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Dive into the research topics where Kazuyuki Kitatani is active.

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Featured researches published by Kazuyuki Kitatani.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Regulation of Autophagy and Its Associated Cell Death by “Sphingolipid Rheostat” RECIPROCAL ROLE OF CERAMIDE AND SPHINGOSINE 1-PHOSPHATE IN THE MAMMALIAN TARGET OF RAPAMYCIN PATHWAY

Makoto Taniguchi; Kazuyuki Kitatani; Tadakazu Kondo; Mayumi Hashimoto-Nishimura; Satoshi Asano; Akira Hayashi; Susumu Mitsutake; Yasuyuki Igarashi; Hisanori Umehara; Hiroyuki Takeya; Junzo Kigawa; Toshiro Okazaki

Background: The sphingolipids ceramide and sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) control various cellular functions, including proliferation, cell death, and autophagy. Results: Binding of S1P to its receptor S1P3 counteracts ceramide-mediated autophagy by activating the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway. Conclusion: Sphingolipid rheostat between ceramide and S1P plays an important role in regulating mTOR-controlled autophagy. Significance: We provide new insights into novel regulatory mechanisms in autophagy induction. The role of “sphingolipid rheostat” by ceramide and sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) in the regulation of autophagy remains unclear. In human leukemia HL-60 cells, amino acid deprivation (AA(−)) caused autophagy with an increase in acid sphingomyleinase (SMase) activity and ceramide, which serves as an autophagy inducing lipid. Knockdown of acid SMase significantly suppressed the autophagy induction. S1P treatment counteracted autophagy induction by AA(−) or C2-ceramide. AA(−) treatment promoted mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) dephosphorylation/inactivation, inducing autophagy. S1P treatment suppressed mTOR inactivation and autophagy induction by AA(−). S1P exerts biological actions via cell surface receptors, and S1P3 among five S1P receptors was predominantly expressed in HL-60 cells. We evaluated the involvement of S1P3 in suppressing autophagy induction. S1P treatment of CHO cells had no effects on mTOR inactivation and autophagy induction by AA(−) or C2-ceramide. Whereas S1P treatment of S1P3 overexpressing CHO cells resulted in activation of the mTOR pathway, preventing cells from undergoing autophagy induced by AA(−) or C2-ceramide. These results indicate that S1P-S1P3 plays a role in counteracting ceramide signals that mediate mTOR-controlled autophagy. In addition, we evaluated the involvement of ceramide-activated protein phosphatases (CAPPs) in ceramide-dependent inactivation of the mTOR pathway. Inhibition of CAPP by okadaic acid in AA(−)- or C2-ceramide-treated cells suppressed dephosphorylation/inactivation of mTOR, autophagy induction, and autophagy-associated cell death, indicating a novel role of ceramide-CAPPs in autophagy induction. Moreover, S1P3 engagement by S1P counteracted cell death. Taken together, these results indicated that sphingolipid rheostat in ceramide-CAPPs and S1P-S1P3 signaling modulates autophagy and its associated cell death through regulation of the mTOR pathway.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2012

Regulation of Cell Migration by Sphingomyelin Synthases: Sphingomyelin in Lipid Rafts Decreases Responsiveness to Signaling by the CXCL12/CXCR4 Pathway

Satoshi Asano; Kazuyuki Kitatani; Makoto Taniguchi; Mayumi Hashimoto; Kota Zama; Susumu Mitsutake; Yasuyuki Igarashi; Hiroyuki Takeya; Junzo Kigawa; Akira Hayashi; Hisanori Umehara; Toshiro Okazaki

ABSTRACT Sphingomyelin synthase (SMS) catalyzes the formation of sphingomyelin, a major component of the plasma membrane and lipid rafts. To investigate the role of SMS in cell signaling and migration induced by binding of the chemokine CXCL12 to CXCR4, we used mouse embryonic fibroblasts deficient in SMS1 and/or SMS2 and examined the effects of SMS deficiency on cell migration. SMS deficiency promoted cell migration through a CXCL12/CXCR4-dependent signaling pathway involving extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) activation. In addition, SMS1/SMS2 double-knockout cells had heightened sensitivity to CXCL12, which was significantly suppressed upon transfection with the SMS1 or SMS2 gene or when they were treated with exogenous sphingomyelin but not when they were treated with the SMS substrate ceramide. Notably, SMS deficiency facilitated relocalization of CXCR4 to lipid rafts, which form platforms for the regulation and transduction of receptor-mediated signaling. Furthermore, we found that SMS deficiency potentiated CXCR4 dimerization, which is required for signal transduction. This dimerization was significantly repressed by sphingomyelin treatment. Collectively, our data indicate that SMS-derived sphingomyelin lowers responsiveness to CXCL12, thereby reducing migration induced by this chemokine. Our findings provide the first direct evidence for an involvement of SMS-generated sphingomyelin in the regulation of cell migration.


Oncogene | 2016

Ceramide limits phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase C2β-controlled cell motility in ovarian cancer: potential of ceramide as a metastasis-suppressor lipid.

Kazuyuki Kitatani; Toshinori Usui; Shravan Kumar Sriraman; Masafumi Toyoshima; Masumi Ishibashi; Shogo Shigeta; Satoru Nagase; M Sakamoto; H Ogiso; T Okazaki; Y A Hannun; Vladimir P. Torchilin; Nobuo Yaegashi

Targeting cell motility, which is required for dissemination and metastasis, has therapeutic potential for ovarian cancer metastasis, and regulatory mechanisms of cell motility need to be uncovered for developing novel therapeutics. Invasive ovarian cancer cells spontaneously formed protrusions, such as lamellipodia, which are required for generating locomotive force in cell motility. Short interfering RNA screening identified class II phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase C2β (PI3KC2β) as the predominant isoform of PI3K involved in lamellipodia formation of ovarian cancer cells. The bioactive sphingolipid ceramide has emerged as an antitumorigenic lipid, and treatment with short-chain C6-ceramide decreased the number of ovarian cancer cells with PI3KC2β-driven lamellipodia. Pharmacological analysis demonstrated that long-chain ceramide regenerated from C6-ceramide through the salvage/recycling pathway, at least in part, mediated the action of C6-ceramide. Mechanistically, ceramide was revealed to interact with the PIK-catalytic domain of PI3KC2β and affect its compartmentalization, thereby suppressing PI3KC2β activation and its driven cell motility. Ceramide treatment also suppressed cell motility promoted by epithelial growth factor, which is a prometastatic factor. To examine the role of ceramide in ovarian cancer metastasis, ceramide liposomes were employed and confirmed to suppress cell motility in vitro. Ceramide liposomes had an inhibitory effect on peritoneal metastasis in a murine xenograft model of human ovarian cancer. Metastasis of PI3KC2β knocked-down cells was insensitive to treatment with ceramide liposomes, suggesting specific involvement of ceramide interaction with PI3KC2β in metastasis suppression. Our study identified ceramide as a bioactive lipid that limits PI3KC2β-governed cell motility, and ceramide is proposed to serve as a metastasis-suppressor lipid in ovarian cancer. These findings could be translated into developing ceramide-based therapy for metastatic diseases.


Cancer Biology & Therapy | 2015

Inhibition of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 is a potential therapeutic strategy in ovarian cancer

Satsuki Mashiko; Kazuyuki Kitatani; Masafumi Toyoshima; Atsuhiko Ichimura; Takashi Dan; Toshinori Usui; Masumi Ishibashi; Shogo Shigeta; Satoru Nagase; Toshio Miyata; Nobuo Yaegashi

Plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI)-1 is predictive of poor outcome in several types of cancer. The present study investigated the biological role for PAI-1 in ovarian cancer and potential of targeted pharmacotherapeutics. In patients with ovarian cancer, PAI-1 mRNA expression in tumor tissues was positively correlated with poor prognosis. To determine the role of PAI-1 in cell proliferation in ovarian cancer, the effects of PAI-1 inhibition were examined in PAI-1-expressing ovarian cancer cells. PAI-1 knockdown by small interfering RNA resulted in significant suppression of cell growth accompanied with G2/M cell cycle arrest and intrinsic apoptosis. Similarly, treatment with the small molecule PAI-1 inhibitor TM5275 effectively blocked cell proliferation of ovarian cancer cells that highly express PAI-1. Together these results suggest that PAI-1 promotes cell growth in ovarian cancer. Interestingly, expression of PAI-1 was increased in ovarian clear cell carcinoma compared with that in serous tumors. Our results suggest that PAI-1 inhibition promotes cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in ovarian cancer and that PAI-1 inhibitors potentially represent a novel class of anti-tumor agents.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Defining a Role for Acid Sphingomyelinase in the p38/Interleukin-6 Pathway

David M. Perry; Benjamin Newcomb; Mohamad Adada; Bill X. Wu; Patrick Roddy; Kazuyuki Kitatani; Leah J. Siskind; Lina M. Obeid; Yusuf A. Hannun

Background: Sphingolipids are important in multiple biological processes, but there is a lack of understanding of the pathways that mediate these effects. Results: Acid sphingomyelinase is involved in p38 activation, interleukin-6 production, and cancer cell invasion. Conclusion: Acid sphingomyelinase plays a role in inflammatory, proinvasive signaling in cancer cells. Significance: This work expands the understanding of acid sphingomyelinase signaling and downstream biology. Acid sphingomyelinase (ASM) is one of the key enzymes involved in regulating the metabolism of the bioactive sphingolipid ceramide in the sphingolipid salvage pathway, yet defining signaling pathways by which ASM exerts its effects has proven difficult. Previous literature has implicated sphingolipids in the regulation of cytokines such as interleukin-6 (IL-6), but the specific sphingolipid pathways and mechanisms involved in inflammatory signaling need to be further elucidated. In this work, we sought to define the role of ASM in IL-6 production because our previous work showed that a parallel pathway of ceramide metabolism, acid β-glucosidase 1, negatively regulates IL-6. First, silencing ASM with siRNA abrogated IL-6 production in response to the tumor promoter, 4β-phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA), in MCF-7 cells, in distinction to acid β-glucosidase 1 and acid ceramidase, suggesting specialization of the pathways. Moreover, treating cells with siRNA to ASM or with the indirect pharmacologic inhibitor desipramine resulted in significant inhibition of TNFα- and PMA-induced IL-6 production in MDA-MB-231 and HeLa cells. Knockdown of ASM was found to significantly inhibit PMA-dependent IL-6 induction at the mRNA level, probably ruling out mechanisms of translation or secretion of IL-6. Further, ASM knockdown or desipramine blunted p38 MAPK activation in response to TNFα, revealing a key role for ASM in activating p38, a signaling pathway known to regulate IL-6 induction. Last, knockdown of ASM dramatically blunted invasion of HeLa and MDA-MB-231 cells through Matrigel. Taken together, these results demonstrate that ASM plays a critical role in p38 signaling and IL-6 synthesis with implications for tumor pathobiology.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Network Analysis of a Comprehensive Knowledge Repository Reveals a Dual Role for Ceramide in Alzheimer’s Disease

Satoshi Mizuno; Soichi Ogishima; Kazuyuki Kitatani; Masataka Kikuchi; Hiroshi Tanaka; Nobuo Yaegashi; Jun Nakaya

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common cause of senile dementia. Many inflammatory factors such as amyloid-β and pro-inflammatory cytokines are known to contribute to the inflammatory response in the AD brain. Sphingolipids are widely known to have roles in the pathogenesis of inflammatory diseases, where the precise roles for sphingolipids in inflammation-associated pathogenesis of AD are not well understood. Here we performed a network analysis to clarify the importance of sphingolipids and to model relationships among inflammatory factors and sphingolipids in AD. In this study, we have updated sphingolipid signaling and metabolic cascades in a map of AD signaling networks that we named “AlzPathway,” a comprehensive knowledge repository of signaling pathways in AD. Our network analysis of the updated AlzPathway indicates that the pathways related to ceramide are one of the primary pathways and that ceramide is one of the important players in the pathogenesis of AD. The results of our analysis suggest the following two prospects about inflammation in AD: (1) ceramide could play important roles in both inflammatory and anti-inflammatory pathways of AD, and (2) several factors such as Sphingomyelinase and Siglec-11 may be associated with ceramide related inflammation and anti-inflammation pathways in AD. In this study, network analysis of comprehensive knowledge repository reveals a dual role for ceramide in AD. This result provides a clue to clarify sphingolipids related inflammatory and anti-inflammatory pathways in AD.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Activation of p38 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase in Gaucher’s Disease

Kazuyuki Kitatani; Masayuki Wada; David K. Perry; Toshinori Usui; Ying Sun; Lina M. Obeid; Nobuo Yaegashi; Gregory A. Grabowski; Yusuf A. Hannun

Gaucher’s disease is caused by defects in acid β-glucosidase 1 (GBA1) and has been also proposed as an inflammatory disease. GBA1 cleaves glucosylceramide to form ceramide, an established bioactive lipid, and defects in GBA1 lead to aberrant accumulation in glucosylceramide and insufficient formation of ceramide. We investigated if the pro-inflammatory kinase p38 is activated in Gaucher’s disease, since ceramide has been proposed to suppress p38 activation. Three Gaucher’s disease mouse models were employed, and p38 was found to be activated in lung and liver tissues of all Gaucher’s disease mice. Most interestingly, neuronopathic Gaucher’s disease type mice, but not non-neuronopathic ones, displayed significant activation of p38 and up-regulation of p38-inducible proinflammatory cytokines in brain tissues. In addition, all type of Gaucher’s disease mice also showed increases in serum IL-6. As cellular signalling is believed to represent an in vivo inflammatory phenotype in Gaucher’s disease, activation of p38 and possibly its-associated formation of proinflammatory cytokines were assessed in fibroblasts established from neuronopathic Gaucher’s disease mice. In mouse Gaucher’s disease cells, p38 activation and IL-6 formation by TNF-α treatment were enhanced as compared to those of wild type. Furthermore, human fibroblasts from Gaucher’s disease patients also displayed increases in p38 activation and IL-6 formation as comparison to healthy counterpart. These results raise the potential that proinflammatory responses such as p38 activation and IL-6 formation are augmented in Gaucher’s disease.


Oncogene | 2016

Transferrin facilitates the formation of DNA double-strand breaks via transferrin receptor 1: the possible involvement of transferrin in carcinogenesis of high-grade serous ovarian cancer.

Shogo Shigeta; Masafumi Toyoshima; Kazuyuki Kitatani; Masumi Ishibashi; Toshinori Usui; Nobuo Yaegashi

Fallopian tubal epithelium is a candidate for the origin of high-grade serous ovarian cancer. Transferrin-containing follicular fluid and/or retrograde menstrual blood are possible risk factors for carcinogenesis. Accumulation of DNA double-strand breaks (DNA-DSBs) in the fallopian tubal epithelium is considered to play an important role in the development of cancer. However, the mechanisms by which DNA-DSBs accumulate have not yet been fully elucidated. The hydroxyl radical, which is produced in a Fenton reaction catalyzed by an iron ion, serves as a potent DNA-DSB-inducing molecule, raising the potential of an iron ion transporter of transferrin in the formation of DNA-DSBs. We studied the potential involvement of transferrin in DNA damage and the development of ovarian cancer. Treatment with transferrin facilitated the formation of histone 2AX phosphorylated at Serine 139 (γH2AX), which is known as a DNA-DSB marker, in human fallopian tube secretory epithelial cells and A2780 ovarian cancer cells. Knockdown of transferrin receptor 1 (TfR1), but not transferrin receptor 2, suppressed the transferrin uptake and consequent formation of γH2AX. As hydroxyl radicals in reactive oxygen species (ROS) are involved in DNA-DSBs, the formation of ROS was determined. Treatment with TfR1-specific small interference RNAs significantly diminished transferrin-induced formation of ROS. Moreover, TfR1-dependent uptake of transferrin was revealed to augment the formation of DNA-DSBs in the presence of hydrogen peroxide, which served as a substrate for the Fenton reaction. An ex vivo study with murine fallopian tubes further demonstrated that transferrin treatment introduced DNA-DSBs in the fallopian tubal epithelium. Collectively, these data suggested that the transferrin-TfR1 axis accounts for the induction of DNA-DSBs that potentially lead to DNA damage/genome instability. These findings also suggested that exposure to transferrin initiates and promotes the development of ovarian cancer by aiding the accumulation of DNA-DSBs in the fallopian tubal epithelium.


Mediators of Inflammation | 2016

Sphingolipids in Inflammation: From Bench to Bedside

Kazuyuki Kitatani; Kazuhisa Iwabuchi; Ashley J. Snider; Laura Riboni

Sphingolipids have been appreciated as bioactive lipids that regulate a diverse range of cellular responses [1, 2]. In recent years many efforts of researchers were made to improve our knowledge of sphingolipids in pathophysiological inflammation. Different studies demonstrated that cellular signaling in inflammatory processes is controlled by ceramide [3], sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) [4], ceramide-1-phosphate [5], and glycosphingolipids (such as lactosylceramide and GM3) [6]. The molecular mechanisms underlying this signaling have been extensively studied. This special issue is composed of ten articles including three research articles and seven review articles. These contributions review important discoveries and provide novel findings that support the multifaceted role of sphingolipids in inflammation. Dysregulated formation of several sphingolipids including S1P and ceramide has been implicated in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). L. Abdel Hadi et al. describe sphingolipid metabolism and signaling in IBD and discuss the potential of sphingolipid-targeted molecules as therapeutic strategies for this disease. Metabolic disease, such as obesity and type 2 diabetes, is emerging as a major health crisis in many countries. High fat diet is a primary contributing factor for obesity and its related diseases. S. Choi and A. J. Snider review the evidence for sphingolipid metabolism and pathobiology in models of high fat diet. Glycosphingolipids cluster with sphingomyelin and cholesterol in plasma membranes, forming lipid microdomains (lipid rafts) considered as platforms for signal transduction. K. Iwabuchi et al. review the evidence for biological significance of lactosylceramide-enriched microdomains in immunological and inflammatory responses of neutrophils. They also overview the significance of ceramide species and its metabolites in biological functions. A. M. Bryan et al. discuss the findings pointing to the importance of sphingolipids in immune responses of macrophages and neutrophils to fungal infections. R. Ghidoni et al. review roles of sphingolipid in the pathobiology of lung inflammation. Three research articles discuss novel findings for S1P and its receptors. E. Moon et al. discover an involvement of S1P in stroke damage in initial and recurrent stroke models. A. Chumanevich et al. reveal that S1P/S1P receptor 2 axis promotes mast cell angiogenic potential. C. Zhao et al. demonstrate that the sphingolipid pathway controlling S1P levels is dysregulated in rheumatoid arthritis synovial fibroblasts. In addition, M. Aoki et al. and S. Mahajan-Thakur et al. review the evidence pointing to roles of S1P and its receptors in immune system and blood coagulation system. This special issue discusses the topics associated with sphingolipid metabolism and pathobiology in inflammation. The articles in this special issue not only provide novel findings in sphingolipid pathobiology, but also discuss the evidence collected from a large number of research articles, giving insight into drug discovery for inflammation-associated diseases.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Tyrosine kinase receptor TIE-1 mediates platinum resistance by promoting nucleotide excision repair in ovarian cancer

Masumi Ishibashi; Masafumi Toyoshima; Xuewei Zhang; Junko Hasegawa-Minato; Shogo Shigeta; Toshinori Usui; Christopher J. Kemp; Carla Grandori; Kazuyuki Kitatani; Nobuo Yaegashi

Platinum resistance is one of the most challenging problems in ovarian cancer treatment. High-throughput functional siRNA screening identified tyrosine kinase with immunoglobulin-like and EGF-like domains 1 (TIE-1) as a gene that confers cells resistant to cisplatin. Conversely enforced over-expression of TIE-1 was validated to decrease cisplatin sensitivity in multiple ovarian cancer cell lines and up-regulation of TIE-1 was correlated with poor prognosis and cisplatin resistance in patients with ovarian cancer. Mechanistically, TIE-1 up-regulates the nucleotide excision repair (NER) system mediated by xeroderma pigmentosum complementation group C (XPC), thereby leading to decreased susceptibility to cisplatin-induced cell death without affecting cisplatin uptake and excretion. Importantly potentiation of therapeutic efficacy by TIE-1 inhibition was selective to DNA-adduct-type chemotherapeutic platinum reagents. Therefore, TIE-1 is suggested to promote XPC-dependent NER, rendering ovarian cancer cells resistant to platinum. Accompanied with novel findings, TIE-1 could represent as a novel therapeutic target for platinum-resistant ovarian cancer.

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