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Dive into the research topics where Kaori Kondo is active.

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Featured researches published by Kaori Kondo.


Cell | 2014

Variant PRC1 complex-dependent H2A ubiquitylation drives PRC2 recruitment and polycomb domain formation.

Neil P. Blackledge; Anca M. Farcas; Takashi Kondo; Hamish W. King; Joanna F. McGouran; Lars L.P. Hanssen; Shinsuke Ito; Sarah Cooper; Kaori Kondo; Tomoyuki Ishikura; Hannah K. Long; Thomas W. Sheahan; Neil Brockdorff; Benedikt M. Kessler; Haruhiko Koseki; Robert J. Klose

Summary Chromatin modifying activities inherent to polycomb repressive complexes PRC1 and PRC2 play an essential role in gene regulation, cellular differentiation, and development. However, the mechanisms by which these complexes recognize their target sites and function together to form repressive chromatin domains remain poorly understood. Recruitment of PRC1 to target sites has been proposed to occur through a hierarchical process, dependent on prior nucleation of PRC2 and placement of H3K27me3. Here, using a de novo targeting assay in mouse embryonic stem cells we unexpectedly discover that PRC1-dependent H2AK119ub1 leads to recruitment of PRC2 and H3K27me3 to effectively initiate a polycomb domain. This activity is restricted to variant PRC1 complexes, and genetic ablation experiments reveal that targeting of the variant PCGF1/PRC1 complex by KDM2B to CpG islands is required for normal polycomb domain formation and mouse development. These observations provide a surprising PRC1-dependent logic for PRC2 occupancy at target sites in vivo.


PLOS Genetics | 2009

Combined In Silico and In Vivo Analyses Reveal Role of Hes1 in Taste Cell Differentiation

Masato S. Ota; Yoshiyuki Kaneko; Kaori Kondo; Soichi Ogishima; Hiroshi Tanaka; Kazuhiro Eto; Takashi Kondo

The sense of taste is of critical importance to animal survival. Although studies of taste signal transduction mechanisms have provided detailed information regarding taste receptor calcium signaling molecules (TRCSMs, required for sweet/bitter/umami taste signal transduction), the ontogeny of taste cells is still largely unknown. We used a novel approach to investigate the molecular regulation of taste system development in mice by combining in silico and in vivo analyses. After discovering that TRCSMs colocalized within developing circumvallate papillae (CVP), we used computational analysis of the upstream regulatory regions of TRCSMs to investigate the possibility of a common regulatory network for TRCSM transcription. Based on this analysis, we identified Hes1 as a likely common regulatory factor, and examined its function in vivo. Expression profile analyses revealed that decreased expression of nuclear HES1 correlated with expression of type II taste cell markers. After stage E18, the CVP of Hes1−/ − mutants displayed over 5-fold more TRCSM-immunoreactive cells than did the CVP of their wild-type littermates. Thus, according to our composite analyses, Hes1 is likely to play a role in orchestrating taste cell differentiation in developing taste buds.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Influence of a Short-Term Iron-Deficient Diet on Hepatic Gene Expression Profiles in Rats

Asuka Kamei; Yuki Watanabe; Kaori Kondo; Shinji Okada; Fumika Shinozaki; Tomoko Ishijima; Yuji Nakai; Takashi Kondo; Soichi Arai; Keiko Abe

Iron is an essential mineral for the body, and iron deficiency generally leads to anemia. However, because non-anemic iron deficiency can exist, we performed a comprehensive transcriptome analysis of the liver to define the effects of this condition on the body. Four-week-old male rats were fed a low-iron diet (approximately 3 ppm iron) for 3 days and compared with those fed a normal diet (48 ppm iron) by pair feeding as a control. The rats in the iron-deficient diet group developed a non-anemic iron-deficient state. DNA microarray analysis revealed that during this short time, this state conferred a variety of effects on nutrient metabolism in the liver. In comparison with long-term (17 days) iron-deficiency data from a previous study, some of the changed genes were found to be common to both short- and long-term iron deficiency models, some were specific to the short-term iron deficiency model, and the others were oppositely regulated between the two feeding terms. Taken together, these data suggest that although the blood hemoglobin level itself remains unchanged during non-anemic iron deficiency, a variety of metabolic processes involved in the maintenance of the energy balance are altered.


Development | 2016

RING1 proteins contribute to early proximal-distal specification of the forelimb bud by restricting Meis2 expression.

Nayuta Yakushiji-Kaminatsui; Takashi Kondo; Takaho A. Endo; Kaori Kondo; Osamu Ohara; Miguel Vidal; Haruhiko Koseki

Polycomb group (PcG) proteins play a pivotal role in silencing developmental genes and help to maintain various stem and precursor cells and regulate their differentiation. PcG factors also regulate dynamic and complex regional specification, particularly in mammals, but this activity is mechanistically not well understood. In this study, we focused on proximal-distal (PD) patterning of the mouse forelimb bud to elucidate how PcG factors contribute to a regional specification process that depends on developmental signals. Depletion of the RING1 proteins RING1A (RING1) and RING1B (RNF2), which are essential components of Polycomb repressive complex 1 (PRC1), led to severe defects in forelimb formation along the PD axis. We show that preferential defects in early distal specification in Ring1A/B-deficient forelimb buds accompany failures in the repression of proximal signal circuitry bound by RING1B, including Meis1/2, and the activation of distal signal circuitry in the prospective distal region. Additional deletion of Meis2 induced partial restoration of the distal gene expression and limb formation seen in the Ring1A/B-deficient mice, suggesting a crucial role for RING1-dependent repression of Meis2 and likely also Meis1 for distal specification. We suggest that the RING1-MEIS1/2 axis is regulated by early PD signals and contributes to the initiation or maintenance of the distal signal circuitry. Highlighted article: RING1 proteins, which are essential components of Polycomb repressive complex-1, control proximal-distal patterning of the mouse forelimb by integrating developmental signals to regulate MEIS expression.


Molecular Nutrition & Food Research | 2017

Quantitative deviating effects of maple syrup extract supplementation on the hepatic gene expression of mice fed a high‐fat diet

Asuka Kamei; Yuki Watanabe; Fumika Shinozaki; Akihito Yasuoka; Kousuke Shimada; Kaori Kondo; Tomoko Ishijima; Tsudoi Toyoda; Soichi Arai; Takashi Kondo; Keiko Abe

SCOPE Maple syrup contains various polyphenols and we investigated the effects of a polyphenol-rich maple syrup extract (MSXH) on the physiology of mice fed a high-fat diet (HFD). METHODS AND RESULTS The mice fed a low-fat diet (LFD), an HFD, or an HFD supplemented with 0.02% (002MSXH) or 0.05% MSXH (005MSXH) for 4 weeks. Global gene expression analysis of the liver was performed, and the differentially expressed genes were classified into three expression patterns; pattern A (LFD < HFD > 002MSXH = 005MSXH, LFD > HFD < 002MSXH = 005MSXH), pattern B (LFD < HFD = 002MSXH > 005MSXH, LFD > HFD = 002MSXH < 005MSXH), and pattern C (LFD < HFD > 002MSXH < 005MSXH, LFD > HFD < 002MSXH > 005MSXH). Pattern A was enriched in glycolysis, fatty acid metabolism, and folate metabolism. Pattern B was enriched in tricarboxylic acid cycle while pattern C was enriched in gluconeogenesis, cholesterol metabolism, amino acid metabolism, and endoplasmic reticulum stress-related event. CONCLUSION Our study suggested that the effects of MSXH ingestion showed (i) dose-dependent pattern involved in energy metabolisms and (ii) reversely pattern involved in stress responses.


bioRxiv | 2018

CTCF looping is established during gastrulation in medaka embryos

Ryohei Nakamura; Yuichi Motai; Masahiko Kumagai; Haruyo Nishiyama; Neva C. Durand; Kaori Kondo; Takashi Kondo; Tatsuya Tsukahara; Atsuko Shimada; Erez Lieberman Aiden; Shinichi Morishita; Hiroyuki Takeda

Genome architecture plays a critical role in gene regulation, but how the structures seen in mature cells emerge during embryonic development remains poorly understood. Here, we study early development in medaka (the Japanese killifish, Oryzias latipes) at 12 time points before, during, and after gastrulation which is the most dramatic event in early embryogenesis, and characterize transcription, protein binding, and genome architecture. We find that gastrulation is most associated with drastic changes in genome architecture, including the formation of the first loops between sites bound by the insulator protein CTCF and great increase in the size of contact domains. However, the position of CTCF is fixed throughout medaka embryogenesis. Interestingly, genome-wide transcription precedes the emergence of mature domains and CTCF-CTCF loops.


Development | 2018

Variant PRC1 competes with retinoic acid-related signals to repress Meis2 in the mouse distal forelimb bud

Nayuta Yakushiji-Kaminatsui; Takashi Kondo; Ken-ichi Hironaka; Jafar Sharif; Takaho A. Endo; Manabu Nakayama; Osamu Masui; Kaori Kondo; Osamu Ohara; Miguel Vidal; Yoshihiro Morishita; Haruhiko Koseki

ABSTRACT Suppression of Meis genes in the distal limb bud is required for proximal-distal (PD) specification of the forelimb. Polycomb group (PcG) factors play a role in downregulation of retinoic acid (RA)-related signals in the distal forelimb bud, causing Meis repression. It is, however, not known whether downregulation of RA-related signals and PcG-mediated proximal gene repression are functionally linked. Here, we reveal that PcG factors and RA-related signals antagonize each other to polarize Meis2 expression along the PD axis in mouse. Supported by mathematical modeling and simulation, we propose that PcG factors are required to adjust the threshold for RA-related signaling to regulate Meis2 expression. Finally, we show that a variant Polycomb repressive complex 1 (PRC1), incorporating PCGF3 and PCGF5, represses Meis2 expression in the distal limb bud. Taken together, we reveal a previously unknown link between PcG proteins and downregulation of RA-related signals to mediate the phase transition of Meis2 transcriptional status during forelimb patterning. Summary: This study reveals a role for the variant PCGF3/5-PRC1 complex in repression of Meis2 expression in the mouse distal forelimb bud by adjusting the threshold of retinoic acid-related signals.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2018

Amelogenin X impacts age-dependent increase of frequency and number in labial incisor grooves in C57BL/6

Masato S. Ota; Kaori Kondo; Yong Li; Sachiko Iseki; Atsuko Yamashita; Carolyn W. Gibson; Takashi Kondo

Labial grooves in maxillary incisors have been reported in several wild-type rodent species. Previous studies have reported age-dependent labial grooves occur in moderate prevalence in C57BL/6 mice; however, very little is known about the occurrence of such grooves. In the present study, we observed age-dependent groove formation in C57BL/6 mice up to 26 months after birth and found that not only the frequency of the appearance of incisor grooves but also the number of grooves increased in an age-dependent manner. We examined the molecular mechanisms of age-dependent groove formation by performing DNA microarray analysis of the incisors of 12-month-old (12M) and 24-month-old (24M) mice. Amelx, encoding the major enamel matrix protein AMELOGENIN, was identified as a 12M-specific gene. Comparing with wild-type mice, the maxillary incisors of Amelx-/- mutants indicated the increase of the frequency and number of labial grooves. These findings suggested that the Amelx gene impacts the age-dependent appearance of the labial incisor groove in C57BL/6 mice.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2018

Postnatal development of bitter taste avoidance behavior in mice is associated with ACTIN-dependent localization of bitter taste receptors to the microvilli of taste cells

Atsuko Yamashita; Kaori Kondo; Yoshimi Kunishima; Sachiko Iseki; Takashi Kondo; Masato S. Ota

Bitter taste avoidance behavior (BAB) plays a fundamental role in the avoidance of toxic substances with a bitter taste. However, the molecular basis underlying the development of BAB is unknown. To study critical developmental events by which taste buds turn into functional organs with BAB, we investigated the early phase development of BAB in postnatal mice in response to bitter-tasting compounds, such as quinine and thiamine. Postnatal mice started to exhibit BAB for thiamine and quinine at postnatal day 5 (PD5) and PD7, respectively. Histological analyses of taste buds revealed the formation of microvilli in the taste pores starting at PD5 and the localization of type 2 taste receptor 119 (TAS2R119) at the microvilli at PD6. Treatment of the tongue epithelium with cytochalasin D (CytD), which disturbs ACTIN polymerization in the microvilli, resulted in the loss of TAS2R119 localization at the microvilli and the loss of BAB for quinine and thiamine. The release of ATP from the circumvallate papillae tissue due to taste stimuli was also declined following CytD treatment. These results suggest that the localization of TAS2R119 at the microvilli of taste pores is critical for the initiation of BAB.


Mechanisms of Development | 2009

09-P026 Combined in silico and in vivo analyses reveal role of Hes1 in taste cell differentiation

Masato S. Ota; Yoshiyuki Kaneko; Kaori Kondo; Soichi Ogishima; Hiroshi Tanaka; Sachiko Iseki; Takashi Kondo

The cellular role of protein kinases (PKs) have been studied extensively, but relatively little is known as to how specific expression of PKs mediate early development and differentiation. We have used directed differentiation of ES cells towards the mesendodermal lineage in combination with microarray analysis to identify a set of PKs that are induced upon differentiation from the pluripotent stage. From these kinases, we identified one previously uncharacterised kinase, Vlk (Vertebrate lonesome kinase) that is well conserved in vertebrates, but which has no homologues outside of the vertebrate lineage. Its kinase domain cannot be classified as a member of any of the previously defined kinase groups, families or sub-families. Although Vlk is specifically expressed in E-cadherin positive cells in early embryogenesis, later its expression is confined to E-cadherin negative mesenchyme. We show that Vlk is enriched in the Golgi apparatus and that targeted disruption leads to a disruption in lung development and a delayed ossification of endochondral bone. Vlk mutants also display neonatal lethality due to respiratory failure with a suckling defect arising from a cleft palate. Our results demonstrate that Vlk is a novel vertebrate specific protein kinase that is essential for mesenchymal function.

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Masato S. Ota

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Sachiko Iseki

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Yuki Watanabe

Sapporo Medical University

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