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Dive into the research topics where Asako Sugimoto is active.

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Featured researches published by Asako Sugimoto.


The EMBO Journal | 1987

Function of the 30 kd protein of tobacco mosaic virus: involvement in cell-to-cell movement and dispensability for replication

Tetsuo Meshi; Yuichiro Watanabe; Tetsuichiro Saito; Asako Sugimoto; Tatsuya Maeda; Yoshimi Okada

We have investigated the function of the 30 kd protein of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) by a reverse genetics approach. First, a point mutation of TMV Ls1 (a temperature‐sensitive mutant defective in cell‐to‐cell movement), that causes an amino acid substitution in the 30 kd protein, was introduced into the parent strain, TMV L. The generated mutant showed the same phenotype as TMV Ls1, and therefore the one‐base substitution in the 30 kd protein gene adequately explains the defectiveness of TMV Ls1. Next, four kinds of frame‐shift mutants were constructed, whose mutations are located at three different positions of the 30 kd protein gene. All the frame‐shift mutants were replication‐competent in protoplasts but none showed infectivity on tobacco plants. From these observations the 30 kd protein was confirmed to be involved in cell‐to‐cell movement. To clarify that the 30 kd protein is not necessary for replication, two kinds of deletion mutants were constructed; one lacking most of the 30 kd protein gene and the other lacking both the 30 kd and coat protein genes. Both mutants replicated in protoplasts and the former still produced the subgenomic mRNA for the coat protein. These results clearly showed that the 30 kd protein, as well as the coat protein, is dispensable for replication and that no cis‐acting element for replication is located in their coding sequences. It is also suggested that the signal for coat protein mRNA synthesis may be located within about 100 nucleotides upstream of the initiation codon of the coat protein gene.


The EMBO Journal | 1994

Baculovirus p35 prevents developmentally programmed cell death and rescues a ced-9 mutant in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans

Asako Sugimoto; Paul D. Friesen; Joel H. Rothman

Programmed cell death, or apoptosis, occurs throughout the course of normal development in most animals and can also be elicited by a number of stimuli such as growth factor deprivation and viral infection. Certain morphological and biochemical characteristics of programmed cell death are similar among different tissues and species. During development of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, a single genetic pathway promotes the death of selected cells in a lineally fixed pattern. This pathway appears to be conserved among animal species. The baculovirus p35‐encoding gene (p35) is an inhibitor of virus‐induced apoptosis in insect cells. Here we demonstrate that expression of p35 in C. elegans prevents death of cells normally programmed to die. This suppression of developmentally programmed cell death results in appearance of extra surviving cells. Expression of p35 can rescue the embryonic lethality of a mutation in ced‐9, an endogenous gene homologous to the mammalian apoptotic suppressor bcl‐2, whose absence leads to ectopic cell deaths. These results support the hypothesis that viral infection can activate the same cell death pathway as is used during normal development and suggest that baculovirus p35 may act downstream or independently of ced‐9 in this pathway.


Nature Cell Biology | 2006

Sequential functioning of the ECT-2 RhoGEF, RHO-1 and CDC-42 establishes cell polarity in Caenorhabditis elegans embryos

Fumio Motegi; Asako Sugimoto

During development, the establishment of cell polarity is important for cells to undergo asymmetric cell divisions that give rise to diverse cell types. In C. elegans embryos, cues from the centrosome trigger the cortical flow of an actomyosin network, leading to the formation of anterior–posterior polarity. However, its precise mechanism is poorly understood. Here, we show that small GTPases have sequential and crucial functions in this process. ECT-2, a potential guanine nucleotide-exchange factor (GEF) for RHO-1, was uniformly distributed at the cortex before polarization, but was excluded from the posterior cortex by the polarity cue from the centrosomes. This local exclusion of ECT-2 led to an asymmetric RHO-1 distribution, which generated a cortical flow of the actomyosin that translocated PAR proteins and CDC-42 (Refs 4, 5) to the anterior cortex. Polarized CDC-42 was, in turn, involved in maintaining the established anterior-cortical domains. Our results suggest that a local change in the function of ECT-2 and RHO-1 links the centrosomal polarity cue with the polarization of the cell cortex.


Genes & Development | 2008

A new mechanism controlling kinetochore-microtubule interactions revealed by comparison of two dynein-targeting components: SPDL-1 and the Rod/Zwilch/Zw10 complex.

Reto Gassmann; Anthony Essex; Jia-Sheng Hu; Paul S. Maddox; Fumio Motegi; Asako Sugimoto; Sean M. O’Rourke; Bruce Bowerman; Ian X. McLeod; John R. Yates; Karen Oegema; Iain M. Cheeseman; Arshad Desai

Chromosome segregation requires stable bipolar attachments of spindle microtubules to kinetochores. The dynein/dynactin motor complex localizes transiently to kinetochores and is implicated in chromosome segregation, but its role remains poorly understood. Here, we use the Caenorhabditis elegans embryo to investigate the function of kinetochore dynein by analyzing the Rod/Zwilch/Zw10 (RZZ) complex and the associated coiled-coil protein SPDL-1. Both components are essential for Mad2 targeting to kinetochores and spindle checkpoint activation. RZZ complex inhibition, which abolishes both SPDL-1 and dynein/dynactin targeting to kinetochores, slows but does not prevent the formation of load-bearing kinetochore-microtubule attachments and reduces the fidelity of chromosome segregation. Surprisingly, inhibition of SPDL-1, which abolishes dynein/dynactin targeting to kinetochores without perturbing RZZ complex localization, prevents the formation of load-bearing attachments during most of prometaphase and results in extensive chromosome missegregation. Coinhibition of SPDL-1 along with the RZZ complex reduces the phenotypic severity to that observed following RZZ complex inhibition alone. We propose that the RZZ complex can inhibit the formation of load-bearing attachments and that this activity of the RZZ complex is normally controlled by dynein/dynactin localized via SPDL-1. This mechanism could coordinate the hand-off from initial weak dynein-mediated lateral attachments, which help orient kinetochores and enhance their ability to capture microtubules, to strong end-coupled attachments that drive chromosome segregation.


The EMBO Journal | 1995

dad-1, an endogenous programmed cell death suppressor in Caenorhabditis elegans and vertebrates

Asako Sugimoto; R R Hozak; T Nakashima; T Nishimoto; Joel H. Rothman

Programmed cell death (apoptosis) is a normally occurring process used to eliminate unnecessary or potentially harmful cells in multicellular organisms. Recent studies demonstrate that the molecular control of this process is conserved phylogenetically in animals. The dad‐1 gene, which encodes a novel 113 amino acid protein, was originally identified in a mutant hamster cell line (tsBN7) that undergoes apoptosis at restrictive temperature. We have identified a dad‐1 homologue in Caenorhabditis elegans (Ce‐dad‐1) whose predicted product is > 60% identical to vertebrate DAD‐1. A search of the sequence databases indicated that DAD‐1‐like proteins are also expressed in two plant species. Expression of either human dad‐1 or Ce‐dad‐1 under control of a C.elegans heat‐shock‐inducible promoter resulted in a reduction in the number of programmed cell death corpses visible in C.elegans embryos. Extra surviving cells were present in these animals, indicating that both the human and C.elegans dad‐1 genes can suppress developmentally programmed cell death. Ce‐dad‐1 was found to rescue mutant tsBN7 hamster cells from apoptotic death as efficiently as the vertebrate genes. These results suggest that dad‐1, which is necessary for cell survival in a mammalian cell line, is sufficient to suppress some programmed cell death in C.elegans.


Journal of Cell Science | 2003

Essential role of the C. elegans Arp2/3 complex in cell migration during ventral enclosure

Mariko Sawa; Shiro Suetsugu; Asako Sugimoto; Hiroaki Miki; Masayuki Yamamoto; Tadaomi Takenawa

Migration of cells through the reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton is essential for morphogenesis of multicellular animals. In a cell culture system, the actin-related protein (Arp) 2/3 complex functions as a nucleation core for actin polymerization when activated by the members of the WASP (Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein) family. However, the regulation of cell motility in vivo remains poorly understood. Here we report that homologues of the mammalian Arp2/3 complex and N-WASP in Caenorhabditis elegans play an important role in hypodermal cell migration during morphogenesis, a process known as ventral enclosure. In the absence of one of any of the C. elegans Arp2/3 complex subunits (ARX-1, ARX-2, ARX-4, ARX-5, ARX-6 or ARX-7) or of N-WASP (WSP-1), hypodermal cell migration led by actin-rich filopodia formation is inhibited during ventral enclosure owing to the reduction of filamentous actin formation. However, there is no effect on differentiation of hypodermal cells and dorsal intercalation. Disruption of the function of ARX-1 and WSP-1 in hypodermal cells also resulted in hypodermal cell arrest during ventral enclosure, suggesting that their function is cell autonomous. WSP-1 protein activated Arp2/3-mediated actin polymerization in vitro. Consistent with these results, the Arp2/3 complex and WSP-1 colocalized at the leading edge of migrating hypodermal cells. The stable localization of WSP-1 was dependent on the presence of Arp2/3 complex, suggesting an interaction between the Arp2/3 complex and WSP-1 in vivo.


The EMBO Journal | 1991

S. pombe pac1+, whose overexpression inhibits sexual development, encodes a ribonuclease III-like RNase.

Yuichi Iino; Asako Sugimoto; Masayuki Yamamoto

The Schizosaccharomyces pombe pac1 gene is a multicopy suppressor of the pat1 temperature‐sensitive mutation, which directs uncontrolled meiosis at the restrictive temperature. Overexpression of the pac1 gene had no apparent effect on vegetative growth but inhibited mating and sporulation in wild type S. pombe cells. In such cells, expression of certain genes required for mating or meiosis was inhibited. The pac1 gene is essential for vegetative cell growth. The deduced pac1 gene product has 363 amino acids. Its C‐terminal 230 residues revealed 25% amino acid identity with ribonuclease III, an enzyme that digests double‐stranded RNA and is involved in processing ribosomal RNA precursors and certain mRNAs in Escherichia coli. The pac1 gene product could degrade double‐stranded RNA in vitro. These observations establish the presence of a RNase III homolog in eukaryotic cells. The pac1 gene product probably inhibits mating and meiosis by degrading a specific mRNA(s) required for sexual development. It is likely that mRNA processing is involved in the regulation of sexual development in fission yeast.


Current Biology | 2007

EGG-3 Regulates Cell-Surface and Cortex Rearrangements during Egg Activation in Caenorhabditis elegans

Rika Maruyama; Nathalie V. Velarde; Richard Klancer; Scott Gordon; Pavan Kadandale; Jean M. Parry; Julie S. Hang; Jacob Rubin; Allison Stewart-Michaelis; Peter Schweinsberg; Barth D. Grant; Fabio Piano; Asako Sugimoto; Andrew Singson

Fertilization triggers egg activation and converts the egg into a developing embryo. The events of this egg-to-embryo transition typically include the resumption of meiosis, the reorganization of the cortical actin cytoskeleton, and the remodeling of the oocyte surface. The factors that regulate sperm-dependent egg-activation events are not well understood. Caenorhabditis elegans EGG-3, a member of the protein tyrosine phosphatase-like (PTPL) family, is essential for regulating cell-surface and cortex rearrangements during egg activation in response to sperm entry. Although fertilization occurred normally in egg-3 mutants, the polarized dispersal of F-actin is altered, a chitin eggshell is not formed, and no polar bodies are produced. EGG-3 is associated with the oocyte plasma membrane in a pattern that is similar to CHS-1 and MBK-2. CHS-1 is required for eggshell deposition, whereas MBK-2 is required for the degradation of maternal proteins during the egg-to-embryo transition. The localization of CHS-1 and EGG-3 are interdependent and both genes were required for the proper localization of MBK-2 in oocytes. Therefore, EGG-3 plays a central role in egg activation by influencing polarized F-actin dynamics and the localization or activity of molecules that are directly involved in executing the egg-to-embryo transition.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2011

PGL proteins self associate and bind RNPs to mediate germ granule assembly in C. elegans

Momoyo Hanazawa; Masafumi Yonetani; Asako Sugimoto

PGL proteins act as scaffolds that recruit RNPs during C. elegans germ granule formation.


Current Genetics | 1995

Schizosaccharomyces pombe pac2 § controls the onset of sexual development via a pathway independent of the cAMP cascade

Hirofumi Kunitomo; Asako Sugimoto; Masayuki Yamamoto; Caroline R. M. Wilkinson

The Schizosaccharomyces pombe pac2 gene encodes a protein of 235 amino acids not similar to any protein of known function. Cells over-expressing pac2 were poor in mating and sporulation. Expression of ste11, which encodes a key transcription factor for sexual development, was not inducible by nitrogen starvation in these cells. Cells defective in pac2 could express ste11 and enter sexual development under incomplete starvation conditions. Although expression of ste11 is regulated primarily by the cAMP cascade, genetic analysis indicated that this cascade and pac2 can partially compensate for each other in the regulation of sexual development, and that neither of them is epistatic over the other. Thus, Pac2 appears to control ste11 expression via a signaling pathway independent of the cAMP cascade.

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