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Dive into the research topics where Michiko Sekiya is active.

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Featured researches published by Michiko Sekiya.


PLOS Genetics | 2012

Loss of axonal mitochondria promotes tau- mediated neurodegeneration and Alzheimer's disease-related tau phosphorylation via PAR-1.

Kanae Iijima-Ando; Michiko Sekiya; Akiko Maruko-Otake; Yosuke Ohtake; Emiko Suzuki; Bingwei Lu; Koichi Iijima

Abnormal phosphorylation and toxicity of a microtubule-associated protein tau are involved in the pathogenesis of Alzheimers disease (AD); however, what pathological conditions trigger tau abnormality in AD is not fully understood. A reduction in the number of mitochondria in the axon has been implicated in AD. In this study, we investigated whether and how loss of axonal mitochondria promotes tau phosphorylation and toxicity in vivo. Using transgenic Drosophila expressing human tau, we found that RNAi–mediated knockdown of milton or Miro, an adaptor protein essential for axonal transport of mitochondria, enhanced human tau-induced neurodegeneration. Tau phosphorylation at an AD–related site Ser262 increased with knockdown of milton or Miro; and partitioning defective-1 (PAR-1), the Drosophila homolog of mammalian microtubule affinity-regulating kinase, mediated this increase of tau phosphorylation. Tau phosphorylation at Ser262 has been reported to promote tau detachment from microtubules, and we found that the levels of microtubule-unbound free tau increased by milton knockdown. Blocking tau phosphorylation at Ser262 site by PAR-1 knockdown or by mutating the Ser262 site to unphosphorylatable alanine suppressed the enhancement of tau-induced neurodegeneration caused by milton knockdown. Furthermore, knockdown of milton or Miro increased the levels of active PAR-1. These results suggest that an increase in tau phosphorylation at Ser262 through PAR-1 contributes to tau-mediated neurodegeneration under a pathological condition in which axonal mitochondria is depleted. Intriguingly, we found that knockdown of milton or Miro alone caused late-onset neurodegeneration in the fly brain, and this neurodegeneration could be suppressed by knockdown of Drosophila tau or PAR-1. Our results suggest that loss of axonal mitochondria may play an important role in tau phosphorylation and toxicity in the pathogenesis of AD.


PLOS Genetics | 2016

Stabilization of Microtubule-Unbound Tau via Tau Phosphorylation at Ser262/356 by Par-1/MARK Contributes to Augmentation of AD-Related Phosphorylation and Aβ42-Induced Tau Toxicity.

Kanae Ando; Akiko Maruko-Otake; Yosuke Ohtake; Motoki Hayashishita; Michiko Sekiya; Koichi Iijima

Abnormal accumulation of the microtubule-interacting protein tau is associated with neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer’s disease (AD). β-amyloid (Aβ) lies upstream of abnormal tau behavior, including detachment from microtubules, phosphorylation at several disease-specific sites, and self-aggregation into toxic tau species in AD brains. To prevent the cascade of events leading to neurodegeneration in AD, it is essential to elucidate the mechanisms underlying the initial events of tau mismetabolism. Currently, however, these mechanisms remain unclear. In this study, using transgenic Drosophila co-expressing human tau and Aβ, we found that tau phosphorylation at AD-related Ser262/356 stabilized microtubule-unbound tau in the early phase of tau mismetabolism, leading to neurodegeneration. Aβ increased the level of tau detached from microtubules, independent of the phosphorylation status at GSK3-targeted SP/TP sites. Such mislocalized tau proteins, especially the less phosphorylated species, were stabilized by phosphorylation at Ser262/356 via PAR-1/MARK. Levels of Ser262 phosphorylation were increased by Aβ42, and blocking this stabilization of tau suppressed Aβ42-mediated augmentation of tau toxicity and an increase in the levels of tau phosphorylation at the SP/TP site Thr231, suggesting that this process may be involved in AD pathogenesis. In contrast to PAR-1/MARK, blocking tau phosphorylation at SP/TP sites by knockdown of Sgg/GSK3 did not reduce tau levels, suppress tau mislocalization to the cytosol, or diminish Aβ-mediated augmentation of tau toxicity. These results suggest that stabilization of microtubule-unbound tau by phosphorylation at Ser262/356 via the PAR-1/MARK may act in the initial steps of tau mismetabolism in AD pathogenesis, and that such tau species may represent a potential therapeutic target for AD.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2013

Global analysis of phosphorylation of tau by the checkpoint kinases Chk1 and Chk2 in vitro.

Jhoana Mendoza; Michiko Sekiya; Taizo Taniguchi; Koichi Iijima; Rong Wang; Kanae Ando

Hyperphosphorylation of microtubule-associated protein tau is thought to contribute to Alzheimers disease (AD) pathogenesis. We previously showed that DNA damage-activated cell cycle checkpoint kinases Chk1 and Chk2 phosphorylate tau at an AD-related site and enhance tau toxicity, suggesting potential roles of these kinases in AD. The purpose of this study is to systematically identify which sites in tau are directly phosphorylated by Chk1 and Chk2. Using recombinant human tau phosphorylated by Chk1 and Chk2 in vitro, we first analyzed tau phosphorylation at the AD-related sites by Western blot with phospho-tau-specific antibodies. Second, to globally identify phosphorylated sites in tau, liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS(3)) was employed. These systematic analyses identified a total of 27 Ser/Thr residues as Chk1- or Chk2- target sites. None of them were proline-directed kinase targets. Many of these sites are located within the microtubule-binding domain and C-terminal domain, whose phosphorylation has been shown to reduce tau binding to microtubules and/or has been implicated in tau toxicity. Among these 27 sites, 13 sites have been identified to be phosphorylated in AD brains. Since DNA damage is accumulated in diseased brains, Chk1 and Chk2 may be involved in tau phosphorylation and toxicity in AD pathogenesis.


PLOS Genetics | 2018

Knockdown of wfs1, a fly homolog of Wolfram syndrome 1, in the nervous system increases susceptibility to age- and stress-induced neuronal dysfunction and degeneration in Drosophila

Yasufumi Sakakibara; Michiko Sekiya; Naoki Fujisaki; Xiuming Quan; Koichi Iijima

Wolfram syndrome (WS), caused by loss-of-function mutations in the Wolfram syndrome 1 gene (WFS1), is characterized by juvenile-onset diabetes mellitus, bilateral optic atrophy, and a wide spectrum of neurological and psychiatric manifestations. WFS1 encodes an endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-resident transmembrane protein, and mutations in this gene lead to pancreatic β-cell death induced by high levels of ER stress. However, the mechanisms underlying neurodegeneration caused by WFS1 deficiency remain elusive. Here, we investigated the role of WFS1 in the maintenance of neuronal integrity in vivo by knocking down the expression of wfs1, the Drosophila homolog of WFS1, in the central nervous system. Neuronal knockdown of wfs1 caused age-dependent behavioral deficits and neurodegeneration in the fly brain. Knockdown of wfs1 in neurons and glial cells resulted in premature death and significantly exacerbated behavioral deficits in flies, suggesting that wfs1 has important functions in both cell types. Although wfs1 knockdown alone did not promote ER stress, it increased the susceptibility to oxidative stress-, excitotoxicity- or tauopathy-induced behavioral deficits, and neurodegeneration. The glutamate release inhibitor riluzole significantly suppressed premature death phenotypes induced by neuronal and glial knockdown of wfs1. This study highlights the protective role of wfs1 against age-associated neurodegeneration and furthers our understanding of potential disease-modifying factors that determine susceptibility and resilience to age-associated neurodegenerative diseases.


Genome Medicine | 2018

Integrated biology approach reveals molecular and pathological interactions among Alzheimer’s Aβ42, Tau, TREM2, and TYROBP in Drosophila models

Michiko Sekiya; Minghui Wang; Naoki Fujisaki; Yasufumi Sakakibara; Xiuming Quan; Michelle E. Ehrlich; Philip L. De Jager; David A. Bennett; Eric E. Schadt; Sam Gandy; Kanae Ando; Bin Zhang; Koichi Iijima

BackgroundCerebral amyloidosis, neuroinflammation, and tauopathy are key features of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), but interactions among these features remain poorly understood. Our previous multiscale molecular network models of AD revealed TYROBP as a key driver of an immune- and microglia-specific network that was robustly associated with AD pathophysiology. Recent genetic studies of AD further identified pathogenic mutations in both TREM2 and TYROBP.MethodsIn this study, we systematically examined molecular and pathological interactions among Aβ, tau, TREM2, and TYROBP by integrating signatures from transgenic Drosophila models of AD and transcriptome-wide gene co-expression networks from two human AD cohorts.ResultsGlial expression of TREM2/TYROBP exacerbated tau-mediated neurodegeneration and synergistically affected pathways underlying late-onset AD pathology, while neuronal Aβ42 and glial TREM2/TYROBP synergistically altered expression of the genes in synaptic function and immune modules in AD.ConclusionsThe comprehensive pathological and molecular data generated through this study strongly validate the causal role of TREM2/TYROBP in driving molecular networks in AD and AD-related phenotypes in flies.


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2013

Epigenetic modifications reveal an effective use of the protein quality control system to suppress accumulation and toxicity of beta-amyloid 42 in the secretory pathway in neurons

Koichi Iijima; Michiko Sekiya; Akiko Maruko-Otake; Kanae Ando

chaperone. In support of this theory we have found that mutations in the BRICHOS domain of proSP-C lead to interstitial lung disease with amyloid deposits of SP-C (Willander H., Askarieh G. et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 2012). We have recently reported that the BRICHOS domain is an efficient in vitro inhibitor of A b amyloid formation. The proSP-C and the Bri2 BRICHOS domains prevented aggregation and fibril formation of Ab far below stoichiometric amounts of BRICHOS protein, and we could show that the A bwas kept in amonomeric unstructured state in the presence of BRICHOS (Willander H., Presto J. et al., J Biol Chem, 2012).Methods: To further examine BRICHOS effects on Ab in vivo, we have now used transgenic Drosophila melanogaster to study the effects of the BRICHOS domain on Ab aggregation and concomitant neuronal dysfunction.Results: Expression of Ab42 alone in flies results in peptide aggregates detectable with confocal microscopy, reduced life-span and decreased locomotor activity, while expression of proSP-C BRICHOS alone cause no detectable effects compared to wild type flies. Co-expression of proSP-C BRICHOS with Ab42 gives a decreased amount of aggregated peptide, increased life-span as well as improved locomotor activity. The BRICHOS domain is able to prevent Ab in the fly brain from aggregation, and instead keeps Ab soluble. Conclusions: This strongly suggests that the inhibition of Ab 42 aggregation by BRICHOS is accompanied by positive effects on toxicity and neuronal function.


Developmental Cell | 2017

EDEM Function in ERAD Protects against Chronic ER Proteinopathy and Age-Related Physiological Decline in Drosophila

Michiko Sekiya; Akiko Maruko-Otake; Stephen Hearn; Yasufumi Sakakibara; Naoki Fujisaki; Emiko Suzuki; Kanae Ando; Koichi Iijima


BMC Neuroscience | 2018

Cognitive and emotional alterations in App knock-in mouse models of Aβ amyloidosis

Yasufumi Sakakibara; Michiko Sekiya; Takashi Saito; Takaomi C. Saido; Koichi Iijima


The Japanese Biochemical Society/The Molecular Biology Society of Japan | 2017

Protective roles of Sur , a fly homologue of Sulfonylurea receptors, ABCC8 /SUR1 and ABCC9 /SUR2, against age-associated neurodegeneration in Drosophila

Xiuming Quan; Naoki Fujisaki; Yasufumi Sakakibara; Michiko Sekiya; Koichi Iijima


The Molecular Biology Society of Japan | 2016

The mechanism underlying neurodegeneration in a Drosophila model of Wolfram syndrome

Naoki Fujisaki; Yasufumi Sakakibara; Michiko Sekiya; Koichi Iijima

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Koichi Iijima

Thomas Jefferson University

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Kanae Ando

Tokyo Metropolitan University

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Akiko Maruko-Otake

Thomas Jefferson University

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Emiko Suzuki

National Institute of Genetics

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Kanae Iijima-Ando

Thomas Jefferson University

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Yosuke Ohtake

Thomas Jefferson University

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Stephen Hearn

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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Bin Zhang

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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