Minoru Nakazato
National Institutes of Health
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Featured researches published by Minoru Nakazato.
Trends in Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2001
Leonard D. Kohn; Koichi Suzuki; Minoru Nakazato; Ines E. Royaux; Eric D. Green
Iodide transport by thyrocytes involves porters on the apical and basal surfaces of the cell facing the follicular lumen and bloodstream, respectively. Recent work identifies pendrin as an apical porter and shows that follicular thyroglobulin is a transcriptional regulator of the gene encoding pendrin and other thyroid-restricted genes. For example, whereas follicular thyroglobulin suppresses the gene expression and activity of the sodium iodide symporter (NIS), it increases pendrin gene expression. A potential new dynamic for iodide flux and thyroid hormone formation in thyrocytes has thus emerged and is supported by in vivo data.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999
Luca Ulianich; Koichi Suzuki; Atsumi Mori; Minoru Nakazato; Michele Pietrarelli; Paul Goldsmith; Francesco Pacifico; Eduardo Consiglio; Silvestro Formisano; Leonard D. Kohn
Follicular thyroglobulin (TG) decreases expression of the thyroid-restricted transcription factors, thyroid transcription factor (TTF)-1, TTF-2, and Pax-8, thereby suppressing expression of the sodium iodide symporter, thyroid peroxidase, TG, and thyrotropin receptor genes (Suzuki, K., Lavaroni, S., Mori, A., Ohta, M., Saito, J., Pietrarelli, M., Singer, D. S., Kimura, S., Katoh, R., Kawaoi, A., and Kohn, L. D. (1997) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 95, 8251–8256). The ability of highly purified 27, 19, or 12 S follicular TG to suppress thyroid-restricted gene expression correlates with their ability to bind to FRTL-5 thyrocytes and is inhibited by a specific antibody to the thyroid apical membrane asialoglycoprotein receptor (ASGPR), which is related to the ASGPR of liver cells. Phosphorylating serine/threonine residues of TG, by autophosphorylation or protein kinase A, eliminates TG suppression and enhances transcript levels of the thyroid-restricted genes 2-fold in the absence of a change in TG binding to the ASGPR. Follicular TG suppression of thyroid-restricted genes is thus mediated by the ASPGR on the thyrocyte apical membrane and regulated by a signal system wherein phosphorylation of serine/threonine residues on the bound ligand is an important component. These data provide a hitherto unsuspected role for the ASGPR in transcriptional signaling, aside from its role in endocytosis. They establish a functional role for phosphorylated serine/threonine residues on the TG molecule.
Biochimie | 1999
Koichi Suzuki; Atsumi Mori; Stefano Lavaroni; Luca Ulianich; Eri Miyagi; Jun Saito; Minoru Nakazato; Michele Pietrarelli; Neta Shafran; Antonino Grassadonia; Won Bae Kim; Eduardo Consiglio; Silvestro Formisano; Leonard D. Kohn
Thyroglobulin (TG) is the primary synthetic product of the thyroid and the macromolecular precursor of thyroid hormones. TG synthesis, iodination, storage in follicles, and lysosomal degradation can each modulate thyroid hormone formation and secretion into the circulation. Thyrotropin (TSH), via its receptor (the TSHR), increases thyroid hormone levels by upregulating expression of the sodium iodide symporter (NIS), thyroid peroxidase (TPO), and TG genes. TSH does this by modulating the expression and activity of the thyroid-specific transcription factors, thyroid transcription factor (TTF)-1, TTF-2, and Pax-8, which coordinately regulate NIS, TPO, TG, and the TSHR. Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I gene expression, which is also regulated by TTF-1 and Pax-8 in the thyroid, is simultaneously decreased; this maintains self tolerance in the face of TSH-increased gene products necessary for thyroid hormone formation. We now show that follicular TG, 27S > 19S > 12S, counter-regulates TSH-increased thyroid-specific gene transcription by suppressing the expression of the TTF-1, TTF-2, and Pax-8 genes. This decreases expression of the TG, TPO, NIS and TSHR genes, but increases class I expression. TG action involves an apical membrane TG-binding protein; however, it acts transcriptionally, targeting, for example, a sequence within 1.15 kb of the start of TTF-1 transcription. TG does not affect ubiquitous transcription factors regulating TG, TPO, NIS and/or TSHR gene expression. TG activity is not duplicated by thyroid hormones or iodide. We hypothesize that TG-initiated, transcriptional regulation of thyroid-restricted genes is a normal, feedback, compensatory mechanism which regulates follicular function, regulates thyroid hormone secretion, and contributes to follicular heterogeneity.
International Reviews of Immunology | 2000
Leonard D. Kohn; Giorgio Napolitano; Dinah S. Singer; Monica Molteni; Raffaella Scorza; Naoki Shimojo; Yoichi Kohno; Edna Mozes; Minoru Nakazato; Luca Ulianich; Hyun-Kyung Chung; Hana Matoba; Bertrand Saunier; Koichi Suzuki; Frank Schuppert; Motoyasu Saji
In this report we summarize evidence to support a model for the development of Graves’ disease. The model suggests that Graves’ disease is initiated by an insult to the thyrocyte in an individual with a normal immune system. The insult, infectious or otherwise, causes double strand DNA or RNA to enter the cytoplasm of the cell. This causes abnormal expression of major histocompatibility (MHC) class I as a dominant feature, but also aberrant expression of MHC class II, as well as changes in genes or gene products needed for the thyrocyte to become an antigen presenting cell (APC). These include increased expression of proteasome processing proteins (LMP2), transporters of antigen peptides (TAP), invariant chain (Ii), HLA-DM, and the co-stimulatory molecule, B7, as well as STAT and NF-kB activation. A critical factor in these changes is the loss of normal negative regulation of MHC class I, class II, and thyrotropin receptor (TSHR) gene expression, which is necessary to maintain self-tolerance during the normal changes in gene expression involved in hormonally-increased growth and function of the cell. Self-tolerance to the TSHR is maintained in normals because there is a population of CD8+ cells which normally suppresses a population of CD4+ cells that can interact with the TSHR if thyrocytes become APCs. This is a host self-defense mechanism that we hypothesize leads to autoimmune disease in persons, for example, with a specific viral infection, a genetic predisposition, or even, possibly, a TSHR polymorphism. The model is suggested to be important to explain the development of other autoimmune diseases including systemic lupus or diabetes.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2000
Minoru Nakazato; Hyun-Kyung Chung; Luca Ulianich; Antonino Grassadonia; Koichi Suzuki; Leonard D. Kohn
ABSTRACT Follicular thyroglobulin (TG) selectively suppresses the expression of thyroid-restricted transcription factors, thereby altering the expression of thyroid-specific proteins. In this study, we investigated the molecular mechanism by which TG suppresses the prototypic thyroid-restricted transcription factor, thyroid transcription factor 1 (TTF-1), in rat FRTL-5 thyrocytes. We show that the region between bp −264 and −153 on the TTF-1 promoter contains two nuclear factor I (NFI) elements whose function is involved in TG-mediated suppression. Thus, NFI binding to these elements is critical for constitutive expression of TTF-1; TG decreases NFI binding to the NFI elements in association with TG repression. NFI is a family of transcription factors that is ubiquitously expressed and contributes to constitutive and cell-specific gene expression. In contrast to the contribution of NFI proteins to constitutive gene expression in other systems, we demonstrate that follicular TG transcriptionally represses all NFI RNAs (NFI-A, -B, -C, and -X) in association with decreased NFI binding and that the RNA levels decrease as early as 4 h after TG treatment. Although TG treatment for 48 h results in a decrease in NFI protein-DNA complexes measured in DNA mobility shift assays, NFI proteins are still detectable by Western analysis. We show, however, that the binding of all NFI proteins is redox regulated. Thus, diamide treatment of nuclear extracts strongly reduces the binding of NFI proteins, and the addition of higher concentrations of dithiothreitol to nuclear extracts from TG-treated cells restores NFI-DNA binding to levels in extracts from untreated cells. We conclude that NFI binding to two NFI elements, at bp −264 to −153, positively regulates TTF-1 expression and controls constitutive TTF-1 levels. TG mediates the repression of TTF-1 gene expression by decreasing NFI RNA and protein levels, as well as by altering the binding activity of NFI, which is redox controlled.
Reviews in Endocrine & Metabolic Disorders | 2000
Koichi Suzuki; Minoru Nakazato; Luca Ulianich; Atsumi Mori-Aoki; Emiko Moriyama; Hyun-Kyung Chung; Michelle Pietrarelli; Antonino Grassadonia; Hana Matoba; Leonard D. Kohn
Koichi Suzuki, Ph.D., Minoru Nakazato, M.D., Ph.D., Luca Ulianich, Ph.D., Atsumi Mori-Aoki, M.D., Emiko Moriyama, B.A., Hyun-Kyung Chung, M.D., Michelle Pietrarelli, Ph.D., Antonino Grassadonia, M.D., Hana Matoba, M.D., Ph.D., and Leonard D. Kohn, M.D. Cell Regulation Section, Metabolic Diseases Branch, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, Laboratory of Molecular Endocrinology, MedStar Research Institute, Washington Hospital Center, 108 Irving Street, NW, Washington DC 20010, First Department of Internal Medicine, Tottori University School of Medicine, Yonago 683-8504, Japan
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 1997
Tsukasa Saito; Toyoshi Endo; Akio Kawaguchi; Masato Ikeda; Minoru Nakazato; Takahiko Kogai; Toshimasa Onaya
Molecular Endocrinology | 1997
Toyoshi Endo; Masahiro Kaneshige; Minoru Nakazato; Masayuki Ohmori; Norikazu Harii; Toshimasa Onaya
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1996
Toyoshi Endo; Takahiko Kogai; Minoru Nakazato; Tsukasa Saito; Masahiro Kaneshige; Toshimasa Onaya
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1996
Toyoshi Endo; Masahiro Kaneshige; Minoru Nakazato; Takahiko Kogai; Tsukasa Saito; Toshimasa Onaya