Masatake Osawa
Harvard University
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Featured researches published by Masatake Osawa.
Science | 1996
Masatake Osawa; Ken-ichi Hanada; Hirofumi Hamada; Hiromitsu Nakauchi
Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) supply all blood cells throughout life by making use of their self-renewal and multilineage differentiation capabilities. A monoclonal antibody raised to the mouse homolog of CD34 (mCD34) was used to purify mouse HSCs to near homogeneity. Unlike in humans, primitive adult mouse bone marrow HSCs were detected in the mCD34 low to negative fraction. Injection of a single mCD34lo/−, c-Kit+, Sca-1+, lineage markers negative (Lin−) cell resulted in long-term reconstitution of the lymphohematopoietic system in 21 percent of recipients. Thus, the purified HSC population should enable analysis of the self-renewal and multilineage differentiation of individual HSCs.
Nature | 2002
Emi K. Nishimura; Siobhán A. Jordan; Hideo Oshima; Hisahiro Yoshida; Masatake Osawa; Mariko Moriyama; Ian J. Jackson; Yann Barrandon; Yoshiki Miyachi; Shin-Ichi Nishikawa
Stem cells—which have the capacity to self-renew and generate differentiated progeny—are thought to be maintained in a specific environment known as a niche. The localization of the niche, however, remains largely obscure for most stem-cell systems. Melanocytes (pigment cells) in hair follicles proliferate and differentiate closely coupled to the hair regeneration cycle. Here we report that stem cells of the melanocyte lineage can be identified, using Dct-lacZ transgenic mice, in the lower permanent portion of mouse hair follicles throughout the hair cycle. It is only the population in this region that fulfils the criteria for stem cells, being immature, slow cycling, self-maintaining and fully competent in regenerating progeny on activation at early anagen (the growing phase of hair follicles). Induction of the re-pigmentation process in K14-steel factor transgenic mice demonstrates that a portion of amplifying stem-cell progeny can migrate out from the niche and retain sufficient self-renewing capability to function as stem cells after repopulation into vacant niches. Our data indicate that the niche has a dominant role in the fate determination of melanocyte stem-cell progeny.
Journal of Immunology | 2000
Midori Kaneta; Masatake Osawa; Mitsujiro Osawa; Kazuhiro Sudo; Hiromitsu Nakauchi; Andrew G. Farr; Yousuke Takahama
T lymphocyte development requires a series of interactions between developing thymocytes and thymic epithelial (TE) cells. In this paper we show that TE cells in the developing thymus express Pref-1, a Delta-like cell-surface molecule. In fetal thymus organ cultures (FTOC), thymocyte cellularity was increased by the exogenous dimeric Pref-1 fusion protein, but was reduced by the soluble Pref-1 monomer or anti-Pref-1 Ab. Dimeric Pref-1 in FTOC also increased thymocyte expression of the HES-1 transcription factor. Thymocyte cellularity was increased in FTOC repopulated with immature thymocytes overexpressing HES-1, whereas FTOC from HES-1-deficient mice were hypocellular and unresponsive to the Pref-1 dimer. We detected no effects of either Pref-1 or HES-1 on developmental choice among thymocyte lineages. These results indicate that Pref-1 expressed by TE cells and HES-1 expressed by thymocytes are critically involved in supporting thymocyte cellularity.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2006
Mariko Moriyama; Masatake Osawa; Siu-Shan Mak; Toshiyuki Ohtsuka; Norio Yamamoto; Hua Han; Véronique Delmas; Ryoichiro Kageyama; Friedrich Beermann; Lionel Larue; Shin-Ichi Nishikawa
Melanoblasts (Mbs) are thought to be strictly regulated by cell–cell interactions with epidermal keratinocytes, although the precise molecular mechanism of the regulation has been elusive. Notch signaling, whose activation is mediated by cell–cell interactions, is implicated in a broad range of developmental processes. We demonstrate the vital role of Notch signaling in the maintenance of Mbs, as well as melanocyte stem cells (MSCs). Conditional ablation of Notch signaling in the melanocyte lineage leads to a severe defect in hair pigmentation, followed by intensive hair graying. The defect is caused by a dramatic elimination of Mbs and MSCs. Furthermore, targeted overexpression of Hes1 is sufficient to protect Mbs from the elimination by apoptosis. Thus, these data provide evidence that Notch signaling, acting through Hes1, plays a crucial role in the survival of immature Mbs by preventing initiation of apoptosis.
Development | 2005
Masatake Osawa; Gyohei Egawa; Siu-Shan Mak; Mariko Moriyama; Rasmus Freter; Saori Yonetani; Friedrich Beermann; Shin-Ichi Nishikawa
Emerging evidence from stem cell (SC) research has strengthened the idea that SC fate is determined by a specialized environment, known as the SC niche. However, because of the difficulty of identifying individual stem cells and their surrounding components in situ, the exact mechanisms underlying SC regulation by the niche remain elusive. To overcome this difficulty, we employed melanocyte stem cells (MSCs), which allow the identification of individual SCs in the niche, the lower permanent portion of the hair follicle (HF). Here, we present molecular makers that can distinguish MSCs from other melanocyte (MC) subsets in the HF. We also describe a simple and robust method that allows gene expression profiling in individual SCs. After isolating individual MSCs from transgenic mice in which the MCs are marked by green fluorescence protein (GFP), we performed single-cell transcript analysis to obtain the molecular signature of individual MSCs in the niche. The data suggest the existence of a mechanism that induces the downregulation of various key molecules for MC proliferation or differentiation in MSCs located in the niche. By integrating these data, we propose that the niche is an environment that insulates SCs from various activating stimuli and maintains them in a quiescent state.
Developmental Cell | 2008
Mariko Moriyama; André-Dante Durham; Hiroyuki Moriyama; Kiyotaka Hasegawa; Shin-Ichi Nishikawa; Freddy Radtke; Masatake Osawa
Recent studies have shown that Notch signaling plays an important role in epidermal development, but the underlying molecular mechanisms remain unclear. Here, by integrating loss- and gain-of-function studies of Notch receptors and Hes1, we describe molecular information about the role of Notch signaling in epidermal development. We show that Notch signaling determines spinous cell fate and induces terminal differentiation by a mechanism independent of Hes1, but Hes1 is required for maintenance of the immature state of spinous cells. Notch signaling induces Ascl2 expression to promote terminal differentiation, while simultaneously repressing Ascl2 through Hes1 to inhibit premature terminal differentiation. Despite the critical role of Hes1 in epidermal development, Hes1 null epidermis transplanted to adult mice showed no obvious defects, suggesting that this role of Hes1 may be restricted to developmental stages. Overall, we conclude that Notch signaling orchestrates the balance between differentiation and immature programs in suprabasal cells during epidermal development.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 1999
Hiromitsu Nakauchi; Hina Takano; Hideo Ema; Masatake Osawa
Abstract: We have previously reported that in adult mouse bone marrow, CD34low/− c‐kit+ Sca‐1+ lineage markers negative (Lin−) (CD34−KSL) cells represent hematopoietic stem cells with long‐term marrow repopulating ability whereas CD34+ c‐kit+ Sca‐1+ Lin− (CD34+KSL) cells are progenitors with short‐term reconstitution capacity. To further characterize cells in those two populations, relative expression of various genes wereee examniend by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT‐PCR). In CD34−KSL Cells, none of the genes sturied was found to be expressed with the exception of GATA‐2, IL‐1Rα, IL‐2Rγ, AIC‐2B, c‐kit, EPO‐R, and c‐mpl. In contrast, expression of GATA‐1 and all cytokine receptor genes examined except IL‐2Rβ, IL‐7Rα and IL‐9Rα were found in CD34+KSL.
Cancer Research | 2008
Tae Inoue-Narita; Koichi Hamada; Takehiko Sasaki; Sachiko Hatakeyama; Sachiko Fujita; Kohichi Kawahara; Masato Sasaki; Hiroyuki Kishimoto; Satoshi Eguchi; Itaru Kojima; Friedrich Beermann; Tetsunori Kimura; Masatake Osawa; Satoshi Itami; Tak Wah Mak; Toru Nakano; Motomu Manabe; Akira Suzuki
Phosphate and tensin homologue deleted on chromosome 10 (PTEN) is a tumor suppressor gene inactivated in numerous sporadic cancers, including melanomas. To analyze Pten functions in melanocytes, we used the Cre-loxP system to delete Pten specifically in murine pigment-producing cells and generated DctCrePten(flox/flox) mice. Half of DctCrePten(flox/flox) mice died shortly after birth with enlargements of the cerebral cortex and hippocampus. Melanocytes were increased in the dermis of perinatal DctCrePten(flox/flox) mice. When the mutants were subjected to repeated depilations, melanocyte stem cells in the bulge of the hair follicle resisted exhaustion and the mice were protected against hair graying. Although spontaneous melanomas did not form in DctCrePten(flox/flox) mice, large nevi and melanomas developed after carcinogen exposure. DctCrePten(flox/flox) melanocytes were increased in size and exhibited heightened activation of Akt and extracellular signal-regulated kinases, increased expression of Bcl-2, and decreased expression of p27(Kip1). Our results show that Pten is important for the maintenance of melanocyte stem cells and the suppression of melanomagenesis.
Blood | 2009
Yasushi Kubota; Masatake Osawa; Lars Martin Jakt; Kazuaki Yoshikawa; Shin-Ichi Nishikawa
Hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) proliferation is tightly regulated by a poorly understood complex of positive and negative cell-cycle regulatory mechanisms. Necdin (Ndn) is an evolutionally conserved multifunctional protein that has been implicated in cell-cycle regulation of neuronal cells. Here, we provide evidence that necdin plays an important role in restricting excessive HSC proliferation during hematopoietic regeneration. We identify Ndn as being preferentially expressed in the HSC population on the basis of gene expression profiling and demonstrate that mice deficient in Ndn show accelerated recovery of the hematopoietic system after myelosuppressive injury, whereas no overt abnormality is seen in steady-state hematopoiesis. In parallel, after myelosuppression, Ndn-deficient mice exhibit an enhanced number of proliferating HSCs. Based on these findings, we propose that necdin functions in a negative feedback loop that prevents excessive proliferation of HSCs during hematopoietic regeneration. These data suggest that the inhibition of necdin after clinical myelosuppressive treatment (eg, chemotherapy, HSC transplantation) may provide therapeutic benefits by accelerating hematologic recovery.
Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2011
Satomi Nishikawa‐Torikai; Masatake Osawa; Shin-Ichi Nishikawa
In mice, coat pigmentation requires a stem cell (SC) system in which the survival, proliferation, and differentiation of melanocytes (MCs) are regulated by microenvironments in hair follicles (HFs). In vitro systems are required to analyze the behavior of single melanocyte stem cells (MCSCs) and their potential to form SC systems in vivo. We describe here an experimental system for the isolation, self-renewal, and differentiation of MCSCs, as well as an in vivo reconstitution assay for assessing their potential. Using Dct(tm1(Cre)Bee)/CAG-CAT-GFP mice, we show that, in the presence of stem cell factor and basic fibroblast growth factor and the XB2 feeder cell line, purified MCSCs can undergo clonogenic proliferation, resulting in c-Kit(low) side scatter(low) cells. In culture, these cells maintain their capacity to differentiate and reconstitute an MCSC system in HFs. As these cells are present in the upper part of the HF near the bulge region, express only low levels of housekeeping genes, and are resistant to neonatal treatment with ACK2, it is likely that only MCSCs that are quiescent in vivo have clonogenic activity in vitro. We also found that MCSCs can be purified from wild-type mice by fluorescent cell sorting and can be characterized in vitro.