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Dive into the research topics where Hiraku Takebe is active.

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Featured researches published by Hiraku Takebe.


Mutation Research | 1979

A seventh complementation group in excision-deficient xeroderma pigmentosum.

W. Keijzer; Nicolaas G. J. Jaspers; P.J. Abrahams; A.M.R. Taylor; C.F. Arlett; B. Zelle; Hiraku Takebe; P.D.S. Kinmont; D. Bootsma

Cells from a xeroderma pigmentosum patient XP2BI who has reached 17 years of age with no keratoses or skin tumours constitute a new, 7th complementation group G. These cells exhibit a low residual level of excision repair, 2% of normal after a UV dose of 5 J/m2 and an impairment of post-replication repair characteristic of excision-defective XPs. They are also sensitive to the lethal effects of UV and defective in host-cell reactivation of UV-irradiated SV40 DNA.


Oncogene | 1998

Mutated p21 WAF1/CIP1/SDI1 lacking CDK-inhibitory activity fails to prevent apoptosis in human colorectal carcinoma cells

Yanjun Lu; Nobuyuki Yamagishi; Takashi Yagi; Hiraku Takebe

Human colorectal tumor cell lines were established which express wildtype p21 or p21 with a mutation at codon 46 (Cys) or 140 (Gly) on IPTG treatment (LacSwitch). The IPTG-induced wildtype p21 bound to CDK2 and PCNA and inhibited CDK activity in the cells and reduced cell growth rate; whereas, both IPTG-induced mutated p21 proteins neither bound to CDK2 nor affected the CDK activity but did bind to PCNA, and they did not affect the cell growth rate. Wildtype p21 suppressed apoptosis and enhanced survival of X-ray-irradiated or adriamycin-treated cells; but, mutated p21 neither suppressed apoptosis nor affected cell survival. When cells were treated with mimosine, a p53-independent p21-inducer, or butyrolactone I, a specific inhibitor of CDK, cellular endogenous p21 was induced and X-ray or adriamycin-induced apoptosis was blocked. These results suggest that CDK-binding or CDK-inhibitory activity of p21 is required to prevent apoptosis, i.e., CDK is required for apoptosis in human tumor cells.


Mutation Research | 1974

Comparative studies of host-cell reactivation, colony forming ability, and excision repair after uv irradiation of xeroderma pigmentosum, normal human, and some other mammalian cells

Hiraku Takebe; Shiro Nii; Ishii Michiko Iida; Hiroshi Utsumi

Abstract Host-cell reactivation, that is, the degree of survival of Herpes simplex virus after UV irradiation, was high in African green monkey BSC-1 cells, intermediate in normal human fibroblasts and human FL cells, and low in both xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) cells and mouse L cells. However, colony-forming ability after UV was high for FL, normal human fibroblasts and L cells, slightly low for BSC-1 cells and extremely low for XP cells. During the 24-h post-UV incubation period, up to about 50% of the thymine-containing dimers in the acid-insoluble DNA fraction disappeared at an almost equal rate for BSC-1, FL and normal human cells but remained unaltered for the XP cells. Alkaline sucrose gradient centrifugation of DNA after UV irradiation revealed only a slight difference between FL and BSC-1 cells in the kinetics of formation of single-strand breaks and their apparent repair. From these and the previously known characters of L cells possessing reduced excision-repair ability, if any, we may conclude that, if the survival of UV-irradiated Herpes simplex virus on a test line of human or other mammalian cells is as low as that on excisionless XP cells, then it is very probable that the test cell line is defective in excision repair. This reasoning leads to the presumptive conclusion that mouse L cells have an enhanced post-replication repair other than excision repair to deal with UV damage responsible for inactivation of colony-forming ability.


Mutation Research | 1996

Increase in hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl transferase gene mutations by exposure to high-density 50-Hz magnetic fields

Junji Miyakoshi; Nobuyuki Yamagishi; Shuji Ohtsu; Kayoko Mohri; Hiraku Takebe

Exposure to extremely low frequency magnetic field (ELFMF) of 50 Hz and 400 mT induced mutations in the hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl transferase gene of human melanoma MeWo cells. The mutant frequency was enhanced both by increasing the exposure period and the induced current intensity. Mutations induced by X-rays were enhanced by ELFMF exposure. No significant increase in mutant frequency occurred when DNA replication was inhibited during ELFMF exposure. DNA replication error is suspected of causing the mutations produced by ELFMF exposure.


Mutation Research-genetic Toxicology and Environmental Mutagenesis | 1998

Molecular analysis of mutations induced by acrolein in human fibroblast cells using supF shuttle vector plasmids

Masanobu Kawanishi; Tomonari Matsuda; Aki Nakayama; Hiraku Takebe; Saburo Matsui; Takashi Yagi

Types of mutations induced by acrolein in the supF gene on the shuttle vector plasmid pMY189 replicated in normal human fibroblast cells were examined. Base sequence analysis of 92 plasmids with mutations in the supF gene revealed that the majority of the mutations were base substitutions (76%) and the others were deletions and insertions (24%). Single base substitutions were most frequently found (46%), while multiple base substitutions were 18% and tandem (two adjacent) base substitutions were 12% of the mutations. Of the base substitution mutations, G:C to T:A transversions were 44% and G:C to A:T transitions were 24%. The mutations were distributed not randomly but located at several hotspots. Acrolein produced DNA intra-strand cross-links between guanine residues, which might be responsible for rather high induction of the tandem base substitution mutations.


Journal of Molecular Evolution | 1999

Phylogeny of Japanese papilionid butterflies inferred from nucleotide sequences of the mitochondrial ND5 gene.

Takashi Yagi; Go Sasaki; Hiraku Takebe

Abstract. Phylogenetic relationships among the Japanese papilionid butterflies were analyzed by comparing 783 nucleotide sequences of the mitochondrial gene encoding NADH dehydrogenase subunit 5 (ND5). Phylogenetic trees of the representative species from each family in the superfamily Papilionoidea revealed that the species of the family Papilionidae and those of all other families formed distinct clusters, with a few species of the family Hesperiidae (Hesperioidea) as an outgroup. In the phylogenetic trees of most Japanese species of the family Papilionidae with Nymphalis xanthomelas (Nymphalidae) as an outgroup, the tribe Parnassiini (Parnassiinae) formed a cluster, and the rest formed the other cluster in which the tribe Zerynthiini (Parnassiinae) and the subfamily Papilioninae formed different subclusters. In the Papilioninae cluster, the tribes Troidini and Graphiini formed a subcluster, and the tribe Papilionini formed the other subcluster. These results generally agree with the traditional classification of the papilionid butterflies based on their morphological characteristics and support the proposed evolutionary genealogy of the butterflies based on their morphology, behavior, and larval host plants, except that the tribes Parnasiini and Zerynthiini (both Parnassiinae) are not in the same cluster.


Mutation Research | 1989

Frequency of variant erythrocytes at the glycophorin-A locus in two Bloom's syndrome patients

Seishi Kyoizumi; Nori Nakamura; Hiraku Takebe; Kouichi Tatsumi; J. German; Mitoshi Akiyama

Blood type MN is determined by a glycoprotein termed glycophorin A (GPA) which exists on the surface of erythrocytes, and the difference between the M and N types is derived from the presence of 2 different amino acids in the amino-terminal portion (Furthmayer, 1978). Using a pair of fluorescence-labeled monoclonal antibodies specific to each GPA, somatic mutations in erythrocytes of MN heterozygotes at the GPA-M and -N alleles can be quantitatively determined using a flow sorter (Langlois et al., 1986). Our results for 2 Blooms syndrome (BS) patients showed that variants either lost expression of one allele (simple gene inactivation or loss) or expressed only one allele at twice the normal level (most probably somatic recombination) occurring at a frequency of about 1-3 per 10(3) erythrocytes. The flow cytometric patterns of erythrocytes from the BS patients showed a typical smear of variants bearing intermediate levels of expression of one GPA allele, indicating that the real variant frequency is even greater than that measured. On the other hand, the parents heterozygous for the BS gene showed variant frequencies (1-8 x 10(-5)) within the normal range. These data strongly support the hypothesis that the cancer proneness of BS patients is due to their increased frequency of spontaneous mutations and somatic recombination.


Molecular Carcinogenesis | 2000

Involvement of cyclin-dependent kinases in doxorubicin-induced apoptosis in human tumor cells.

Yanjun Lu; Masaaki Tatsuka; Hiraku Takebe; Takashi Yagi

Apoptotic cell death caused by doxorubicin, a chemotherapeutic agent, is suppressed by expression of p21 (waf1/cip1/sdi1), a cyclin‐dependent kinase (cdk) inhibitor. To examine cdk activity required for doxorubicin‐induced apoptosis, we transfected p21‐deficient human tumor DLD1(p21−/−) cells with plasmids carrying wild‐type p21 and mutated p21 unable to bind to cdks or proliferating cell nuclear antigen. The apoptosis induced at the G2/M phase after doxorubicin treatment was suppressed by transient expression of the p21 with cdk‐binding activity but not by the p21 lacking the activity. We also transfected cells with plasmids carrying wild‐type, dominant negative and constitutively active mutants of cdk2 or cdk4. The apoptosis was suppressed by transient expression of dominant negative mutants of cdk2 or cdk4. These findings indicate that cdk is involved in the doxorubicin‐induced apoptosis pathway. Mol. Carcinog. 29:1–7, 2000.


Mutation Research | 1981

Repair of ultraviolet radiation damage in xeroderma pigmentosum cells belonging to complementation group F

Hiroshi Hayakawa; Kanji Ishizaki; Masao Inoue; Takashi Yagi; Mutsuo Sekiguchi; Hiraku Takebe

DNA-repair characteristics of xeroderma pigmentosum belonging to complementation group F were investigated. The cells exhibited an intermediate level of repair as measured in terms of (1) disappearance of T4 endonuclease-V-susceptible sites from DNA, (2) formation of ultraviolet-induced strand breaks in DNA, and (3) ultraviolet-induced unscheduled DNA synthesis during post-irradiation incubation. The impaired ability of XP3YO to perform unscheduled DNA synthesis was restored, to half the normal level, by the concomitant treatment with T4 endonuclease V and ultraviolet-inactivated Sendai virus. It is suggested that xeroderma pigmentosum cells of group F may be defective, at least in part, in the incision step of excision repair.


Clinical Genetics | 2008

Bloom's syndrome. XIV. The disorder in Japan

James German; Hiraku Takebe

Fourteen persons have been diagnosed Blooms syndrome in Japan, with cytological verification in 11. Widely separated birthplaces throughout Honshu, Shikoku, and Kyushu and a parental consanguinity incidence greater than in the general population suggest that the Blooms syndrome mutation, although very rare, is distributed widely throughout the Japanese population. The locus mutated is the same as in Jews and persons of Western European extraction. The phenotype differs somewhat from most cases recognized elsewhere, in that dolichocephaly is a less constant feature, the facial skin lesion is less prominent, and life‐threatening infections are less common. The characteristic predisposition to neoplasia exists, however, as probably does that to diabetes mellitus.

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Takashi Yagi

Osaka Prefecture University

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Kouichi Tatsumi

National Institute of Radiological Sciences

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Tomonari Matsuda

Environmental Quality Management

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