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Dive into the research topics where Hisato Yagi is active.

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Featured researches published by Hisato Yagi.


Nature | 2015

Global genetic analysis in mice unveils central role for cilia in congenital heart disease

You Li; Nikolai T. Klena; George C. Gabriel; Xiaoqin Liu; Andrew J. Kim; Kristi Lemke; Yu Chen; Bishwanath Chatterjee; William A. Devine; Rama Rao Damerla; Chienfu Chang; Hisato Yagi; Jovenal T. San Agustin; Mohamed Thahir; Shane Anderton; Caroline Lawhead; Anita Vescovi; C. Herbert Pratt; Judy Morgan; Leslie Haynes; Cynthia L. Smith; Janan T. Eppig; Laura G. Reinholdt; Richard Francis; Linda Leatherbury; Madhavi Ganapathiraju; Kimimasa Tobita; Gregory J. Pazour; Cecilia W. Lo

Congenital heart disease (CHD) is the most prevalent birth defect, affecting nearly 1% of live births; the incidence of CHD is up to tenfold higher in human fetuses. A genetic contribution is strongly suggested by the association of CHD with chromosome abnormalities and high recurrence risk. Here we report findings from a recessive forward genetic screen in fetal mice, showing that cilia and cilia-transduced cell signalling have important roles in the pathogenesis of CHD. The cilium is an evolutionarily conserved organelle projecting from the cell surface with essential roles in diverse cellular processes. Using echocardiography, we ultrasound scanned 87,355 chemically mutagenized C57BL/6J fetal mice and recovered 218 CHD mouse models. Whole-exome sequencing identified 91 recessive CHD mutations in 61 genes. This included 34 cilia-related genes, 16 genes involved in cilia-transduced cell signalling, and 10 genes regulating vesicular trafficking, a pathway important for ciliogenesis and cell signalling. Surprisingly, many CHD genes encoded interacting proteins, suggesting that an interactome protein network may provide a larger genomic context for CHD pathogenesis. These findings provide novel insights into the potential Mendelian genetic contribution to CHD in the fetal population, a segment of the human population not well studied. We note that the pathways identified show overlap with CHD candidate genes recovered in CHD patients, suggesting that they may have relevance to the more complex genetics of CHD overall. These CHD mouse models and >8,000 incidental mutations have been sperm archived, creating a rich public resource for human disease modelling.


Circulation | 2012

High Prevalence of Respiratory Ciliary Dysfunction in Congenital Heart Disease Patients With Heterotaxy

Nader Nakhleh; Richard Francis; Rachel Giese; Xin Tian; You Li; Maimoona A. Zariwala; Hisato Yagi; Omar Khalifa; Safina Kureshi; Bishwanath Chatterjee; Steven L. Sabol; Matthew W. Swisher; Patricia S. Connelly; Matthew P. Daniels; Ashok Srinivasan; Karen Kuehl; Nadav Kravitz; Kimberlie A. Burns; Iman Sami; Heymut Omran; M. Michael Barmada; Kenneth N. Olivier; Kunal K. Chawla; Margaret W. Leigh; Richard A. Jonas; Linda Leatherbury; Cecilia W. Lo

Background— Patients with congenital heart disease (CHD) and heterotaxy show high postsurgical morbidity/mortality, with some developing respiratory complications. Although this finding is often attributed to the CHD, airway clearance and left-right patterning both require motile cilia function. Thus, airway ciliary dysfunction (CD) similar to that of primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) may contribute to increased respiratory complications in heterotaxy patients. Methods and Results— We assessed 43 CHD patients with heterotaxy for airway CD. Videomicrocopy was used to examine ciliary motion in nasal tissue, and nasal nitric oxide (nNO) was measured; nNO level is typically low with PCD. Eighteen patients exhibited CD characterized by abnormal ciliary motion and nNO levels below or near the PCD cutoff values. Patients with CD aged >6 years show increased respiratory symptoms similar to those seen in PCD. Sequencing of all 14 known PCD genes in 13 heterotaxy patients with CD, 12 without CD, 10 PCD disease controls, and 13 healthy controls yielded 0.769, 0.417, 1.0, and 0.077 novel variants per patient, respectively. One heterotaxy patient with CD had the PCD causing DNAI1 founder mutation. Another with hyperkinetic ciliary beat had 2 mutations in DNAH11, the only PCD gene known to cause hyperkinetic beat. Among PCD patients, 2 had known PCD causing CCDC39 and CCDC40 mutations. Conclusions— Our studies show that CHD patients with heterotaxy have substantial risk for CD and increased respiratory disease. Heterotaxy patients with CD were enriched for mutations in PCD genes. Future studies are needed to assess the potential benefit of prescreening and prophylactically treating heterotaxy patients for CD.


PLOS Biology | 2013

Wdpcp, a PCP Protein Required for Ciliogenesis, Regulates Directional Cell Migration and Cell Polarity by Direct Modulation of the Actin Cytoskeleton

Cheng Cui; Bishwanath Chatterjee; Thomas P. Lozito; Zhen Zhang; Richard Francis; Hisato Yagi; Lisa M. Swanhart; Subramaniam Sanker; Deanne Francis; Qing Yu; Jovenal T. San Agustin; Chandrakala Puligilla; Tania Chatterjee; Terry Tansey; Xiaoqin Liu; Matthew W. Kelley; Elias T. Spiliotis; Adam V. Kwiatkowski; Rocky S. Tuan; Gregory J. Pazour; Neil A. Hukriede; Cecilia W. Lo

Wdpcp, a protein required for both planar cell polarity and ciliogenesis, regulates cell polarity and alignment via direct modulation of the actin cytoskeleton.


Nature Genetics | 2015

MMP21 is mutated in human heterotaxy and is required for normal left-right asymmetry in vertebrates

Anne Guimier; George C. Gabriel; Fanny Bajolle; Michael Tsang; Hui Liu; Aaron Noll; Molly Schwartz; Rajae El Malti; Laurie Smith; Nikolai T. Klena; Gina Jimenez; Neil A. Miller; Myriam Oufadem; Anne Moreau de Bellaing; Hisato Yagi; Carol J. Saunders; Candice N. Baker; Sylvie Di Filippo; Kevin A. Peterson; Isabelle Thiffault; Christine Bole-Feysot; Linda D. Cooley; Emily Farrow; Cécile Masson; Patric Schoen; Jean-François Deleuze; Patrick Nitschké; Stanislas Lyonnet; Loïc de Pontual; Stephen A. Murray

Heterotaxy results from a failure to establish normal left-right asymmetry early in embryonic development. By whole-exome sequencing, whole-genome sequencing and high-throughput cohort resequencing, we identified recessive mutations in MMP21 (encoding matrix metallopeptidase 21) in nine index cases with heterotaxy. In addition, Mmp21-mutant mice and mmp21-morphant zebrafish displayed heterotaxy and abnormal cardiac looping, respectively, suggesting a new role for extracellular matrix remodeling in the establishment of laterality in vertebrates.


PLOS Genetics | 2016

DNAH6 and Its Interactions with PCD Genes in Heterotaxy and Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia.

You Li; Hisato Yagi; Ezenwa O. Onuoha; Rama Rao Damerla; Richard Francis; Yoshiyuki Furutani; Muhammad Tariq; Stephen M. King; Gregory M. Hendricks; Cheng Cui; Dong Min Lee; Maliha Zahid; Iman Sami; Linda Leatherbury; Gregory J. Pazour; Stephanie M. Ware; Toshio Nakanishi; Elizabeth Goldmuntz; Michael Tsang; Cecilia W. Lo

Heterotaxy, a birth defect involving left-right patterning defects, and primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD), a sinopulmonary disease with dyskinetic/immotile cilia in the airway are seemingly disparate diseases. However, they have an overlapping genetic etiology involving mutations in cilia genes, a reflection of the common requirement for motile cilia in left-right patterning and airway clearance. While PCD is a monogenic recessive disorder, heterotaxy has a more complex, largely non-monogenic etiology. In this study, we show mutations in the novel dynein gene DNAH6 can cause heterotaxy and ciliary dysfunction similar to PCD. We provide the first evidence that trans-heterozygous interactions between DNAH6 and other PCD genes potentially can cause heterotaxy. DNAH6 was initially identified as a candidate heterotaxy/PCD gene by filtering exome-sequencing data from 25 heterotaxy patients stratified by whether they have airway motile cilia defects. dnah6 morpholino knockdown in zebrafish disrupted motile cilia in Kupffer’s vesicle required for left-right patterning and caused heterotaxy with abnormal cardiac/gut looping. Similarly DNAH6 shRNA knockdown disrupted motile cilia in human and mouse respiratory epithelia. Notably a heterotaxy patient harboring heterozygous DNAH6 mutation was identified to also carry a rare heterozygous PCD-causing DNAI1 mutation, suggesting a DNAH6/DNAI1 trans-heterozygous interaction. Furthermore, sequencing of 149 additional heterotaxy patients showed 5 of 6 patients with heterozygous DNAH6 mutations also had heterozygous mutations in DNAH5 or other PCD genes. We functionally assayed for DNAH6/DNAH5 and DNAH6/DNAI1 trans-heterozygous interactions using subthreshold double-morpholino knockdown in zebrafish and showed this caused heterotaxy. Similarly, subthreshold siRNA knockdown of Dnah6 in heterozygous Dnah5 or Dnai1 mutant mouse respiratory epithelia disrupted motile cilia function. Together, these findings support an oligogenic disease model with broad relevance for further interrogating the genetic etiology of human ciliopathies.


Nature Genetics | 2017

The complex genetics of hypoplastic left heart syndrome

Xiaoqin Liu; Hisato Yagi; Shazina Saeed; Abha S Bais; George C. Gabriel; Zhaohan Chen; Kevin A. Peterson; You Li; Molly Schwartz; William Reynolds; Brian Gibbs; Yijen Wu; William A. Devine; Bishwanath Chatterjee; Nikolai T. Klena; Dennis Kostka; Karen L. de Mesy Bentley; Madhavi Ganapathiraju; Phillip Dexheimer; Linda Leatherbury; Omar Khalifa; Anchit Bhagat; Maliha Zahid; William T. Pu; Simon C. Watkins; Paul Grossfeld; Stephen A. Murray; George A. Porter; Michael Tsang; Lisa J. Martin

Congenital heart disease (CHD) affects up to 1% of live births. Although a genetic etiology is indicated by an increased recurrence risk, sporadic occurrence suggests that CHD genetics is complex. Here, we show that hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS), a severe CHD, is multigenic and genetically heterogeneous. Using mouse forward genetics, we report what is, to our knowledge, the first isolation of HLHS mutant mice and identification of genes causing HLHS. Mutations from seven HLHS mouse lines showed multigenic enrichment in ten human chromosome regions linked to HLHS. Mutations in Sap130 and Pcdha9, genes not previously associated with CHD, were validated by CRISPR–Cas9 genome editing in mice as being digenic causes of HLHS. We also identified one subject with HLHS with SAP130 and PCDHA13 mutations. Mouse and zebrafish modeling showed that Sap130 mediates left ventricular hypoplasia, whereas Pcdha9 increases penetrance of aortic valve abnormalities, both signature HLHS defects. These findings show that HLHS can arise genetically in a combinatorial fashion, thus providing a new paradigm for the complex genetics of CHD.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2015

Respiratory motile cilia dysfunction in a patient with cranioectodermal dysplasia

You Li; Andrea S. Garrod; Suneeta Madan-Khetarpal; Gayathri Sreedher; Marianne McGuire; Hisato Yagi; Nikolai T. Klena; George C. Gabriel; Omar Khalifa; Maliha Zahid; Ashok Panigrahy; Daniel J. Weiner; Cecilia W. Lo

Ciliopathies such as cranioectodermal dysplasia, Sensenbrenner syndrome, short‐rib polydactyly, and Jeune syndrome are associated with respiratory complications arising from rib cage dysplasia. While such ciliopathies have been demonstrated to involve primary cilia defects, we show motile cilia dysfunction in the airway of a patient diagnosed with cranioectodermal dysplasia. While this patient had mild thoracic dystrophy not requiring surgical treatment, there was nevertheless newborn respiratory distress, restrictive airway disease with possible obstructive airway involvement, repeated respiratory infections, and atelectasis. High‐resolution videomicroscopy of nasal epithelial biopsy showed immotile/dyskinetic cilia and nasal nitric oxide was reduced, both of which are characteristics of primary ciliary dyskinesia, a sinopulmonary disease associated with mucociliary clearance defects due to motile cilia dysfunction in the airway. Exome sequencing analysis of this patient identified compound heterozygous mutations in WDR35, but no mutations in any of the 30 known primary ciliary dyskinesia genes or other cilia‐related genes. Given that WDR35 is only known to be required for primary cilia function, we carried out WDR35 siRNA knockdown in human respiratory epithelia to assess the role of WDR35 in motile cilia function. This showed WDR35 deficiency disrupted ciliogenesis in the airway, indicating WDR35 is also required for formation of motile cilia. Together, these findings suggest patients with WDR35 mutations have an airway mucociliary clearance defect masked by their restrictive airway disease.


Biology Open | 2016

Prickle1 mutation causes planar cell polarity and directional cell migration defects associated with cardiac outflow tract anomalies and other structural birth defects

Brian Gibbs; Rama Rao Damerla; Eszter K. Vladar; Bishwanath Chatterjee; Yong Wan; Xiaoqin Liu; Cheng Cui; George C. Gabriel; Maliha Zahid; Hisato Yagi; Heather L. Szabo-Rogers; Kaye Suyama; Jeffrey D. Axelrod; Cecilia W. Lo

ABSTRACT Planar cell polarity (PCP) is controlled by a conserved pathway that regulates directional cell behavior. Here, we show that mutant mice harboring a newly described mutation termed Beetlejuice (Bj) in Prickle1 (Pk1), a PCP component, exhibit developmental phenotypes involving cell polarity defects, including skeletal, cochlear and congenital cardiac anomalies. Bj mutants die neonatally with cardiac outflow tract (OFT) malalignment. This is associated with OFT shortening due to loss of polarized cell orientation and failure of second heart field cell intercalation mediating OFT lengthening. OFT myocardialization was disrupted with cardiomyocytes failing to align with the direction of cell invasion into the outflow cushions. The expression of genes mediating Wnt signaling was altered. Also noted were shortened but widened bile ducts and disruption in canonical Wnt signaling. Using an in vitro wound closure assay, we showed Bj mutant fibroblasts cannot establish polarized cell morphology or engage in directional cell migration, and their actin cytoskeleton failed to align with the direction of wound closure. Unexpectedly, Pk1 mutants exhibited primary and motile cilia defects. Given Bj mutant phenotypes are reminiscent of ciliopathies, these findings suggest Pk1 may also regulate ciliogenesis. Together these findings show Pk1 plays an essential role in regulating cell polarity and directional cell migration during development. Summary: Outflow tract malalignment and multiple birth defects observed in the Prickle1 mutant may arise from cell polarity perturbation, which may involve disruptions in Wnt signaling and of cilia function.


bioRxiv | 2018

An unconventional myosin, myosin 1d regulates Kupffer's vesicle morphogenesis and laterality

Hisato Yagi; Michael J. Calderon; Madeline J. Clark; Timothy N. Feinstein; Ming Sun; Donna B. Stolz; Simon C. Watkins; Jeffrey D. Amack; Cecilia W. Lo; Michael Tsang

Establishing left-right (LR) asymmetry is a fundamental process essential for arrangement of visceral organs during development. In vertebrates, motile cilia driven fluid flow in the left-right organizer (LRO) is essential for initiating symmetry breaking event. Without a definite LRO structure in invertebrates, LR asymmetry is initiated at a cellular level by actin-myosin driven chirality. In Drosophila, myosin1D drives tissue-specific chirality in hind-gut looping. Here, we show that myosin 1d (myo1d) is essential for establishing LR asymmetry in zebrafish. Using super-resolution microscopy, we show that the zebrafish LRO, Kupffer9s vesicle (KV), fails to form proper lumen size in the absence of myo1d. This process requires directed vacuolar trafficking in KV epithelial cells. Interestingly, the vacuole transporting function of zebrafish Myo1d can be substituted by myosin1C derived from an ancient eukaryote, Acanthamoeba castellanii, where it regulates the transport of contractile vacuoles. Our findings reveal an evolutionarily conserved role for an unconventional myosin in vacuole trafficking, lumen formation and determining laterality.


Pediatric Cardiology | 2018

The Genetic Landscape of Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome

Hisato Yagi; Xiaoqin Liu; George C. Gabriel; Yijen Wu; Kevin A. Peterson; Stephen A. Murray; Bruce J. Aronow; Lisa J. Martin; D. Woodrow Benson; Cecilia W. Lo

Hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS) is one of the most lethal congenital heart defects, and remains clinically challenging. While surgical palliation allows most HLHS patients to survive their critical heart disease with a single-ventricle physiology, many will suffer heart failure, requiring heart transplantation as the only therapeutic course. Current paradigm suggests HLHS is largely of hemodynamic origin, but recent findings from analysis of the first mouse model of HLHS showed intrinsic cardiomyocyte proliferation and differentiation defects underlying the left ventricular (LV) hypoplasia. The findings of similar defects of lesser severity in the right ventricle suggest this could contribute to the heart failure risks in surgically palliated HLHS patients. Analysis of 8 independent HLHS mouse lines showed HLHS is genetically heterogeneous and multigenic in etiology. Detailed analysis of the Ohia mouse line accompanied by validation studies in CRISPR gene-targeted mice revealed a digenic etiology for HLHS. Mutation in Sap130, a component of the HDAC repressor complex, was demonstrated to drive the LV hypoplasia, while mutation in Pcdha9, a protocadherin cell adhesion molecule played a pivotal role in the valvular defects associated with HLHS. Based on these findings, we propose a new paradigm in which complex CHD such as HLHS may arise in a modular fashion, mediated by multiple mutations. The finding of intrinsic cardiomyocyte defects would suggest hemodynamic intervention may not rescue LV growth. The profound genetic heterogeneity and oligogenic etiology indicated for HLHS would suggest that the genetic landscape of HLHS may be complex and more accessible in clinical studies built on a familial study design.

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Cecilia W. Lo

University of Pittsburgh

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You Li

University of Pittsburgh

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Michael Tsang

University of Pittsburgh

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Xiaoqin Liu

University of Pittsburgh

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Bishwanath Chatterjee

National Institutes of Health

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Linda Leatherbury

Children's National Medical Center

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Maliha Zahid

University of Pittsburgh

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Gregory J. Pazour

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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