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Dive into the research topics where Hidehito Inagaki is active.

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Featured researches published by Hidehito Inagaki.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Cruciform DNA Structure Underlies the Etiology for Palindrome-mediated Human Chromosomal Translocations

Hiroki Kurahashi; Hidehito Inagaki; Kouji Yamada; Tamae Ohye; Mariko Taniguchi; Beverly S. Emanuel; Tatsushi Toda

There is accumulating evidence to suggest that palindromic AT-rich repeats (PATRRs) represent hot spots of double-strand breakage that lead to recurrent chromosomal translocations in humans. As a mechanism for such rearrangements, we proposed that the PATRR forms a cruciform structure that is the source of genomic instability. To test this hypothesis, we have investigated the tertiary structure of a cloned PATRR. We have observed that a plasmid containing this PATRR undergoes a conformational change, causing temperature-dependent mobility changes upon agarose gel electrophoresis. The mobility shift is observed in physiologic salt concentrations and is most prominent when the plasmid DNA is incubated at room temperature prior to electrophoresis. Analysis using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis indicates that the mobility shift results from the formation of a cruciform structure. S1 nuclease and T7 endonuclease both cut the plasmid into a linear form, also suggesting cruciform formation. Furthermore, anti-cruciform DNA antibody reduces the electrophoretic mobility of the PATRR-containing fragment. Finally, we have directly visualized cruciform extrusions from the plasmid DNA with the size expected of hairpin arms using atomic force microscopy. Our data imply that for human chromosomes, translocation susceptibility is mediated by PATRRs and likely results from their unstable conformation.


Biological Chemistry | 1999

Molecular genetics of dopa-responsive dystonia.

Hiroshi Ichinose; Takahiro Suzuki; Hidehito Inagaki; Tamae Ohye; Toshiharu Nagatsu

Abstract The causative genes of two types of hereditary doparesponsive dystonia (DRD) due to dopamine (DA) deficiency in the nigrostriatum DA neurons have been elucidated. Autosomal dominant DRD (AD-DRD) was originally described by Segawa as hereditary progressive dystonia with marked diurnal fluctuation (HPD). We cloned the human GTP cyclohydrolase I (GCH1) gene, and mapped the gene to chromosome 14q22.1–q22.2 within the HPD/DRD locus, which had been identified by linkage analysis. GCH1 is the rate-limiting enzyme for the biosynthesis of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4), the cofactor for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), which is the first and rate-limiting enzyme of DA synthesis. We proved that the GCH1 gene is the causative gene for HPD/DRD based on the identification of mutations of the gene in the patients and decreases in the enzyme activity expressed in mononuclear blood cells to 2–20% of the normal value. About 60 different mutations (missense, nonsense, and frameshift mutations) in the coding region or in the exon-intron junctions of the GCH1 gene have been reported in patients with AD-DRD all over the world. Recent findings indicate that the decreased GCH1 activity in AD-DRD may be caused by the negative interaction of the mutated subunit with the wild-type one, i. e., a dominant negative effect, and/or by decreases in the levels of GCH1 mRNA and protein caused by inactivation of one allele of the GCH1 gene. Autosomal recessive DRD (ARDRD) with Segawas syndrome was discovered in Germany. The AR-DRD locus was mapped to chromosome 11p15.5 in the chromosomal site of the TH gene. In the AR-DRD with Segawas syndrome, a point mutation in TH (Gln381Lys) resulted in a pronounced decrease in TH activity to about 15% of that of the wild type. Several missense mutations in the TH gene have been found in AR-DRD in Europe. The phenotype of AR-DRD with the Leu205Pro mutation in the TH gene, which produces a severe decrease in TH activity to 1.5% of that of the wild type, was severe, not dystonia/Segawas syndrome, but early-onset parkinsonism. However, a marked improvement of all clinical symptoms with a low dose of L-dopa was reported in ARDRD/ parkinsonism patients. These findings on DRD indicate that the nigrostriatal DA neurons may be most susceptible to the decreases in GCH1 activity, BH4 level, TH activity, and DA level, and that DRD is the DA deficiency without neuronal death in contrast to juvenile parkinsonism or Parkinsons disease with DA cell death.


Genes to Cells | 2002

Generation of human artificial chromosomes expressing naturally controlled guanosine triphosphate cyclohydrolase I gene.

Masashi Ikeno; Hidehito Inagaki; Keiko Nagata; Miwa Morita; Hiroshi Ichinose; Tuneko Okazaki

Background Human artificial chromosomes (HACs) are generated from the precursor DNA constructs containing α‐satellite DNA with CENP‐B boxes, and the process could be used for the incorporation of large genes in the HACs. Guanosine triphosphate cyclohydrolase I (GCH1) is the first and rate‐limiting enzyme for the biosynthesis of tetrahydrobiopterin, the essential co‐factor of aromatic amino acid hydroxylases and nitric oxide synthase.


Genome Research | 2008

Chromosomal instability mediated by non-B DNA: Cruciform conformation and not DNA sequence is responsible for recurrent translocation in humans

Hidehito Inagaki; Tamae Ohye; Hiroshi Kogo; Takema Kato; Hasbaira Bolor; Mariko Taniguchi; Tamim H. Shaikh; Beverly S. Emanuel; Hiroki Kurahashi

Chromosomal aberrations have been thought to be random events. However, recent findings introduce a new paradigm in which certain DNA segments have the potential to adopt unusual conformations that lead to genomic instability and nonrandom chromosomal rearrangement. One of the best-studied examples is the palindromic AT-rich repeat (PATRR), which induces recurrent constitutional translocations in humans. Here, we established a plasmid-based model that promotes frequent intermolecular rearrangements between two PATRRs in HEK293 cells. In this model system, the proportion of PATRR plasmid that extrudes a cruciform structure correlates to the levels of rearrangement. Our data suggest that PATRR-mediated translocations are attributable to unusual DNA conformations that confer a common pathway for chromosomal rearrangements in humans.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Age-Related Decrease of Meiotic Cohesins in Human Oocytes

Makiko Tsutsumi; Reiko Fujiwara; Haruki Nishizawa; Mayuko Ito; Hiroshi Kogo; Hidehito Inagaki; Tamae Ohye; Takema Kato; Takuma Fujii; Hiroki Kurahashi

Aneuploidy in fetal chromosomes is one of the causes of pregnancy loss and of congenital birth defects. It is known that the frequency of oocyte aneuploidy increases with the human maternal age. Recent data have highlighted the contribution of cohesin complexes in the correct segregation of meiotic chromosomes. In mammalian oocytes, cohesion is established during the fetal stages and meiosis-specific cohesin subunits are not replenished after birth, raising the possibility that the long meiotic arrest of oocytes facilitates a deterioration of cohesion that leads to age-related increases in aneuploidy. We here examined the cohesin levels in dictyate oocytes from different age groups of humans and mice by immunofluorescence analyses of ovarian sections. The meiosis-specific cohesin subunits, REC8 and SMC1B, were found to be decreased in women aged 40 and over compared with those aged around 20 years (P<0.01). Age-related decreases in meiotic cohesins were also evident in mice. Interestingly, SMC1A, the mitotic counterpart of SMC1B, was substantially detectable in human oocytes, but little expressed in mice. Further, the amount of mitotic cohesins of mice slightly increased with age. These results suggest that, mitotic and meiotic cohesins may operate in a coordinated way to maintain cohesions over a sustained period in humans and that age-related decreases in meiotic cohesin subunits impair sister chromatid cohesion leading to increased segregation errors.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2009

Mutations of the SYCP3 Gene in Women with Recurrent Pregnancy Loss

Hasbaira Bolor; Terumi Mori; Sachie Nishiyama; Yoshimasa Ito; Eriko Hosoba; Hidehito Inagaki; Hiroshi Kogo; Tamae Ohye; Makiko Tsutsumi; Takema Kato; Maoqing Tong; Haruki Nishizawa; Kanako Pryor-Koishi; Eri Kitaoka; Tomio Sawada; Yukio Nishiyama; Yasuhiro Udagawa; Hiroki Kurahashi

Aneuploidy, a chromosomal numerical abnormality in the conceptus or fetus, occurs in at least 5% of all pregnancies and is the leading cause of early pregnancy loss in humans. Accumulating evidence now suggests that the correct segregation of chromosomes is affected by events occurring in prophase during meiosis I. These events include homologous chromosome pairing, sister-chromatid cohesion, and meiotic recombination. In our current study, we show that mutations in SYCP3, a gene encoding an essential component of the synaptonemal complex that is central to the interaction of homologous chromosomes, are associated with recurrent pregnancy loss. Two out of 26 women with recurrent pregnancy loss of unknown cause were found to carry independent heterozygous nucleotide alterations in this gene, neither of which was present among a group of 150 fertile women. Analysis of transcripts from minigenes harboring each of these two mutations revealed that both affected normal splicing, possibly resulting in the production of C-terminally mutated proteins. The mutant proteins were found to interact with their wild-type counterpart in vitro and inhibit the normal fiber formation of the SYCP3 protein when coexpressed in a heterologous system. These data suggest that these mutations are likely to generate an aberrant synaptonemal complex in a dominant-negative manner and contribute to abnormal chromosomal behavior that might lead to recurrent miscarriage. Combined with the fact that similar mutations have been previously identified in two males with azoospermia, our current data suggest that sexual dimorphism in response to meiotic disruption occurs even in humans.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2002

Characterization of wild-type and mutants of recombinant human GTP cyclohydrolase I: Relationship to etiology of dopa-responsive dystonia

Takahiro Suzuki; Tamae Ohye; Hidehito Inagaki; Toshiharu Nagatsu; Hiroshi Ichinose

Abstract : To explore the molecular etiology of two disorders caused by a defect in GTP cyclohydrolase I—hereditary progressive dystonia with marked diurnal flucturation (HPD), also known as dopa‐responsive dystonia (DRD), and autosomal recessive GTP cyclohydrolase I deficiency—we purified and analyzed recombinant human wild‐type and mutant GTP cyclohydrolase I proteins expressed in Escherichia coli. Mutant proteins showed very low enzyme activities, and some mutants were eluted at a delayed volume on gel filtration compared with the recombinant wild‐type. Next, we examined the GTP cyclohydrolase I protein amount by western blot analysis in phytohemagglutinin‐stimulated mononuclear blood cells from HPD/DRD patients. We found a great reduction in the amount of the enzyme protein not only in one patient who had a frameshift mutation, but also in an HPD/DRD patient who had a missense mutation. These results suggest that a dominant‐negative effect of chimeric protein composed of wild‐type and mutant subunits is unlikely as a cause of the reduced enzyme activity in HPD/DRD patients. We suggest that reduction of the amount of the enzyme protein, which is independent of the mutation type, could be a reason for the dominant inheritance in HPD/DRD.


Clinical Genetics | 2010

The constitutional t(11;22): implications for a novel mechanism responsible for gross chromosomal rearrangements

Hiroki Kurahashi; Hidehito Inagaki; Tamae Ohye; Hiroshi Kogo; Makiko Tsutsumi; Takema Kato; Maoqing Tong; Beverly S. Emanuel

Kurahashi H, Inagaki H, Ohye T, Kogo H, Tsutsumi M, Kato T, Tong M, Emanuel BS. The constitutional t(11;22): implications for a novel mechanism responsible for gross chromosomal rearrangements.


Journal of Human Genetics | 2009

Recent advance in our understanding of the molecular nature of chromosomal abnormalities

Hiroki Kurahashi; Hasbaira Bolor; Takema Kato; Hiroshi Kogo; Makiko Tsutsumi; Hidehito Inagaki; Tamae Ohye

The completion of the human genome project has enabled researchers to characterize the breakpoints for various chromosomal structural abnormalities including deletions, duplications or translocations. This in turn has shed new light on the molecular mechanisms underlying the onset of gross chromosomal rearrangements. On the other hand, advances in genetic manipulation technologies for various model organisms has increased our knowledge of meiotic chromosome segregation, errors which, contribute to chromosomal aneuploidy. This review focuses on the current understanding of germ line chromosomal abnormalities and provides an overview of the mechanisms involved. We refer to our own recent data and those of others to illustrate some of the new paradigms that have arisen in this field. We also discuss some perspectives on the sexual dimorphism of some of the pathways that leads to these chromosomal abnormalities.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2006

Meiotic recombination and spatial proximity in the etiology of the recurrent t(11;22).

Terry Ashley; Ann P. Gaeth; Hidehito Inagaki; Allen D. Seftel; Maimon M. Cohen; Lorinda K. Anderson; Hiroki Kurahashi; Beverly S. Emanuel

Although balanced translocations are among the most common human chromosomal aberrations, the constitutional t(11;22)(q23;q11) is the only known recurrent non-Robertsonian translocation. Evidence indicates that de novo formation of the t(11;22) occurs during meiosis. To test the hypothesis that spatial proximity of chromosomes 11 and 22 in meiotic prophase oocytes and spermatocytes plays a role in the rearrangement, the positions of the 11q23 and 22q11 translocation breakpoints were examined. Fluorescence in situ hybridization with use of DNA probes for these sites demonstrates that 11q23 is closer to 22q11 in meiosis than to a control at 6q26. Although chromosome 21p11, another control, often lies as close to 11q23 as does 22q11 during meiosis, chromosome 21 rarely rearranges with 11q23, and the DNA sequence of chromosome 21 appears to be less susceptible than 22q11 to double-strand breaks (DSBs). It has been suggested that the rearrangement recurs as a result of the palindromic AT-rich repeats at both 11q23 and 22q11, which extrude hairpin structures that are susceptible to DSBs. To determine whether the DSBs at these sites coincide with normal hotspots of meiotic recombination, immunocytochemical mapping of MLH1, a protein involved in crossing over, was employed. The results indicate that the translocation breakpoints do not coincide with recombination hotspots and therefore are unlikely to be the result of meiotic programmed DSBs, although MRE11 is likely to be involved. Previous analysis indicated that the DSBs appear to be repaired by a mechanism similar to nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ), although NHEJ is normally suppressed during meiosis. Taken together, these studies support the hypothesis that physical proximity between 11q23 and 22q11--but not typical meiotic recombinational activity in meiotic prophase--plays an important role in the generation of the constitutional t(11;22) rearrangement.

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Tamae Ohye

Fujita Health University

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Hiroshi Kogo

Fujita Health University

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Takema Kato

Fujita Health University

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Beverly S. Emanuel

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Hiroshi Ichinose

Tokyo Institute of Technology

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Kouji Yamada

Fujita Health University

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