Atsuo Ogura
University of Tsukuba
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Featured researches published by Atsuo Ogura.
Cell | 2004
Mito Kanatsu-Shinohara; Kimiko Inoue; Jiyoung Lee; Momoko Yoshimoto; Narumi Ogonuki; Hiromi Miki; Shiro Baba; Takeo Kato; Yasuhiro Kazuki; Shinya Toyokuni; Megumi Toyoshima; Ohtsura Niwa; Mitsuo Oshimura; Toshio Heike; Tatsutoshi Nakahata; Fumitoshi Ishino; Atsuo Ogura; Takashi Shinohara
Although germline cells can form multipotential embryonic stem (ES)/embryonic germ (EG) cells, these cells can be derived only from embryonic tissues, and such multipotent cells have not been available from neonatal gonads. Here we report the successful establishment of ES-like cells from neonatal mouse testis. These ES-like cells were phenotypically similar to ES/EG cells except in their genomic imprinting pattern. They differentiated into various types of somatic cells in vitro under conditions used to induce the differentiation of ES cells and produced teratomas after inoculation into mice. Furthermore, these ES-like cells formed germline chimeras when injected into blastocysts. Thus, the capacity to form multipotent cells persists in neonatal testis. The ability to derive multipotential stem cells from the neonatal testis has important implications for germ cell biology and opens the possibility of using these cells for biotechnology and medicine.
Biology of Reproduction | 2003
Mito Kanatsu-Shinohara; Narumi Ogonuki; Kimiko Inoue; Hiromi Miki; Atsuo Ogura; Shinya Toyokuni; Takashi Shinohara
Abstract Spermatogenesis is a complex process that originates in a small population of spermatogonial stem cells. Here we report the in vitro culture of spermatogonial stem cells that proliferate for long periods of time. In the presence of glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor, epidermal growth factor, basic fibroblast growth factor, and leukemia inhibitory factor, gonocytes isolated from neonatal mouse testis proliferated over a 5-month period (>1014-fold) and restored fertility to congenitally infertile recipient mice following transplantation into seminiferous tubules. Long-term spermatogonial stem cell culture will be useful for studying spermatogenesis mechanism and has important implications for developing new technology in transgenesis or medicine.
BioTechniques | 2009
Motoki Goto; Eiichi Honda; Atsuo Ogura; Akio Nomoto; Kenichi Hanaki
Loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP), a novel gene amplification method, enables the synthesis of larger amounts of both DNA and a visible byproduct--namely, magnesium pyrophosphate--without thermal cycling. A positive reaction is indicated by the turbidity of the reaction solution or the color change after adding an intercalating dye to the reaction solution, but the use of such dyes has certain limitations. Hydroxy naphthol blue (HNB), a metal indicator for calcium and a colorimetric reagent for alkaline earth metal ions, was used for a new colorimetric assay of the LAMP reaction. Preaddition of 120 microM HNB to the LAMP reaction solution did not inhibit amplification efficiency. A positive reaction is indicated by a color change from violet to sky blue. The LAMP reaction with HNB could also be carried out in a 96-well microplate, and the reaction could be measured at 650 nm with a microplate reader. The colorimetric LAMP method using HNB would be helpful for high-throughput DNA and RNA detection.
Nature Genetics | 2000
Kimiko Inoue; Kazuto Nakada; Atsuo Ogura; Kotoyo Isobe; Yu-ichi Goto; Ikuya Nonaka; Jun-Ichi Hayashi
Mice carrying mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) with pathogenic mutations would provide a system in which to study how mutant mtDNAs are transmitted and distributed in tissues, resulting in expression of mitochondrial diseases. However, no effective procedures are available for the generation of these mice. Isolation of mouse cells without mtDNA (ρ0) enabled us to trap mutant mtDNA that had accumulated in somatic tissues into ρ0 cells repopulated with mtDNA (cybrids). We isolated respiration-deficient cybrids with mtDNA carrying a deletion and introduced this mtDNA into fertilized eggs. The mutant mtDNA was transmitted maternally, and its accumulation induced mitochondrial dysfunction in various tissues. Moreover, most of these mice died because of renal failure, suggesting the involvement of mtDNA mutations in the pathogeneses of new diseases.
Nature Medicine | 2001
Kazuto Nakada; Kimiko Inoue; Tomoko Ono; Kotoyo Isobe; Atsuo Ogura; Yu-ichi Goto; Ikuya Nonaka; Jun-Ichi Hayashi
Here we investigated the pathogenesis of deletion mutant mitochondrial (mt)DNA by generating mice with mutant mtDNA carrying a 4696-basepair deletion (ΔmtDNA4696), and by using cytochrome c oxidase (COX) electron micrographs to identify COX activity at the individual mitochondrial level. All mitochondria in tissues with ΔmtDNA4696 showed normal COX activity until ΔmtDNA4696 accumulated predominantly; this prevented mice from expressing disease phenotypes. Moreover, we did not observe coexistence of COX-positive and -negative mitochondria within single cells. These results indicate the occurrence of inter-mitochondrial complementation through exchange of genetic contents between exogenously introduced mitochondria with ΔmtDNA4696 and host mitochondria with normal mtDNA. This complementation shows a mitochondria-specific mechanism for avoiding expression of deletion-mutant mtDNA, and opens the possibility of a gene therapy in which mitochondria possessing full-length DNA are introduced.
Nature | 2011
Takuya Sato; Kumiko Katagiri; Ayako Gohbara; Kimiko Inoue; Narumi Ogonuki; Atsuo Ogura; Yoshinobu Kubota; Takehiko Ogawa
Spermatogenesis is one of the most complex and longest processes of sequential cell proliferation and differentiation in the body, taking more than a month from spermatogonial stem cells, through meiosis, to sperm formation. The whole process, therefore, has never been reproduced in vitro in mammals, nor in any other species with a very few exceptions in some particular types of fish. Here we show that neonatal mouse testes which contain only gonocytes or primitive spermatogonia as germ cells can produce spermatids and sperm in vitro with serum-free culture media. Spermatogenesis was maintained over 2 months in tissue fragments positioned at the gas–liquid interphase. The obtained spermatids and sperm resulted in healthy and reproductively competent offspring through microinsemination. In addition, neonatal testis tissues were cryopreserved and, after thawing, showed complete spermatogenesis in vitro. Our organ culture method could be applicable through further refinements to a variety of mammalian species, which will serve as a platform for future clinical application as well as mechanistic understanding of spermatogenesis.
Nature | 2012
Toshinobu Nakamura; Yu-Jung Liu; Hiroyuki Nakashima; Hiroki Umehara; Kimiko Inoue; Shogo Matoba; Makoto Tachibana; Atsuo Ogura; Yoichi Shinkai; Toru Nakano
The modification of DNA by 5-methylcytosine (5mC) has essential roles in cell differentiation and development through epigenetic gene regulation. 5mC can be converted to another modified base, 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC), by the tet methylcytosine dioxygenase (Tet) family of enzymes. Notably, the balance between 5hmC and 5mC in the genome is linked with cell-differentiation processes such as pluripotency and lineage commitment. We have previously reported that the maternal factor PGC7 (also known as Dppa3, Stella) is required for the maintenance of DNA methylation in early embryogenesis, and protects 5mC from conversion to 5hmC in the maternal genome. Here we show that PGC7 protects 5mC from Tet3-mediated conversion to 5hmC by binding to maternal chromatin containing dimethylated histone H3 lysine 9 (H3K9me2) in mice. In addition, imprinted loci that are marked with H3K9me2 in mature sperm are protected by PGC7 binding in early embryogenesis. This type of regulatory mechanism could be involved in DNA modifications in somatic cells as well as in early embryos.
Nature Genetics | 2006
Ryuichi Ono; Kenji Nakamura; Kimiko Inoue; Mie Naruse; Takako Usami; Noriko Wakisaka-Saito; Toshiaki Hino; Rika Suzuki-Migishima; Narumi Ogonuki; Hiromi Miki; Takashi Kohda; Atsuo Ogura; Minesuke Yokoyama; Tomoko Kaneko-Ishino; Fumitoshi Ishino
By comparing mammalian genomes, we and others have identified actively transcribed Ty3/gypsy retrotransposon-derived genes with highly conserved DNA sequences and insertion sites. To elucidate the functions of evolutionarily conserved retrotransposon-derived genes in mammalian development, we produced mice that lack one of these genes, Peg10 (paternally expressed 10), which is a paternally expressed imprinted gene on mouse proximal chromosome 6. The Peg10 knockout mice showed early embryonic lethality owing to defects in the placenta. This indicates that Peg10 is critical for mouse parthenogenetic development and provides the first direct evidence of an essential role of an evolutionarily conserved retrotransposon-derived gene in mammalian development.
Biology of Reproduction | 2005
Mito Kanatsu-Shinohara; Hiromi Miki; Kimiko Inoue; Narumi Ogonuki; Shinya Toyokuni; Atsuo Ogura; Takashi Shinohara
Abstract Spermatogonial stem cells are the only stem cells in the body that transmit genetic information to the next generation. These cells can be cultured for extended periods in the presence of serum and feeder cells. However, little is known about factors that regulate self-renewal division of spermatogonial stem cells. In this investigation we examined the possibility of establishing culture systems for spermatogonial stem cells that lack serum or a feeder cell layer. Spermatogonial stem cells could expand in serum-free conditions on mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs), or were successfully cultivated without feeder cells on a laminin-coated plate. However, they could not expand when both serum and feeder cells were absent. Although the cells cultured on laminin differed phenotypically from those on feeder cells, they grew exponentially for at least 6 mo, and produced normal, fertile progeny following transplantation into infertile mouse testis. This culture system will provide a new opportunity for understanding the regulatory mechanism that governs spermatogonial stem cells.
Biology of Reproduction | 2000
Atsuo Ogura; Kimiko Inoue; Narumi Ogonuki; Akira Noguchi; Kaoru Takano; Reiko Nagano; Osamu Suzuki; Jiyoung Lee; Fumitoshi Ishino; Junichiro Matsuda
Abstract Although it is generally accepted that relatively high efficiencies of somatic cell cloning in mammals can be achieved by using donor cells from the female reproductive system (e.g., cumulus/granulosa, oviduct, and mammary gland cells), there is little information on the possibility of using male-specific somatic cells as donor cells. In this study we injected the nucleus of immature mouse Sertoli cells isolated from the testes of newborn (Days 3–10) males into enucleated mature oocytes in order to examine the ability of their nuclei to support embryonic development. After activation of the oocytes that had received the freshly recovered immature Sertoli cells, some developed into the morula/blastocyst stage, depending on the age of the donor cells (22.0–37.4%). When transferred into pseudopregnant females, 7 (3.3%, 7 of 215) developed into normal pups at term. Nuclear transfer of immature Sertoli cells after 1 wk in culture also produced normal pups after embryo transfer (3.1%, 2 of 65). Even after cryopreservation in a conventional cryoprotectant solution, their ability as donor cells was maintained, as demonstrated by the birth of cloned young (6.7%, 7 of 105). Immature Sertoli cells transfected with green fluorescent protein gene also supported embryo development into morulae/blastocysts, which showed specific fluorescence. This study demonstrates that immature Sertoli cells, male-specific somatic cells, are potential donors for somatic cell cloning.