Isamu Aiba
University of New Mexico
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Featured researches published by Isamu Aiba.
Science Translational Medicine | 2015
Isamu Aiba; Jeffrey L. Noebels
Ion channel mutations that cause epilepsy also predispose the immature brainstem to generate a depolarizing, tsunami-like wave that leads to autonomic collapse and death. Subduing SUDEP (sudden unexplained death in epilepsy) Patients with uncontrolled epilepsy can have a seizure at any time and—even worse—also face an increased risk of sudden death: SUDEP (sudden unexplained death in epilepsy). Aiba and Noebels now report that genetically controlled sensitivity to inactivation of the heart and respiratory control centers of the brain may underlie SUDEP. After a seizure, epileptic mice with mutations in certain ion channels can show a massive depolarization in the brainstem, which shuts down the cardiorespiratory control centers, causing sudden death. Mutation in a modifier gene prevented the mortality. The authors attribute the susceptibility to so-called spreading depression to the mutated ion channels and suggest that similar channel variations in humans may increase the risk of seizure-induced death. Ultimately, genetic analysis could predict which patients are at the highest risk of SUDEP. Cardiorespiratory collapse after a seizure is the leading cause of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) in young persons, but why only certain individuals are at risk is unknown. To identify a mechanism for this lethal cardiorespiratory failure, we examined whether genes linked to increased SUDEP risk lower the threshold for spreading depolarization (SD), a self-propagating depolarizing wave that silences neuronal networks. Mice carrying mutations in Kv1.1 potassium channels (−/−) and Scn1a sodium ion channels (+/R1407X) phenocopy many aspects of human SUDEP. In mutant, but not wild-type mice, seizures initiated by topical application of 4-aminopyridine to the cortex led to a slow, negative DC potential shift recorded in the dorsal medulla, a brainstem region that controls cardiorespiratory pacemaking. This irreversible event slowly depolarized cells and inactivated synaptic activity, producing cardiorespiratory arrest. Local initiation of SD in this region by potassium chloride microinjection also elicited electroencephalographic suppression, apnea, bradycardia, and asystole, similar to the events seen in monitored human SUDEP. In vitro study of brainstem slices confirmed that mutant mice had a lower threshold for SD elicited by metabolic substrate depletion and that immature mice were at greater risk than adults. Deletion of the gene encoding tau, which prolongs life in these mutants, also restored the normal SD threshold in Kv1.1-mutant mouse brainstem. Thus, brainstem SD may be a critical threshold event linking seizures and SUDEP.
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2009
Wen Bin Tsai; Isamu Aiba; Soo Yong Lee; Lynn G. Feun; Niramol Savaraj; Macus Tien Kuo
Arginine deiminase (ADI)–based arginine depletion is a novel strategy under clinical trials for the treatment of malignant melanoma with promising results. The sensitivity of melanoma to ADI treatment is based on its auxotrophy for arginine due to a lack of argininosuccinate synthetase (AS) expression, the rate-limiting enzyme for the de novo biosynthesis of arginine. We show here that AS expression can be transcriptionally induced by ADI in melanoma cell lines A2058 and SK-MEL-2 but not in A375 cells, and this inducibility was correlated with resistance to ADI treatment. The proximal region of the AS promoter contains an E-box that is recognized by c-Myc and HIF-1α and a GC-box by Sp4. Through ChIP assays, we showed that under noninduced conditions, the E-box was bound by HIF-1α in all the three melanoma cell lines. Under arginine depletion conditions, HIF-1α was replaced by c-Myc in A2058 and SK-MEL-2 cells but not in A375 cells. Sp4 was constitutively bound to the GC-box regardless of arginine availability in all three cell lines. Overexpressing c-Myc by transfection upregulated AS expression in A2058 and SK-MEL-2 cells, whereas cotransfection with HIF-1α suppressed c-Myc–induced AS expression. These results suggest that regulation of AS expression involves interplay among positive transcriptional regulators c-Myc and Sp4, and negative regulator HIF-1α that confers resistance to ADI treatment in A2058 and SK-MEL-2 cells. Inability of AS induction in A375 cells under arginine depletion conditions was correlated by the failure of c-Myc to interact with the AS promoter. [Mol Cancer Ther 2009;8(12):3223–33]
Molecular Pharmacology | 2008
Im-Sook Song; Helen H.W. Chen; Isamu Aiba; Anwar Hossain; Zheng D. Liang; Leo W. J. Klomp; Macus Tien Kuo
Copper is an essential metal nutrient, yet copper overload is toxic. Here, we report that human copper transporter (hCtr) 1 plays an important role in the maintenance of copper homeostasis by demonstrating that expression of hCtr1 mRNA was up-regulated under copper-depleted conditions and down-regulated under copper-replete conditions. Overexpression of full-length hCtr1 by transfection with a recombinant hCtr1 cDNA clone reduced endogenous hCtr1 mRNA levels, whereas overexpression of N terminus-deleted hCtr1 did not change endogenous hCtr1 mRNA levels, suggesting that increased functional hCtr1 transporter, which leads to increased intracellular copper content, down-regulates the endogenous hCtr1 mRNA. A luciferase assay using reporter constructs containing the hCtr1 promoter sequences revealed that three Sp1 binding sites are involved in the basal and copper concentration-dependent regulation of hCtr1 expression. Modulation of Sp1 levels affected the expression of hCtr1. We further demonstrated that the zinc-finger domain of Sp1 functions as a sensor of copper that regulates hCtr1 up and down in response to copper concentration variations. Our results demonstrate that mammalian copper homeostasis is maintained at the hCtr1 mRNA level, which is regulated by the Sp1 transcription factor.
Cancer Research | 2012
Wen Bin Tsai; Isamu Aiba; Yan Long; Hui Kuan Lin; Lynn G. Feun; Niramol Savaraj; Macus Tien Kuo
Melanomas and other cancers that do not express argininosuccinate synthetase (AS), the rate-limiting enzyme for arginine biosynthesis, are sensitive to arginine depletion with pegylated arginine deiminase (ADI-PEG20). However, ADI resistance eventually develops in tumors because of AS upregulation. Although it has been shown that AS upregulation involves c-Myc, the underlying mechanisms remain unknown. Here we show that ADI-PEG20 activates Ras signaling and the effector extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K)/AKT/GSK-3β kinase cascades, resulting in phosphorylation and stabilization of c-Myc by attenuation of its ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation mechanism. Inhibition of the induced cell signaling pathways using PI3K/AKT inhibitors suppressed c-Myc induction and enhanced ADI-mediated cell killing. Notably, in an animal model of AS-negative melanoma, combination therapy using a PI3K inhibitor plus ADI-PEG20 yielded additive antitumor effects as compared with either agent alone. Taken together, our findings offer mechanistic insight into arginine deprivation metabolism and ADI resistance, and they illustrate how combining inhibitors of the Ras/ERK and PI3K/AKT signaling pathways may improve ADI-PEG20 anticancer responses.
The Journal of Physiology | 2012
Isamu Aiba; C. William Shuttleworth
• Spreading depolarization (SD) is a profound neuronal and glial depolarization implicated in the progression of acute brain injury. • In metabolically compromised tissue, SD can trigger irrecoverable injury; however, the underlying cellular mechanisms are not well established. • We investigated consequences of SD in hippocampal brain slices, using a combination of electrophysiological and single‐cell imaging methods. • We characterized a brief period of prolonged NMDA receptor (NMDAR) activation after SD onset, which appeared to underlie extended Ca2+ elevations in dendrites. • Prolonged NMDAR activation was sufficient to cause injury after SD in metabolically compromised neurons, and therefore may contribute to deleterious consequences of SD in pathological conditions.
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2011
Russell E. Carter; Isamu Aiba; Robert M. Dietz; Christian T. Sheline; C. William Shuttleworth
Spreading depression (SD) involves coordinated depolarizations of neurons and glia that propagate through the brain tissue. Repetitive SD-like events are common following human ischemic strokes, and are believed to contribute to the enlargement of infarct volume. Accumulation of Zn2+ is also implicated in ischemic neuronal injury. Synaptic glutamate release contributes to SD propagation, and because Zn2+ is costored with glutamate in some synaptic vesicles, we examined whether Zn2+ is released by SD and may therefore provide a significant source of Zn2+ in the postischemic period. Spreading depression-like events were generated in acutely prepared murine hippocampal slices by deprivation of oxygen and glucose (OGD), and Zn2+ release was detected extracellularly by a Zn2+-selective indicator FluoZin-3. Deprivation of oxygen and glucose-SD produced large FluoZin-3 increases that propagated with the event, and signals were abolished in tissues from ZnT3 knockout animals lacking synaptic Zn2+. Synaptic Zn2+ release was also maintained with repetitive SDs generated by microinjections of KCl under normoxic conditions. Intracellular Zn2+ accumulation in CA1 neurons, assessed using microinjection of FluoZin-3, showed significant increases following SD that was attributed to synaptic Zn2+ release. These results suggest that Zn2+ is released during SDs and could provide a significant source of Zn2+ that contributes to neurodegeneration in the postischemic period.
Molecular Pharmacology | 2008
Isamu Aiba; Anwar Hossain; Macus Tien Kuo
Cadmium is a nonessential toxic metal in mammals. Its toxicity is mainly caused by interactions with cellular proteins that result in protein dysfunction and then disturb normal cellular functions. Glutathione (GSH) has been reported to play a role in cadmium resistance by serving as a cofactor for multidrug resistance protein 1/GS-X pump-mediated cadmium elimination. To further investigate the role of GSH in cadmium toxicity, we carried out a comparative study using small-cell lung cancer-derived cell lines, SR3A, and those that were stably transfected with glutamate cysteine ligase catalytic subunit (GCLC), a rate-limiting enzyme in GSH biosynthesis. These GCLC stably transfected cell lines produced higher levels of GSH and were more resistant to cadmium toxicity than the parental cell line was. The rates of cadmium uptake were reduced in these GCLC-transfected cell lines, which were associated with down-regulation of the cadmium transporter ZIP8/SLC39A8. Further analyses demonstrated that Sp1 binding site at the proximal promoter region of ZIP8 was sensitive to the GSH level and that the expression level of transcription factor Sp1 was reduced by increased GSH levels. We also demonstrated that low concentrations of cadmium exposure down-regulated ZIP8 expression with concomitant reduction of Sp1 expression. Taken together, these results demonstrate the importance of Sp1 in the regulation of ZIP8 expression. More important, our results reveal a new mechanism by which elevated GSH levels confer cadmium resistance by down-regulation of ZIP8 expression through the suppression of Sp1.
Journal of Neurophysiology | 2012
Isamu Aiba; Andrew P. Carlson; Christian T. Sheline; C. William Shuttleworth
Cortical spreading depression (CSD) is a consequence of a slowly propagating wave of neuronal and glial depolarization (spreading depolarization; SD). Massive release of glutamate contributes to SD propagation, and it was recently shown that Zn(2+) is also released from synaptic vesicles during SD. The present study examined consequences of extracellular Zn(2+) accumulation on the propagation of SD. SD mechanisms were studied first in murine brain slices, using focal KCl applications as stimuli and making electrical and optical recordings in hippocampal area CA1. Elevating extracellular Zn(2+) concentrations with exogenous ZnCl(2) reduced SD propagation rates. Selective chelation of endogenous Zn(2+) (using TPEN or CaEDTA) increased SD propagation rates, and these effects appeared due to chelation of Zn(2+) derived from synaptic vesicles. Thus, in tissues where synaptic Zn(2+) release was absent [knockout (KO) of vesicular Zn(2+) transporter ZnT-3], SD propagation rates were increased, and no additional increase was observed following chelation of endogenous Zn(2+) in these tissues. The role of synaptic Zn(2+) was then examined on CSD in vivo. ZnT-3 KO animals had higher susceptibility to CSD than wild-type controls as evidenced by significantly higher propagation rates and frequencies. Studies of candidate mechanisms excluded changes in neuronal excitability, presynaptic release, and GABA receptors but left open a possible contribution of N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor inhibition. These results suggest the extracellular accumulation of synaptically released Zn(2+) can serve as an intrinsic inhibitor to limit SD events. The inhibitory action of extracellular Zn(2+) on SD may counteract to some extent the neurotoxic effects of intracellular Zn(2+) accumulation in acute brain injury models.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2016
Valerie C. Bomben; Isamu Aiba; Jing Qian; Melanie D. Mark; Stefan Herlitze; Jeffrey L. Noebels
Generalized spike-wave seizures involving abnormal synchronization of cortical and underlying thalamic circuitry represent a major category of childhood epilepsy. Inborn errors of Cacna1a, the P/Q-type voltage-gated calcium channel α subunit gene, expressed throughout the brain destabilize corticothalamic rhythmicity and produce this phenotype. To determine the minimal cellular lesion required for this network disturbance, we used neurotensin receptor 1 (Ntsr1) cre-driver mice to ablate floxed Cacna1a in layer VI pyramidal neurons, which supply the sole descending cortical synaptic input to thalamocortical relay cells and reticular interneurons and activate intrathalamic circuits. Targeted Cacna1a ablation in layer VI cells resulted in mice that display a robust spontaneous spike-wave absence seizure phenotype accompanied by behavioral arrest and inhibited by ethosuximide. To verify the selectivity of the molecular lesion, we determined that P/Q subunit proteins were reduced in corticothalamic relay neuron terminal zones, and confirmed that P/Q-mediated glutamate release was reduced at these synapses. Spike-triggered exocytosis was preserved by N-type calcium channel rescue, demonstrating that evoked release at layer VI terminals relies on both P/Q and N-type channels. Whereas intrinsic excitability of the P/Q channel depleted layer VI neurons was unaltered, T-type calcium currents in the postsynaptic thalamic relay and reticular cells were dramatically elevated, favoring rebound bursting and seizure generation. We find that an early P/Q-type release defect, limited to synapses of a single cell-type within the thalamocortical circuit, is sufficient to remodel synchronized firing behavior and produce a stable generalized epilepsy phenotype. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT This study dissects a critical component of the corticothalamic circuit in spike-wave epilepsy and identifies the developmental importance of P/Q-type calcium channel-mediated presynaptic glutamate release at layer VI pyramidal neuron terminals. Genetic ablation of Cacna1a in layer VI neurons produced synchronous spike-wave discharges in the cortex and thalamus that were inhibited by ethosuximide. These mice also displayed N-type calcium channel compensation at descending thalamic synapses, and consistent with other spike-wave models increased low-threshold T-type calcium currents within postsynaptic thalamic relay and reticular neurons. These results demonstrate, for the first time, that preventing the developmental homeostatic switch from loose to tightly coupled synaptic release at a single class of deep layer cortical excitatory output neurons results in generalized spike-wave epilepsy.
Expert Opinion on Therapeutic Targets | 2015
Helen H.W. Chen; Wen Chung Chen; Zhang Dong Liang; Wen Bin Tsai; Yan Long; Isamu Aiba; Siqing Fu; Russell Broaddus; Jinsong Liu; Lynn G. Feun; Niramol Savaraj; Macus Tien Kuo
Introduction: Platinum (Pt)-based antitumor agents remain important chemotherapeutic agents for treating many human malignancies. Elevated expression of the human high-affinity copper transporter 1 (hCtr1), resulting in enhanced Pt drug transport into cells, has been shown to be associated with improved treatment efficacy. Thus, targeting hCtr1 upregulation is an attractive strategy for improving the treatment efficacy of Pt-based cancer chemotherapy. Area covered: Regulation of hCtr1 expression by cellular copper homeostasis is discussed. Association of elevated hCtr1 expression with intrinsic sensitivity of ovarian cancer to Pt drugs is presented. Mechanism of copper-lowering agents in enhancing hCtr1-mediated cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (II) (cisplatin, cDDP) transport is reviewed. Applications of copper chelation strategy in overcoming cDDP resistance through enhanced hCtr1 expression are evaluated. Expert opinion: While both transcriptional and post-translational mechanisms of hCtr1 regulation by cellular copper bioavailability have been proposed, detailed molecular insights into hCtr1 regulation by copper homeostasis remain needed. Recent clinical study using a copper-lowering agent in enhancing hCtr1-mediated drug transport has achieved incremental improvement in overcoming Pt drug resistance. Further improvements in identifying predictive measures in the subpopulation of patients that can benefit from the treatment are needed.