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Dive into the research topics where Mikako Yagi is active.

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Featured researches published by Mikako Yagi.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

ERAL1 is associated with mitochondrial ribosome and elimination of ERAL1 leads to mitochondrial dysfunction and growth retardation.

Takeshi Uchiumi; Kippei Ohgaki; Mikako Yagi; Yoshimasa Aoki; Aya Sakai; Shinya Matsumoto; Dongchon Kang

ERAL1, a homologue of Era protein in Escherichia coli, is a member of conserved GTP-binding proteins with RNA-binding activity. Depletion of prokaryotic Era inhibits cell division without affecting chromosome segregation. Previously, we isolated ERAL1 protein as one of proteins which were associated with mitochondrial transcription factor A by using immunoprecipitation. In this study, we analysed the localization and function of ERAL1 in mammalian cells. ERAL1 was localized in mitochondrial matrix and associated with mitoribosomal proteins including the 12S rRNA. siRNA knockdown of ERAL1 decreased mitochondrial translation, caused redistribution of ribosomal small subunits and reduced 12S rRNA. The knockdown of ERAL1 in human HeLa cells elevated mitochondrial superoxide production and slightly decreased mitochondrial membrane potential. The knockdown inhibited the growth of HeLa cells with an accumulation of apoptotic cells. These results suggest that ERAL1 is localized in a small subunit of the mitochondrial ribosome, plays an important role in the small ribosomal constitution, and is also involved in cell viability.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

p32/gC1qR is indispensable for fetal development and mitochondrial translation: importance of its RNA-binding ability

Mikako Yagi; Takeshi Uchiumi; Shinya Takazaki; Bungo Okuno; Masatoshi Nomura; Shin-ichi Yoshida; Tomotake Kanki; Dongchon Kang

p32 is an evolutionarily conserved and ubiquitously expressed multifunctional protein. Although p32 exists at diverse intra and extracellular sites, it is predominantly localized to the mitochondrial matrix near the nucleoid associated with mitochondrial transcription factor A. Nonetheless, its function in the matrix is poorly understood. Here, we determined p32 function via generation of p32-knockout mice. p32-deficient mice exhibited mid-gestation lethality associated with a severe developmental defect of the embryo. Primary embryonic fibroblasts isolated from p32-knockout embryos showed severe dysfunction of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, because of severely impaired mitochondrial protein synthesis. Recombinant p32 binds RNA, not DNA, and endogenous p32 interacts with all mitochondrial messenger RNA species in vivo. The RNA-binding ability of p32 is well correlated with the mitochondrial translation. Co-immunoprecipitation revealed the close association of p32 with the mitoribosome. We propose that p32 is required for functional mitoribosome formation to synthesize proteins within mitochondria.


Nature Communications | 2014

Glycolytic genes are targets of the nuclear receptor Ad4BP/SF-1

Takashi Baba; Hiroyuki Otake; Tetsuya Sato; Kanako Miyabayashi; Yurina Shishido; Chia Yih Wang; Yuichi Shima; Hiroshi Kimura; Mikako Yagi; Yasuhiro Ishihara; Shinjiro Hino; Hidesato Ogawa; Mitsuyoshi Nakao; Takeshi Yamazaki; Dongchon Kang; Yasuyuki Ohkawa; Mikita Suyama; Bon-chu Chung; Ken-ichirou Morohashi

Genetic deficiencies in transcription factors can lead to the loss of certain types of cells and tissue. The steroidogenic tissue-specific nuclear receptor Ad4BP/SF-1 (NR5A1) is one such gene, because mice in which this gene is disrupted fail to develop the adrenal gland and gonads. However, the specific role of Ad4BP/SF-1 in these biological events remains unclear. Here we use chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing to show that nearly all genes in the glycolytic pathway are regulated by Ad4BP/SF-1. Suppression of Ad4BP/SF-1 by small interfering RNA reduces production of the energy carriers ATP and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate, as well as lowers expression of genes involved in glucose metabolism. Together, these observations may explain tissue dysgenesis as a result of Ad4BP/SF-1 gene disruption in vivo. Considering the function of estrogen-related receptor α, the present study raises the possibility that certain types of nuclear receptors regulate sets of genes involved in metabolic pathways to generate energy carriers.


Cancer Science | 2011

Mitochondrial p32/C1QBP is highly expressed in prostate cancer and is associated with shorter prostate-specific antigen relapse time after radical prostatectomy

Rie Amamoto; Mikako Yagi; YooHyun Song; Yoshinao Oda; Masazumi Tsuneyoshi; Seiji Naito; Akira Yokomizo; Kentaro Kuroiwa; Shoji Tokunaga; Seiji Kato; Hisahide Hiura; Tomohiro Samori; Dongchon Kang; Takeshi Uchiumi

Mitochondria are key organelles for ATP production and apoptosis. Therefore, impairment of mitochondria can modulate or accelerate cancer progression. p32, originally identified as a pre‐mRNA splicing factor SF2/ASF‐associated protein, is localized predominantly in the mitochondrial matrix and involved in mitochondria respiration. Recently, p32 was implicated in apoptosis and resultantly cancer progression. However, little is known about the expression and function of p32 in human tumors including prostate cancer. Here, we investigated the expression of p32 in 148 prostate carcinoma tissues by immunohistochemistry and found a positive correlation of p32 expression to clinicopathological parameters including follow‐up data. p32 is highly expressed in prostate tumor samples and its expression is significantly associated with the Gleason score, pathological stage and relapse. For localized cancers, high p32 is a strong and independent predictor of clinical recurrence in multivariate analysis (P = 0.01). In addition, p32 is overexpressed in the prostate cancer cell lines examined. The selective knockdown of p32 by RNA interference inhibits the growth of prostate cancer cell lines but not of a non‐cancerous cell line. The p32 RNA interference decreases cyclin D1, increases p21 expression and causes a G1/S cell cycle arrest in prostate cancer cells. These data suggest that p32 is critical for prostate cancer cell proliferation and may be a novel marker of clinical progression in prostate cancer. (Cancer Sci 2011; 102: 639–647)


Bioscience Reports | 2013

Dihydro-orotate dehydrogenase is physically associated with the respiratory complex and its loss leads to mitochondrial dysfunction

Jing Xian Fang; Takeshi Uchiumi; Mikako Yagi; Shinya Matsumoto; Rie Amamoto; Shinya Takazaki; Haruyoshi Yamaza; Kazuaki Nonaka; Dongchon Kang

Some mutations of the DHODH (dihydro-orotate dehydrogenase) gene lead to postaxial acrofacial dysostosis or Miller syndrome. Only DHODH is localized at mitochondria among enzymes of the de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis pathway. Since the pyrimidine biosynthesis pathway is coupled to the mitochondrial RC (respiratory chain) via DHODH, impairment of DHODH should affect the RC function. To investigate this, we used siRNA (small interfering RNA)-mediated knockdown and observed that DHODH knockdown induced cell growth retardation because of G2/M cell-cycle arrest, whereas pyrimidine deficiency usually causes G1/S arrest. Inconsistent with this, the cell retardation was not rescued by exogenous uridine, which should bypass the DHODH reaction for pyrimidine synthesis. DHODH depletion partially inhibited the RC complex III, decreased the mitochondrial membrane potential, and increased the generation of ROS (reactive oxygen species). We observed that DHODH physically interacts with respiratory complexes II and III by IP (immunoprecipitation) and BN (blue native)/SDS/PAGE analysis. Considering that pyrimidine deficiency alone does not induce craniofacial dysmorphism, the DHODH mutations may contribute to the Miller syndrome in part through somehow altered mitochondrial function.


Mitochondrion | 2012

Localization of mRNAs encoding human mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation proteins.

Shinya Matsumoto; Takeshi Uchiumi; Toshiro Saito; Mikako Yagi; Shinya Takazaki; Tomotake Kanki; Dongchon Kang

The mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) proteins are encoded by both nuclear and mitochondrial DNA. The nuclear-encoded OXPHOS mRNAs have specific subcellular localizations, but little is known about which localize near mitochondria. Here, we compared mRNAs in mitochondria-bound polysome fractions with those in cytosolic, free polysome fractions. mRNAs encoding hydrophobic OXPHOS proteins, which insert into the inner membrane, were localized near mitochondria. Conversely, OXPHOS gene which mRNAs were predominantly localized in cytosol had less than one transmembrane domain. The RNA-binding protein Y-box binding protein-1 is localized at the mitochondrial outer membrane and bound to the OXPHOS mRNAs. Our findings offer new insight into mitochondrial co-translational import in human cells.


Biochemical Journal | 2012

Ribonucleoprotein Y-box-binding protein-1 regulates mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) protein expression after serum stimulation through binding to OXPHOS mRNA

Shinya Matsumoto; Takeshi Uchiumi; Hiroyuki Tanamachi; Toshiro Saito; Mikako Yagi; Shinya Takazaki; Tomotake Kanki; Dongchon Kang

Mitochondria play key roles in essential cellular functions, such as energy production, metabolic pathways and aging. Growth factor-mediated expression of the mitochondrial OXPHOS (oxidative phosphorylation) complex proteins has been proposed to play a fundamental role in metabolic homoeostasis. Although protein translation is affected by general RNA-binding proteins, very little is known about the mechanism involved in mitochondrial OXPHOS protein translation. In the present study, serum stimulation induced nuclear-encoded OXPHOS protein expression, such as NDUFA9 [NADH dehydrogenase (ubiquinone) 1α subcomplex, 9, 39 kDa], NDUFB8 [NADH dehydrogenase (ubiquinone) 1β subcomplex, 8, 19 kDa], SDHB [succinate dehydrogenase complex, subunit B, iron sulfur (Ip)] and UQCRFS1 (ubiquinol-cytochrome c reductase, Rieske iron-sulfur polypeptide 1), and mitochondrial ATP production, in a translation-dependent manner. We also observed that the major ribonucleoprotein YB-1 (Y-box-binding protein-1) preferentially bound to these OXPHOS mRNAs and regulated the recruitment of mRNAs from inactive mRNPs (messenger ribonucleoprotein particles) to active polysomes. YB-1 depletion led to up-regulation of mitochondrial function through induction of OXPHOS protein translation from inactive mRNP release. In contrast, YB-1 overexpression suppressed the translation of these OXPHOS mRNAs through reduced polysome formation, suggesting that YB-1 regulated the translation of mitochondrial OXPHOS mRNAs through mRNA binding. Taken together, our findings suggest that YB-1 is a critical factor for translation that may control OXPHOS activity.


Bioscience Reports | 2012

Protein instability and functional defects caused by mutations of dihydro-orotate dehydrogenase in Miller syndrome patients

Jing Xian Fang; Takeshi Uchiumi; Mikako Yagi; Shinya Matsumoto; Rie Amamoto; Toshiro Saito; Shinya Takazaki; Tomotake Kanki; Haruyoshi Yamaza; Kazuaki Nonaka; Dongchon Kang

Miller syndrome is a recessive inherited disorder characterized by postaxial acrofacial dysostosis. It is caused by dysfunction of the DHODH (dihydroorotate dehydrogenase) gene, which encodes a key enzyme in the pyrimidine de novo biosynthesis pathway and is localized at mitochondria intermembrane space. We investigated the consequence of three missense mutations, G202A, R346W and R135C of DHODH, which were previously identified in patients with Miller syndrome. First, we established HeLa cell lines stably expressing DHODH with Miller syndrome-causative mutations: G202A, R346W and R135C. These three mutant proteins retained the proper mitochondrial localization based on immunohistochemistry and mitochondrial subfractionation studies. The G202A, R346W DHODH proteins showed reduced protein stability. On the other hand, the third one R135C, in which the mutation lies at the ubiquinone-binding site, was stable but possessed no enzymatic activity. In conclusion, the G202A and R346W mutation causes deficient protein stability, and the R135C mutation does not affect stability but impairs the substrate-induced enzymatic activity, suggesting that impairment of DHODH activity is linked to the Miller syndrome phenotype.


Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2002

Molecular cloning, functional expression, and mutagenesis of cDNA encoding rye (secale cereale) seed chitinase-c

Takayuki Ohnuma; Mikako Yagi; Takeshi Yamagami; Toki Taira; Yoichi Aso; Masatsune Ishiguro

We cloned a complete cDNA encoding rye seed chitinase-c, designated RSC-c, by rapid amplification of cDNA end and PCR procedures. The cDNA of RSC-c consists of 1,018 nucleotides and includes an open reading frame encoding a polypeptide of 266 amino acid residues. A recombinant RSC-c was produced by expression in Escherichia coli Origami(DE3) and purified. rRSC-c had almost the same chitinase activity toward glycolchitin and antifungal activity against Trichoderma sp. as the authentic RSC-c did. RSC-c mutants were subsequently constructed and characterized with respect to their chitinase and antifungal activities. Mutation of Glu67 to Gln completely abolished the chitinase activity and diminished the antifungal activity. Considerable decreases in both activities were observed in the mutations of Trp72 and Ser120 to Ala, and Glu89 to Gln. The roles of these residues in the catalytic event of RSC-c are discussed.


Hepatology Research | 2013

Mutation and functional analysis of ABCC2/multidrug resistance protein 2 in a Japanese patient with Dubin-Johnson syndrome

Takeshi Uchiumi; Hiroyuki Tanamachi; Kajiyo Kuchiwaki; Mitsuharu Kajita; Shinya Matsumoto; Mikako Yagi; Tomotake Kanki; Dongchon Kang

Dubin–Johnson syndrome (DJS) is a recessive inherited disorder characterized by conjugated hyperbilirubinemia. It is caused by dysfunction of adenosine triphosphate‐binding cassette, sub‐family C, member 2 (ABCC2/MRP2) on the canalicular membrane of hepatocytes. We performed mutational analysis of the ABCC2/MRP2 gene in a Japanese female with DJS. Furthermore, we investigated the effects of the two identified DJS‐associated mutations on MRP2 function. We found a compound heterozygous mutation in the patient: W709R (c.2124T>C), a missense mutation in exon 17, and R1310X (c.3928C>T), a nonsense mutation in exon 28. DJS‐associated mutations have been shown to impair the protein maturation and transport activity of ABCC2/MRP2. We established HEK293 cell lines stably expressing one of the two identified DJS‐associated mutations. Expressed W709R MRP2 was mainly core‐glycosylated, predominantly retained in the endoplasmic reticulum, and exhibited no transport activity, suggesting that this mutation causes deficient maturation and impaired protein sorting. No MRP2 protein was expressed from HEK293 cells transfected with an R1310X‐containing construct. This compound heterozygous mutation of the MRP2 gene causes dysfunction of the MRP2 protein and the hyperbilirubinemia seen in DJS.

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