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Dive into the research topics where Hiroaki Mano is active.

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Featured researches published by Hiroaki Mano.


Molecular Brain Research | 1999

Exo-rhodopsin: a novel rhodopsin expressed in the zebrafish pineal gland.

Hiroaki Mano; Daisuke Kojima; Yoshitaka Fukada

The zebrafish, a useful animal model for genetic studies, has a photosensitive pineal gland, which has an endogenous circadian pacemaker entrained to environmental light-dark cycles [G.M. Cahill, Brain Res. 708 (1996) 177-181]. Although pinopsin has been found in the pineal glands of birds and reptiles, the molecular identity responsible for fish pineal photosensitivity remains unclear. This study reports identification of a novel opsin gene expressed in the zebrafish pineal gland. The deduced amino acid sequence is similar to, but not identical (74% identity) with that of canonical rhodopsin in the zebrafish retina. This novel rhodopsin is expressed in the majority of pineal cells but not in retinal cells, and hence named exo-rhodopsin after extra-ocular rhodopsin. This study first shows that two different rhodopsin genes are expressed in an individual animal each within a unique location. A phylogenetic analysis indicated that the exo-rhodopsin gene was produced by a duplication of the rhodopsin gene at an early stage in the ray-finned fish lineage. As expected, the exo-rhodopsin gene was found in the medakafish and European eel genomes, suggesting strongly that exo-rhodopsin is a pineal opsin common to teleosts. Identification of exo-rhodopsin in the zebrafish provides an opportunity for studying the role of pineal photoreceptive molecules by using genetic approaches.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Pineal expression-promoting element (PIPE), a cis-acting element, directs pineal-specific gene expression in zebrafish

Y. Asaoka; Hiroaki Mano; Daisuke Kojima; Yoshitaka Fukada

The pineal gland, sharing morphological and biochemical similarities with the retina, plays a unique and central role in the photoneuroendocrine system. The unique development of the pineal gland is directed by a specific combination of the expressed genes, but little is known about the regulatory mechanism underlying the pineal-specific gene expression. We isolated a 1.1-kbp fragment upstream of the zebrafish exo-rhodopsin (exorh) gene, which is expressed specifically in the pineal gland. Transgenic analysis using an enhanced green fluorescent protein reporter gene demonstrated that the proximal 147-bp region of the exorh promoter is sufficient to direct pineal-specific expression. This region contains three copies of a putative cone rod homeobox (Crx)/Otx-binding site, which is known to be required for expression of both retina- and pineal-specific genes. Deletion and mutational analyses of the exorh promoter revealed that a previously uncharacterized sequence TGACCCCAATCT termed pineal expression-promoting element (PIPE) is required for pineal-specific promoter activity in addition to the Crx/Otx-binding sites. By using the zebrafish rhodopsin (rh) promoter that drives retina-specific expression, we created a reporter construct having ectopic PIPE in the rh promoter at a position equivalent to that in the exorh promoter by introducing five nucleotide changes. Such a slight modification in the rh promoter induced ectopic enhanced green fluorescent protein expression in the pineal gland without affecting its retinal expression. These results identify PIPE as a critical cis-element contributing to the pineal-specific gene expression, in combination with the Crx/Otx-binding site(s).


Photochemistry and Photobiology | 2006

A Median Third Eye: Pineal Gland Retraces Evolution of Vertebrate Photoreceptive Organs†

Hiroaki Mano; Yoshitaka Fukada

In many vertebrates, the pineal gland serves as a photoreceptive neuroendocrine organ. Morphological and functional similarities between the pineal and retinal photoreceptor cells indicate their close evolutionary relationship, and hence the comparative studies on the pineal gland and the retina are the keys to deciphering the evolutionary traces of the vertebrate photoreceptive organs. Several studies have suggested common genetic and molecular mechanisms responsible for their similarities, but largely unknown are those underlying pineal‐specific development and physiological functions. Recent studies have identified several cis‐acting DNA elements that participate in transcriptional control of the pineal‐specific genes. Genetic approaches in the zebrafish have also contributed to elucidating the genetic network regulating the pineal development and neurogenesis. These efforts toward elucidating the molecular instrumentation intrinsic to the pineal gland, back to back with those to the retina, should lead to a comprehensive understanding of the evolutionary history of the vertebrate photoreceptive structures. This article summarizes the current status of research on these topics.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Redox alters yellow dragonflies into red

Ryo Futahashi; Ryoji Kurita; Hiroaki Mano; Takema Fukatsu

Body color change associated with sexual maturation—so-called nuptial coloration—is commonly found in diverse vertebrates and invertebrates, and plays important roles for their reproductive success. In some dragonflies, whereas females and young males are yellowish in color, aged males turn vivid red upon sexual maturation. The male-specific coloration plays pivotal roles in, for example, mating and territoriality, but molecular basis of the sex-related transition in body coloration of the dragonflies has been poorly understood. Here we demonstrate that yellow/red color changes in the dragonflies are regulated by redox states of epidermal ommochrome pigments. Ratios of reduced-form pigments to oxidized-form pigments were significantly higher in red mature males than yellow females and immature males. The ommochrome pigments extracted from the dragonflies changed color according to redox conditions in vitro: from red to yellow in the presence of oxidant and from yellow to red in the presence of reductant. By injecting the reductant solution into live insects, the yellow-to-red color change was experimentally reproduced in vivo in immature males and mature females. Discontinuous yellow/red mosaicism was observed in body coloration of gynandromorphic dragonflies, suggesting a cell-autonomous regulation over the redox states of the ommochrome pigments. Our finding extends the mechanical repertoire of pigment-based body color change in animals, and highlights an impressively simple molecular mechanism that regulates an ecologically important color trait.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2000

Vertebrate Ancient-Long Opsin: A Green-Sensitive Photoreceptive Molecule Present in Zebrafish Deep Brain and Retinal Horizontal Cells

Daisuke Kojima; Hiroaki Mano; Yoshitaka Fukada


Zoological Science | 2005

SCREENING FOR TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS REGULATING THE ZEBRAFISH PINEAL PHOTORECEPTOR CELL DIFFERENTIATION(Developmental Biology,Abstracts of papers presented at the 76^ Annual Meeting of the Zoological Society of Japan)

Hiroaki Mano; Y. Asaoka; Yoshitaka Fukada


Zoological Science | 2003

TRANSGENIC ZEBRAFISH EXPRESSING DOMINANT NEGATIVE MUTANT OF zfBMAL IN THE PINEAL GLAND(Physiology&Biochemistry,Abstracts of papers presented at the 74^ Annual Meeting of the Zoological Society of Japan)

Toshiyuki Okano; Takamasa Ikeda; Kazuyuki Imazato; Hiroaki Mano; Yoshitaka Fukada


Zoological Science | 2003

COMPARISON OF GENE EXPRESSION PROFILES BETWEEN THE ZEBRAFISH PINEAL AND RETINAL PHOTORECEPTOR CELLS(Physiology,Abstracts of papers presented at the 74^ Annual Meeting of the Zoological Society of Japan)

Hiroaki Mano; Yoshitaka Fukada


Zoological Science | 2002

PIPE : A NOVEL CIS-ACTING ELEMENT RESPONSIBLE FOR PINEAL-SPECIFIC GENE EXPRESSION IN THE ZEBRAFISH(Physiology)(Proceedings of the Seventy-Third Annual Meeting of the Zoological Society of Japan)

Hiroaki Mano; Y. Asaoka; Daisuke Kojima; Yoshitaka Fukada


Zoological Science | 2002

IN VIVO ANALYSIS OF THE ZEBRAFISH Bmal FUNCTION IN THE PINEAL CLOCK SYSTEM(Physiology)(Proceedings of the Seventy-Third Annual Meeting of the Zoological Society of Japan)

Kazuyuki Imazato; Toshiyuki Okano; Hiroaki Mano; Yoshitaka Fukada

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Ryo Futahashi

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Takema Fukatsu

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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