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Dive into the research topics where Kazutoyo Terada is active.

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Featured researches published by Kazutoyo Terada.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2004

hsp70-DnaJ chaperone pair prevents nitric oxide- and CHOP-induced apoptosis by inhibiting translocation of Bax to mitochondria.

Tomomi Gotoh; Kazutoyo Terada; Seiichi Oyadomari; Masataka Mori

AbstractWe reported that the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress pathway involving CHOP, a member of the C/EBP transcription factor family, plays a key role in nitric oxide (NO)-mediated apoptosis of macrophages and pancreatic β cells. We also showed that the cytosolic chaperone pair of hsp70 and dj1 (hsp40/hdj-1) or dj2 (HSDJ/hdj-2) prevents NO-mediated apoptosis upstream of cytochrome c release from mitochondria. To analyze roles of the chaperone pair in preventing apoptosis, RAW 264.7 macrophages stably expressing hsp70 and dj1 or dj2 were established. The chaperone pair prevented LPS/IFN-γ-induced and NO-mediated apoptosis downstream of CHOP induction. hsp70 mutant protein lacking the ATPase domain or the C-terminal EEVD sequence were not effective in preventing CHOP-induced apoptosis. A mutant dj2 lacking the C-terminal prenylation CaaX motif, was also not effective. When wild-type RAW 264.7 cells were treated with LPS/IFN-γ, NO-mediated apoptosis was induced, and proapoptotic Bcl-2 family protein Bax was translocated from cytosol to mitochondria. This translocation was prevented in cells stably expressing hsp70/dj2, and in CHOP knockout cells. Overexpression of CHOP in wild-type cells also induced translocation of Bax and this translocation was prevented in cells expressing hsp70/dj2. CHOP-induced apoptosis was prevented by Bax knock-down. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments showed that Bax interacts with both hsp70 and dj1/dj2. ATPase domain of hsp70 was necessary for the binding with Bax. These findings indicate that CHOP-induced apoptosis is mediated by translocation of Bax from the cytosol to the mitochondria, and hsp70/dj1 or dj2 chaperone pair prevents apoptosis by interacting with Bax and preventing translocation to the mitochondria.


FEBS Letters | 1996

Molecular cloning of cDNA for nonhepatic mitochondrial arginase (arginase II) and comparison of its induction with nitric oxide synthase in a murine macrophage-like cell line

Tomomi Gotoh; Takashi Sonoki; Akitoshi Nagasaki; Kazutoyo Terada; Masaki Takiguchi; Masataka Mori

Arginase exists in two isoforms. Liver‐type arginase (arginase I) is expressed almost exclusively in the liver and catalyzes the last step of urea synthesis, whereas the nonhepatic type (arginase II) is expressed in extrahepatic tissues. Arginase II has been proposed to play a role in down‐regulation of nitric oxide synthesis. A cDNA for human arginase II was isolated. A polypeptide of 354 amino acid residues including the putative NH2‐terminal presequence for mitochondrial import was predicted. It was 59% identical with arginase I. The arginase II precursor synthesized in vitro was imported into isolated mitochondria and proteolytically processed. mRNA for human arginase II was present in the kidney and other tissues, but was not detected in the liver. Arginase II mRNA was coinduced with nitric oxide synthase mRNA in murine macrophage‐like RAW 264.7 cells by lipopolysaccharide. This induction was enhanced by dexamethasone and dibutyryl cAMP, and was prevented by interferon‐γ. Possible roles of arginase II in NO synthesis are discussed.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Human DnaJ Homologs dj2 and dj3, and bag-1 Are Positive Cochaperones of hsc70

Kazutoyo Terada; Masataka Mori

DnaJ is an essential cochaperone of mammalian heat shock cognate 70 (hsc70) protein. We previously found that dj2 (HSDJ/hdj-2/rdj1), rather than dj1 (hsp40/hdj-1), is a partner DnaJ for the hsc70-based chaperone system. Here, we compared the distribution of dj1, dj2, and the newly found dj3 (cpr3/DNJ3/HIRIP4/rdj2) in cultured cells. Both dj3 as well as dj2 were farnesylated and were ubiquitously expressed. In immunocytochemical and subfractionation studies, these two proteins colocalized with hsc70 under normal conditions. However, dj1 and hsc70 apparently colocalized in the nucleoli after heat shock. Simultaneous depletion of dj2 and dj3 from rabbit reticulocyte lysate markedly reduced mitochondrial import of pre-ornithine transcarbamylase and refolding of guanidine-denatured luciferase. Re-addition of either dj2 or dj3 led to recovery of these reactions. In a reconstituted system, both hsc70-dj2 and hsc70-dj3 were effective in protein refolding. Anti-apoptotic protein bag-1 further stimulated ATP hydrolysis and protein refolding by both pairs. Thus, dj2 and dj3 are the partner DnaJs of hsc70 within the cell, functionally similar and much more efficient than dj1, and bag-1 is a positive cochaperone of the hsc70-dj2 and hsc70-dj3 systems.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2003

AIP is a mitochondrial import mediator that binds to both import receptor Tom20 and preproteins.

Masato Yano; Kazutoyo Terada; Masataka Mori

Most mitochondrial preproteins are maintained in a loosely folded import-competent conformation by cytosolic chaperones, and are imported into mitochondria by translocator complexes containing a preprotein receptor, termed translocase of the outer membrane of mitochondria (Tom) 20. Using two-hybrid screening, we identified arylhydrocarbon receptor–interacting protein (AIP), an FK506-binding protein homologue, interacting with Tom20. The extreme COOH-terminal acidic segment of Tom20 was required for interaction with tetratricopeptide repeats of AIP. An in vitro import assay indicated that AIP prevents preornithine transcarbamylase from the loss of import competency. In cultured cells, overexpression of AIP enhanced preornithine transcarbamylase import, and depletion of AIP by RNA interference impaired the import. An in vitro binding assay revealed that AIP specifically binds to mitochondrial preproteins. Formation of a ternary complex of Tom20, AIP, and preprotein was observed. Hsc70 was also found to bind to AIP. An aggregation suppression assay indicated that AIP has a chaperone-like activity to prevent substrate proteins from aggregation. These results suggest that AIP functions as a cytosolic factor that mediates preprotein import into mitochondria.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

Visualization of Mitochondrial Protein Import in Cultured Mammalian Cells with Green Fluorescent Protein and Effects of Overexpression of the Human Import Receptor Tom20

Masato Yano; Masaki Kanazawa; Kazutoyo Terada; Chewawiwat Namchai; Masaru Yamaizumi; Brendon Hanson; Nicholas J. Hoogenraad; Masataka Mori

The presequence of the ornithine transcarbamylase precursor (pOTC) was fused to green fluorescent protein (GFP), yielding pOTC-GFP and pOTCN-GFP containing the presequence plus 4 and 58 residues of mature ornithine transcarbamylase, respectively. When GFP cDNA was transfected into COS-7 cells, the cytosol and nucleus were fluorescent. On the other hand, pOTC-GFP cDNA gave strong fluorescence of a unique mitochondrial pattern. After fractionation of cells expressing pOTC-GFP with digitonin, fluorescence was recovered mostly in the particulate fraction. Immunoblot analysis showed that processed GFP was present in the particulate fraction, whereas pOTC-GFP was recovered in both the soluble and particulate fractions. pOTC-GFP and pOTCN-GFP synthesized in vitro were imported efficiently into the isolated mitochondria. Single and triple amino acid mutations in the presequence resulted in impaired mitochondrial import and in a loss of mitochondrial fluorescence. Perinuclear aggregation of fluorescent mitochondria was observed when the human mitochondrial import receptor Tom20 (hTom20) was coexpressed with pOTC-GFP. Overexpression of hTom20 (not ΔhTom20, which lacks the anchor sequence) resulted in stimulated mitochondrial import of pOTC-GFP in COS-7 cells. When pOTC-GFP cDNA was microinjected into nuclei of human fibroblast cells, mitochondrial fluorescence was detected as early as 2-3 h after injection. These results show that GFP fusion protein can be used to visualize mitochondrial structures and to monitor mitochondrial protein import in a single cell in real time.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2014

Role of Endothelial Cell–Derived Angptl2 in Vascular Inflammation Leading to Endothelial Dysfunction and Atherosclerosis Progression

Eiji Horio; Tsuyoshi Kadomatsu; Keishi Miyata; Yasumichi Arai; Kentaro Hosokawa; Yasufumi Doi; Toshiharu Ninomiya; Haruki Horiguchi; Motoyoshi Endo; Mitsuhisa Tabata; Hirokazu Tazume; Zhe Tian; Otowa Takahashi; Kazutoyo Terada; Motohiro Takeya; Hiroyuki Hao; Nobuyoshi Hirose; Takashi Minami; Toshio Suda; Yutaka Kiyohara; Hisao Ogawa; Koichi Kaikita; Yuichi Oike

Objective—Cardiovascular disease (CVD), the most common morbidity resulting from atherosclerosis, remains a frequent cause of death. Efforts to develop effective therapeutic strategies have focused on vascular inflammation as a critical pathology driving atherosclerosis progression. Nonetheless, molecular mechanisms underlying this activity remain unclear. Here, we ask whether angiopoietin-like protein 2 (Angptl2), a proinflammatory protein, contributes to vascular inflammation that promotes atherosclerosis progression. Approach and Results—Histological analysis revealed abundant Angptl2 expression in endothelial cells and macrophages infiltrating atheromatous plaques in patients with cardiovascular disease. Angptl2 knockout in apolipoprotein E–deficient mice (ApoE−/−/Angptl2−/−) attenuated atherosclerosis progression by decreasing the number of macrophages infiltrating atheromatous plaques, reducing vascular inflammation. Bone marrow transplantation experiments showed that Angptl2 deficiency in endothelial cells attenuated atherosclerosis development. Conversely, ApoE−/− mice crossed with transgenic mice expressing Angptl2 driven by the Tie2 promoter (ApoE−/−/Tie2-Angptl2 Tg), which drives Angptl2 expression in endothelial cells but not monocytes/macrophages, showed accelerated plaque formation and vascular inflammation because of increased numbers of infiltrated macrophages in atheromatous plaques. Tie2-Angptl2 Tg mice alone did not develop plaques but exhibited endothelium-dependent vasodilatory dysfunction, likely because of decreased production of endothelial cell–derived nitric oxide. Conversely, Angptl2−/− mice exhibited less severe endothelial dysfunction than did wild-type mice when fed a high-fat diet. In vitro, Angptl2 activated proinflammatory nuclear factor-&kgr;B signaling in endothelial cells and increased monocyte/macrophage chemotaxis. Conclusions—Endothelial cell–derived Angptl2 accelerates vascular inflammation by activating proinflammatory signaling in endothelial cells and increasing macrophage infiltration, leading to endothelial dysfunction and atherosclerosis progression.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2000

Identification and Functional Analysis of Human Tom22 for Protein Import into Mitochondria

Masato Yano; Nicholas J. Hoogenraad; Kazutoyo Terada; Masataka Mori

ABSTRACT Mitochondria have a receptor complex in the outer membrane which recognizes and translocates mitochondrial proteins synthesized in the cytosol. We report here the identification and functional analysis of human Tom22 (hTom22). hTom22 has an N-terminal negatively charged region exposed to the cytosol, a putative transmembrane region, and a C-terminal intermembrane space region with little negative charge. Tom22 forms a complex with Tom20, and its cytosolic domain functions as an import receptor as in fungi. An import inhibition assay, using pre-ornithine transcarbamylase (pOTC) derivatives and a series of hTom22 deletion mutants, showed that the C-terminal segment of the cytosolic domain is important for presequence binding, whereas the N-terminal domain is important for binding to the mature portion of pOTC. No evidence for pOTC interaction with the Tom22 intermembrane space domain was obtained. Binding studies revealed that the presequence is critical for pOTC binding to Tom20, whereas both the presequence and mature portion are important for binding to Tom22. A cell-free immunoprecipitation assay indicated that an internal segment of the Tom22 cytosolic domain is important for interaction with Tom20.


The EMBO Journal | 2005

A type I DnaJ homolog, DjA1, regulates androgen receptor signaling and spermatogenesis

Kazutoyo Terada; Kentaro Yomogida; Tomoaki Imai; Hiroshi Kiyonari; Naoki Takeda; Tsuyoshi Kadomatsu; Masato Yano; Shinichi Aizawa; Masataka Mori

Two type I DnaJ homologs DjA1 (DNAJA1; dj2, HSDJ/hdj‐2, rdj1) and DjA2 (DNAJA2; dj3, rdj2) work similarly as a cochaperone of Hsp70s in protein folding and mitochondrial protein import in vitro. To study the in vivo role of DjA1, we generated DjA1‐mutant mice. Surprisingly, loss of DjA1 in mice led to severe defects in spermatogenesis that involve aberrant androgen signaling. Transplantation experiments with green fluorescent protein‐labeled spermatogonia into DjA1−/− mice revealed a primary defect of Sertoli cells in maintaining spermiogenesis at steps 8 and 9. In Sertoli cells of DjA1−/− mice, the androgen receptor markedly accumulated with enhanced transcription of several androgen‐responsive genes, including Pem and testin. Disruption of Sertoli–germ cell adherens junctions was also evident in DjA1−/− mice. Experiments with DjA1−/− fibroblasts and primary Sertoli cells indicated aberrant androgen receptor signaling. These results revealed a critical role of DjA1 in spermiogenesis and suggest that DjA1 and DjA2 are not functionally equivalent in vivo.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1995

Role of heat shock cognate 70 protein in import of ornithine transcarbamylase precursor into mammalian mitochondria.

Kazutoyo Terada; Kenzo Ohtsuka; N Imamoto; Yoshihiro Yoneda; Masataka Mori

The roles of the 70-kDa cytosolic heat shock protein (hsp70) in import of precursor proteins into the mitochondria were postulated to be related to (i) unfolding of precursor proteins in the cytosol, (ii) maintenance of the import-competent state, and (iii) unfolding and transport of precursor proteins through contact sites, in cooperation with matrix hsp70. We examined roles of cytosolic hsp70 family members in import of ornithine transcarbamylase precursor (pOTC) into rat liver mitochondria, using an in vitro import system and antibodies against hsp70. Immunoblot analysis using an hsc70 (70-kDa heat shock cognate protein)-specific monoclonal antibody and a polyclonal antibody that reacts with both hsc70 and hsp70 showed that hsc70 is the only or major form of hsp70 family members in the rabbit reticulocyte lysate. The hsc70 antibody did not inhibit pOTC import when added prior to import assay. However, when pOTC was synthesized in the presence of the antibody and then subjected to import assay, pOTC import was markedly decreased. pOTC import was also decreased when the precursor was synthesized in the lysate depleted for hsc70 by treatment with hsc70 antibody-conjugated Sepharose. This reduction was almost completely restored by readdition of purified mouse hsc70 during pOTC synthesis. The readdition of hsc70 after pOTC synthesis and only during the import assay was not effective. Thus, once import competence of pOTC was lost, hsc70 was ineffective for restoration. Newly synthesized pOTC lost import competence in the absence of hsc70 somewhat more rapidly than in its presence. These results indicate that hsc70 is required during pOTC synthesis and not during import into the mitochondria. hsc70 presumably binds to pOTC polypeptide and maintains it in an import-competent form.


Science Signaling | 2014

The Secreted Protein ANGPTL2 Promotes Metastasis of Osteosarcoma Cells Through Integrin α5β1, p38 MAPK, and Matrix Metalloproteinases

Haruki Odagiri; Tsuyoshi Kadomatsu; Motoyoshi Endo; Tetsuro Masuda; Masaki Suimye Morioka; Shigetomo Fukuhara; Takeshi Miyamoto; Eisuke Kobayashi; Keishi Miyata; Jun Aoi; Haruki Horiguchi; Naotaka Nishimura; Kazutoyo Terada; Toshitake Yakushiji; Ichiro Manabe; Naoki Mochizuki; Hiroshi Mizuta; Yuichi Oike

Preventing signaling by ANGPTL2, which is stimulated by the tumor microenvironment, could inhibit metastasis. Microenvironment Drives Osteosarcoma Metastasis The selective pressures of the tumor microenvironment alter the behavior of cancer cells. Odagiri et al. found that the expression of ANGPTL2, encoding the secreted angiopoietin-like protein 2, increased in osteosarcoma cells grown in xenografts in mice or cultured in conditions that mimic the tumor microenvironment. Silencing ANGPTL2 or overexpressing a proteolytically cleaved form decreased matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) activity, delayed the onset of metastasis from xenografts, and prolonged survival in mice. The abundance of ANGPTL2 correlated with that of MMP-9 in patient samples, and both inversely correlated with metastasis-free survival in patients. The findings highlight the influence of the tumor microenvironment and implicate ANGPTL2 as a target to hinder metastasis in osteosarcoma. The tumor microenvironment can enhance the invasive capacity of tumor cells. We showed that expression of angiopoietin-like protein 2 (ANGPTL2) in osteosarcoma (OS) cell lines increased and the methylation of its promoter decreased with time when grown as xenografts in mice compared with culture. Compared with cells grown in normal culture conditions, the expression of genes encoding DNA demethylation–related enzymes increased in tumor cells implanted into mice or grown in hypoxic, serum-starved culture conditions. ANGPTL2 expression in OS cell lines correlated with increased tumor metastasis and decreased animal survival by promoting tumor cell intravasation mediated by the integrin α5β1, p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase, and matrix metalloproteinases. The tolloid-like 1 (TLL1) protease cleaved ANGPTL2 into fragments in vitro that did not enhance tumor progression when overexpressed in xenografts. Expression of TLL1 was weak in OS patient tumors, suggesting that ANGPTL2 may not be efficiently cleaved upon secretion from OS cells. These findings demonstrate that preventing ANGPTL2 signaling stimulated by the tumor microenvironment could inhibit tumor cell migration and metastasis.

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