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Dive into the research topics where Hiroko Misawa is active.

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Featured researches published by Hiroko Misawa.


Journal of Molecular Endocrinology | 2008

Functions of PIT1 in GATA2-dependent transactivation of the thyrotropin β promoter

Yumiko Kashiwabara; Shigekazu Sasaki; Akio Matsushita; Koji Nagayama; Kenji Ohba; Hiroyuki Iwaki; Hideyuki Matsunaga; Shingo Suzuki; Hiroko Misawa; Keiko Ishizuka; Yutaka Oki; Hirotoshi Nakamura

Thyrotropin (TSH) is a heterodimer consisting of alpha and beta chains, and the beta chain (TSHbeta) is specific to TSH. The coexistence of two transcription factors, PIT1 and GATA2, is known to be essential for TSHbeta expression. Using kidney-derived CV1 cells, we investigated the role of PIT1 in the expression of Tshb gene. GATA2 Zn finger domain, which is known to recognize GATA-responsive elements (GATA-REs), is essential for cooperation by PIT1. Transactivation of TSHbeta promoter requires PIT1-binding site upstream to GATA-REs (PIT1-US), and the spacing between PIT1-US and GATA-REs strictly determines the cooperation between PIT1 and GATA2. Moreover, truncation of the sequence downstream to GATA-REs enabled GATA2 to transactivate the TSHbeta promoter without PIT1. The deleted region (nt -82/-52) designated as a suppressor region (SR) was considered to inhibit transactivation by GATA2. The cooperation of PIT1 with GATA2 was not conventional synergism but rather counteracted SR-induced suppression (derepression). The minimal sequence for SR was mapped to the 9 bp sequence downstream to GATA-REs. Electrophoretic mobility shift assay suggested that some nuclear factor exists in CV1 cells, which binds with SR and this interaction was blocked by recombinant PIT1. Our study indicates that major activator for the TSHbeta promoter is GATA2 and that PIT1 protects the function of GATA2 from the inhibition by SR-binding protein.


PLOS ONE | 2011

GATA2 mediates thyrotropin-releasing hormone-induced transcriptional activation of the thyrotropin β gene

Kenji Ohba; Shigekazu Sasaki; Akio Matsushita; Hiroyuki Iwaki; Hideyuki Matsunaga; Shingo Suzuki; Keiko Ishizuka; Hiroko Misawa; Yutaka Oki; Hirotoshi Nakamura

Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) activates not only the secretion of thyrotropin (TSH) but also the transcription of TSHβ and α-glycoprotein (αGSU) subunit genes. TSHβ expression is maintained by two transcription factors, Pit1 and GATA2, and is negatively regulated by thyroid hormone (T3). Our prior studies suggest that the main activator of the TSHβ gene is GATA2, not Pit1 or unliganded T3 receptor (TR). In previous studies on the mechanism of TRH-induced activation of the TSHβ gene, the involvements of Pit1 and TR have been investigated, but the role of GATA2 has not been clarified. Using kidney-derived CV1 cells and pituitary-derived GH3 and TαT1 cells, we demonstrate here that TRH signaling enhances GATA2-dependent activation of the TSHβ promoter and that TRH-induced activity is abolished by amino acid substitution in the GATA2-Zn finger domain or mutation of GATA-responsive element in the TSHβ gene. In CV1 cells transfected with TRH receptor expression plasmid, GATA2-dependent transactivation of αGSU and endothelin-1 promoters was enhanced by TRH. In the gel shift assay, TRH signal potentiated the DNA-binding capacity of GATA2. While inhibition by T3 is dominant over TRH-induced activation, unliganded TR or the putative negative T3-responsive element are not required for TRH-induced stimulation. Studies using GH3 cells showed that TRH-induced activity of the TSHβ promoter depends on protein kinase C but not the mitogen-activated protein kinase, suggesting that the signaling pathway is different from that in the prolactin gene. These results indicate that GATA2 is the principal mediator of the TRH signaling pathway in TSHβ expression.


Journal of Endocrinology | 2008

Inhibition of GATA2-dependent transactivation of the TSHβ gene by ligand-bound estrogen receptor α

Koji Nagayama; Shigekazu Sasaki; Akio Matsushita; Kenji Ohba; Hiroyuki Iwaki; Hideyuki Matsunaga; Shingo Suzuki; Hiroko Misawa; Keiko Ishizuka; Yutaka Oki; Jaeduk Yoshimura Noh; Hirotoshi Nakamura

Transcriptional repression of the TSH-specific beta subunit (TSHbeta) gene has been regarded to be specific to thyroid hormone (tri-iodothyronine, T(3)) and its receptors (TRs) in physiological conditions. However, TSHbeta mRNA levels in the pituitary were reported to decrease in the administration of pharmacologic doses of estrogen (17-beta-estradiol, E(2)) and increase in E(2) receptor (ER)-alpha null mice. Here, we investigated the molecular mechanism of inhibition of the TSHbeta gene expression by E(2)-bound E(2)-estrogen receptor 1 (E(2)-ERalpha). In kidney-derived CV1 cells, transcriptional activity of the TSHbeta promoter was stimulated by GATA2 and suppressed by THRBs and ERalpha in a ligand-dependent fashion. Overexpression of PIT1 diminished the E(2)-ERalpha-induced inhibition, suggesting that PIT1 may protect GATA2 from E(2)-ERalpha targeting by forming a stable complex with GATA2. Interacting surfaces between ERalpha and GATA2 were mapped to the DNA-binding domain (DBD) of ERalpha and the Zn finger domain of GATA2. E(2)-dependent inhibition requires the ERalpha amino-terminal domain but not the tertiary structure of the second Zn finger motif in E(2)-ERalpha-DBD. In the thyrotroph cell line, TalphaT1, E(2) treatment reduced TSHbeta mRNA levels measured by the reverse transcription PCR. In the human study, despite similar free thyroxine levels, the serum TSH level was small but significantly higher in post- than premenopausal women who possessed no anti-thyroid antibodies (1.90 microU/ml+/-0.13 S.E.M. vs 1.47 microU/ml+/-0.12 S.E.M., P<0.05). Our findings indicate redundancy between T(3)-TR and E(2)-ERalpha signaling exists in negative regulation of the TSHbeta gene.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Essential role of TEA domain transcription factors in the negative regulation of the MYH 7 gene by thyroid hormone and its receptors.

Hiroyuki Iwaki; Shigekazu Sasaki; Akio Matsushita; Kenji Ohba; Hideyuki Matsunaga; Hiroko Misawa; Yutaka Oki; Keiko Ishizuka; Hirotoshi Nakamura; Takafumi Suda

MYH7 (also referred to as cardiac myosin heavy chain β) gene expression is known to be repressed by thyroid hormone (T3). However, the molecular mechanism by which T3 inhibits the transcription of its target genes (negative regulation) remains to be clarified, whereas those of transcriptional activation by T3 (positive regulation) have been elucidated in detail. Two MCAT (muscle C, A, and T) sites and an A/T-rich region in the MYH7 gene have been shown to play a critical role in the expression of this gene and are known to be recognized by the TEAD/TEF family of transcription factors (TEADs). Using a reconstitution system with CV-1 cells, which has been utilized in the analysis of positive as well as negative regulation, we demonstrate that both T3 receptor (TR) β1 and α1 inhibit TEAD-dependent activation of the MYH7 promoter in a T3 dose-dependent manner. TRβ1 bound with GC-1, a TRβ-selective T3 analog, also repressed TEAD-induced activity. Although T3-dependent inhibition required the DNA-binding domain (DBD) of TRβ1, it remained after the putative negative T3-responsive elements were mutated. A co-immunoprecipitation study demonstrated the in vivo association of TRβ1 with TEAD-1, and the interaction surfaces were mapped to the DBD of the TRβ1 and TEA domains of TEAD-1, both of which are highly conserved among TRs and TEADs, respectively. The importance of TEADs in MYH7 expression was also validated with RNA interference using rat embryonic cardiomyocyte H9c2 cells. These results indicate that T3-bound TRs interfere with transactivation by TEADs via protein-protein interactions, resulting in the negative regulation of MYH7 promoter activity.


Journal of Molecular Endocrinology | 2010

The role of the amino-terminal domain in the interaction of unliganded peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ-2 with nuclear receptor co-repressor

Sadako Suzuki; Shigekazu Sasaki; Hiroshi Morita; Yutaka Oki; Daisuke Turiya; Takeshi Ito; Hiroko Misawa; Keiko Ishizuka; Hirotoshi Nakamura

Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma-2 (PPARG2) is a ligand-dependent transcriptional factor involved in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance. In the presence of a ligand, PPARG2 associates with co-activators, while it recruits co-repressors (CoRs) in the absence of a ligand. It has been reported that the interaction of liganded PPARG2 with co-activators is regulated by the amino-terminal A/B domain (NTD) via inter-domain communication. However, the role of the NTD is unknown in the case of the interaction between unliganded PPARG2 and CoRs. To elucidate this, total elimination of the influence of ligands is required, but the endogenous ligands of PPARG2 have not been fully defined. PPARG1-P467L, a naturally occurring mutant of PPARG1, was identified in a patient with severe insulin resistance. Reflecting its very low affinity for various ligands, this mutant does not have transcriptional activity in the PPAR response element, but exhibits dominant negative effects (DNEs) on liganded wild-type PPARG2-mediated transactivation. Using the corresponding PPARG2 mutant, PPARG2-P495L, we evaluated the role of the NTD in the interaction between unliganded PPARG2 and CoRs. Interestingly, the DNE of PPARG2-P495L was increased by the truncation of its NTD. NTD deletion also enhanced the DNE of a chimeric receptor, PT, in which the ligand-binding domain of PPARG2 was replaced with that of thyroid hormone receptor beta-1. Moreover, NTD deletion facilitated the in vitro binding of nuclear receptor CoR with wild-type PPARG2, mutant P495L, and the PT chimera (PPARG2-THRB). Inter-domain communication in PPARG2 regulates not only ligand-dependent transactivation but also ligand-independent silencing.


Journal of Endocrinology | 2006

1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 and its receptor inhibit the chenodeoxycholic acid-dependent transactivation by farnesoid X receptor

Yumiko Honjo; Shigekazu Sasaki; Yoshimasa Kobayashi; Hiroko Misawa; Hirotoshi Nakamura


Molecular Endocrinology | 2007

Essential Role of GATA2 in the Negative Regulation of Thyrotropin β Gene by Thyroid Hormone and Its Receptors

Akio Matsushita; Shigekazu Sasaki; Yumiko Kashiwabara; Koji Nagayama; Kenji Ohba; Hiroyuki Iwaki; Hiroko Misawa; Keiko Ishizuka; Hirotoshi Nakamura


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2003

β-Catenin/Tcf-1-mediated transactivation of cyclin D1 promoter is negatively regulated by thyroid hormone

Hiroko Natsume; Shigekazu Sasaki; Masatoshi Kitagawa; Yumiko Kashiwabara; Akio Matsushita; Keiko Nakano; Kozo Nishiyama; Koji Nagayama; Hiroko Misawa; Hiroko Masuda; Hirotoshi Nakamura


Biochemical Journal | 2004

Thyroid-hormone-dependent negative regulation of thyrotropin beta gene by thyroid hormone receptors: study with a new experimental system using CV1 cells.

Keiko Nakano; Akio Matsushita; Shigekazu Sasaki; Hiroko Misawa; Kozo Nishiyama; Yumiko Kashiwabara; Hirotoshi Nakamura


Endocrinology | 2004

Unliganded Thyroid Hormone Receptor-β1 Represses Liver X Receptor α/Oxysterol-Dependent Transactivation

Kotaro Kawai; Shigekazu Sasaki; Takeshi Ito; Sadako Suzuki; Hiroko Misawa; Hirotoshi Nakamura

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Kenji Ohba

National University of Singapore

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