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Dive into the research topics where Etsuo A. Susaki is active.

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Featured researches published by Etsuo A. Susaki.


Cell | 2014

Whole-brain imaging with single-cell resolution using chemical cocktails and computational analysis

Etsuo A. Susaki; Kazuki Tainaka; Dimitri Perrin; Fumiaki Kishino; Takehiro Tawara; Tomonobu M. Watanabe; Chihiro Yokoyama; Hirotaka Onoe; Megumi Eguchi; Shun Yamaguchi; Takaya Abe; Hiroshi Kiyonari; Yoshihiro Shimizu; Atsushi Miyawaki; Hideo Yokota; Hiroki R. Ueda

Systems-level identification and analysis of cellular circuits in the brain will require the development of whole-brain imaging with single-cell resolution. To this end, we performed comprehensive chemical screening to develop a whole-brain clearing and imaging method, termed CUBIC (clear, unobstructed brain imaging cocktails and computational analysis). CUBIC is a simple and efficient method involving the immersion of brain samples in chemical mixtures containing aminoalcohols, which enables rapid whole-brain imaging with single-photon excitation microscopy. CUBIC is applicable to multicolor imaging of fluorescent proteins or immunostained samples in adult brains and is scalable from a primate brain to subcellular structures. We also developed a whole-brain cell-nuclear counterstaining protocol and a computational image analysis pipeline that, together with CUBIC reagents, enable the visualization and quantification of neural activities induced by environmental stimulation. CUBIC enables time-course expression profiling of whole adult brains with single-cell resolution.


Chemistry & Biology | 2016

Whole-body and Whole-Organ Clearing and Imaging Techniques with Single-Cell Resolution: Toward Organism-Level Systems Biology in Mammals

Etsuo A. Susaki; Hiroki R. Ueda

Organism-level systems biology aims to identify, analyze, control and design cellular circuits in organisms. Many experimental and computational approaches have been developed over the years to allow us to conduct these studies. Some of the most powerful methods are based on using optical imaging in combination with fluorescent labeling, and for those one of the long-standing stumbling blocks has been tissue opacity. Recently, the solutions to this problem have started to emerge based on whole-body and whole-organ clearing techniques that employ innovative tissue-clearing chemistry. Here, we review these advancements and discuss how combining new clearing techniques with high-performing fluorescent proteins or small molecule tags, rapid volume imaging and efficient image informatics is resulting in comprehensive and quantitative organ-wide, single-cell resolution experimental data. These technologies are starting to yield information on connectivity and dynamics in cellular circuits at unprecedented resolution, and bring us closer to system-level understanding of physiology and diseases of complex mammalian systems.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Common and specific roles of the related CDK inhibitors p27 and p57 revealed by a knock-in mouse model

Etsuo A. Susaki; Keiko Nakayama; Lili Yamasaki; Keiichi I. Nakayama

Although p27 and p57 are structurally related cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors (CKIs), and are thought to perform similar functions, p27 knockout (p27KO) and p57KO mice show distinct phenotypes. To elucidate the in vivo functions of these CKIs, we have now generated a knock-in mouse model (p57p27KI), in which the p57 gene has been replaced with the p27 gene. The p57p27KI mice are viable and appear healthy, with most of the developmental defects characteristic of p57KO mice having been corrected by p27 knock-in. Such developmental defects of p57KO mice were also ameliorated in mice deficient in both p57 and the transcription factor E2F1, suggesting that loss of p57 promotes E2F1-dependent apoptosis. The developmental defects apparent in a few tissues of p57KO mice were unaffected or only partially corrected by knock-in expression of p27. Thus, these observations indicate that p57 and p27 share many characteristics in vivo, but that p57 also performs specific functions not amenable to substitution with p27.


Neuron | 2016

Involvement of Ca2+-Dependent Hyperpolarization in Sleep Duration in Mammals

Fumiya Tatsuki; Genshiro A. Sunagawa; Shoi Shi; Etsuo A. Susaki; Hiroko Yukinaga; Dimitri Perrin; Kenta Sumiyama; Maki Ukai-Tadenuma; Hiroshi Fujishima; Rei-ichiro Ohno; Daisuke Tone; Koji L. Ode; Katsuhiko Matsumoto; Hiroki R. Ueda

The detailed molecular mechanisms underlying the regulation of sleep duration in mammals are still elusive. To address this challenge, we constructed a simple computational model, which recapitulates the electrophysiological characteristics of the slow-wave sleep and awake states. Comprehensive bifurcation analysis predicted that a Ca(2+)-dependent hyperpolarization pathway may play a role in slow-wave sleep and hence in the regulation of sleep duration. To experimentally validate the prediction, we generate and analyze 21 KO mice. Here we found that impaired Ca(2+)-dependent K(+) channels (Kcnn2 and Kcnn3), voltage-gated Ca(2+) channels (Cacna1g and Cacna1h), or Ca(2+)/calmodulin-dependent kinases (Camk2a and Camk2b) decrease sleep duration, while impaired plasma membrane Ca(2+) ATPase (Atp2b3) increases sleep duration. Pharmacological intervention and whole-brain imaging validated that impaired NMDA receptors reduce sleep duration and directly increase the excitability of cells. Based on these results, we propose a hypothesis that a Ca(2+)-dependent hyperpolarization pathway underlies the regulation of sleep duration in mammals.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Increased E4 activity in mice leads to Ubiquitin-containing aggregates and degeneration of hypothalamic neurons resulting in obesity

Etsuo A. Susaki; Chie Kaneko-Oshikawa; Keishi Miyata; Mitsuhisa Tabata; Tetsuya Yamada; Yuichi Oike; Hideki Katagiri; Keiichi I. Nakayama

Obesity has become a serious worldwide public health problem. Although neural degeneration in specific brain regions has been suggested to contribute to obesity phenotype in humans, a causal relationship between these two conditions has not been demonstrated experimentally. We now show that E4B (also known as UFD2a), a mammalian ubiquitin chain elongation factor (E4), induces the formation of intracellular aggregates positive for ubiquitin and the adaptor protein p62 when overexpressed in cultured cells or the brain. Mice transgenic for E4B manifested neural degeneration in association with aggregate formation, and they exhibited functional impairment specifically in a subset of hypothalamic neurons that regulate food intake and energy expenditure, resulting in development of hyperphagic obesity and related metabolic abnormalities. The neural pathology of E4B transgenic mice was similar to that of human neurodegenerative diseases associated with the formation of intracellular ubiquitin-positive deposits, indicating the existence of a link between such diseases and obesity and related metabolic disorders. Our findings thus provide experimental evidence for a role of hypothalamic neurodegeneration in obesity, and the E4B transgenic mouse should prove to be a useful animal model for studies of the relationship between neurodegenerative diseases and obesity.


Journal of Physiological Sciences | 2016

Sleep as a biological problem: an overview of frontiers in sleep research

Takeshi Kanda; Natsuko Tsujino; Eriko Kuramoto; Yoshimasa Koyama; Etsuo A. Susaki; Sachiko Chikahisa; Hiromasa Funato

Sleep is a physiological process not only for the rest of the body but also for several brain functions such as mood, memory, and consciousness. Nevertheless, the nature and functions of sleep remain largely unknown due to its extremely complicated nature and lack of optimized technology for the experiments. Here we review the recent progress in the biology of the mammalian sleep, which covers a wide range of research areas: the basic knowledge about sleep, the physiology of cerebral cortex in sleeping animals, the detailed morphological features of thalamocortical networks, the mechanisms underlying fluctuating activity of autonomic nervous systems during rapid eye movement sleep, the cutting-edge technology of tissue clearing for visualization of the whole brain, the ketogenesis-mediated homeostatic regulation of sleep, and the forward genetic approach for identification of novel genes involved in sleep. We hope this multifaceted review will be helpful for researchers who are interested in the biology of sleep.


Genes to Cells | 2013

Establishment of TSH β real-time monitoring system in mammalian photoperiodism

Kaori Tsujino; Ryohei Narumi; Koh-hei Masumoto; Etsuo A. Susaki; Yuta Shinohara; Takaya Abe; Masayuki Iigo; Atsushi Wada; Mamoru Nagano; Yasufumi Shigeyoshi; Hiroki R. Ueda

Organisms have seasonal physiological changes in response to day length. Long‐day stimulation induces thyroid‐stimulating hormone beta subunit (TSHβ) in the pars tuberalis (PT), which mediates photoperiodic reactions like day‐length measurement and physiological adaptation. However, the mechanism of TSHβ induction for day‐length measurement is largely unknown. To screen candidate upstream molecules of TSHβ, which convey light information to the PT, we generated Luciferase knock‐in mice, which quantitatively report the dynamics of TSHβ expression. We cultured brain slices containing the PT region from adult and neonatal mice and measured the bioluminescence activities from each slice over several days. A decrease in the bioluminescence activities was observed after melatonin treatment in adult and neonatal slices. These observations indicate that the experimental system possesses responsiveness of the TSHβ expression to melatonin. Thus, we concluded that our experimental system monitors TSHβ expression dynamics in response to external stimuli.


Scientific Reports | 2017

CUBIC pathology: three-dimensional imaging for pathological diagnosis

Satoshi Nojima; Etsuo A. Susaki; Kyotaro Yoshida; Hiroyoshi Takemoto; Naoto Tsujimura; Shohei Iijima; Ko Takachi; Yujiro Nakahara; Shinichiro Tahara; Kenji Ohshima; Masako Kurashige; Yumiko Hori; Naoki Wada; Jun-ichiro Ikeda; Atsushi Kumanogoh; Eiichi Morii; Hiroki R. Ueda

The examination of hematoxylin and eosin (H&E)-stained tissues on glass slides by conventional light microscopy is the foundation for histopathological diagnosis. However, this conventional method has some limitations in x-y axes due to its relatively narrow range of observation area and in z-axis due to its two-dimensionality. In this study, we applied a CUBIC pipeline, which is the most powerful tissue-clearing and three-dimensional (3D)-imaging technique, to clinical pathology. CUBIC was applicable to 3D imaging of both normal and abnormal patient-derived, human lung and lymph node tissues. Notably, the combination of deparaffinization and CUBIC enabled 3D imaging of specimens derived from paraffin-embedded tissue blocks, allowing quantitative evaluation of nuclear and structural atypia of an archival malignant lymphoma tissue. Furthermore, to examine whether CUBIC can be applied to practical use in pathological diagnosis, we performed a histopathological screening of a lymph node metastasis based on CUBIC, which successfully improved the sensitivity in detecting minor metastatic carcinoma nodules in lymph nodes. Collectively, our results indicate that CUBIC significantly contributes to retrospective and prospective clinicopathological diagnosis, which might lead to the establishment of a novel field of medical science based on 3D histopathology.


npj Systems Biology and Applications | 2017

Next-generation mammalian genetics toward organism-level systems biology

Etsuo A. Susaki; Hideki Ukai; Hiroki R. Ueda

Organism-level systems biology in mammals aims to identify, analyze, control, and design molecular and cellular networks executing various biological functions in mammals. In particular, system-level identification and analysis of molecular and cellular networks can be accelerated by next-generation mammalian genetics. Mammalian genetics without crossing, where all production and phenotyping studies of genome-edited animals are completed within a single generation drastically reduce the time, space, and effort of conducting the systems research. Next-generation mammalian genetics is based on recent technological advancements in genome editing and developmental engineering. The process begins with introduction of double-strand breaks into genomic DNA by using site-specific endonucleases, which results in highly efficient genome editing in mammalian zygotes or embryonic stem cells. By using nuclease-mediated genome editing in zygotes, or ~100% embryonic stem cell-derived mouse technology, whole-body knock-out and knock-in mice can be produced within a single generation. These emerging technologies allow us to produce multiple knock-out or knock-in strains in high-throughput manner. In this review, we discuss the basic concepts and related technologies as well as current challenges and future opportunities for next-generation mammalian genetics in organism-level systems biology.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Non-Enzymatic DNA Cleavage Reaction Induced by 5-Ethynyluracil in Methylamine Aqueous Solution and Application to DNA Concatenation

Shuji Ikeda; Kazuki Tainaka; Katsuhiko Matsumoto; Yuta Shinohara; Koji L. Ode; Etsuo A. Susaki; Hiroki R. Ueda

DNA can be concatenated by hybridization of DNA fragments with protruding single-stranded termini. DNA cleavage occurring at a nucleotide containing a DNA base analogue is a useful method to obtain DNA with designed protruding termini. Here, we report a novel non-enzymatic DNA cleavage reaction for DNA concatenation. We found that DNA is cleaved at a nucleotide containing 5-ethynyluracil in a methylamine aqueous solution to generate 5′-phosphorylated DNA fragment as a cleavage product. We demonstrated that the reaction can be applied to DNA concatenation of PCR-amplified DNA fragments. This novel non-enzymatic DNA cleavage reaction is a simple practical approach for DNA concatenation.

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Dimitri Perrin

Queensland University of Technology

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