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Dive into the research topics where Kazuko Takahashi-Niki is active.

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Featured researches published by Kazuko Takahashi-Niki.


Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity | 2013

Neuroprotective function of DJ-1 in Parkinson's disease.

Hiroyoshi Ariga; Kazuko Takahashi-Niki; Izumi Kato; Hiroshi Maita; Takeshi Niki; Sanae M. M. Iguchi-Ariga

Parkinsons disease (PD) is caused by dopaminergic neuronal death in the substantia nigra, resulting in a reduced level of dopamine in the striatum. Oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction are thought to be major causes of neurodegeneration in PD. Although genetic and environmental factors are thought to affect the onset of PD, precise mechanisms at the molecular level have not been elucidated. The DJ-1 gene is a causative gene for familial PD (park7) and also an oncogene. DJ-1 has various functions, including transcriptional regulation, antioxidative stress reaction, and chaperone, protease, and mitochondrial regulation, and its activity is regulated by its oxidative status, especially that of cysteine 106 (C106) of DJ-1. Excess oxidation of DJ-1, which renders DJ-1 inactive, has been observed in patients with sporadic PD and Alzheimers disease, suggesting that DJ-1 also participates in the onset and pathogenesis of sporadic PD as well as familial PD. DJ-1 is also a stress sensor and its expression is increased upon various stresses, including oxidative stress. In this review, we describe functions of DJ-1 against oxidative stress and possible roles of DJ-1 in the pathogenesis of PD.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2006

Proper SUMO-1 conjugation is essential to DJ-1 to exert its full activities

Y Shinbo; Takeshi Niki; Takahiro Taira; Hiromasa Ooe; Kazuko Takahashi-Niki; Chinatsu Maita; C Seino; Sanae M.M. Iguchi-Ariga; Hiroyoshi Ariga

DJ-1 is a multifunctional protein that plays roles in transcriptional regulation and antioxidative stress, and loss of its function is thought to result in the onset of Parkinsons disease (PD). Here, we report that DJ-1 was sumoylated on a lysine residue at amino-acid number 130 (K130) by PIASxα or PIASy. The K130 mutation abrogated all of the functions of DJ-1, including ras-dependent transformation, cell growth promotion and anti-UV-induced apoptosis activities. Sumoylation of DJ-1 was increased after UV irradiation concomitant with a pI shift to an acidic point of DJ-1. Furthermore, L166P, a mutant DJ-1 found in PD patients, and K130RX, an artificial mutant containing four mutations in DJ-1, were improperly sumoylated, and they became insoluble, partly localized in the mitochondria and degraded by the proteasome system. Both L166P-expressing cells and DJ-1-knockdown cells were found to be highly susceptible to UV-induced cell apoptosis.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2009

DJ-1 binds to mitochondrial complex I and maintains its activity

Takuya Hayashi; Chikako Ishimori; Kazuko Takahashi-Niki; Takahiro Taira; Y. A. Kim; Hiroshi Maita; Chinatsu Maita; Hiroyoshi Ariga; Sanae M.M. Iguchi-Ariga

Parkinsons disease (PD) is caused by neuronal cell death, and oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction are thought to be responsible for onset of PD. DJ-1, a causative gene product of a familial form of Parkinsons disease, PARK7, plays roles in transcriptional regulation and anti-oxidative stress. The possible mitochondrial function of DJ-1 has been proposed, but its exact function remains unclear. In this study, we found that DJ-1 directly bound to NDUFA4 and ND1, nuclear and mitochondrial DNA-encoding subunits of mitochondrial complex I, respectively, and was colocalized with complex I and that complex I activity was reduced in DJ-1-knockdown NIH3T3 and HEK293 cells. These findings suggest that DJ-1 is an integral mitochondrial protein and that DJ-1 plays a role in maintenance of mitochondrial complex I activity.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Oxidative status of DJ-1-dependent activation of dopamine synthesis through interaction of tyrosine hydroxylase and 4-dihydroxy-L-phenylalanine (L-DOPA) decarboxylase with DJ-1.

Shizuma Ishikawa; Takahiro Taira; Takeshi Niki; Kazuko Takahashi-Niki; Chinatsu Maita; Hiroshi Maita; Hiroyoshi Ariga; Sanae M.M. Iguchi-Ariga

Parkinson disease (PD) is caused by loss of dopamine, which is synthesized from tyrosine by two enzymes, tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and 4-dihydroxy-l-phenylalanine decarboxylase (DDC). DJ-1 is a causative gene for the familial form of PD, but little is known about the roles of DJ-1 in dopamine synthesis. In this study, we found that DJ-1 directly bound to TH and DDC and positively regulated their activities in human dopaminergic cells. Mutants of DJ-1 found in PD patients, including heterozygous mutants, lost their activity and worked as dominant-negative forms toward wild-type DJ-1. When cells were treated with H2O2, 6-hydroxydopamine, or 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium, changes in activities of TH and DDC accompanied by oxidation of cysteine 106 of DJ-1 occurred. It was found that DJ-1 possessing Cys-106 with SH and SOH forms was active and that DJ-1 possessing Cys-106 with SO2H and SO3H forms was inactive in terms of stimulation of TH and DDC activities. These findings indicate an essential role of DJ-1 in dopamine synthesis and contribution of DJ-1 to the sporadic form of PD.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Human DJ-1-specific Transcriptional Activation of Tyrosine Hydroxylase Gene

Shizuma Ishikawa; Takahiro Taira; Kazuko Takahashi-Niki; Takeshi Niki; Hiroyoshi Ariga; Sanae M. M. Iguchi-Ariga

Loss-of-function mutation in the DJ-1 gene causes a subset of familial Parkinson disease. The mechanism underlying DJ-1-related selective vulnerability in the dopaminergic pathway is, however, not known. DJ-1 has multiple functions, including transcriptional regulation, and one of transcriptional target genes for DJ-1 is the tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) gene, the product of which is a key enzyme for dopamine biosynthesis. It has been reported that DJ-1 is a neuroprotective transcriptional co-activator that sequesters a transcriptional co-repressor polypyrimidine tract-binding protein-associated splicing factor (PSF) from the TH gene promoter. In this study, we found that knockdown of human DJ-1 by small interference RNA in human dopaminergic cell lines attenuated TH gene expression and 4-dihydroxy-l-phenylalanine production but that knockdown or knock-out of mouse DJ-1 in mouse cell lines or in mice did not affect such expression and TH activity. In reporter assays using the human TH gene promoter linked to the luciferase gene, stimulation of TH promoter activity was observed in human cells, but not mouse cells, that had been transfected with DJ-1. Although human DJ-1 and mouse DJ-1 were associated either with human or with mouse PSF, TH promoter activity inhibited by PSF was restored by human DJ-1 but not by mouse DJ-1. Chromatin immunoprecipitation assays revealed that the complex of PSF with DJ-1 bound to the human but not the mouse TH gene promoter. These results suggest a novel species-specific transcriptional regulation of the TH promoter by DJ-1 and one of the mechanisms for no reduction of TH in DJ-1-knock-out mice.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2013

Oxidized DJ-1 inhibits p53 by sequestering p53 from promoters in a DNA-binding affinity-dependent manner

Izumi Kato; Hiroshi Maita; Kazuko Takahashi-Niki; Yoshiro Saito; Noriko Noguchi; Sanae M. M. Iguchi-Ariga; Hiroyoshi Ariga

ABSTRACT DJ-1 is an oncogene and the causative gene for familial Parkinsons disease. Although the oxidative status of DJ-1 at cysteine 106 (C106) is thought to affect all of the activities of DJ-1 and excess oxidation leads to the onset of various diseases, the precise molecular mechanisms underlying the effects of oxidation of DJ-1 on protein-protein interactions of DJ-1 remain unclear. In this study, we found that DJ-1 bound to the DNA-binding region of p53 in a manner dependent on the oxidation of C106. Of the p53 target genes, the expression level and promoter activity of the DUSP1 gene, but not those of the p21 gene, were increased in H2O2-treated DJ-1−/− cells and were decreased in wild-type DJ-1- but not C106S DJ-1-transfected H1299 cells through sequestration of p53 from the DUSP1 promoter by DJ-1. DUSP1 downregulated by oxidized DJ-1 activated extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and decreased apoptosis. The DUSP1 and p21 promoters harbor nonconsensus and consensus p53 recognition sequences, respectively, which have low affinity and high affinity for p53. However, DJ-1 inhibited p21 promoter activity exhibited by p53 mutants harboring low DNA-binding affinity but not by wild-type p53. These results indicate that DJ-1 inhibits the expression of p53 target genes and depend on p53 DNA-binding affinity and oxidation of DJ-1 C106.


Neuroscience Letters | 2005

Expression profiles of genes in DJ-1-knockdown and L166P DJ-1 mutant cells

Hiromi Nishinaga; Kazuko Takahashi-Niki; Takahiro Taira; Athena Andreadis; Sanae M.M. Iguchi-Ariga; Hiroyoshi Ariga

DJ-1 is a novel oncogene and a causative gene for the familial form of Parkinsons disease (PD). DJ-1 has been shown to play roles in anti-oxidative stress by eliminating reactive oxygen species and in transcriptional regulation of genes. Loss of these functions of DJ-1 is thought to trigger the onset of PD. In this study, to identify genes for which expressions are regulated by DJ-1, DNA microarray analyses were carried out using two mouse NIH3T3 cell lines, DJ-1-knockdown cells and cells harboring an exogenously added L 166 P DJ-1 mutant found in PD patients. In both cell lines, drastic changes in expressions of genes, including genes related to stress, apoptosis, oxidative stress and neurotoxicity, were observed and changes in expressions were confirmed by RT-PCR. Of the genes identified, expression level of the extracellular superoxide dismutase (SOD 3) gene was found to decrease in DJ-1-knockdown cells, while expressions of SOD 1 and SOD 2 genes did not change. Furthermore, expression of the tau gene, a gene whose product gives cells neurotoxicity by aggregation, was found to increase at its promoter level in L 166 P DJ-1 cells. These findings suggest that DJ-1 regulates expressions of genes for which functions are thought to be related to cell death or neurodegeneration.


Molecular Neurodegeneration | 2011

Neuroprotective effect of a new DJ-1-binding compound against neurodegeneration in Parkinson's disease and stroke model rats

Yoshihisa Kitamura; Shotaro Watanabe; Masanobu Taguchi; Kentaro Takagi; Takuya Kawata; Kazuko Takahashi-Niki; Hiroyuki Yasui; Hiroshi Maita; Sanae M. M. Iguchi-Ariga; Hiroyoshi Ariga

BackgroundParkinsons disease (PD) and cerebral ischemia are chronic and acute neurodegenerative diseases, respectively, and onsets of these diseases are thought to be induced at least by oxidative stress. PD is caused by decreased dopamine levels in the substantia nigra and striatum, and cerebral ischemia occurs as a result of local reduction or arrest of blood supply. Although a precursor of dopamine and inhibitors of dopamine degradation have been used for PD therapy and an anti-oxidant have been used for cerebral ischemia therapy, cell death progresses during treatment. Reagents that prevent oxidative stress-induced cell death are therefore necessary for fundamental therapies for PD and cerebral ischemia. DJ-1, a causative gene product of a familial form of PD, PARK7, plays roles in transcriptional regulation and anti-oxidative stress, and loss of its function is thought to result in the onset of PD. Superfluous oxidation of cysteine at amino acid 106 (C106) of DJ-1 renders DJ-1 inactive, and such oxidized DJ-1 has been observed in patients with the sporadic form of PD.ResultsIn this study, a compound, comp-23, that binds to DJ-1 was isolated by virtual screening. Comp-23 prevented oxidative stress-induced death of SH-SY5Y cells and primary neuronal cells of the ventral mesencephalon but not that of DJ-1-knockdown SH-SY5Y cells, indicating that the effect of the compound is specific to DJ-1. Comp-23 inhibited the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) induced by oxidative stress and prevented excess oxidation of DJ-1. Furthermore, comp-23 prevented dopaminergic cell death in the substantia nigra and restored movement abnormality in 6-hydroxyldopamine-injected and rotenone-treated PD model rats and mice. Comp-23 also reduced infarct size of cerebral ischemia in rats that had been induced by middle cerebral artery occlusion. Protective activity of comp-23 seemed to be stronger than that of previously identified compound B.ConclusionsThe results indicate that comp-23 exerts a neuroprotective effect by reducing ROS-mediated neuronal injury, suggesting that comp-23 becomes a lead compound for PD and ischemic neurodegeneration therapies.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Transcriptional Activation of Low-Density Lipoprotein Receptor Gene by DJ-1 and Effect of DJ-1 on Cholesterol Homeostasis

Shiori Yamaguchi; Takuya Yamane; Kazuko Takahashi-Niki; Izumi Kato; Takeshi Niki; Matthew S. Goldberg; Jie Shen; Kenji Ishimoto; Takefumi Doi; Sanae M. M. Iguchi-Ariga; Hiroyoshi Ariga

DJ-1 is a novel oncogene and also causative gene for familial Parkinson’s disease park7. DJ-1 has multiple functions that include transcriptional regulation, anti-oxidative reaction and chaperone and mitochondrial regulation. For transcriptional regulation, DJ-1 acts as a coactivator that binds to various transcription factors, resulting in stimulation or repression of the expression of their target genes. In this study, we found the low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR) gene is a transcriptional target gene for DJ-1. Reduced expression of LDLR mRNA and protein was observed in DJ-1-knockdown cells and DJ-1-knockout mice and this occurred at the transcription level. Reporter gene assays using various deletion and point mutations of the LDLR promoter showed that DJ-1 stimulated promoter activity by binding to the sterol regulatory element (SRE) with sterol regulatory element binding protein (SREBP) and that stimulating activity of DJ-1 toward LDLR promoter activity was enhanced by oxidation of DJ-1. Chromatin immunoprecipitation, gel-mobility shift and co-immunoprecipitation assays showed that DJ-1 made a complex with SREBP on the SRE. Furthermore, it was found that serum LDL cholesterol level was increased in DJ-1-knockout male, but not female, mice and that the increased serum LDL cholesterol level in DJ-1-knockout male mice was cancelled by administration with estrogen, suggesting that estrogen compensates the increased level of serum LDL cholesterol in DJ-1-knockout female mice. This is the first report that DJ-1 participates in metabolism of fatty acid synthesis through transcriptional regulation of the LDLR gene.


Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 2014

Immunostaining of Oxidized DJ-1 in Human and Mouse Brains

Yoshiro Saito; Tomohiro Miyasaka; Hiroyuki Hatsuta; Kazuko Takahashi-Niki; Kojiro Hayashi; Yuichiro Mita; Osamu Kusano-Arai; Hiroko Iwanari; Hiroyoshi Ariga; Takao Hamakubo; Yasukazu Yoshida; Etsuo Niki; Shigeo Murayama; Yasuo Ihara; Noriko Noguchi

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