Kotaro Sueoka
Yamaguchi University
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Featured researches published by Kotaro Sueoka.
Cancer Letters | 2012
Akihiro Murakami; Kazuyuki Yakabe; Keiko Yoshidomi; Kotaro Sueoka; Shugo Nawata; Yoshihito Yokoyama; Shigeki Tsuchida; Fahd Al-Mulla; Norihiro Sugino
Human carbonyl reductase 1 (CBR1) is an enzyme that catalyse the reduction of many compounds by using NADPH-dependent oxydoreductase activity. Although CBR1 is known to regulate the tumour progression, the molecular mechanisms of CBR1 in cancer progression and the clinical significance of CBR1 status remain unclear. Here, we investigated the molecular mechanisms by which CBR1 affects cancer cell behaviour in vitro and the clinical significance of CBR1 using immunohistochemical analyses in endometrial cancer. Here, the role of CBR1 in cancer cell invasion and metastasis, and its molecular mechanisms were investigated by transfection of sense and antisense CBR1 cDNAs into a human endometrial adenocarcinoma cell line. The relationship between CBR1 expression analysed by immunohistochemistry and prognosis such as progression free survival (PFS) and overall survival (OS) was examined in endometrial cancer tissues from FIGO stage I-IV (n=109). Suppression of CBR1 by antisense CBR1 cDNA increased cancer cell invasion, and suppressed E-cadherin expression and capacity for cellular aggregation. In contrast, over-expression of CBR1 by sense CBR1 cDNA increased E-cadherin expression and capacity for cellular aggregation, and suppressed cancer cell invasion. The expression of transcriptional suppressors of E-cadherin, Snail and ZEB1, were increased by CBR1 suppression, but suppressed by CBR1 over-expression. Immunohistochemical analyses showed that decreased CBR1 expression is significantly related with poor PFS and OS compared with strong CBR1 expression. In multivariate analyses, decreased CBR1 expression was an independent prognostic factor for PFS and OS. CBR1 regulates cancer cell invasion in endometrial adenocarcinomas by regulating the epithelial mesenchymal transition. A decreased CBR1 expression can be a useful marker of an unfavourable clinical outcome in patients with endometrial cancer.
Cancer Letters | 2011
Akihiro Murakami; Chikako Fukushima; Keiko Yoshidomi; Kotaro Sueoka; Shugo Nawata; Yoshihito Yokoyama; Shigeki Tsuchida; Endom Ismail; Fahd Al-Mulla; Norihiro Sugino
Carbonyl reductase (CR) is an NADPH-dependent, mostly monomeric, cytosolic enzyme with broad substrate specificity for carbonyl compounds. CR appears to be involved in the regulation of tumour progression. However, molecular mechanisms of CR in tumour progression and clinical significance of CR status remain unclear in human uterine squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). Here, we investigated the clinical significance of CR using immunohistochemical analyses of human uterine cervical SCC tissues and how CR affects cancer cell behaviour in vitro. Paraffin sections from uterine cervical SCC tissues, FIGO stage Ib1-IIb (n = 67) were immunostained with anti-CR antibodies. Overall survival (OS) and progression-free survival (PFS) were analyzed by the Kaplan-Meier method. Sense and antisense CR cDNAs were transfected into a human uterine SCC cell line (SiHa) to investigate the role of CR in cancer cell invasion and metastasis. Immunohistochemical analyses showed that reduced CR expression patterns in primary cancer lesions were closely associated with a high incidence of pelvic lymph node metastasis, poor OS, and poor PFS. In an in vitro experiment, suppression of CR increased cancer cell invasion, secretion of MMP-2, -9 and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) expression and decreased E-cadherin expression. On the other hand, over-expression of CR increased E-cadherin expression and decreased MMP-2, -9 secretion and COX-2 expression. The reduced CR expression pattern, as measured by immunohistochemistry, can be a useful predictor of lymph node metastasis and poor prognosis in patients with uterine SCC. This clinical result is supported by the in vitro data which show that suppression of CR expression promotes cancer cell invasion with decreased E-cadherin expression and increased MMP-2, -9 secretion.
Proteomics Clinical Applications | 2011
Chikako Fukushima; Akihiro Murakami; Keiko Yoshitomi; Kotaro Sueoka; Shugo Nawata; Kazuyuki Nakamura; Norihiro Sugino
Purpose: Proteomic profiling of human uterine cervical squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) tissues was performed to find new biomarkers for the early diagnosis and molecular target therapies.
Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Research | 2016
Kazuyuki Yakabe; Akihiro Murakami; Takuya Kajimura; Yuki Nishimoto; Kotaro Sueoka; Shun Sato; Shugo Nawata; Norihiro Sugino
Transgelin‐2 (TAGLN2) has previously been found to be highly expressed in uterine cervical squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) tissues by proteomic analyses. The present study investigated the role of TAGLN2 in the malignant behaviors of cervical SCC cells in vitro and in vivo, and the clinical significance of TAGLN2 using immunohistochemistry for human cervical SCC tissues.
Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology Research | 2014
Keiko Yoshidomi; Akihiro Murakami; Kazuyuki Yakabe; Kotaro Sueoka; Shugo Nawata; Norihiro Sugino
Heat shock protein 70 (HSP70) was previously found to be highly expressed in cervical squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) tissues compared with normal tissues by proteomic analyses. The present study investigated the roles of HSP70 in malignant behaviors and chemosensitivity to cisplatin in cervical SCC cells in vitro.
International Journal of Gynecological Cancer | 2015
Kotaro Sueoka; Kenji Umayahara; Akiko Abe; Tomoka Usami; Akiko Yamamoto; Hidetaka Nomura; Maki Matoda; Sanshiro Okamoto; Kohei Omatsu; Eiji Kondo; Kazuyoshi Kato; Nobuhiro Takeshima
Objective The purpose of this study was to analyze the prognosis for endometrial cancer patients treated with systematic pelvic and para-aortic lymphadenectomy (PLA and PALA) followed by platinum-based chemotherapy. Materials and Methods From 1994 to 2004, in the Cancer Institute Hospital, 502 patients who were surgically treated with systematic PLA and PALA were enrolled in this study. Their prognosis and clinicopathological features were retrospectively reviewed. Results One hundred ninety-one (38.0%) patients received adjuvant platinum-based chemotherapy. Lymph node (LN) metastasis was observed in 80 (15.9%) patients, pelvic-only LN metastasis in 27 (5.4%), para-aortic-only LN metastasis in 15 (3.0%), and both pelvic and para-aortic LN metastasis in 38 (7.6%). The median number of metastatic LNs was 2 (range, 1–57), 1 (range, 1–4), and 6 (range, 2–50) in patients with pelvic-only, para-aortic-only, and both pelvic and para-aortic LN metastasis, respectively (P < 0.001). Only 2.6% (2/76) of patients with no myometrial invasion had LN metastasis, and no less than 8.9% (22/247) of patients with myometrial invasion (limited to the inner half) had LN metastasis. Five-year overall survival (OS) for LN metastasis–negative and –positive patients was 96.7% and 76% (P < 0.001), respectively. Five-year OS for patients with metastasis in 1 or 2 LNs was 84.8% and was significantly higher than that for patients with metastasis in 3 or more LNs (57.8%; P = 0.011). In patients with LN metastasis, 5-year OS of endometrioid adenocarcinoma and non–endometrioid adenocarcinoma cell types was 90.2% and 56.7% (P = 0.0016), respectively. Conclusions Under the settings of thorough PLA and PALA followed by intensive platinum-based chemotherapy for endometrial cancer, metastasis in 1 or 2 LNs seems to have little effect on survival, although para-aortic LNs are involved. This therapeutic strategy could not improve the prognosis of patients with metastasis in 3 or more LNs or patients with non–endometrioid adenocarcinoma cell types along with LN involvement.
Reproductive Medicine and Biology | 2018
Yuki Nishimoto; Akihiro Murakami; Shun Sato; Takuya Kajimura; Kengo Nakashima; Kazuyuki Yakabe; Kotaro Sueoka; Norihiro Sugino
Carbonyl reductase 1 (CBR1) is involved in cancer progression. Recently, the authors reported that the loss of CBR1 expression is associated with a poor prognosis in uterine cervical cancer. Here, we investigated whether the decreased CBR1 expression promotes cancer progression by inducing the epithelial mesenchymal transition (EMT).
Oncology Reports | 2008
Akihiro Murakami; Tatsushi Nakagawa; Chikako Fukushima; Mayumi Torii; Kotaro Sueoka; Shugo Nawata; Osamu Takeda; Hitoshi Ishikawa; Norihiro Sugino
International Journal of Oncology | 2005
Kotaro Sueoka; Shugo Nawata; Tatsushi Nakagawa; Akihiro Murakami; Osamu Takeda; Yoshinori Suminami; Hiroshi Kato; Norihiro Sugino
International Journal of Oncology | 2010
Akihiro Murakami; Chikako Fukushima; Keiko Yositomi; Kotaro Sueoka; Shugo Nawata; Masanori Fujimoto; Kazuyuki Nakamura; Norihiro Sugino