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Dive into the research topics where Keiji Kuba is active.

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Featured researches published by Keiji Kuba.


Cell | 2008

Identification of oxidative stress and toll-like receptor 4 signaling as a key pathway of acute lung injury

Yumiko Imai; Keiji Kuba; G. Greg Neely; Rubina Yaghubian-Malhami; Thomas Perkmann; Geert van Loo; Maria A. Ermolaeva; Ruud A. W. Veldhuizen; Y.H. Connie Leung; Hongliang Wang; Haolin Liu; Yang Sun; Manolis Pasparakis; Manfred Kopf; Christin Mech; Sina Bavari; J. S. Malik Peiris; Arthur S. Slutsky; Shizuo Akira; Malin Hultqvist; Rikard Holmdahl; John M. Nicholls; Chengyu Jiang; Christoph J. Binder; Josef M. Penninger

Summary Multiple lung pathogens such as chemical agents, H5N1 avian flu, or SARS cause high lethality due to acute respiratory distress syndrome. Here we report that Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) mutant mice display natural resistance to acid-induced acute lung injury (ALI). We show that TLR4-TRIF-TRAF6 signaling is a key disease pathway that controls the severity of ALI. The oxidized phospholipid (OxPL) OxPAPC was identified to induce lung injury and cytokine production by lung macrophages via TLR4-TRIF. We observed OxPL production in the lungs of humans and animals infected with SARS, Anthrax, or H5N1. Pulmonary challenge with an inactivated H5N1 avian influenza virus rapidly induces ALI and OxPL formation in mice. Loss of TLR4 or TRIF expression protects mice from H5N1-induced ALI. Moreover, deletion of ncf1, which controls ROS production, improves the severity of H5N1-mediated ALI. Our data identify oxidative stress and innate immunity as key lung injury pathways that control the severity of ALI.


Nature | 2005

Angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 protects from severe acute lung failure.

Yumiko Imai; Keiji Kuba; Shuan Rao; Yi Huan; Feng Guo; Bin Guan; Peng Yang; Teiji Wada; Howard Leong-Poi; Michael A. Crackower; Akiyoshi Fukamizu; Chi-Chung Hui; Lutz Hein; Stefan Uhlig; Arthur S. Slutsky; Chengyu Jiang; Josef M. Penninger

Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), the most severe form of acute lung injury, is a devastating clinical syndrome with a high mortality rate (30–60%) (refs 1–3). Predisposing factors for ARDS are diverse and include sepsis, aspiration, pneumonias and infections with the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) coronavirus. At present, there are no effective drugs for improving the clinical outcome of ARDS. Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) and ACE2 are homologues with different key functions in the renin–angiotensin system. ACE cleaves angiotensin I to generate angiotensin II, whereas ACE2 inactivates angiotensin II and is a negative regulator of the system. ACE2 has also recently been identified as a potential SARS virus receptor and is expressed in lungs. Here we report that ACE2 and the angiotensin II type 2 receptor (AT2) protect mice from severe acute lung injury induced by acid aspiration or sepsis. However, other components of the renin–angiotensin system, including ACE, angiotensin II and the angiotensin II type 1a receptor (AT1a), promote disease pathogenesis, induce lung oedemas and impair lung function. We show that mice deficient for Ace show markedly improved disease, and also that recombinant ACE2 can protect mice from severe acute lung injury. Our data identify a critical function for ACE2 in acute lung injury, pointing to a possible therapy for a syndrome affecting millions of people worldwide every year.


Nature Medicine | 2005

A crucial role of angiotensin converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) in SARS coronavirus-induced lung injury.

Keiji Kuba; Yumiko Imai; Shuan Rao; Hong Gao; Feng Guo; Bin Guan; Yi Huan; Peng Yang; Yanli Zhang; Wei Deng; Linlin Bao; Binlin Zhang; Guang Liu; Zhong Wang; Mark C. Chappell; Yanxin Liu; Dexian Zheng; Teiji Wada; Arthur S. Slutsky; De-Pei Liu; Chuan Qin; Chengyu Jiang; Josef M. Penninger

During several months of 2003, a newly identified illness termed severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) spread rapidly through the world. A new coronavirus (SARS-CoV) was identified as the SARS pathogen, which triggered severe pneumonia and acute, often lethal, lung failure. Moreover, among infected individuals influenza such as the Spanish flu and the emergence of new respiratory disease viruses have caused high lethality resulting from acute lung failure. In cell lines, angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) has been identified as a potential SARS-CoV receptor. The high lethality of SARS-CoV infections, its enormous economic and social impact, fears of renewed outbreaks as well as the potential misuse of such viruses as biologic weapons make it paramount to understand the pathogenesis of SARS-CoV. Here we provide the first genetic proof that ACE2 is a crucial SARS-CoV receptor in vivo. SARS-CoV infections and the Spike protein of the SARS-CoV reduce ACE2 expression. Notably, injection of SARS-CoV Spike into mice worsens acute lung failure in vivo that can be attenuated by blocking the renin-angiotensin pathway. These results provide a molecular explanation why SARS-CoV infections cause severe and often lethal lung failure and suggest a rational therapy for SARS and possibly other respiratory disease viruses.


Nature | 2012

ACE2 links amino acid malnutrition to microbial ecology and intestinal inflammation

Tatsuo Hashimoto; Thomas Perlot; Ateequr Rehman; Jean Trichereau; Hiroaki Ishiguro; Magdalena Paolino; Verena Sigl; Toshikatsu Hanada; Reiko Hanada; Simone Lipinski; Birgit Wild; Simone M. R. Camargo; Dustin Singer; Andreas Richter; Keiji Kuba; Akiyoshi Fukamizu; Stefan Schreiber; Hans Clevers; François Verrey; Philip Rosenstiel; Josef M. Penninger

Malnutrition affects up to one billion people in the world and is a major cause of mortality. In many cases, malnutrition is associated with diarrhoea and intestinal inflammation, further contributing to morbidity and death. The mechanisms by which unbalanced dietary nutrients affect intestinal homeostasis are largely unknown. Here we report that deficiency in murine angiotensin I converting enzyme (peptidyl-dipeptidase A) 2 (Ace2), which encodes a key regulatory enzyme of the renin-angiotensin system (RAS), results in highly increased susceptibility to intestinal inflammation induced by epithelial damage. The RAS is known to be involved in acute lung failure, cardiovascular functions and SARS infections. Mechanistically, ACE2 has a RAS-independent function, regulating intestinal amino acid homeostasis, expression of antimicrobial peptides, and the ecology of the gut microbiome. Transplantation of the altered microbiota from Ace2 mutant mice into germ-free wild-type hosts was able to transmit the increased propensity to develop severe colitis. ACE2-dependent changes in epithelial immunity and the gut microbiota can be directly regulated by the dietary amino acid tryptophan. Our results identify ACE2 as a key regulator of dietary amino acid homeostasis, innate immunity, gut microbial ecology, and transmissible susceptibility to colitis. These results provide a molecular explanation for how amino acid malnutrition can cause intestinal inflammation and diarrhoea.


Circulation Research | 2007

Impaired Heart Contractility in Apelin Gene–Deficient Mice Associated With Aging and Pressure Overload

Keiji Kuba; Liyong Zhang; Yumiko Imai; Sara Arab; Manyin Chen; Yuichiro Maekawa; Michael Leschnik; Mato Markovic; Julia Schwaighofer; Nadine Beetz; Renata Musialek; G. Greg Neely; Vukoslav Komnenovic; Ursula Kolm; Bernhard Metzler; Romeo Ricci; Hiromitsu Hara; Arabella Meixner; Mai Nghiem; Xin Chen; Fayez Dawood; Kit Man Wong; Eva Cukerman; Akinori Kimura; Lutz Hein; Johann Thalhammer; Peter Liu; Josef M. Penninger

Apelin constitutes a novel endogenous peptide system suggested to be involved in a broad range of physiological functions, including cardiovascular function, heart development, control of fluid homeostasis, and obesity. Apelin is also a catalytic substrate for angiotensin-converting enzyme 2, the key severe acute respiratory syndrome receptor. The in vivo physiological role of Apelin is still elusive. Here we report the generation of Apelin gene–targeted mice. Apelin mutant mice are viable and fertile, appear healthy, and exhibit normal body weight, water and food intake, heart rates, and heart morphology. Intriguingly, aged Apelin knockout mice developed progressive impairment of cardiac contractility associated with systolic dysfunction in the absence of histological abnormalities. We also report that pressure overload induces upregulation of Apelin expression in the heart. Importantly, in pressure overload–induced heart failure, loss of Apelin did not significantly affect the hypertrophy response, but Apelin mutant mice developed progressive heart failure. Global gene expression arrays and hierarchical clustering of differentially expressed genes in hearts of banded Apelin−/y and Apelin+/y mice showed concerted upregulation of genes involved in extracellular matrix remodeling and muscle contraction. These genetic data show that the endogenous peptide Apelin is crucial to maintain cardiac contractility in pressure overload and aging.


Cell | 2013

The Lipid Mediator Protectin D1 Inhibits Influenza Virus Replication and Improves Severe Influenza

Masayuki Morita; Keiji Kuba; Akihiko Ichikawa; Mizuho Nakayama; Jun Katahira; Ryo Iwamoto; Tokiko Watanebe; Saori Sakabe; Tomo Daidoji; Shota Nakamura; Ayumi Kadowaki; Takayo Ohto; Hiroki Nakanishi; Ryo Taguchi; Takaaki Nakaya; Makoto Murakami; Yoshihiro Yoneda; Hiroyuki Arai; Yoshihiro Kawaoka; Josef M. Penninger; Makoto Arita; Yumiko Imai

Influenza A viruses are a major cause of mortality. Given the potential for future lethal pandemics, effective drugs are needed for the treatment of severe influenza such as that caused by H5N1 viruses. Using mediator lipidomics and bioactive lipid screen, we report that the omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA)-derived lipid mediator protectin D1 (PD1) markedly attenuated influenza virus replication via RNA export machinery. Production of PD1 was suppressed during severe influenza and PD1 levels inversely correlated with the pathogenicity of H5N1 viruses. Suppression of PD1 was genetically mapped to 12/15-lipoxygenase activity. Importantly, PD1 treatment improved the survival and pathology of severe influenza in mice, even under conditions where known antiviral drugs fail to protect from death. These results identify the endogenous lipid mediator PD1 as an innate suppressor of influenza virus replication that protects against lethal influenza virus infection.


Cell | 2010

A Global In Vivo Drosophila RNAi Screen Identifies NOT3 as a Conserved Regulator of Heart Function

G. Gregory Neely; Keiji Kuba; Anthony Cammarato; Kazuya Isobe; Sabine Amann; Liyong Zhang; Mitsushige Murata; Lisa Elmén; Vaijayanti Gupta; Suchir Arora; Rinku Sarangi; Debasis Dan; Susumu Fujisawa; Takako Usami; Cui ping Xia; Alex C. Keene; Nakissa N. Alayari; Hiroyuki Yamakawa; Ulrich Elling; Christian Berger; Maria Novatchkova; Rubina Koglgruber; Keiichi Fukuda; Hiroshi Nishina; Mitsuaki Isobe; J. Andrew Pospisilik; Yumiko Imai; Arne Pfeufer; Andrew A. Hicks; Peter P. Pramstaller

Heart diseases are the most common causes of morbidity and death in humans. Using cardiac-specific RNAi-silencing in Drosophila, we knocked down 7061 evolutionarily conserved genes under conditions of stress. We present a first global roadmap of pathways potentially playing conserved roles in the cardiovascular system. One critical pathway identified was the CCR4-Not complex implicated in transcriptional and posttranscriptional regulatory mechanisms. Silencing of CCR4-Not components in adult Drosophila resulted in myofibrillar disarray and dilated cardiomyopathy. Heterozygous not3 knockout mice showed spontaneous impairment of cardiac contractility and increased susceptibility to heart failure. These heart defects were reversed via inhibition of HDACs, suggesting a mechanistic link to epigenetic chromatin remodeling. In humans, we show that a common NOT3 SNP correlates with altered cardiac QT intervals, a known cause of potentially lethal ventricular tachyarrhythmias. Thus, our functional genome-wide screen in Drosophila can identify candidates that directly translate into conserved mammalian genes involved in heart function.


Diabetes | 2012

Apelin treatment increases complete Fatty Acid oxidation, mitochondrial oxidative capacity, and biogenesis in muscle of insulin-resistant mice.

Camille Attané; Camille Foussal; Sophie Le Gonidec; Alexandre Benani; Danièle Daviaud; Estelle Wanecq; Rocío Guzmán-Ruiz; Cédric Dray; Véronic Bézaire; Chloé Rancoule; Keiji Kuba; Mariano Ruiz-Gayo; Thierry Levade; Josef M. Penninger; Rémy Burcelin; Luc Pénicaud; Philippe Valet; Isabelle Castan-Laurell

Both acute and chronic apelin treatment have been shown to improve insulin sensitivity in mice. However, the effects of apelin on fatty acid oxidation (FAO) during obesity-related insulin resistance have not yet been addressed. Thus, the aim of the current study was to determine the impact of chronic treatment on lipid use, especially in skeletal muscles. High-fat diet (HFD)-induced obese and insulin-resistant mice treated by an apelin injection (0.1 μmol/kg/day i.p.) during 4 weeks had decreased fat mass, glycemia, and plasma levels of triglycerides and were protected from hyperinsulinemia compared with HFD PBS-treated mice. Indirect calorimetry experiments showed that apelin-treated mice had a better use of lipids. The complete FAO, the oxidative capacity, and mitochondrial biogenesis were increased in soleus of apelin-treated mice. The action of apelin was AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) dependent since all the effects studied were abrogated in HFD apelin-treated mice with muscle-specific inactive AMPK. Finally, the apelin-stimulated improvement of oxidative capacity led to decreased levels of acylcarnitines and enhanced insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in soleus. Thus, by promoting complete lipid use in muscle of insulin-resistant mice through mitochondrial biogenesis and tighter matching between FAO and the tricarboxylic acid cycle, apelin treatment could contribute to insulin sensitivity improvement.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2013

CXCL10-CXCR3 Enhances the Development of Neutrophil-mediated Fulminant Lung Injury of Viral and Nonviral Origin

Akihiko Ichikawa; Keiji Kuba; Masayuki Morita; Shinsuke Chida; Hiroyuki Tezuka; Hiromitsu Hara; Takehiko Sasaki; Toshiaki Ohteki; V. Marco Ranieri; Claudia C. dos Santos; Yoshihiro Kawaoka; Shizuo Akira; Andrew D. Luster; Bao Lu; Josef M. Penninger; Stefan Uhlig; Arthur S. Slutsky; Yumiko Imai

RATIONALE Patients who developed acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) after infection with severe respiratory viruses (e.g., severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus, H5N1 avian influenza virus), exhibited unusually high levels of CXCL10, which belongs to the non-ELR (glutamic-leucine-arginine) CXC chemokine superfamily. CXCL10 may not be a bystander to the severe virus infection but may directly contribute to the pathogenesis of neutrophil-mediated, excessive pulmonary inflammation. OBJECTIVES We investigated the contribution of CXCL10 and its receptor CXCR3 axis to the pathogenesis of ARDS with nonviral and viral origins. METHODS We induced nonviral ARDS by acid aspiration and viral ARDS by intratracheal influenza virus infection in wild-type mice and mice deficient in CXCL10, CXCR3, IFNAR1 (IFN-α/β receptor 1), or TIR domain-containing adaptor inducing IFN-β (TRIF). MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS We found that the mice lacking CXCL10 or CXCR3 demonstrated improved severity and survival of nonviral and viral ARDS, whereas mice that lack IFNAR1 did not control the severity of ARDS in vivo. The increased levels of CXCL10 in lungs with ARDS originate to a large extent from infiltrated pulmonary neutrophils, which express a unique CXCR3 receptor via TRIF. CXCL10-CXCR3 acts in an autocrine fashion on the oxidative burst and chemotaxis in the inflamed neutrophils, leading to fulminant pulmonary inflammation. CONCLUSIONS CXCL10-CXCR3 signaling appears to be a critical factor for the exacerbation of the pathology of ARDS. Thus, the CXCL10-CXCR3 axis could represent a prime therapeutic target in the treatment of the acute phase of ARDS of nonviral and viral origins.


Current Opinion in Pharmacology | 2006

Angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 in lung diseases.

Keiji Kuba; Yumiko Imai; Josef M. Penninger

The renin-angiotensin system (RAS) plays a key role in maintaining blood pressure homeostasis, as well as fluid and salt balance. Angiotensin II, a key effector peptide of the system, causes vasoconstriction and exerts multiple biological functions. Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) plays a central role in generating angiotensin II from angiotensin I, and capillary blood vessels in the lung are one of the major sites of ACE expression and angiotensin II production in the human body. The RAS has been implicated in the pathogenesis of pulmonary hypertension and pulmonary fibrosis, both commonly seen in chronic lung diseases such as chronic obstructive lung disease. Recent studies indicate that the RAS also plays a critical role in acute lung diseases, especially acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). ACE2, a close homologue of ACE, functions as a negative regulator of the angiotensin system and was identified as a key receptor for SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) coronavirus infections. In the lung, ACE2 protects against acute lung injury in several animal models of ARDS. Thus, the RAS appears to play a critical role in the pathogenesis of acute lung injury. Indeed, increasing ACE2 activity might be a novel approach for the treatment of acute lung failure in several diseases.

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Josef M. Penninger

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Akinori Kimura

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Chengyu Jiang

Peking Union Medical College

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