Hiromi Yanagisawa
University of Tsukuba
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Featured researches published by Hiromi Yanagisawa.
Nature | 2002
Hiromi Yanagisawa; Elaine C. Davis; Barry Starcher; Takashi Ouchi; Masashi Yanagisawa; James A. Richardson; Eric N. Olson
Extracellular elastic fibres provide mechanical elasticity to tissues and contribute towards the processes of organ remodelling by affecting cell–cell signalling. The formation of elastic fibres requires the assembly and crosslinking of tropoelastin monomers, and organization of the resulting insoluble elastin matrix into functional fibres. The molecules and mechanisms involved in this process are unknown. Fibulin-5 (also known as EVEC/DANCE) is an extracellular matrix protein abundantly expressed in great vessels and cardiac valves during embryogenesis, and in many adult tissues including the aorta, lung, uterus and skin, all of which contain abundant elastic fibres. Here we show that fibulin-5 is a calcium-dependent, elastin-binding protein that localizes to the surface of elastic fibres in vivo. fibulin-5-/- mice develop marked elastinopathy owing to the disorganization of elastic fibres, with resulting loose skin, vascular abnormalities and emphysematous lung. This phenotype, which resembles the cutis laxa syndrome in humans, reveals a critical function for fibulin-5 as a scaffold protein that organizes and links elastic fibres to cells. This function may be mediated by the RGD motif in fibulin-5, which binds to cell surface integrins, and the Ca2+-binding epidermal growth factor (EGF) repeats, which bind elastin.
Nature Genetics | 2004
Xiaoqing Liu; Yun Zhao; Jiangang Gao; Basil S. Pawlyk; Barry Starcher; Jeffrey A. Spencer; Hiromi Yanagisawa; Jian Zuo; Tiansen Li
Elastic fibers are components of the extracellular matrix and confer resilience. Once laid down, they are thought to remain stable, except in the uterine tract where cycles of active remodeling occur. Loss of elastic fibers underlies connective tissue aging and important diseases including emphysema. Failure to maintain elastic fibers is explained by a theory of antielastase-elastase imbalance, but little is known about the role of renewal. Here we show that mice lacking the protein lysyl oxidase–like 1 (LOXL1) do not deposit normal elastic fibers in the uterine tract post partum and develop pelvic organ prolapse, enlarged airspaces of the lung, loose skin and vascular abnormalities with concomitant tropoelastin accumulation. Distinct from the prototypic lysyl oxidase (LOX), LOXL1 localizes specifically to sites of elastogenesis and interacts with fibulin-5. Thus elastin polymer deposition is a crucial aspect of elastic fiber maintenance and is dependent on LOXL1, which serves both as a cross-linking enzyme and an element of the scaffold to ensure spatially defined deposition of elastin.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1991
Aiji Sakamoto; Masashi Yanagisawa; Takeshi Sakurai; Yoh Takuwa; Hiromi Yanagisawa; Tomoh Masaki
We report the cloning of human cDNA encoding an ETB (non-isopeptide-selective) subtype of the endothelin receptor. The predicted amino acid sequence of the human ETB endothelin receptor was 87.8% and 62.9% identical with the previously cloned rat ETB and ETA receptors, respectively. COS cells transiently transfected with the cloned cDNA expressed specific, high-affinity binding sites for endothelin isopeptides and responded to the peptides with a transient increase of [Ca2+]i; endothelin-1 and endothelin-3 exhibited approximately equal potencies both in displacing 125I-labeled endothelin-1 binding and in eliciting [Ca2+]i transients. The ETB receptor mRNAs were expressed in various human tissues and also in the intact porcine aortic intimal cells ex vivo.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1998
Hiromi Yanagisawa; Robert E. Hammer; James A. Richardson; S.C. Williams; David E. Clouthier; Masashi Yanagisawa
The intercellular signaling mediated by endothelins and their G protein-coupled receptors has recently been shown to be essential for the normal embryonic development of subsets of neural crest cell derivatives. Endothelin-1 (ET-1) is proteolytically generated from its inactive precursor by endothelin-converting enzyme-1 (ECE-1) and acts on the endothelin-A (ETA) receptor. Genetic disruption of this ET-1/ECE-1/ETA pathway results in defects in branchial arch- derived craniofacial tissues, as well as defects in cardiac outflow and great vessel structures, which are derived from cephalic (cardiac) neural crest. In this study, in situ hybridization of ETA-/- and ECE-1(-)/- embryos with a cardiac neural crest marker, cellular retinoic acid-binding protein-1, shows that the migration of neural crest cells from the neural tube to cardiac outflow tract is not affected in these embryos. Immunostaining of an endothelial marker, platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule CD-31, shows that the initial formation of the branchial arch arteries is not disturbed in ETA-/- or ECE-1(-)/- embryos. To visualize the subsequent patterning of arch vessels in detail, we generated ETA-/- or ECE-1(-)/- embryos that expressed an SM22alpha-lacZ marker transgene in arterial smooth muscle cells. Wholemount X-gal staining of these mutant embryos reveals that the abnormal regression and persistence of specific arch arteries results in disturbance of asymmetrical remodeling of the arch arteries. These defects include abnormal regression of arch arteries 4 and 6, enlargement of arch artery 3, and abnormal persistence of the bilateral ductus caroticus and right dorsal aorta. These abnormalities eventually lead to various types of great vessel malformations highly similar to those seen in neural crest-ablated chick embryos and human congenital cardiac defects. This study demonstrates that ET-1/ETA-mediated signaling plays an essential role in a complex process of aortic arch patterning by affecting the postmigratory cardiac neural crest cell development.
Immunological Reviews | 1999
Joel D. Taugor; Shanna D. Maika; Nimman Satumtira; Martha L. Dorris; Ian Lochlan McLean; Hiromi Yanagisawa; Alain Sayad; Andrew J. Stagg; Graham M. Fox; Anne Le O'Brein; Muhammad Rehman; Ming Zhou; Allison L. Weiner; Judy B. Splawski; James A. Richardson; Robert E. Hammer
Summary: A spontaneous inflammatory disease in rats transgenic for HLAB27 resembles the B27‐associated human spondyloarthropathies, Colitis and arthritis, the two most important features, require T cells, gut bacteria, and high expression of B27 in bone marrow‐derived cells, Control rats with HLA‐B7 remain healthy. Most rats with HLA‐Cw6 (associated with psoriasis vulgaris) remain healthy; a minority develop mild and transient disease. Rats with a mutant B27 with a Cys67←Ser substitution resemble wild‐type B27 transgenics, but with a lower prevalence of arthritis. A similar phenotype is seen in B2 7 rats co‐expressing a viral peptide that binds B27. Disease‐prone LEW but not F344 B27 rats develop high serum IgA levels concurrent with disease progression. Colitis is associated with high interferon‐y, arthritis with high interleukin‐6. Disease is similar in B27 LEW, F344, and PVG rats, but the DA background is protective. Conclusions: The spondyloarthropathy‐like disease in rats is specific for HLA‐B27 but does not require Cys67. Arthritis but not colitis is particularly sensitive to B27 peptide‐binding specificity. Genetic background exerts a strong influence, but some phenotypic differences exist between permissive strains that do not influence disease susceptibility The data favor a role for B27 peptide presentation in arthritis, but other mechanisms to explain the role of B27 have not been excluded.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2000
Hiromi Yanagisawa; Robert E. Hammer; James A. Richardson; Noriaki Emoto; S. Clay Williams; Shin-ichi Takeda; David E. Clouthier; Masashi Yanagisawa
Endothelin-converting enzyme-1 and -2 (ECE-1 and -2) are membrane-bound metalloproteases that can cleave biologically the inactive endothelin-1 (ET-1) precursor to form active ET-1 in vitro. We previously reported developmental defects in specific subsets of neural crest-derived tissues, including branchial arch-derived craniofacial structures, aortic arch arteries, and the cardiac outflow tract in ECE-1 knockout mice. To examine the role of ECE-2 in cardiovascular development, we have now generated a null mutation in ECE-2 by homologous recombination. ECE-2 null mice develop normally, are healthy into adulthood, are fertile in both sexes, and live a normal life span. However, when they are bred into an ECE-1-null background, defects in cardiac outflow structures become more severe than those in ECE-1 single knockout embryos. In addition, ECE-1(-/-); ECE-2(-/-) double null embryos exhibited abnormal atrioventricular valve formation, a phenotype never seen in ECE-1 single knockout embryos. In the developing mouse heart, ECE-2 mRNA is expressed in the endocardial cushion mesenchyme from embyronic day (E) 12.5, in contrast to the endocardial expression of ECE-1. Levels of mature ET-1 and ET-2 in whole ECE-1(-/-); ECE-2(-/-) embryos at E12.5 do not differ appreciably from those of ECE-1(-/-) embryos. The significant residual ET-1/ET-2 in the ECE-1(-/-); ECE-2(-/-) embryos indicates that proteases distinct from ECE-1 and ECE-2 can carry out ET-1 activation in vivo.
Development | 2003
Hiromi Yanagisawa; David E. Clouthier; James A. Richardson; Jeroen Charité; Eric N. Olson
The basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor dHAND is expressed in the mesenchyme of branchial arches and the developing heart. Mice homozygous for a dHAND (Hand2) null mutation die early in embryogenesis from cardiac abnormalities, precluding analysis of the potential role of dHAND in branchial arch development. Two independent enhancers control expression of dHAND in the heart and branchial arches. Endothelin-1 (ET-1) signaling regulates the branchial arch enhancer and is required for dHAND expression in the branchial arches. To determine the potential role of dHAND in branchial arch development and to assess the role of the ET-1-dependent enhancer in dHAND regulation in vivo, we deleted this enhancer by homologous recombination. Mice lacking the dHAND branchial arch enhancer died perinatally and exhibited a spectrum of craniofacial defects that included cleft palate, mandibular hypoplasia and cartilage malformations. Expression of dHAND was abolished in the ventolateral regions of the first and second branchial arches in these mutant mice, but expression was retained in a ventral domain where the related transcription factor eHAND is expressed. We conclude that dHAND plays an essential role in patterning and development of skeletal elements derived from the first and second branchial arches and that there are heterogeneous populations of cells in the branchial arches that rely on different cis-regulatory elements for activation of dHAND transcription.
Circulation Research | 2010
Jianbin Huang; Elaine C. Davis; Shelby L. Chapman; Madhusudhan Budatha; Lihua Y. Marmorstein; R. Ann Word; Hiromi Yanagisawa
Rationale: Loss of fibulin-4 during embryogenesis results in perinatal lethality because of aneurysm rupture, and defective elastic fiber assembly has been proposed as an underlying cause for the aneurysm phenotype. However, aneurysms are never seen in mice deficient for elastin, or for fibulin-5, which absence also leads to compromised elastic fibers. Objective: We sought to determine the mechanism of aneurysm development in the absence of fibulin-4 and establish the role of fibulin-4 in aortic development. Methods and Results: We generated germline and smooth muscle cell (SMC)-specific deletion of the fibulin-4 gene in mice (Fbln4GKO and Fbln4SMKO, respectively). Fbln4GKO and Fbln4SMKO aortic walls fail to fully differentiate, exhibiting reduced expression of SM-specific contractile genes and focal proliferation of SMCs accompanied by degenerative changes of the medial wall. Marked upregulation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 signaling pathway was observed in the aneurysmal wall of Fbln4GKO and Fbln4SMKO mice and both mutants developed aneurysm predominantly in the ascending thoracic aorta. In vitro, Fbln4GKO SMCs exhibit an immature SMC phenotype with a marked reduction of SM-myosin heavy chain and increased proliferative capacity. Conclusions: The vascular phenotype in Fbln4 mutant mice is remarkably similar to a subset of human thoracic aortic aneurysms caused by mutations in SMC contractile genes. Our study provides a potential link between the intrinsic properties of SMCs and aneurysm progression in vivo and supports the dual role of fibulin-4 in the formation of elastic fibers as well as terminal differentiation and maturation of SMCs in the aortic wall.
Circulation Research | 2005
Sandra L. Merklinger; Roger A. Wagner; Edda Spiekerkoetter; Aleksander Hinek; Russell H. Knutsen; M. Golam Kabir; Kavin Desai; Shelby L. Hacker; Lingli Wang; Gordon M. Cann; Noona Ambartsumian; Eugene Lukanidin; Daniel Bernstein; Mansoor Husain; Robert P. Mecham; Barry Starcher; Hiromi Yanagisawa; Marlene Rabinovitch
Transgenic mice overexpressing the calcium binding protein, S100A4/Mts1, occasionally develop severe pulmonary vascular obstructive disease. To understand what underlies this propensity, we compared the pulmonary vascular hemodynamic and structural features of S100A4/Mts1 with control C57Bl/6 mice at baseline, following a 2-week exposure to chronic hypoxia, and after 1 and 3 months “recovery” in room air. S100A4/Mts1 mice had greater right ventricular systolic pressure and right ventricular hypertrophy at baseline, which increased further with chronic hypoxia and was sustained after 3 months “recovery” in room air. These findings correlated with a heightened response to acute hypoxia and failure to vasodilate with nitric oxide or oxygen. S100A4/Mts1 mice, when compared with C57Bl/6 mice, also had impaired cardiac function judged by reduced ventricular elastance and decreased cardiac output. Despite higher right ventricular systolic pressures with chronic hypoxia, S100A4/Mts1 mice did not develop more severe PVD, but in contrast to C57Bl/6 mice, these features did not regress on return to room air. Microarray analysis of lung tissue identified a number of genes differentially upregulated in S100A4/Mts1 versus control mice. One of these, fibulin-5, is a matrix component necessary for normal elastin fiber assembly. Fibulin-5 was localized to pulmonary arteries and associated with thickened elastic laminae. This feature could underlie attenuation of pulmonary vascular changes in response to elevated pressure, as well as impaired reversibility.
Hypertension | 2010
Noriaki Emoto; Takashi Ohuchi; Bambang Widyantoro; Keiko Yagi; Kazuhiko Nakayama; Rafal M. Kedzierski; Robert E. Hammer; Hiromi Yanagisawa; S. Clay Williams; James A. Richardson; Takashi Suzuki; Masashi Yanagisawa
Endothelin (ET) 1 is a potent vasoconstrictor peptide produced by vascular endothelial cells and implicated in various pathophysiologic states involving abnormal vascular tone. Homozygous ET-1 null mice have craniofacial and cardiac malformations that lead to neonatal death. To study the role of ET-1 in adult vascular physiology, we generated a mouse strain (ET-1flox/flox;Tie2-Cre mice) in which ET-1 is disrupted specifically in endothelial cells. ET-1 peptide levels in plasma, heart, lung, kidney, and brain homogenates were reduced by 65% to 80% in these mice. mRNA levels for ET receptors were unaltered except that the ETA receptor mRNA was upregulated in the heart. ET-1flox/flox;Tie2-Cre mice had mean blood pressures 10 to 12 mm Hg lower than genetic controls. In contrast, the blood pressure of mice systemically heterozygous for the ET-1 null allele (ET-1dlox/+ mice) was unchanged compared with wild-type littermates. Despite the lower basal blood pressure, acute pharmacological responses to angiotensin II, captopril, phenylephrine, bradykinin, NG-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester, and exogenous ET-1 were normal in ET-1flox/flox;Tie2-Cre mice. These results support an essential role of endothelial-derived ET-1 in the maintenance of basal vascular tone and blood pressure. Normal pharmacological responses of ET-1flox/flox;Tie2-Cre mice suggest that the renin-angiotensin system, the adrenergic system, and NO are not significantly altered by endothelial ET-1. Taken in conjunction with other lines of genetically altered mice, our results provide evidence for a paracrine vasoregulatory pathway mediated by endothelial cell–derived ET-1 acting on the vascular smooth muscle ETA receptor.