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Dive into the research topics where Daita Nadano is active.

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Featured researches published by Daita Nadano.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

NADE, a p75NTR-associated Cell Death Executor, Is Involved in Signal Transduction Mediated by the Common Neurotrophin Receptor p75NTR

Jun Mukai; Takahisa Hachiya; Shisako Shoji-Hoshino; Makoto T. Kimura; Daita Nadano; Petro Suvanto; Takaomi Hanaoka; Yin Li; Shinji Irie; Lloyd A. Greene; Taka-Aki Sato

The low affinity neurotrophin receptor p75NTR can mediate cell survival as well as cell death of neural cells by NGF and other neurotrophins. To elucidate p75NTR-mediated signal transduction, we screened p75NTR-associated proteins by a yeast two-hybrid system. We identified one positive clone and named NADE (p75NTR-associated cell deathexecutor). Mouse NADE has marked homology to the human HGR74 protein. NADE specifically binds to the cell-death domain of p75NTR. Co-expression of NADE and p75NTR induced caspase-2 and caspase-3 activities and the fragmentation of nuclear DNA in 293T cells. However, in the absence of p75NTR, NADE failed to induce apoptosis, suggesting that NADE expression is necessary but insufficient for p75NTR-mediated apoptosis. Furthermore, p75NTR/NADE-induced cell death was dependent on NGF but not BDNF, NT-3, or NT-4/5, and the recruitment of NADE to p75NTR (intracellular domain) was dose-dependent. We obtained similar results from PC12 cells, nnr5 cells, and oligodendrocytes. Taken together, NADE is the first signaling adaptor molecule identified in the involvement of p75NTR-mediated apoptosis induced by NGF, and it may play an important role in the pathogenesis of neurogenetic diseases.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

O-Linked N-Acetylglucosamine Is Present on the Extracellular Domain of Notch Receptors

Aiko Matsuura; Makiko Ito; Yuta Sakaidani; Tatsuhiko Kondo; Kosuke Murakami; Koichi Furukawa; Daita Nadano; Tsukasa Matsuda; Tetsuya Okajima

Rare types of glycosylation often occur in a domain-specific manner and are involved in specific biological processes. In particular, O-fucose glycans are reported to regulate the functions of EGF domain-containing proteins such as Notch receptors. In the course of mass spectrometric analysis of O-glycans displayed on Drosophila Notch receptors expressed in S2 cells, we found an unusual O-linked N-acetylhexosamine (HexNAc) modification which occurs at a site distinct from those of O-fucose and O-glucose glycosylations. Modification site mapping by mass spectrometry and amino acid substitution studies revealed that O-HexNAc modification occurs on a serine or threonine located between the fifth and sixth cysteines within the EGF domain. This modification occurs simultaneously along with other closely positioned O-glycosylations. This modification was determined to be O-β-GlcNAc by galactosyltransferase labeling and β-N-acetyl-hexosaminidase digestion experiments and by immunoblotting with a specific antibody. O-GlcNAc modification occurs at multiple sites on Notch epidermal growth factor repeats. O-GlcNAc modification was also found on the extracellular domain of Delta, a ligand for Notch receptors. Although the O-GlcNAc modification is known to regulate a wide range of cellular processes, the list of known modified proteins has previously been limited to intracellular proteins in animals. Thus, the finding of O-GlcNAc modification in extracellular environments predicts a distinct glycosylation process that might be associated with a novel regulatory mechanism for Notch receptor activity.


Nature Communications | 2011

O-Linked-N-acetylglucosamine on extracellular protein domains mediates epithelial cell-matrix interactions

Yuta Sakaidani; Tomoko Nomura; Aiko Matsuura; Makiko Ito; Emiko Suzuki; Kosuke Murakami; Daita Nadano; Tsukasa Matsuda; Koichi Furukawa; Tetsuya Okajima

The O-linked-N-acetylglucosamine (O-GlcNAc) modification of cytoplasmic and nuclear proteins regulates basic cellular functions and is involved in the aetiology of diabetes and neurodegeneration. This intracellular O-GlcNAcylation is catalyzed by a single O-GlcNAc transferase, OGT. Here we report a novel OGT, EOGT, responsible for extracellular O-GlcNAcylation. Although both OGT and EOGT are regulated by hexosamine flux, EOGT localizes to the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum and transfers GlcNAc to epidermal growth factor-like domains in an OGT-independent manner. Loss of Eogt gives phenotypes similar to those caused by defects in the apical extracellular matrix. Dumpy (Dp), a membrane-anchored extracellular protein, is O-GlcNAcylated, and EOGT is required for Dp-dependent epithelial cell-matrix interactions. Thus, O-GlcNAcylation of secreted and membrane glycoproteins is a novel mediator of cell-cell or cell-matrix interactions at the cell surface.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1992

Human urine deoxyribonuclease II (DNase II) isoenzymes: a novel immunoaffinity purification, biochemical multiplicity, genetic heterogeneity and broad distribution among tissues and body fluids

Toshihiro Yasuda; Daita Nadano; Shuichi Awazu; Koichiro Kishi

Deoxyribonuclease II (DNase II) was purified from the urine of a 48-year-old male (a single individual) using a column chromatography series, including concanavalin A-agarose and an immunoaffinity column utilizing anti-human spleen DNase II antibody, and was then characterized. Based on the catalytic properties of the purified enzyme, we have devised a technique of isoelectric focusing by thin-layer polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (IEF-PAGE) combined with a specific zymogram method, for investigating the possible molecular heterogeneity of human DNase II. DNase II in urine as well as the purified form was found to exist in multiple forms with different pI values separable by IEF-PAGE within a pH range of 5-7. Since sialidase treatment of the urine sample induced simplification of the isoenzyme patterns with diminishment of anodal bands, it was clear that the multiplicity of the enzyme was in part due to differences in the sialic acid content. On screening of DNase II isoenzyme patterns in urine samples from more than 200 Japanese individuals, only the common isoenzyme pattern was observed and no electrophoretic variations were detected. However, genetic studies of urinary enzyme activity and comparative studies on the activity in urine, semen and leukocytes from the same individuals suggest that the enzyme activity level of DNase II may be under genetic control. The enzyme was widely distributed in human tissues and showed high activities in secretory body fluids such as breast milk, saliva, semen and urine, and leukocyte lysates.


Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 2003

Differential Expression of Ribosomal Proteins in Human Normal and Neoplastic Colorectum

Hide Kasai; Daita Nadano; Eiko Hidaka; Kayoko Higuchi; Masatomo Kawakubo; Taka-Aki Sato; Jun Nakayama

Ribosomal proteins are a major component of ribosomes and play critical roles in protein biosynthesis. Recently it has been shown that the ribosomal proteins also function during various cellular processes that are independent of protein biosynthesis therefore called extraribosomal functions. In this study we have, for the first time, determined the expression profile of 12 ribosomal proteins (Sa, S8, S11, S12, S18, S24, L7, L13a, L18, L28, L32, and L35a) in normal epithelia of human colorectal mucosa using immunohistochemistry (IHC) and then compared their expression patterns with those of colorectal cancer. In the normal mucosa, ribosomal proteins were largely associated with the ribosomes of mucosal epithelia, and the expression level of ribosomal proteins, except for S11 and L7 proteins, was markedly increased in associated with maturation of the mucosal cells. On the other hand, these ribosomal proteins were markedly decreased in colorectal cancer compared with the normal mucosa. By contrast, S11 and L7 ribosomal proteins were rarely associated with the ribosomes of colorectal epithlia except immature mucosal cells, whereas their expression levels were significantly enchanced in colorectal cancer cells. In addition, L7 ribosomal protien was detected in the secretory granules of the enterochromaffin cells in the colorectal mucosa and in carcinoma cells expressing chromogranin A. These results indicate that the expression of ribosomal proteins is differentially regulated not only in normal mucosa but also in carcinoma of human colorectum, and suggest an extraribosomal function of L7 ribosomal protein in neuroendocrine function.


Biochemical Journal | 2004

A newly identified zona pellucida glycoprotein, ZPD, and dimeric ZP1 of chicken egg envelope are involved in sperm activation on sperm–egg interaction

Hiroki Okumura; Yoshinori Kohno; Yuki Iwata; Hitoshi Mori; Naohito Aoki; Chihiro Sato; Ken Kitajima; Daita Nadano; Tsukasa Matsuda

Fertilization begins with interaction between the sperm and the egg. The surface of the vertebrate oocyte is covered with the egg envelope, which is composed of ZP (zona pellucida) glycoproteins. We have identified two glycoproteins, ZP1/gp97 and ZPC/gp42, as the major components of the chicken egg envelope. In the present study, another 42 kDa protein, designated ZPD, has been found as a new major component of the chicken egg envelope. ZPD was specifically released from the egg envelope by ultrasonication treatment without urea. ZPD cDNA was cloned using a chicken granulosa cell cDNA pool. The deduced amino acid sequence showed that preproprotein of ZPD is composed of 418 amino acid residues with four potential N-glycosylation sites and includes a ZP domain, common in vertebrate ZP glycoproteins, and a transmembrane domain. ZPD belongs phylogenetically to a distinct group from known ZP glycoprotein subfamilies, ZPA, ZPB, and ZPC. In two-dimensional gel electrophoresis ZPD proteins were identified to be several isoforms with different pI values between 5 and 7. ZP1, ZPC and the newly identified ZPD were confirmed to be the major components of chicken egg envelope by MS of proteolytic digests of whole egg envelope. The in vitro incubation of chicken sperm with calcium ionophore A23187 induced sperm activation, resulting in the fragmentation and release of a 41 kDa PNA (peanut agglutinin)-positive glycoprotein and the decrease or loss of sperm PNA-stainability. The incubation with ZPD and dimeric ZP1, but not ZPC and monomeric ZP1, also induced the decrease or loss of sperm PNA-stainability, suggesting the in vitro sperm activation by these ZP components. Collectively, ZPD might bind loosely to egg envelope matrix and play a key role in the sperm activation on avian sperm-egg interaction.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2012

O-linked- N -acetylglucosamine modification of mammalian Notch receptors by an atypical O-GlcNAc transferase Eogt1

Yuta Sakaidani; Naoki Ichiyanagi; Chika Saito; Tomoko Nomura; Makiko Ito; Yosuke Nishio; Daita Nadano; Tsukasa Matsuda; Koichi Furukawa; Tetsuya Okajima

O-linked-β-N-acetylglucosamine (O-GlcNAc) modification is a unique cytoplasmic and nuclear protein modification that is common in nearly all eukaryotes, including filamentous fungi, plants, and animals. We had recently reported that epidermal growth factor (EGF) repeats of Notch and Dumpy are O-GlcNAcylated by an atypical O-GlcNAc transferase, EOGT, in Drosophila. However, no study has yet shown whether O-GlcNAcylation of extracellular proteins is limited to insects such as Drosophila or whether it occurs in other organisms, including mammals. Here, we report the characterization of A130022J15Rik, a mouse gene homolog of Drosophila Eogt (Eogt 1). Enzymatic analysis revealed that Eogt1 has a substrate specificity similar to that of Drosophila EOGT, wherein the Thr residue located between the fifth and sixth conserved cysteines of the folded EGF-like domains is modified. This observation is supported by the fact that the expression of Eogt1 in Drosophila rescued the cell-adhesion defect caused by Eogt downregulation. In HEK293T cells, Eogt1 expression promoted modification of Notch1 EGF repeats by O-GlcNAc, which was further modified, at least in part, by galactose to generate a novel O-linked-N-acetyllactosamine structure. These results suggest that Eogt1 encodes EGF domain O-GlcNAc transferase and that O-GlcNAcylation reaction in the secretory pathway is a fundamental biochemical process conserved through evolution.


American Journal of Pathology | 2003

Implantation-Dependent Expression of Trophinin by Maternal Fallopian Tube Epithelia during Tubal Pregnancies: Possible Role of Human Chorionic Gonadotrophin on Ectopic Pregnancy

Jun Nakayama; Daisuke Aoki; Tomoaki Suga; Tomoya O. Akama; Satoshi Ishizone; Hirohito Yamaguchi; Kazuhiko Imakawa; Daita Nadano; Asgerally T. Fazleabas; Tsutomu Katsuyama; Shiro Nozawa; Michiko N. Fukuda

Trophinin, tastin, and bystin have been identified as molecules potentially involved in human embryo implantation. Both trophoblasts and endometrial epithelial cells express trophinin, which mediates apical cell adhesion through homophilic trophinin-trophinin binding. We hypothesized that trophinins function in embryo implantation is unique to humans and investigated the expression of trophinin, tastin, and bystin in ectopic pregnancy, a condition unique to humans. In tubal pregnancies, high levels of all three were found in both trophoblasts and fallopian tubal epithelia. Trophinin expression in maternal cells was particularly high in the area adjacent to the trophoblasts, whereas trophinin was barely detectable in intact fallopian tubes from women with in utero pregnancies or without pregnancies. When explants of intact fallopian tube were incubated with the human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG), trophinin expression was enhanced in epithelial cells. Since the trophectoderm of the human blastocyst secretes hCG before and after implantation, these results suggest that hCG from the human embryo induces trophinin expression by maternal cells. As both beta-subunit of hCG and trophinin genes have diverged in mammals, the present study suggests a unique role of hCG and trophinin in human embryo implantation, including the pathogenesis of ectopic pregnancy.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Trophoblast cell activation by trophinin ligation is implicated in human embryo implantation

Kazuhiro Sugihara; Daijiro Sugiyama; James Byrne; Don P. Wolf; Kevin P. Lowitz; Yoichi Kobayashi; Maryam Kabir-Salmani; Daita Nadano; Daisuke Aoki; Shiro Nozawa; Jun Nakayama; Tomas Mustelin; Erkki Ruoslahti; Naoto Yamaguchi; Michiko N. Fukuda

During human embryo implantation, trophectoderm mediates adhesion of the blastocyst to the uterine epithelium. The rapid growth of the embryo and invasion of the maternal tissue suggest adhesion-induced activation of the embryonal cells. We show here that ligation of trophinin, a homophilic cell adhesion molecule expressed on trophoblastic cells, induces tyrosine phosphorylation in trophinin-expressing trophoblastic HT-H cells. The phosphorylation could be induced in HT-H cells with the binding of trophinin-expressing cells or anti trophinin antibodies. Trophinin-dependent tyrosine phosphorylation was associated with actin reorganization. We also isolated trophinin-binding peptides from phage libraries. These peptides exhibited the consensus sequence GWRQ and seemed to reproduce the effects of trophinin-mediated cell adhesion. Upon binding of a GWRQ peptide, HT-H cells became highly proliferative and motile. HT-H cells expressed ErbB family receptors and bound EGF and heparin-binding EGF-like growth factor (HB-EGF), but ErbB family receptor phosphorylation in these cells required GWRQ. In the absence of GWRQ, trophinin interacted with the cytoplasmic protein bystin, which binds to ErbB4 and blocks its autophosphorylation. In HT-H cells, GWRQ peptide dissociated trophinin from bystin, and ErbB4 was activated. Culturing monkey blastocysts in the presence of the peptide increased total number and motility of the trophectoderm cells. These results suggest that trophinin-mediated cell adhesion functions as a molecular switch for trophectoderm activation in human embryo implantation.


Biochemical Journal | 2006

Weaning-induced expression of a milk-fat globule protein, MFG-E8, in mouse mammary glands, as demonstrated by the analyses of its mRNA, protein and phosphatidylserine-binding activity.

Hajime Nakatani; Naohito Aoki; Yoshimi Nakagawa; Shinji Jin-no; Koji Aoyama; Kenji Oshima; Sachiyo Ohira; Chihiro Sato; Daita Nadano; Tsukasa Matsuda

A milk membrane glycoprotein, MFG-E8 [milk fat globule-EGF (epidermal growth factor) factor 8], is expressed abundantly in lactating mammary glands in stage- and tissue-specific manners, and has been believed to be secreted in association with milk fat globules. In the present paper, we describe further up-regulation of MFG-E8 in involuting mammary glands, where the glands undergo a substantial increase in the rate of epithelial cell apoptosis, and a possible role of MFG-E8 in mediating recognition and engulfment of apoptotic cells through its specific binding to PS (phosphatidylserine). Immunoblotting and RNA blotting analyses revealed that both MFG-E8 protein and MFG-E8 mRNA were markedly increased in mammary tissue within 3 days of either natural or forced weaning (pup withdrawal) of lactating mice. Using immunohistochemical analysis of the mammary tissue cryosections, the MFG-E8 signal was detected around the epithelium of such involuting mammary glands, but was almost undetectable at early- and mid-lactation stages, although strong signals were obtained for milk fat globules stored in the alveolar lumen. Some signals double positive to a macrophage differentiation marker, CD68, and MFG-E8 were detected in the post-weaning mammary tissue, although such double-positive signals were much smaller in number than the MFG-E8 single-positive ones. Total MFG-E8 in milk was also increased in the post-weaning mammary glands and, furthermore, the free MFG-E8 content in the post-weaning milk, as measured by in vitro PS-binding and apoptotic HC11 cell-binding activities, was much higher than that of lactation. In addition, the post-weaning milk enhanced the binding of apoptotic HC11 cells to J774 macrophages. Sucrose density-gradient ultracentrifugation analyses revealed that such enhanced PS-binding activity of MFG-E8 was present in membrane vesicle fractions (density 1.05-1.13 g/ml), rather than milk fat globule fractions. The weaning-induced MFG-E8 might play an important role in the recognition and engulfment of apoptotic epithelial cells by the neighbouring phagocytic epithelial cells in involuting mammary glands.

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