Atsumi Mori
National Institutes of Health
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Featured researches published by Atsumi Mori.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1998
Koichi Suzuki; Stefano Lavaroni; Atsumi Mori; Fumikazu Okajima; Shioko Kimura; Ryohei Katoh; Akira Kawaoi; Leonard D. Kohn
ABSTRACT Thyroid transcription factor 1 (TTF-1) was identified for its critical role in thyroid-specific gene expression; its level in the thyroid is regulated by thyrotropin-increased cyclic AMP levels. TTF-1 was subsequently found in lung tissue, where it regulates surfactant expression, and in certain neural tissues, where its function is unknown. Ligands or signals regulating TTF-1 levels in lung or neural tissue are unknown. We recently identified TTF-1 in rat parafollicular C cells and parathyroid cells. In this report, we show that TTF-1 is present in the parafollicular C cells of multiple species and that it interacts with specific elements on the 5′-flanking regions of the extracellular Ca2+-sensing receptor (CaSR), calmodulin, and calcitonin genes in C cells. When intracellular Ca2+ levels are increased or decreased in C cells, by the calcium ionophore A23187, by physiologic concentrations of the P2 purinergic receptor ligand ATP, or by changes in extracellular Ca2+ levels, the promoter activity, RNA levels, and binding of TTF-1 to these genes are, respectively, decreased or increased. The changes in TTF-1 inversely alter CaSR gene and calcitonin gene expression. We show, therefore, that TTF-1 is a Ca2+-modulated transcription factor that coordinately regulates the activity of genes critical for Ca2+homeostasis by parafollicular C cells. We hypothesize that TTF-1 similarly coordinates Ca2+-dependent gene expression in all cells in which TTF-1 and the CaSR are expressed, i.e., parathyroid cells, neural cells in the anterior pituitary or hippocampus, and keratinocytes.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999
Luca Ulianich; Koichi Suzuki; Atsumi Mori; Minoru Nakazato; Michele Pietrarelli; Paul Goldsmith; Francesco Pacifico; Eduardo Consiglio; Silvestro Formisano; Leonard D. Kohn
Follicular thyroglobulin (TG) decreases expression of the thyroid-restricted transcription factors, thyroid transcription factor (TTF)-1, TTF-2, and Pax-8, thereby suppressing expression of the sodium iodide symporter, thyroid peroxidase, TG, and thyrotropin receptor genes (Suzuki, K., Lavaroni, S., Mori, A., Ohta, M., Saito, J., Pietrarelli, M., Singer, D. S., Kimura, S., Katoh, R., Kawaoi, A., and Kohn, L. D. (1997) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 95, 8251–8256). The ability of highly purified 27, 19, or 12 S follicular TG to suppress thyroid-restricted gene expression correlates with their ability to bind to FRTL-5 thyrocytes and is inhibited by a specific antibody to the thyroid apical membrane asialoglycoprotein receptor (ASGPR), which is related to the ASGPR of liver cells. Phosphorylating serine/threonine residues of TG, by autophosphorylation or protein kinase A, eliminates TG suppression and enhances transcript levels of the thyroid-restricted genes 2-fold in the absence of a change in TG binding to the ASGPR. Follicular TG suppression of thyroid-restricted genes is thus mediated by the ASPGR on the thyrocyte apical membrane and regulated by a signal system wherein phosphorylation of serine/threonine residues on the bound ligand is an important component. These data provide a hitherto unsuspected role for the ASGPR in transcriptional signaling, aside from its role in endocytosis. They establish a functional role for phosphorylated serine/threonine residues on the TG molecule.
Biochimie | 1999
Koichi Suzuki; Atsumi Mori; Stefano Lavaroni; Luca Ulianich; Eri Miyagi; Jun Saito; Minoru Nakazato; Michele Pietrarelli; Neta Shafran; Antonino Grassadonia; Won Bae Kim; Eduardo Consiglio; Silvestro Formisano; Leonard D. Kohn
Thyroglobulin (TG) is the primary synthetic product of the thyroid and the macromolecular precursor of thyroid hormones. TG synthesis, iodination, storage in follicles, and lysosomal degradation can each modulate thyroid hormone formation and secretion into the circulation. Thyrotropin (TSH), via its receptor (the TSHR), increases thyroid hormone levels by upregulating expression of the sodium iodide symporter (NIS), thyroid peroxidase (TPO), and TG genes. TSH does this by modulating the expression and activity of the thyroid-specific transcription factors, thyroid transcription factor (TTF)-1, TTF-2, and Pax-8, which coordinately regulate NIS, TPO, TG, and the TSHR. Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I gene expression, which is also regulated by TTF-1 and Pax-8 in the thyroid, is simultaneously decreased; this maintains self tolerance in the face of TSH-increased gene products necessary for thyroid hormone formation. We now show that follicular TG, 27S > 19S > 12S, counter-regulates TSH-increased thyroid-specific gene transcription by suppressing the expression of the TTF-1, TTF-2, and Pax-8 genes. This decreases expression of the TG, TPO, NIS and TSHR genes, but increases class I expression. TG action involves an apical membrane TG-binding protein; however, it acts transcriptionally, targeting, for example, a sequence within 1.15 kb of the start of TTF-1 transcription. TG does not affect ubiquitous transcription factors regulating TG, TPO, NIS and/or TSHR gene expression. TG activity is not duplicated by thyroid hormones or iodide. We hypothesize that TG-initiated, transcriptional regulation of thyroid-restricted genes is a normal, feedback, compensatory mechanism which regulates follicular function, regulates thyroid hormone secretion, and contributes to follicular heterogeneity.
Endocrinology | 1998
Pina L. Balducci-Silano; Koichi Suzuki; Masanori Ohta; Jun Saito; Masayuki Ohmori; Valeria Montani; Giorgio Napolitano; Minho Shong; Shin-ichi Taniguchi; Michele Pietrarelli; Stefano Lavaroni; Atsumi Mori; Dinah S. Singer; Leonard D. Kohn
The single strand binding protein (SSBP-1) is a positive regulator of TSH receptor gene expression and binds to an element with a GXXXXG motif. The S box of the mouse major histocompatibility class II gene has multiple GXXXXG motifs and can also bind SSBP-1. The S box is one of four highly conserved elements on the 5′-flanking region of class II genes that are necessary for interferon-γ (IFNγ) to overcome the normally suppressed state of the gene and induce aberrant class II expression. In this report we show that SSBP-1, when overexpressed in FRTL-5 thyroid cells, is a positive regulator of human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-DRα class II gene expression, as is IFNγ or the class II trans-activator (CIITA). This is evidenced by increased exogenous promoter activity, increased endogenous RNA levels, and increased endogenous antigen expression after transfecting full-length SSBP-1 complementary DNA together with a HLA-DRα promoter-reporter gene chimera into TSH-treated FRTL-5 thyroid cells whose endogenous SSBP-1...
Endocrinology | 2000
Ines E. Royaux; Koichi Suzuki; Atsumi Mori; Ryohei Katoh; Lorraine A. Everett; Leonard D. Kohn; Eric D. Green
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1999
Koichi Suzuki; Atsumi Mori; Ken J. Ishii; Jun Saito; Dinah S. Singer; Dennis M. Klinman; Philip R. Krause; Leonard D. Kohn
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1998
Koichi Suzuki; Stefano Lavaroni; Atsumi Mori; Masanori Ohta; Jun Saito; Michele Pietrarelli; Dinah S. Singer; Shioko Kimura; Ryohei Katoh; Akira Kawaoi; Leonard D. Kohn
Endocrinology | 1999
Koichi Suzuki; Atsumi Mori; Jun Saito; Emiko Moriyama; Luca Ullianich; Leonard D. Kohn
Thyroid | 1999
Koichi Suzuki; Atsumi Mori; Stefano Lavaroni; Eri Miyagi; Luca Ulianich; Ryohei Katoh; Akira Kawaoi; Leonard D. Kohn
Acta Histochemica Et Cytochemica | 1999
Koichi Suzuki; Atsumi Mori; Stefano Lavaroni; Ryohei Katoh; Leonard D. Kohn; Akira Kawaoi