Maho Ishida
University of Yamanashi
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Featured researches published by Maho Ishida.
European Journal of Neuroscience | 2009
Hiroko Hagiwara; Maho Ishida; Jun Arita; Dai Mitsushima; Takuya Takahashi; Fukuko Kimura; Toshiya Funabashi
Differences in male and female responses to pain are widely recognized in many species, including humans, but the cerebral mechanisms that generate these responses are unknown. Using the formalin test, we confirmed that proestrus female rats showed nociceptive behavior, modulated by estrogen that was distinct from male rats, particularly during the interphase period. We then explored the brain areas, which were involved in the female pattern of nociceptive behavior. We found that, after a formalin injection and at the time corresponding to the behavioral interphase, the number of phosphorylated cAMP response element‐binding protein (pCREB)‐immunoreactive neurons observed by immunocytochemistry increased in the dorsolateral division of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BSTLD) in female but not male rats. There were no significant sex differences in pCREB expression following formalin in any region other than the BSTLD. The increased pCREB in female rats was eliminated after an ovariectomy and restored with 17β‐estradiol treatment. Neither an orchidectomy nor 17β‐estradiol treatment affected the pCREB response in male rats. The increase in pCREB expression in the BSTLD in female rats after formalin injection was confirmed with immunoblotting. To determine the role of CREB in the BSTLD, adenovirus‐mediated expression of a dominant‐negative form of CREB (mCREB) was carried out. The nociceptive behavior during interphase was significantly attenuated by injection of virus carrying mCREB into the BSTLD in female rats but not in male rats. These results suggest a novel role for CREB in the BSTLD as a modulator of the pain response in a female‐specific, estrogen‐dependent manner.
Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 2013
Maho Ishida; Tetsuo Mitsui; Michi Izawa; Jun Arita
Estrogen and dopamine are major opposing regulators of the endocrine functions of pituitary lactotrophs. Dopamine inhibits estrogen-induced changes in the synthesis and secretion of prolactin, and lactotroph proliferation. We studied the mechanism of the inhibitory effects of dopaminergic stimulation on estrogen-induced functional changes of rat lactotrophs in primary culture. The dopaminergic agonist, bromocriptine (BC), suppressed 17β-estradiol-stimulated lactotroph proliferation, prolactin promoter activity, and mRNA expression of some estrogen-responsive genes. In lactotroph-enriched pituitary cells, BC treatment inhibited the estrogen response element (ERE) DNA sequence-mediated estrogen receptor (ER) transcriptional activity. Using a lactotroph-specific ERE transcriptional assay, we found that BC inhibition of the ERE-mediated ER transcriptional activity partly involved D2 dopamine receptor-mediated, pertussis toxin-sensitive G protein-coupled, cAMP/protein kinase A-dependent signaling. BC treatment had no effect on the cellular concentration of ERα or its phosphorylation status at Ser-118. Similar transcriptional inhibition by BC was also found in GH4ZR7 cells, a D2 dopamine receptor-expressing somatomammotrophic cell line. These results suggest that activation of the D2 dopamine receptors inhibits estrogen-dependent lactotroph functions in part via attenuation of ERE-mediated ER transactivation.
Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 2011
Tetsuo Mitsui; Maho Ishida; Michi Izawa; Yoshihiro Kagami; Jun Arita
In addition to their well-known stimulatory action, estrogens have an anti-proliferative effect. The present study was undertaken to investigate the mechanism by which 17β-estradiol (E2) inhibits insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1)-induced proliferation in vitro in the rat pituitary lactotroph, a typical estrogen-responsive cell. E2 treatment of pituitary cells did not change levels of IGF-1-induced phosphorylation of proliferation-related protein kinases such as Erk1/2 and Akt. We performed global gene expression profiling by DNA microarray analysis and identified 177 genes regulated by E2 in the presence of IGF-1. These results were verified by quantitative real time PCR. The estrogen-regulated genes included several NFκB family related genes. As pharmacological inhibition of the NFκB pathway blocked IGF-1-induced lactotroph proliferation, we chose to investigate whether one NFκB pathway gene, Bcl3, was involved in the anti-proliferative action of E2. RNA interference-mediated knockdown of Bcl3 expression attenuated IGF-1-induced lactotroph proliferation. Even minimal induced overexpression of Bcl3 blocked the anti-proliferative action of E2. In contrast, Nfkb2, another E2-downregulated protein, required maximal overexpression to block the anti-proliferative action of E2. These results suggest that inhibition of Bcl3 expression is involved in the anti-proliferative action of estrogens in pituitary lactotrophs in culture.
Journal of Endocrinology | 2008
Zhenhua Wang; Tetsuo Mitsui; Maho Ishida; Jun Arita
Adenoviruses are powerful, widely utilized vectors for gene transfer. Limitations to their application, however, have not been well described. We used rat pituitary lactotrophs in primary culture as a model for studying how adenovirus vector infection modulates mitogen-induced proliferation and the activities of mitogen signaling pathways. Infection with adenovirus vectors expressing beta-galactosidase (betagal) raised basal proliferative levels and blocked fetal bovine serum (FBS)-induced proliferation of lactotrophs, but did not influence the changes in proliferation induced by forskolin, IGF-I, and bromocriptine. The betagal-expressing adenoviruses did not alter the inhibitory action of 17beta-estradiol (E(2)) in the presence of IGF-I; however, they blocked the stimulatory action of E(2) in the presence of dextran-coated charcoal-striped serum or forskolin. An adenovirus expressing no protein failed to block FBS-induced proliferation, but was effective in modulating basal proliferative levels and the stimulatory actions of E(2). The increased basal proliferative level and the blockade of FBS-induced proliferation were transient, and lost 5 days after infection while the blockade of the stimulatory action of E(2) in the presence of forskolin persisted. Adenovirus infection raised basal protein levels of the phosphorylated forms of cAMP response element-binding protein (pCREB) and ERK1/2 and increased the proportion of pCREB-immunoreactive lactotrophs. Adenoviruses also altered estrogen-induced responses in mRNA expression of several estrogen-responsive genes in a gene-specific manner. The results demonstrate that an adenovirus vector differentially interferes with lactotroph proliferation in response to various mitogens. Our results suggest that the effects of the adenovirus that are independent of the genes transferred must be considered when performing adenoviral gene transfer in the primary cultures of normal cells.
The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2010
Maho Ishida; Tetsuo Mitsui; Michi Izawa; Jun Arita
The estrogen receptor (ER) is a ligand-activated transcription factor that enhances gene expression by binding to specific regulatory DNA sequences called estrogen response elements (EREs). In some cell lines, the ER is also activated in a ligand-independent manner by multiple signaling pathways. In this study, we developed a novel adenovirus-mediated assay for promoter activation, termed LASETA, which we then used to examine whether ligand-independent activation of the ER occurred in normal pituitary lactotrophs in primary culture. In the LASETA adenovirus vector, the loxP-flanked stop sequence was deleted by prolactin (PRL) promoter-regulated expression of Cre recombinase. This led to lactotroph-specific expression of a reporter gene driven by an ERE-containing promoter. Estrogen-induced expression of the reporter protein luciferase in LASETA was specific for lactotrophs and was ER-dependent. LASETA was shown to be reliable even with varying Cre recombinase expression levels, which were caused by changes in PRL promoter activity. Using LASETA, we observed no change in ERE-mediated ER activity in the absence of estrogen after treatment of normal lactotrophs with agents such as insulin-like growth factor-1, epidermal growth factor, the adenylate cyclase activator forskolin, the extracellular signal-regulated kinase kinase inhibitor U0126, and the protein kinase A inhibitor H89. The ERE-mediated ligand-independent ER activity was induced by the growth factors and forskolin in the somatolactotroph tumor cell line GH4C1 cells. These results suggest that ERE-mediated ligand-independent activation of ER does not occur in normal lactotrophs in primary culture, and is a phenomenon likely restricted to transformed cells.
Endocrine Journal | 2017
Tetsuo Mitsui; Maho Ishida; Michi Izawa; Jun Arita
Estrogen binds to nuclear estrogen receptors (ERs) to modulate transcription of target genes in estrogen-responsive cells. However, recent studies have shown that estrogen also binds to cytoplasmic membrane ERs to modulate protein kinase signaling cascades, leading to non-genomic actions. We investigated whether either nuclear or membrane ERs, including G protein-coupled estrogen receptor 1 (Gper1), mediate the inhibitory action of estrogen on insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1)-induced proliferation of pituitary lactotrophs in primary culture. The cytoplasmic membrane-impermeable bovine serum albumin-conjugated estradiol (BSA-E2) at 1 nM, an equimolar concentration at which 17β-estradiol (E2) exerts anti-proliferative effects, did not inhibit IGF-1-induced lactotroph proliferation. In contrast, diethylstilbestrol, which is known to selectively activate nuclear ERs but not membrane ERs, inhibited IGF-1-induced proliferation and modulated mRNA expression of estrogen-responsive genes to a similar degree as E2. Activation of Gper1 by its agonist G-1 inhibited IGF-1-induced proliferation in a dose-dependent manner, but it had little effect on modulation of mRNA expression of estrogen-responsive genes. However, blockade of Gper1 by its antagonist G-15 did not affect the inhibitory action of E2 on IGF-1-induced proliferation. Here, we demonstrate that E2 inhibition of lactotroph proliferation is due to nuclear ER-mediated genomic action. Our results suggest that activation of Gper1 mimics, but does not mediate, the anti-proliferative action of E2 on lactotrophs.
Endocrine Journal | 2017
Linghong Wang; Tetsuo Mitsui; Maho Ishida; Michi Izawa; Jun Arita
Dexamethasone-induced Ras-related protein 1 (Rasd1) is a member of the Ras superfamily of monomeric G proteins that have a regulatory function in signal transduction. Here we investigated the role of Rasd1 in regulating estrogen-induced gene expression in primary cultures of rat anterior pituitary cells. Rasd1 mRNA expression in anterior pituitary cells decreased after treatment with forskolin or serum and increased after treatment with 17β-estradiol (E2). Increases in Rasd1 mRNA expression occurred as early as 0.5 h after E2 treatment, peaked at 1 h and were sustained for as long as 96 h. This rapid and profound increase in Rasd1 mRNA expression induced by E2 was also seen in GH4C1 cells, an estrogen receptor-positive somatolactotroph cell line. Among pituitary estrogen-responsive late genes studied, basal mRNA expression of Pim3 and Igf1 genes was decreased by RNA interference-mediated knockdown of Rasd1 expression, whereas basal expression of the Giot1 gene was increased. Moreover, Rasd1 knockdown enhanced stimulation of Pim3 mRNA expression and attenuated inhibition of Fosl1 mRNA expression 24 h after E2 treatment. These changes in mRNA expression were accompanied by enhanced activity of promoters containing CRE, AP-1 and SRE binding sequences. These results suggest that Rasd1 is an estrogen-responsive immediate early gene and modulates E2 induction of at least several late genes in anterior pituitary cells.
American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2007
Maho Ishida; Tetsuo Mitsui; Koji Yamakawa; Nobuhiro Sugiyama; Wakaba Takahashi; Hiroki Shimura; Toyoshi Endo; Tetsurou Kobayashi; Jun Arita
Journal of Reproduction and Development | 2007
Maho Ishida; Jae-hyek Choi; Keiji Hirabayashi; Takashi Matsuwaki; Masatoshi Suzuki; Keitaro Yamanouchi; Reiko Horai; Katsuko Sudo; Yoichiro Iwakura; Masugi Nishihara
Endocrinology | 2007
Maho Ishida; Wakaba Takahashi; Susumu Itoh; Shigetaka Shimodaira; Shuichiro Maeda; Jun Arita