for Cdt1 degradation in S phase. Our data suggest that Ctf18 is involved in recruiting CRL4Cdt2 to PCNA foci during S phase. Ctf18-mediated Cdt1 proteolysis occurs independent of cohesion establishment, and depletion of Ctf18 potentiates rereplication. Our findings indicate that individual RFC complexes differentially control CRL4Cdt2-dependent proteolysis of Cdt1 during DNA replication and repair.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Inhibition of DNA Damage-induced Apoptosis through Cdc7-mediated Stabilization of Tob

Toru Suzuki; Junko K. Tsuzuku; Akiyo Hayashi; Yasushi Shiomi; Hiroko Iwanari; Yasuhiro Mochizuki; Takao Hamakubo; Tatsuhiko Kodama; Hideo Nishitani; Hisao Masai; Tadashi Yamamoto

Background: Preventing unnecessary cell death is essential for DNA-damaged cells to carry out the DNA repair process. Results: Cdc7 inhibits the Cul4-DDB1Cdt2-dependent Tob degradation. Conclusion: Cdc7 enables mild DNA-damaged cells to keep their viability by competing with the Tob degradation system. Significance: Cells deal with moderate DNA damage not only by cessation of the cell cycle but also through direct mediated pro-survival signaling. Cells respond to DNA damage by activating alternate signaling pathways that induce proliferation arrest or apoptosis. The correct balance between these two pathways is important for maintaining genomic integrity and preventing unnecessary cell death. The mechanism by which DNA-damaged cells escape from apoptosis during DNA repair is poorly understood. We show that the DNA replication-initiating kinase Cdc7 actively prevents unnecessary death in DNA-damaged cells. In response to mild DNA damage, Tob levels increase through both a transcriptional mechanism and protein stabilization, resulting in inhibition of pro-apoptotic signaling. Cells lacking Cdc7 expression undergo apoptosis after mild DNA damage, where Cul4-DDB1Cdt2 induces Tob ubiquitination and subsequent degradation. Cdc7 phosphorylates and interacts with Tob to inhibit the Cul4-DDB1Cdt2-dependent Tob degradation. Thus, Cdc7 defines an essential pro-survival signaling pathway by contributing to stabilization of Tob, thereby the viability of DNA-damaged cells being maintained.


Cell Cycle | 2017

Mismatch repair proteins recruited to ultraviolet light-damaged sites lead to degradation of licensing factor Cdt1 in the G1 phase

Miyuki Tanaka; Michiyo Takahara; Kohei Nukina; Akiyo Hayashi; Wataru Sakai; Kaoru Sugasawa; Yasushi Shiomi; Hideo Nishitani

ABSTRACT Cdt1 is rapidly degraded by CRL4Cdt2 E3 ubiquitin ligase after UV (UV) irradiation. Previous reports revealed that the nucleotide excision repair (NER) pathway is responsible for the rapid Cdt1-proteolysis. Here, we show that mismatch repair (MMR) proteins are also involved in the degradation of Cdt1 after UV irradiation in the G1 phase. First, compared with the rapid (within ∼15 min) degradation of Cdt1 in normal fibroblasts, Cdt1 remained stable for ∼30 min in NER-deficient XP-A cells, but was degraded within ∼60 min. The delayed degradation was also dependent on PCNA and CRL4Cdt2. The MMR proteins Msh2 and Msh6 were recruited to the UV-damaged sites of XP-A cells in the G1 phase. Depletion of these factors with small interfering RNAs prevented Cdt1 degradation in XP-A cells. Similar to the findings in XP-A cells, depletion of XPA delayed Cdt1 degradation in normal fibroblasts and U2OS cells, and co-depletion of Msh6 further prevented Cdt1 degradation. Furthermore, depletion of Msh6 alone delayed Cdt1 degradation in both cell types. When Cdt1 degradation was attenuated by high Cdt1 expression, repair synthesis at the damaged sites was inhibited. Our findings demonstrate that UV irradiation induces multiple repair pathways that activate CRL4Cdt2 to degrade its target proteins in the G1 phase of the cell cycle, leading to efficient repair of DNA damage.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2014

PCNA-dependent ubiquitination of Cdt1 and p21 in mammalian cells.

Akiyo Hayashi; Naohiro Suenaga; Yasushi Shiomi; Hideo Nishitani

PCNA is a DNA clamp, acting on chromatin as a platform for various proteins involved in many aspects of DNA replication-linked processes. Most of these proteins have the PCNA-interaction protein motif (PIP box) that associates with PCNA. Recent works show that PCNA plays an important role as a matchmaker, connecting PCNA-interacting proteins to the ubiquitin ligase CRL4(Cdt2) for their degradation. Proteins degraded by CRL4(Cdt2) include Cdt1, p21, and Set8 in mammalian cells. These CRL4(Cdt2) substrates have a PIP degron that consists of the canonical PIP-box sequence and additional conserved amino acids required for ubiquitination. The degradation of these proteins is triggered when PCNA is loaded onto chromatin at the onset of S phase, and this process is important to prevent re-replication of DNA. These CRL4(Cdt2) substrates are also degraded through the same mechanism in response to DNA damage. In this chapter, we describe several approaches to investigate how PIP degron-containing proteins are degraded in a PCNA-dependent manner.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2014

Imaging analysis of cell cycle-dependent degradation of Cdt1 in mammalian cells.

Yasushi Shiomi; Naohiro Suenaga; Miyuki Tanaka; Akiyo Hayashi; Hideo Nishitani

Numerous cell cycle-regulating proteins are controlled by protein degradation. Recent work shows that ubiquitination-dependent proteolysis plays an important role in once-per-cell cycle control of DNA replication. Cdt1 is a licensing factor essential for assembling the pre-replicative complex on replication origins. Cdt1 is present in G1 phase, but after S phase ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis maintains Cdt1 at low levels. This is important to prevent the re-replication of chromosomal DNA. The cell cycle-dependent degradation of Cdt1 can be monitored by dual staining of the cell nuclei with antibodies against Cdt1- and S/G2-phase marker proteins, such as cyclin A or geminin.


Genes to Cells | 2018

Mutations at multiple CDK phosphorylation consensus sites on Cdt2 increase the affinity of CRL4Cdt2 for PCNA and its ubiquitination activity in S phase

Kohei Nukina; Akiyo Hayashi; Yasushi Shiomi; Kaoru Sugasawa; Motoaki Ohtsubo; Hideo Nishitani

CRL4Cdt2 ubiquitin ligase plays an important role maintaining genome integrity during the cell cycle. A recent report suggested that Cdk1 negatively regulates CRL4Cdt2 activity through phosphorylation of its receptor, Cdt2, but the involvement of phosphorylation remains unclear. To address this, we mutated all CDK consensus phosphorylation sites located in the C‐terminal half region of Cdt2 (Cdt2‐18A) and examined the effect on substrate degradation. We show that both cyclinA/Cdk2 and cyclinB/Cdk1 phosphorylated Cdt2 in vitro and that phosphorylation was reduced by the 18A mutation both in vitro and in vivo. The 18A mutation increased the affinity of Cdt2 to PCNA, and a high amount of Cdt2‐18A was colocalized with PCNA foci during S phase in comparison with Cdt2‐WT. Poly‐ubiquitination activity to Cdt1 was concomitantly enhanced in cells expressing Cdt2‐18A. Other CRL4Cdt2 substrates, Set8 and thymine DNA glycosylase, begin to accumulate around late S phase to G2 phase, but the accumulation was prevented in Cdt2‐18A cells. Furthermore, mitotic degradation of Cdt1 after UV irradiation was induced in these cells. Our results suggest that CDK‐mediated phosphorylation of Cdt2 inactivates its ubiquitin ligase activity by reducing its affinity to PCNA, an important strategy for regulating the levels of key proteins in the cell cycle.


The Japanese Biochemical Society/The Molecular Biology Society of Japan | 2017

Mismach repair activates CRL4Cdt2 ubiquitin ligase in G1 phase after UV

Michiyo Takahara; Miyuki Tanaka; Kohei Nukina; Akiyo Hayashi; Wataru Sakai; Kaoru Sugasawa; Yasishi Shiomi; Hideo Nishitani


The Japanese Biochemical Society/The Molecular Biology Society of Japan | 2017

Direct binding of Cdt2 to PCNA supports substrate targeting and the CRL4-Cdt2 E3 ligase activity during DNA replication

Akiyo Hayashi; Takashi Ishii; Naohiro Suenaga; Michiyo Takahara; Yasushi Shiomi; Hideo Nishitani


The Japanese Biochemical Society/The Molecular Biology Society of Japan | 2017

Cdt2-PCNA fusion protein disrupts CRL4Cdt2 down-regulation

Hiroyuki Ogino; Asako Ueda; Akiyo Hayashi; Yasushi Shiomi; Hideo Nishitani


The Japanese Biochemical Society/The Molecular Biology Society of Japan | 2017

Role of DNA replication licensing factor, Cdt1 in M phase

Tatsuya Hatano; Takeshi Maeda; Yusuke Murakami; Akiyo Hayashi; Yasushi Shiomi; Hideo Nishitani

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