Masahiko Endo
Hirosaki University
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Featured researches published by Masahiko Endo.
Iubmb Life | 1997
Toshiya Nakamura; Masaru Funahashi; Keiichi Takagaki; Hidekazu Munakata; Masahiko Endo; Kanji Tanaka; Yoshiharu Saito
Human skin fibroblasts were cultured in the presence of 0.5 mM 4‐methylumbelliferone for 12 h, and cell‐free synthesis of hyaluronic acid was performed using membrane‐rich fraction from the cells. The preincubation of the cells with 4‐methylumbelliferone reduced hyaluronic acid synthesis to 15% of that of non‐preincubated cells, although its chain length was not changed. On the other hand, without preincubation of the cells with 4‐methylumbelliferone, hyaluronic acid synthesis was not changed even when 4‐methylumbelliferone was added directly to the reaction mixture. These results suggest that 4‐methylumbelliferone represses the expression of hyaluronic acid synthase on the cell surface.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2002
Keiichi Takagaki; Keinosuke Ishido; Ikuko Kakizaki; Mito Iwafune; Masahiko Endo
In the previous study, we have found that the endo-beta-xylosidase from Patinopecten had the attachment activities of glycosaminoglycan (GAG) chains to peptide. As artificial carrier substrates for this reaction, synthesis of various GAG chains having the linkage region tetrasaccharide, GlcA beta 1-3Gal beta 1-3Gal beta 1-4Xyl, between GAG chain and core protein of proteoglycan was investigated. Hyaluronic acid (HA), chondroitin (Ch), chondroitin 4-sulfate (Ch4S), chondroitin 6-sulfate (Ch6S), and desulfated dermatan sulfate (desulfated DS) as donors and the 4-metylumbelliferone (MU)-labeled hexasaccharide having the linkage region tetrasaccharide at its reducing terminals (MU-hexasaccharide) as an acceptor were subjected to a transglycosylation reaction of testicular hyaluronidase. The products were analyzed by high-performance liquid chromatography and enzyme digestion, and the results indicated that HA, Ch, Ch4S, Ch6S, and desulfated DS chains elongated by the addition of disaccharide units to the nonreducing terminal of MU-hexasaccharide. It was possible to custom-synthesize various GAG chains having the linkage region tetrasaccharide as carrier substrates for enzymatic attachment of GAG chains to peptide.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002
Keinosuke Ishido; Keiichi Takagaki; Mito Iwafune; Syuichi Yoshihara; Mutsuo Sasaki; Masahiko Endo
Endo-β-xylosidase from the mid-gut gland of the molluscus Patinopecten is an endo-type glycosidase that hydrolyzes the xylosyl serine linkage between a core protein and a glycosaminoglycan (GAG) chain, releasing the intact GAG chain from proteoglycan. In this study, we investigated GAG chain transfer activity of this enzyme, in order to develop a method for attaching GAG chains to peptide. Peptidochondroitin sulfate (molecular mass of sugar chain, 30 kDa) from bovine tracheal cartilage as a donor and butyloxycarbonyl-leucyl-seryl-threonyl-arginine-(4-methylcoumaryl-7-amide) as an acceptor were incubated with endo-β-xylosidase. As a result, a reaction product with the same fluorescence as the acceptor peptide was observed. High pressure liquid chromatography analysis, cellulose acetate membrane electrophoresis, and enzymatic digestion showed that this reaction product had the chondroitin sulfate (ChS) from the donor. Furthermore, the acceptor peptide was released from this reaction product after hydrolysis by endo-β-xylosidase. Therefore, it was confirmed that the ChS chain released from the donor was transferred to the acceptor peptide by the GAG chain transfer reaction of endo-β-xylosidase. The optimal pH for hydrolysis by this enzyme was found to be about 4.0, whereas that for this reaction was about 3.0. Not only the ChS but also the dermatan sulfate and the heparan sulfate were transferred to the acceptor peptide by this reaction. By using this reaction, the GAG chain could be attached to the peptide in one step. The GAG chain transfer reaction of endo-β-xylosidase should be a significant glycotechnological tool for the artificial synthesis of proteoglycan.
Glycoconjugate Journal | 1998
Keiichi Takagaki; Toshiyuki Tazawa; Hidekazu Munakata; Toshiya Nakamura; Masahiko Endo
Human skin fibroblasts were incubated with a fluorogenic xyloside, 4-methylumbelliferyl-β-D-xyloside (Xyl-MU), in the presence or absence of tunicamycin. The xyloside-initiated glycosaminoglycans (GAG-MUs) were isolated from the culture medium, and their structures characterized. When the cells were incubated with Xyl-MU in the presence of 0.2 μg ml−1 tunicamycin, the synthesis of GAG-MU was increased about three fold, compared with the control value in the absence of tunicamycin (cells exposed to Xyl-MU alone). The structures of GAG-MUs synthesized in the presence or absence of tunicamycin were compared by HPLC analysis using gel-filtration and ion-exchange columns, enzymatic digestion, and unsaturated disaccharide composition analysis. The data indicated that cells incubated with tunicamycin produced more undersulfated and shorter GAG-MUs than cells without tynicamycin. These results suggest that tunicamycin inhibits the elongation and sulfation of glycosaminoglycan (GAG) chains and that, as a result, GAG-MUs with shorter chains and undersulfated residues, but possessing a large number of GAG chains, are synthesized in the presence of tunicamycin.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002
Keiichi Takagaki; Hidekazu Munakata; Ikuko Kakizaki; Mito Iwafune; Taito Itabashi; Masahiko Endo
Glycobiology | 1999
Hidekazu Munakata; Keiichi Takagaki; Mitsuo Majima; Masahiko Endo
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1999
Keiichi Takagaki; Hidekazu Munakata; Mitsuo Majima; Masahiko Endo
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2000
Keiichi Takagaki; Hidekazu Munakata; Ikuko Kakizaki; Mitsuo Majima; Masahiko Endo
Journal of Biochemistry | 2000
Kelichi Takagaki; Hidekazu Munakata; Mitsuo Majima; lkuko Kakizaki; Masahiko Endo
Bulletin of the Chemical Society of Japan | 1997
Takashi Yasukochi; Koichi Fukase; Yasuo Suda; Keiichi Takagaki; Masahiko Endo; Shoichi Kusumoto