Kazuyoshi Yonezawa
Kobe University
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Featured researches published by Kazuyoshi Yonezawa.
Cell | 2002
Kenta Hara; Yoshiko Maruki; Xiaomeng Long; Ken-ichi Yoshino; Noriko Oshiro; Sujuti Hidayat; Chiharu Tokunaga; Joseph Avruch; Kazuyoshi Yonezawa
mTOR controls cell growth, in part by regulating p70 S6 kinase alpha (p70alpha) and eukaryotic initiation factor 4E binding protein 1 (4EBP1). Raptor is a 150 kDa mTOR binding protein that also binds 4EBP1 and p70alpha. The binding of raptor to mTOR is necessary for the mTOR-catalyzed phosphorylation of 4EBP1 in vitro, and it strongly enhances the mTOR kinase activity toward p70alpha. Rapamycin or amino acid withdrawal increases, whereas insulin strongly inhibits, the recovery of 4EBP1 and raptor on 7-methyl-GTP Sepharose. Partial inhibition of raptor expression by RNA interference (RNAi) reduces mTOR-catalyzed 4EBP1 phosphorylation in vitro. RNAi of C. elegans raptor yields an array of phenotypes that closely resemble those produced by inactivation of Ce-TOR. Thus, raptor is an essential scaffold for the mTOR-catalyzed phosphorylation of 4EBP1 and mediates TOR action in vivo.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998
Kenta Hara; Kazuyoshi Yonezawa; Qing-Ping Weng; Mark T. Kozlowski; Christopher Belham; Joseph Avruch
The present study identifies the operation of a signal tranduction pathway in mammalian cells that provides a checkpoint control, linking amino acid sufficiency to the control of peptide chain initiation. Withdrawal of amino acids from the nutrient medium of CHO-IR cells results in a rapid deactivation of p70 S6 kinase and dephosphorylation of eIF-4E BP1, which become unresponsive to all agonists. Readdition of the amino acid mixture quickly restores the phosphorylation and responsiveness of p70 and eIF-4E BP1 to insulin. Increasing the ambient amino acids to twice that usually employed increases basal p70 activity to the maximal level otherwise attained in the presence of insulin and abrogates further stimulation by insulin. Withdrawal of most individual amino acids also inhibits p70, although with differing potency. Amino acid withdrawal from CHO-IR cells does not significantly alter insulin stimulation of tyrosine phosphorylation, phosphotyrosine-associated phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase activity, c-Akt/protein kinase B activity, or mitogen-activated protein kinase activity. The selective inhibition of p70 and eIF-4E BP1 phosphorylation by amino acid withdrawal resembles the response to rapamycin, which prevents p70 reactivation by amino acids, indicating that mTOR is required for the response to amino acids. A p70 deletion mutant, p70Δ2–46/ΔCT104, that is resistant to inhibition by rapamycin (but sensitive to wortmannin) is also resistant to inhibition by amino acid withdrawal, indicating that amino acid sufficiency and mTOR signal to p70 through a common effector, which could be mTOR itself, or an mTOR-controlled downstream element, such as a protein phosphatase.
Current Biology | 2005
Xiaomeng Long; Yenshou Lin; Sara Ortiz-Vega; Kazuyoshi Yonezawa; Joseph Avruch
BACKGROUND The target of rapamycin (TOR), in complex with the proteins raptor and LST8 (TOR complex 1), phosphorylates the p70S6K and 4E-BP1 to promote mRNA translation. Genetic evidence establishes that TOR complex activity in vivo requires the small GTPase Rheb, and overexpression of Rheb can rescue TOR from inactivation in vivo by amino-acid withdrawal. The Tuberous Sclerosis heterodimer (TSC1/TSC2) functions as a Rheb GTPase activator and inhibits TOR signaling in vivo. RESULTS Here, we show that Rheb binds to the TOR complex specifically, independently of its ability to bind TSC2, through separate interactions with the mTOR catalytic domain and with LST8. Rheb binding to the TOR complex in vivo and in vitro does not require Rheb guanyl nucleotide charging but is modulated by GTP and impaired by certain mutations (Ile39Lys) in the switch 1 loop. Nucleotide-deficient Rheb mutants, although capable of binding mTOR in vivo and in vitro, are inhibitory in vivo, and the mTOR polypeptides that associate with nucleotide-deficient Rheb in vivo lack kinase activity in vitro. Reciprocally, mTOR polypeptides bound to Rheb(Gln64Leu), a mutant that is nearly 90% GTP charged, exhibit substantially higher protein kinase specific activity than mTOR bound to wild-type Rheb. CONCLUSIONS The TOR complex 1 is a direct target of Rheb-GTP, whose binding enables activation of the TOR kinase.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2004
Mirei Murakami; Tomoko Ichisaka; Mitsuyo Maeda; Noriko Oshiro; Kenta Hara; Frank Edenhofer; Hiroshi Kiyama; Kazuyoshi Yonezawa; Shinya Yamanaka
ABSTRACT TOR is a serine-threonine kinase that was originally identified as a target of rapamycin in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and then found to be highly conserved among eukaryotes. In Drosophila melanogaster, inactivation of TOR or its substrate, S6 kinase, results in reduced cell size and embryonic lethality, indicating a critical role for the TOR pathway in cell growth control. However, the in vivo functions of mammalian TOR (mTOR) remain unclear. In this study, we disrupted the kinase domain of mouse mTOR by homologous recombination. While heterozygous mutant mice were normal and fertile, homozygous mutant embryos died shortly after implantation due to impaired cell proliferation in both embryonic and extraembryonic compartments. Homozygous blastocysts looked normal, but their inner cell mass and trophoblast failed to proliferate in vitro. Deletion of the C-terminal six amino acids of mTOR, which are essential for kinase activity, resulted in reduced cell size and proliferation arrest in embryonic stem cells. These data show that mTOR controls both cell size and proliferation in early mouse embryos and embryonic stem cells.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997
Kenta Hara; Kazuyoshi Yonezawa; Mark T. Kozlowski; Tadanori Sugimoto; Khurshid Iqbal Andrabi; Qing-Ping Weng; Masato Kasuga; Ikuo Nishimoto; Joseph Avruch
The proteins eIF-4E BP1 and p70 S6 kinase each undergo an insulin/mitogen-stimulated phosphorylation in situ that is partially inhibited by rapamycin. Previous work has established that the protein known as mTOR/RAFT-1/FRAP is the target through which the rapamycin·FKBP12 complex acts to dephosphorylate/deactivate the p70 S6 kinase; thus, some mTOR mutants that have lost the ability to bind to the rapamycin·FKBP12 complex in vitro can protect the p70 S6 kinase against rapamycin-induced dephosphorylation/deactivationin situ. We show herein that such mTOR mutants also protect eIF-4E BP1 against rapamycin-induced dephosphorylation, and for both p70 S6 kinase and eIF-4E BP1, such protection requires that the rapamycin-resistant mTOR variant retains an active catalytic domain. In contrast, mutants of p70 S6 kinase rendered intrinsically resistant to inhibition by rapamycin in situ are not able to protect coexpressed eIF-4E BP1 from rapamycin-induced dephosphorylation. We conclude that mTOR is an upstream regulator of eIF-4E BP1 as well as the p70 S6 kinase; moreover, these two mTOR targets are regulated in a parallel rather than sequential manner.
Current Biology | 1994
Stefan Wennström; Phillip T. Hawkins; Frank T. Cooke; Kenta Hara; Kazuyoshi Yonezawa; Masato Kasuga; T.R. Jackson; Lena Claesson-Welsh; Len Stephens
BACKGROUND There is substantial evidence that phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI 3-kinase) is a critical component of signalling pathways used by the cell-surface receptors for a variety of mammalian growth factors and other hormones. The physiological product of this enzyme is a highly polar membrane lipid called phosphatidylinositol (3,4,5)-trisphosphate This lipid has been postulated to act as a second-messenger in cells but its putative targets are still unknown. RESULTS A particular rearrangement of actin filaments, which results in membrane ruffling, is elicited by the activation of PDGF beta-receptors expressed in cultured porcine aortic endothelial cells. We have found that this consequence of PDGF beta-receptor activation is inhibited by three independent manipulations of PI 3-kinase activity: firstly, by the deletion of tyrosine residues in the PDGF beta-receptor to which PI 3-kinase binds; secondly, by the overexpression of a mutant 85 kD PI 3-kinase regulatory subunit to which the catalytic kinase subunit cannot bind; and thirdly, by the addition of the fungal metabolite wortmannin, which is a potent inhibitor of the catalytic activity of PI 3-kinase. CONCLUSIONS These results argue strongly that phosphatidylinositol (3,4,5)-trisphosphate synthesis is required for growth-factor-stimulated membrane ruffling in porcine aortic endothelial cells, and suggest that synthesis of this lipid may be part of a signalling pathway leading to direct or indirect activation of the small GTP-binding protein Rac.
The EMBO Journal | 1994
Ritu Dhand; Ian Hiles; George Panayotou; Roche S; Michael J. Fry; Ivan Gout; Nicholas F. Totty; Oanh Truong; Vicendo P; Kazuyoshi Yonezawa
Phosphatidylinositol 3‐kinase (PI 3‐kinase) has a regulatory 85 kDa adaptor subunit whose SH2 domains bind phosphotyrosine in specific recognition motifs, and a catalytic 110 kDa subunit. Mutagenesis of the p110 subunit, within a sequence motif common to both protein and lipid kinases, demonstrates a novel intrinsic protein kinase activity which phosphorylates the p85 subunit on serine at a stoichiometry of approximately 1 mol of phosphate per mol of p85. This protein‐serine kinase activity is detectable only upon high affinity binding of the p110 subunit with its unique substrate, the p85 subunit. Tryptic phosphopeptide mapping revealed that the same major peptide was phosphorylated in p85 alpha both in vivo in cultured cells and in the purified recombinant enzyme. N‐terminal sequence and mass analyses were used to identify Ser608 as the major phosphorylation site on p85 alpha. Phosphorylation of the p85 subunit at this serine causes an 80% decrease in PI 3‐kinase activity, which can subsequently be reversed upon treatment with protein phosphatase 2A. These results have implications for the role of inter‐subunit serine phosphorylation in the regulation of the PI 3‐kinase in vivo.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004
Nobuyuki Takei; Naoko Inamura; Mihoko Kawamura; Hisaaki Namba; Kenta Hara; Kazuyoshi Yonezawa; Hiroyuki Nawa
In neurons, perisynaptic or dendritic translation is implicated in synapse-wide alterations of function and morphology triggered by neural activity. The molecular mechanisms controlling local translation activation, however, have yet to be elucidated. Here, we show that local protein synthesis and translational activation in neuronal dendrites are upregulated by brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) in a rapamycin and small interfering RNA specific for mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR)-sensitive manner. In parallel, BDNF induced the phosphorylation of tuberin and the activation of mTOR in dendrites and the synaptoneurosome fraction. mTOR activation stimulated translation initiation processes involving both eIF4E/4E-binding protein (4EBP) and p70S6 kinase/ribosomal S6 protein. BDNF induced phosphorylation of 4EBP in isolated dendrites. Moreover, local puff application of BDNF to dendrites triggered S6 phosphorylation in a restricted area. Taken together, these data indicate that mTOR-dependent translation activation is essential for the upregulation of local protein synthesis in neuronal dendrites.
Genes to Cells | 2003
Naoki Kimura; Chiharu Tokunaga; Sushila R. Dalal; Christine A. Richardson; Ken-ichi Yoshino; Kenta Hara; Bruce E. Kemp; Lee A. Witters; Osamu Mimura; Kazuyoshi Yonezawa
Background: The mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) regulates multiple cellular functions including translation in response to nutrients, especially amino acids. AMP‐activated protein kinase (AMPK) modulates metabolism in response to energy demand by responding to changes in AMP.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999
Shuji Isotani; Kenta Hara; Chiharu Tokunaga; Hitomi Inoue; Joseph Avruch; Kazuyoshi Yonezawa
p70 S6 kinase α (p70α) is activated in vivo through a multisite phosphorylation in response to mitogens if a sufficient supply of amino acids is available or to high concentrations of amino acids per se. The immunosuppressant drug rapamycin inhibits p70α activation in a manner that can be overcome by coexpression of p70α with a rapamycin-resistant mutant of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) but only if the mTOR kinase domain is intact. We report here that a mammalian recombinant p70α polypeptide, extracted in an inactive form from rapamycin-treated cells, can be directly phosphorylated by the mTOR kinase in vitro predominantly at the rapamycin-sensitive site Thr-412. mTOR-catalyzed p70α phosphorylation in vitro is accompanied by a substantial restoration in p70α kinase activity toward its physiologic substrate, the 40 S ribosomal protein S6. Moreover, sequential phosphorylation of p70α by mTOR and 3-phosphoinositide-dependent protein kinase 1 in vitro resulted in a synergistic stimulation of p70α activity to levels similar to that attained by serum stimulation in vivo. These results indicate that mTOR is likely to function as a direct activator of p70 in vivo, although the relative contribution of mTOR-catalyzed p70 phosphorylation in each of the many circumstances that engender p70 activation remains to be defined.