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Featured researches published by Keiichi Hara.


Human Genetics | 2010

Molecular pathogenesis of a novel mutation, G108D, in short-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase identified in subjects with short-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency

Kenichiro Shirao; Satoshi Okada; Go Tajima; Miyuki Tsumura; Keiichi Hara; Shin’ichiro Yasunaga; Motoaki Ohtsubo; Ikue Hata; Nobuo Sakura; Yosuke Shigematsu; Yoshihiro Takihara; Masao Kobayashi

Short-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (SCAD) is a mitochondrial enzyme involved in the β-oxidation of fatty acids. Genetic defect of SCAD was documented to cause clinical symptoms such as progressive psychomotor retardation, muscle hypotonia, and myopathy in early reports. However, clinical significance of SCAD deficiency (SCADD) has been getting ambiguous, for some variants in the ACADS gene, which encodes the SCAD protein, has turned out to be widely prevailed among general populations. Accordingly, the pathophysiology of SCADD has not been clarified thus far. The present report focuses on two suspected cases of SCADD detected through the screening of newborns by tandem mass spectrometry. In both subjects, compound heterozygous mutations in ACADS were detected. The mutated genes were expressed in a transient gene expression system, and the enzymatic activities of the obtained mutant SCAD proteins were measured. The activities of the mutant SCAD proteins were significantly lower than that of the wild-type enzyme, confirming the mechanism underlying the diagnosis of SCADD in both subjects. Moreover, the mutant SCAD proteins gave rise to mitochondrial fragmentation and autophagy, both of which were proportional to the decrease in SCAD activities. The association of autophagy with programed cell death suggests that the mutant SCAD proteins are toxic to mitochondria and to the cells in which they are expressed. The expression of recombinant ACADS-encoded mutant proteins offers a technique to evaluate both the nature of the defective SCAD proteins and their toxicity. Moreover, our results provide insight into possible molecular pathophysiology of SCADD.


Clinical Pediatric Endocrinology | 2010

Clinical Characteristics of Perinatal Lethal Hypophosphatasia: A Report of 6 Cases

Akari Nakamura-Utsunomiya; Satoshi Okada; Keiichi Hara; Shin-ichiro Miyagawa; Kanae Takeda; Rie Fukuhara; Yusei Nakata; Michiko Hayashidani; Kanako Tachikawa; Toshimi Michigami; Keiichi Ozono; Masao Kobayashi

Hypophosphatasia is a rare inherited disorder caused by deficient tissue-nonspecific alkaline phosphatase activity. It is classified into 6 subtypes, and the perinatal lethal form of hypophosphatasia is the most severe. Patients with this form suffer from various symptoms, including respiratory failure, premature craniosynostosis, rachitic changes in the metaphyses, convulsions and hypercalcemia. This report presents 6 cases of the perinatal lethal form of hypophosphatasia. All of the patients showed shortening of the long bones in utero in ultrasonographic examinations. Two of the six patients died at birth because they could not establish spontaneous breathing. Three of the remaining four patients also died before 1 yr of age. The major cause of death was respiratory failure due to hypoplastic lung. All of the patients, except for the two who died at birth, experienced convulsions in their clinical courses. Vitamin B6 therapy effectively reduced the frequency and severity of convulsions. However, it could not always make the patients convulsion free. Three patients underwent a genetic analysis. The 1559delT mutation, which abolishes Alkaline Phosphatase (ALP) activity, was a hot spot. A homozygous 1559delT mutation was observed in two patients. However, they differed in severity of symptoms. Although a good genotype-phenotype correlation has been reported in hypophosphatasia, the genotype alone does not always predict the life span of the patients. These cases therefore suggested the importance of genetic counseling.


Pediatric Hematology and Oncology | 2009

Successful treatment of Kasabach-Merritt syndrome with vincristine and diagnosis of the hemangioma using three-dimensional imaging.

Keiichi Hara; Tomoaki Yoshida; Teruyuki Kajiume; Norioki Ohno; Hiroshi Kawaguchi; Masao Kobayashi

Kasabach-Merritt syndrome is a life-threatening congenital disorder characterized by an enlarging hemangioma, thrombocytopenia, and consumption coagulopathy. We report the case of a one-month male infant who presented with a large cutaneous tumor in his right axilla with ecchymosis, thrombocytopenia, and chronic consumption coagulopathy. Three-dimensional computed tomography was useful for accurate diagnosis of the cutaneous tumor and for determining the precise vascular constitution of the hemangioma, suggesting the efficacy of this method for diagnosing Kasabach-Merritt syndrome. Although administration of a corticosteroid was not effective, additional administration of vincristine resulted in the reversal of thrombocytopenia and coagulopathy with reduction of the hemangioma.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2016

Significance of ACADM mutations identified through newborn screening of MCAD deficiency in Japan

Keiichi Hara; Go Tajima; Satoshi Okada; Miyuki Tsumura; Reiko Kagawa; Kenichiro Shirao; Yoshinori Ohno; Shin’ichiro Yasunaga; Motoaki Ohtsubo; Ikue Hata; Nobuo Sakura; Yosuke Shigematsu; Yoshihiro Takihara; Masao Kobayashi

BACKGROUND Since the first case was detected in 2000, there has been a remarkable increase in Japanese patients diagnosed with medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD) deficiency. Genetic analysis has revealed a spectrum of mutations that is quite different from those observed in Caucasian populations. In 2014, Japan initiated nationwide newborn screening (NBS) for MCAD using tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). It is an urgent issue to assess the risk of acute metabolic decompensation from the respective novel mutations found thus far. METHODS To evaluate the pathogenic effect of each mutation, we established a eukaryotic cell expression system and prepared 11 mutant proteins identified in five symptomatic patients and eight MS/MS-NBS-positive newborns, as well as two common Caucasian mutations, p.K329E (c.985G>A) and p.Y67H (c.157C>T) for comparison. RESULTS The expression of four mutant proteins (p.Q45R, p.P92L, p.P128X and p.Y397N) were severely impaired, whereas the others expressed normally, as did p.K329E and p.Y67H. Based on their dehydrogenase activities toward n-octanoyl-CoA, we determined three mutations (p.R53C, p.R281S and p.G362E) to be disease-causing, two mutations having (p.R17H and p.M274V) to be of marginal risk, and two mutations (p.K271E and p.I416T) as benign. Their allele-specific activities were as a whole in accordance with those estimated from the results of measurement in peripheral blood mononuclear cells. CONCLUSION As most of the mutations detected in the Japanese population are unique, prudent genetic and enzymatic analysis is essential to precisely evaluate the latent risk of clinical onset for screening-positive newborns.


Molecular genetics and metabolism reports | 2017

A surviving 24-month-old patient with neonatal-onset carnitine palmitoyltransferase II deficiency

Naohiro Ikeda; Kanna Nakano; Ryo Imakiire; Yumiko Ninomiya; Shunji Seki; Kosuke Yanagimoto; Yasuyuki Kakihana; Keiichi Hara; Go Tajima; Yasuhiro Okamoto; Yoshifumi Kawano

The early-onset form of carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT) II deficiency has severe outcomes; patients typically die during the newborn period. We report a case of neonatal-onset CPT II deficiency with prolonged survival, exceeding 24 months. The patient was successfully treated by continuous hemodialysis (CHD), which enabled her to overcome repeated crises. We suggest that early intensive treatment, including CHD, is a key for prolonged survival in patients with neonatal-onset CPT II deficiency.


Brain Pathology | 2017

Adipsic Hypernatremia without Hypothalamic Lesions Accompanied by Autoantibodies to Subfornical Organ

Takeshi Y. Hiyama; Akari Utsunomiya; Masahito Matsumoto; Akihiro Fujikawa; Chia-Hao Lin; Keiichi Hara; Reiko Kagawa; Satoshi Okada; Masao Kobayashi; Mayumi Ishikawa; Makoto Anzo; Hideo Cho; Shinobu Takayasu; Takeshi Nigawara; Makoto Daimon; Tomohiko Sato; Kiminori Terui; Etsuro Ito; Masaharu Noda

Adipsic (or essential) hypernatremia is a rare hypernatremia caused by a deficiency in thirst regulation and vasopressin release. In 2010, we reported a case in which autoantibodies targeting the sensory circumventricular organs (sCVOs) caused adipsic hypernatremia without hypothalamic structural lesions demonstrable by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI); sCVOs include the subfornical organ (SFO) and organum vasculosum of the lamina terminalis (OVLT), which are centers for the monitoring of body‐fluid conditions and the control of water and salt intakes, and harbor neurons innervating hypothalamic nuclei for vasopressin release. We herein report three newly identified patients (3‐ to 8‐year‐old girls on the first visit) with similar symptoms. The common features of the patients were extensive hypernatremia without any sensation of thirst and defects in vasopressin response to serum hypertonicity. Despite these features, we could not detect any hypothalamic structural lesions by MRI. Immunohistochemical analyses using the sera of the three patients revealed that antibodies specifically reactive to the mouse SFO were present in the sera of all cases; in one case, the antibodies also reacted with the mouse OVLT. The immunoglobulin (Ig) fraction of serum obtained from one patient was intravenously injected into wild‐type mice to determine whether the mice developed similar symptoms. Mice injected with a patients Ig showed abnormalities in water/salt intake, vasopressin release, and diuresis, which resultantly developed hypernatremia. Prominent cell death and infiltration of reactive microglia was observed in the SFO of these mice. Thus, autoimmune destruction of the SFO may be the cause of the adipsic hypernatremia. This study provides a possible explanation for the pathogenesis of adipsic hypernatremia without demonstrable hypothalamus‐pituitary lesions.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2016

Screening of MCAD deficiency in Japan: 16 years' experience of enzymatic and genetic evaluation

Go Tajima; Keiichi Hara; Miyuki Tsumura; Reiko Kagawa; Satoshi Okada; Nobuo Sakura; Ikue Hata; Yosuke Shigematsu; Masao Kobayashi

BACKGROUND Medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD) deficiency is a representative disorder of fatty acid oxidation and is one of the most prevalent inborn errors of metabolism among Caucasian populations. In Japan, however, it was as late as 2000 when the first patient was found, and enzymatic and genetic evaluation of MCAD deficiency began. METHODS We measured octanoyl-CoA dehydrogenase activity in lymphocytes of symptomatic children and newborn screening (NBS)-positive subjects who showed elevated levels of C8-acylcarnitine in blood. The results were further confirmed by direct sequencing of the ACADM gene. RESULTS The disease was diagnosed in 9 out of 18 symptomatic children. The affected patients showed residual activities from 0% to 3% of the normal average value, except for one patient with 10% activity. Concerning 50 NBS-positive subjects, 18 with enzymatic activities around 10% or lower and 14 with activities ranging from 13% to 30% were judged to be affected patients, and biallelic variants were detected in most of the cases tested. Newborns with higher enzymatic activities were estimated to be heterozygous carriers or healthy subjects, though biallelic variants were detected in 5 of them. Genetic analysis detected 22 kinds of variant alleles. The most prevalent was c.449_452delCTGA (p.T150Rfs), which was followed by c.50G>A (p.R17H), c.1085G>A (p.G362E), c.157C>T (p.R53C), and c.843A>T (p.R281S); these five variants accounted for approximately 60% of all the alleles examined. CONCLUSION Our study has revealed the unique genetic backgrounds of MCAD deficiency among Japanese, based on the largest series of non-Caucasian cases. A continuous spectrum of severity was also observed in our series of NBS-positive cases, suggesting that it is essential for every nation and ethnic group to accumulate its own information on gene variants, together with their enzymatic evaluation, in order to establish an efficient NBS system for MCAD deficiency.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2017

Newborn screening for carnitine palmitoyltransferase II deficiency using (C16 + C18:1)/C2: Evaluation of additional indices for adequate sensitivity and lower false-positivity

Go Tajima; Keiichi Hara; Miyuki Tsumura; Reiko Kagawa; Satoshi Okada; Nobuo Sakura; Atsuko Noguchi; Tomonari Awaya; Mika Ishige; Nobuyuki Ishige; Ikuma Musha; Sayaka Ajihara; Akira Ohtake; Etsuo Naito; Yusuke Hamada; Tomotaka Kono; Tomoko Asada; Hideo Sasai; Toshiyuki Fukao; Ryoji Fujiki; Osamu Ohara; Ryosuke Bo; Kenji Yamada; Hironori Kobayashi; Yuki Hasegawa; Seiji Yamaguchi; Masaki Takayanagi; Ikue Hata; Yosuke Shigematsu; Masao Kobayashi

BACKGROUND Carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT) II deficiency is one of the most common forms of mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation disorder (FAOD). However, newborn screening (NBS) for this potentially fatal disease has not been established partly because reliable indices are not available. METHODS We diagnosed CPT II deficiency in a 7-month-old boy presenting with hypoglycemic encephalopathy, which apparently had been missed in the NBS using C16 and C18:1 concentrations as indices. By referring to his acylcarnitine profile from the NBS, we adopted the (C16+C18:1)/C2 ratio (cutoff 0.62) and C16 concentration (cutoff 3.0nmol/mL) as alternative indices for CPT II deficiency such that an analysis of a dried blood specimen collected at postnatal day five retroactively yielded the correct diagnosis. Thereafter, positive cases were assessed by measuring (1) the fatty acid oxidation ability of intact lymphocytes and/or (2) CPT II activity in the lysates of lymphocytes. The diagnoses were then further confirmed by genetic analysis. RESULTS The disease was diagnosed in seven of 21 newborns suspected of having CPT II deficiency based on NBS. We also analyzed the false-negative patient and five symptomatic patients for comparison. Values for the NBS indices of the false-negative, symptomatic patient were lower than those of the seven affected newborns. Although it was difficult to differentiate the false-negative patient from heterozygous carriers and false-positive subjects, the fatty acid oxidation ability of the lymphocytes and CPT II activity clearly confirmed the diagnosis. Among several other indices proposed previously, C14/C3 completely differentiated the seven NBS-positive patients and the false-negative patient from the heterozygous carriers and the false-positive subjects. Genetic analysis revealed 16 kinds of variant alleles. The most prevalent, detected in ten alleles in nine patients from eight families, was c.1148T>A (p.F383Y), a finding in line with those of several previous reports on Japanese patients. CONCLUSIONS These findings suggested that CPT II deficiency can be screened by using (C16+C18:1)/C2 and C16 as indices. An appropriate cutoff level is required to achieve adequate sensitivity albeit at the cost of a considerable increase in the false-positive rate, which might be reduced by using additional indices such as C14/C3.


Frontiers in Genetics | 2017

Individual Clinically Diagnosed with CHARGE Syndrome but with a Mutation in KMT2D, a Gene Associated with Kabuki Syndrome: A Case Report

Sonoko Sakata; Satoshi Okada; Kohei Aoyama; Keiichi Hara; Chihiro Tani; Reiko Kagawa; Akari Utsunomiya-Nakamura; Shin-ichiro Miyagawa; Tsutomu Ogata; Haruo Mizuno; Masao Kobayashi

We report a Japanese female patient presenting with classic features of CHARGE syndrome, including choanal atresia, growth and development retardation, ear malformations, genital anomalies, multiple endocrine deficiency, and unilateral facial nerve palsy. She was clinically diagnosed with typical CHARGE syndrome, but genetic analysis using the TruSight One Sequence Panel revealed a germline heterozygous mutation in KMT2D with no pathogenic CHD7 alterations associated with CHARGE syndrome. Kabuki syndrome is a rare multisystem disorder characterized by five cardinal manifestations including typical facial features, skeletal anomalies, dermatoglyphic abnormalities, mild to moderate intellectual disability, and postnatal growth deficiency. Germline mutations in KMT2D underlie the molecular pathogenesis of 52–76% of patients with Kabuki syndrome. This is an instructive case that clearly represents a phenotypic overlap between Kabuki syndrome and CHARGE syndrome. It suggests the importance of considering the possibility of a diagnosis of Kabuki syndrome even if patients present with typical symptoms and meet diagnostic criteria of CHARGE syndrome. The case also emphasizes the impact of non-biased exhaustive genetic analysis by next-generation sequencing in the genetic diagnosis of rare congenital disorders with atypical manifestations.


Pediatrics International | 2013

Management of advanced-stage neuroblastoma in a patient with 21-hydroxalase deficiency

Akari Utsunomiya; Satoshi Okada; Keiichi Hara; Mizuka Miki; Yoko Mizoguchi; Yoshiyuki Kobayashi; Shin-ichiro Miyagawa; Kazuhiko Jinno; Kazuhiro Nakamura; Takashi Sato; Masao Kobayashi

A 2‐year‐old boy presented with a 21‐hydroxylase deficiency, associated with advanced‐stage neuroblastoma primarily occurring in the left adrenal gland. He required intensive chemotherapy with polypharmacy, followed by cord blood stem cell transplantation to treat the neuroblastoma. The precise adjustment of cortisol levels was crucial in this patient to prevent adrenal crisis. We administered hydrocortisone by continuous infusion while monitoring blood cortisol levels. As there are no published reports on the target cortisol levels for children, we used two control infants with advanced‐stage neuroblastoma, also undergoing chemotherapy and cord blood stem cell transplantation, to guide the continuous hydrocortisone therapy. The daily dose of hydrocortisone during chemotherapy required about threefold the normal treatment to avoid adrenal insufficiency. Continuous hydrocortisone therapy is feasible for preventing adrenal crisis and this report may provide an effective management for hydrocortisone replacement in 21‐hydroxylase‐deficient patients undergoing chemotherapy and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.

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