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Dive into the research topics where Kazuaki Yoshizato is active.

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Featured researches published by Kazuaki Yoshizato.


Diabetes | 1997

Impact of Natural IRS-1 Mutations on Insulin Signals: Mutations of IRS-1 in the PTB Domain and Near SH2 Protein Binding Sites Result in Impaired Function at Different Steps of IRS-1 Signaling

Ryohei Yoshimura; Eiichi Araki; Sachiko Ura; Mikio Todaka; Kaku Tsuruzoe; Noboru Furukawa; Hiroyuki Motoshima; Kazuaki Yoshizato; Kengo Kaneko; Kohji Matsuda; Hideki Kishikawa; Motoaki Shichiri

Insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1) is one of the major substrates of insulin receptor tyrosine kinase and mediates various insulin signals downstream. In this study, we have examined the impact of three natural IRS-1 mutations identified in NIDDM patients (G971R, P170R, and m209T) on insulin signaling. G971R is located near src homology 2 protein binding sites, and P170R and m209T are located in the phosphotyrosine binding domain of IRS-1. 32D-IR cells, stably overexpressing human insulin receptor, were transfected with wild-type human IRS-1 cDNA (WT) or three mutant IRS-1 cDNAs and analyzed. All the cell lines expressing mutant IRS-1 showed a significant reduction in ]3H]thymidine incorporation compared with WT. Upon insulin stimulation, cells expressing G971R showed a 39% decrease (P < 0.005) in phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI 3-kinase) activity, a 43% decrease (P < 0.01) in binding of the 85-kDa regulatory subunit of PI 3-kinase, and a 22% decrease (P < 0.05) in mitogen-activated protein kinase activity compared with those expressing WT. Cells expressing P170R and m209T showed slight but significant decreases in PI 3-kinase activity (17 and 14%, respectively; both P < 0.05) and in binding of p85 (22 and 16%, respectively; both P < 0.05) and a greater decrease in mitogen-activated protein kinase activity (41 and 43%, respectively; both P < 0.005) compared with WT. After insulin stimulation, cells expressing P170R and m209T showed significant decreases in IRS-1 phosphorylation (37 and 42%, respectively; both P < 0.05) and in IRS-1 binding to the insulin receptor (48 and 53%, respectively; P < 0.01) compared with WT. G971R showed no changes in IRS-1 phosphorylation and in IRS-1 binding to the insulin receptor compared with WT. These data suggest that the impaired mitogenic response of P170R and m209T was mainly due to reduced binding to the insulin receptor, whereas the impaired response of G971R was mainly due to reduced association with PI 3-kinase p85.


Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice | 1999

Insulin inhibits glucagon secretion by the activation of PI3-kinase in In-R1-G9 cells

Kengo Kaneko; Tetsuya Shirotani; Eiichi Araki; Kazuya Matsumoto; Tetsuya Taguchi; Hiroyuki Motoshima; Kazuaki Yoshizato; Hideki Kishikawa; Motoaki Shichiri

Intracellular mechanisms through which insulin inhibits glucagon secretion remain to be elucidated in glucagon secreting cells. In this study, we confirmed that, in In-R1-G9 cells, a pancreatic alpha cell line, insulin stimulated phosphorylation of insulin receptor substrate-1 (IRS-1) and activated phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-kinase). We further studied, using wortmannin, an inhibitor of PI3-kinase, whether the inhibitory effect of insulin on glucagon secretion was mediated through PI3-kinase pathway in these cells. In static incubation studies, insulin significantly inhibited glucagon secretion at 2, 6 and 12 h, which was completely abolished by pretreatment with wortmannin. In perifusion studies, insulin significantly suppressed glucagon secretion after 10 min, which was also blocked by wortmannin. Insulin also reduced glucagon mRNA at 6 and 12 h but not at 2 h. Wortmannin also abolished insulin-induced reduction of glucagon mRNA. Insulin increased the amount of 85 kDa subunit of PI3-kinase in plasma membrane fraction (PM), with a reciprocal decrease of the kinase in cytosol fraction (CY). Insulin also increased PI3-kinase activity in PM, but not in CY. Our results suggest that insulin suppressed glucagon secretion by inhibiting glucagon release and gene expression. Both actions were mediated by activation of PI3-kinase. Recruitment and activation of PI3-kinase in plasma membrane might be relevant at least in part to insulin-induced inhibition of glucagon release.


Diabetes | 1997

Cell-Specific Regulation of IRS-1 Gene Expression: Role of E Box and C/EBP Binding Site in HepG2 Cells and CHO Cells

Kohji Matsuda; Eiichi Araki; Ryohei Yoshimura; Kaku Tsuruzoe; Noboru Furukawa; Kengo Kaneko; Hiroyuki Motoshima; Kazuaki Yoshizato; Hideki Kishikawa; Motoaki Shichiri

Insulin receptor substrate 1 (IRS-1) is one of the major substrates of insulin receptor tyrosine kinase and mediates multiple insulin signals downstream. We have previously shown that the levels of IRS-1 mRNA varied in different tissues. To elucidate the molecular mechanisms of the tissue specific regulation of IRS-1, we have studied the cis-acting elements and transacting factors in CHO and HepG2 cells. Using the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) assay with the various deletion mutants of the IRS-1 promoter–CAT fusion plasmids, several regions responsible for positive or negative regulation in each cell line were identified. A region from −1645 to −1585 bp, which regulated expression negatively in CHO cells and positively in HepG2 cells, was further analyzed. Within this region sa fragment from −1645 to −1605 bp upregulated the IRS-1 promoter only in HepG2 cells, whereas a fragment from −1605 to −1585 bp downregulated only in CHO cells. In the gel mobility shift assay, several nuclear proteins that bind to these fragments were detected, and among them, two nuclear proteins that bind to a potential E box (nucleotide [nt] −1635 to −1630) and two nuclear proteins that bind to a potential C/EBP binding site (nt −1599 to −1591) were identified in HepG2 and CHO cells, respectively. CAT assays using promoters mutated at the E box or at the C/EBP binding site revealed that these sequences were responsible for cell-specific regulation of the IRS-1 gene. We therefore concluded that the two nuclear proteins that bind to the E box regulate IRS-1 gene expression positively in HepG2 cells and the two nuclear proteins that bind to the C/EBP binding site regulate it negatively in CHO cells.


Diabetologia | 1998

Cellular characterization of pituitary adenoma cell line (AtT20 cell) transfected with insulin, glucose transporter type 2 (GLUT2) and glucokinase genes: insulin secretion in response to physiological concentrations of glucose.

S. Motoyoshi; Tetsuya Shirotani; Eiichi Araki; K. Sakai; Kengo Kaneko; Hiroyuki Motoshima; Kazuaki Yoshizato; Atsuhisa Shirakami; Hideki Kishikawa; Motoaki Shichiri

Summary We investigated the mechanisms of insulin secretion by transfecting into a pituitary adenoma cell line (AtT20) a combination of genes encoding human insulin (HI), glucose transporter type 2 (GLUT2) and glucokinase (GK), followed by studying the characteristics of these cells. In static incubation, a cell line transfected with insulin gene alone (AtT20HI) secreted mature human insulin but this was not in a glucose-dependent manner. Other cell lines transfected with insulin and GLUT2 genes (AtT20HI-GLUT2–3) or with insulin and GK genes (AtT20HI-GK-1) secreted insulin in response to glucose concentrations of only less than 1 mmol/l. In contrast, cell lines transfected with insulin, GLUT2 and GK genes (AtT20HI-GLUT2-GK-6, AtT20HI-GLUT2-GK-7 and AtT20HI-GLUT2-GK-10) showed a glucose-dependent insulin secretion up to 25 mmol/l glucose. Glucose utilization and oxidation were increased in AtT20HI-GLUT2-GK cell lines but not in AtT20HI, AtT20HI-GLUT2–3 and AtT20HI-GK-1 cells at physiological glucose concentrations, compared with AtT20 cells. Diazoxide, nifedipine and 2-deoxy glucose suppressed (p < 0.05) glucose stimulated insulin secretion in AtT20HI-GLUT2-GK-6 cells. Glibenclamide, KCl or corticotropin releasing factor (CRF) stimulated (p < 0.05) insulin secretion both in AtT20HI and AtT20HI-GLUT2-GK-6 cells. Insulin secretion stimulated by glibenclamide, KCl or CRF was further enhanced by the addition of 25 mmol/l glucose in AtT20HI-GLUT2-GK-6 cells but not in AtT20HI cells. In perifusion experiments, a stepwise increase in glucose concentration from 5 to 25 mmol/l stimulated insulin secretion in AtT20HI-GLUT2-GK cell lines but the response lacked a clear first phase of insulin secretion. Our results suggest that both GLUT2 and glucokinase are necessary for the glucose stimulated insulin secretion in at least rodent cell lines, and that other element(s) are necessary for a biphasic insulin secretion typically observed in beta cells. [Diabetologia (1998) 41: 1492–1501]


Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice | 2000

Bradykinin enhances insulin receptor tyrosine kinase in 32D cells reconstituted with bradykinin and insulin signaling pathways

Hiroyuki Motoshima; Eiichi Araki; Toshihiko Nishiyama; Tetsuya Taguchi; Kengo Kaneko; Yoshiaki Hirashima; Kazuaki Yoshizato; Atsuhisa Shirakami; Koji Sakai; Junji Kawashima; Tetsuya Shirotani; Hideki Kishikawa; Motoaki Shichiri

We have previously shown that bradykinin potentiated insulin-induced glucose uptake through GLUT4 translocation in canine adipocytes and skeletal muscles. The aim of this study was to determine the molecular mechanism of bradykinin enhancement of the insulin signal. For this purpose, 32D cells, which express a limited number of insulin receptors and lack endogenous bradykinin B2 receptor (BK2R) or insulin receptor substrate (IRS)-1 were transfected with BK2R cDNA and/or insulin receptor cDNA and/or IRS-1 cDNA, and analyzed. In 32D cells that expressed BK2R and insulin receptor (32D-BKR/IR), bradykinin alone had no effect on the phosphorylation of the insulin receptor, but it enhanced insulin-stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation of the insulin receptor. In 32D cells that expressed BK2R, insulin receptor and IRS-1 (32D-BKR/IR/IRS1), bradykinin also enhanced insulin-stimulated tyrosine phosphorylation of the insulin receptor and IRS-1. An increase in insulin-stimulated phosphorylation of IRS-1 by treatment with bradykinin in 32D-BKR/IR/IRS1 cell was associated with increased binding of 85 kD subunit of phosphatidylinositol 3 (PI 3)-kinase and increased IRS-1 associated PI 3-kinase activity. These effects of bradykinin were not observed in 32D cells which lack the expression of BK2R (32D-IR/IRS1) or insulin receptor (32D-BKR/IRS1). Furthermore, tyrosine phosphatase activity against insulin receptor beta-subunit in plasma membrane fraction of 32D-BKR/IR cells was significantly reduced by bradykinin, suggesting that the effect of bradykinin was in part mediated by inhibition of protein tyrosine phosphatase(s). Our results clearly demonstrated that bradykinin enhanced insulin-stimulated tyrosine kinase activity of the insulin receptor and downstream insulin signal cascade through the BK2R mediated signal pathway.


Hormone Research in Paediatrics | 2004

Preclinical Cushing's syndrome resulting from black adrenal adenoma. A case report.

Hiroshi Tokunagaa; Nobuhiro Miyamura; Kazunari Sasaki; Kazuaki Yoshizato; Mina Itasaka; Kazuhiko Nakamaru; Mihoshi Suefuji; Junji Kawashima; Kazuya Matsumoto; Hironobu Sasano; Eiichi Araki

A 59-year-old Japanese woman, admitted for the treatment of diabetes mellitus and hypertension, was incidentally discovered to have a solid mass of 1.4 cm in diameter by CT scan with the attenuation value of 38 Hounsfield units, relatively higher for ordinary adrenal adenomas. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed no reduction of signal intensity on opposite-phase image on T1-weighted sequence. Adrenal scintigraphy imaging with 131I-adosterol did not show any uptake of the isotope in the area corresponding to both adrenals. Although she had no characteristic feature of overt Cushing’s syndrome, her serum cortisol level was not suppressed after an overnight dexamethasone administration. She was diagnosed as having preclinical Cushing’s syndrome. Left adrenalectomy was performed, revealing the well-circumscribed black tumor, mainly consisted of compact cell, in which cytoplasm was filled with numerous granules pigmented with dark to golden brown colors on hematoxylin-eosin staining. These findings suggested that her incidentaloma was a black adrenal adenoma. Production of steroid hormones was confirmed by immunohistochemical analysis of steroidogenic enzymes and by measurement of the tissue contents of hormones, whose levels were comparable with those in adenomas of overt Cushing’s syndrome. This is the first case report of preclinical Cushing’s syndrome resulting from black adrenal adenoma.


Diabetes | 1998

Creation and characterization of a mitochondrial DNA-depleted pancreatic beta-cell line: impaired insulin secretion induced by glucose, leucine, and sulfonylureas.

Kaku Tsuruzoe; Eiichi Araki; Noboru Furukawa; Tetsuya Shirotani; Kazuya Matsumoto; Kengo Kaneko; Hiroyuki Motoshima; Kazuaki Yoshizato; Atsuhisa Shirakami; Hideki Kishikawa; Jun-ichi Miyazaki; Motoaki Shichiri


Metabolism-clinical and Experimental | 2000

Involvement of Bradykinin in Acute Exercise-Induced Increase of Glucose Uptake and GLUT-4 Translocation in Skeletal Muscle: Studies in Normal and Diabetic Humans and Rats

Tetsuya Taguchi; Hideki Kishikawa; Hiroyuki Motoshima; K. Sakai; Toshihiko Nishiyama; Kazuaki Yoshizato; Atsuhisa Shirakami; Tetsushi Toyonaga; Tetsuya Shirotani; Eiichi Araki; Motoaki Shichiri


Endocrine Journal | 1999

Possible involvement of atypical protein kinase C (PKC) in glucose-sensitive expression of the human insulin gene: DNA-binding activity and transcriptional activity of pancreatic and duodenal homeobox gene-1 (PDX-1) are enhanced via calphostin C-sensitive but phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) and Gö 6976-insensitive pathway.

Noboru Furukawa; Tetsuya Shirotani; Eiichi Araki; Kengo Kaneko; Mikio Todaka; Kazuya Matsumoto; Kaku Tsuruzoe; Hiroyuki Motoshima; Kazuaki Yoshizato; Hideki Kishikawa; Motoaki Shichiri


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2001

Identification of a cis-acting element and a novel trans-acting factor of the human insulin receptor gene in HepG2 and rat liver cells.

Kazuaki Yoshizato; Tetsuya Shirotani; Noboru Furukawa; Tetsuya Taguchi; Hiroyuki Motoshima; Tetsushi Toyonaga; Yoshiaki Hirashima; Junji Kawashima; Yousuke Ebina; Motoaki Shichiri; Eiichi Araki

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