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Dive into the research topics where Mitsutoshi Iimura is active.

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Featured researches published by Mitsutoshi Iimura.


Nature | 2009

Uptake through glycoprotein 2 of FimH + bacteria by M cells initiates mucosal immune response

Koji Hase; Kazuya Kawano; Tomonori Nochi; Gemilson Soares Pontes; Shinji Fukuda; Masashi Ebisawa; Kazunori Kadokura; Toru Tobe; Yumiko Fujimura; Sayaka Kawano; Atsuko Yabashi; Satoshi Waguri; Gaku Nakato; Shunsuke Kimura; Takaya Murakami; Mitsutoshi Iimura; Kimiyo Hamura; Shin Ichi Fukuoka; Anson W. Lowe; Kikuji Itoh; Hiroshi Kiyono; Hiroshi Ohno

The mucosal immune system forms the largest part of the entire immune system, containing about three-quarters of all lymphocytes and producing grams of secretory IgA daily to protect the mucosal surface from pathogens. To evoke the mucosal immune response, antigens on the mucosal surface must be transported across the epithelial barrier into organized lymphoid structures such as Peyer’s patches. This function, called antigen transcytosis, is mediated by specialized epithelial M cells. The molecular mechanisms promoting this antigen uptake, however, are largely unknown. Here we report that glycoprotein 2 (GP2), specifically expressed on the apical plasma membrane of M cells among enterocytes, serves as a transcytotic receptor for mucosal antigens. Recombinant GP2 protein selectively bound a subset of commensal and pathogenic enterobacteria, including Escherichia coli and Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium), by recognizing FimH, a component of type I pili on the bacterial outer membrane. Consistently, these bacteria were colocalized with endogenous GP2 on the apical plasma membrane as well as in cytoplasmic vesicles in M cells. Moreover, deficiency of bacterial FimH or host GP2 led to defects in transcytosis of type-I-piliated bacteria through M cells, resulting in an attenuation of antigen-specific immune responses in Peyer’s patches. GP2 is therefore a previously unrecognized transcytotic receptor on M cells for type-I-piliated bacteria and is a prerequisite for the mucosal immune response to these bacteria. Given that M cells are considered a promising target for oral vaccination against various infectious diseases, the GP2-dependent transcytotic pathway could provide a new target for the development of M-cell-targeted mucosal vaccines.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

Cathelicidin Mediates Innate Intestinal Defense against Colonization with Epithelial Adherent Bacterial Pathogens

Mitsutoshi Iimura; Richard L. Gallo; Koji Hase; Yukiko Miyamoto; Lars Eckmann; Martin F. Kagnoff

Cathelicidin-related antimicrobial peptide (mCRAMP), the sole murine cathelicidin, is encoded by the gene Cnlp. We show that mCRAMP expression in the intestinal tract is largely restricted to surface epithelial cells in the colon. Synthetic mCRAMP had antimicrobial activity against the murine enteric pathogen Citrobacter rodentium, which like the related clinically important human pathogens enteropathogenic Escherichia coli and enterohemorrhagic E. coli, adheres to the apical membrane of intestinal epithelial cells. Colon epithelial cell extracts from Cnlp+/+ mice had significantly greater antimicrobial activity against C. rodentium than those of mutant Cnlp−/− mice that lack mCRAMP. Cnlp−/− mice developed significantly greater colon surface and crypt epithelial cell colonization, surface epithelial cell damage, and systemic dissemination of infection than Cnlp+/+ mice after oral infection with C. rodentium. Moreover, Cnlp+/+ mice were protected from oral infections with C. rodentium inocula that infected the majority of Cnlp−/− mice. These results establish cathelicidin as an important component of innate antimicrobial defense in the colon.


Infection and Immunity | 2004

Clearance of Citrobacter rodentium Requires B Cells but Not Secretory Immunoglobulin A (IgA) or IgM Antibodies

Christian Maaser; Michael P. Housley; Mitsutoshi Iimura; Jennifer R. Smith; Bruce A. Vallance; B. Brett Finlay; John R. Schreiber; Nissi M. Varki; Martin F. Kagnoff; Lars Eckmann

ABSTRACT Citrobacter rodentium, a murine model pathogen for human enteropathogenic Escherichia coli, predominantly colonizes the lumen and mucosal surface of the colon and cecum and causes crypt hyperplasia and mucosal inflammation. Mice infected with C. rodentium develop a secretory immunoglobulin A (IgA) response, but the role of B cells or secretory antibodies in host defense is unknown. To address this question, we conducted oral C. rodentium infections in mice lacking B cells, IgA, secreted IgM, polymeric Ig receptor (pIgR), or J chain. Normal mice showed peak bacterial numbers in colon and feces at 1 week and bacterial eradication after 3 to 4 weeks. B-cell-deficient mice were equally susceptible initially but could not control infection subsequently. Tissue responses showed marked differences, as infection of normal mice was accompanied by transient crypt hyperplasia and mucosal inflammation in the colon and cecum at 2 but not 6 weeks, whereas B-cell-deficient mice had few mucosal changes at 2 weeks but severe epithelial hyperplasia with ulcerations and mucosal inflammation at 6 weeks. The functions of B cells were not mediated by secretory antibodies, since mice lacking IgA or secreted IgM or proteins required for their transport into the lumen, pIgR or J chain, cleared C. rodentium normally. Nonetheless, systemic administration of immune sera reduced bacterial numbers significantly in normal and pIgR-deficient mice, and depletion of IgG abrogated this effect. These results indicate that host defense against C. rodentium depends on B cells and IgG antibodies but does not require production or transepithelial transport of IgA or secreted IgM.


Journal of Immunology | 2008

IL-6-dependent mucosal protection prevents establishment of a microbial niche for attaching/effacing lesion-forming enteric bacterial pathogens

Sara M. Dann; Martina E. Spehlmann; Dustin Hammond; Mitsutoshi Iimura; Koji Hase; Lillian J. Choi; Elaine M. Hanson; Lars Eckmann

Enteric infections with attaching/effacing lesion-inducing bacterial pathogens are a worldwide health problem. A murine infection model with one such pathogen, Citrobacter rodentium, was used to elucidate the importance of the pleiotropic immune regulator, IL-6, in the pathogenesis of infection. IL-6 was strongly induced in colonic epithelial cells and macrophages upon C. rodentium infection and was required for effective host defense, because mice lacking IL-6 failed to control bacterial numbers 2–3 wk after infection and exhibited increased mortality. IL-6 was not needed for mounting effective T and B cell responses to the pathogens, nor was it important for induction of IFN-γ or TNF-α, cytokines involved in host defense against the bacteria, or the antibacterial effector, NO. Instead, IL-6 played a key role in mucosal protection, since its absence was associated with marked infection-induced apoptosis in the colonic epithelium and subsequent ulcerations. Cell culture studies confirmed that IL-6 protected colon epithelial cells directly against inducible apoptosis, which was accompanied by increased expression of an array of genes encoding antiapoptotic proteins, including Bcl-xL, Mcl-1, cIAP-2, and Bcl-3. Ulcerations appeared to be pathogenetically important, because bacteria localized preferentially to those regions, and chemically induced colonic ulcerations promoted bacterial colonization. Furthermore, blood components likely present in ulcer exudates, particularly alanine, asparagine, and glycine, promoted bacterial growth. Thus, IL-6 is an important regulator of host defense against C. rodentium by protecting the mucosa against ulcerations which can act as a microbial niche for the bacteria.


Journal of Immunology | 2006

The Membrane-Bound Chemokine CXCL16 Expressed on Follicle-Associated Epithelium and M Cells Mediates Lympho-Epithelial Interaction in GALT

Koji Hase; Takaya Murakami; Hiroyuki Takatsu; Takeshi Shimaoka; Mitsutoshi Iimura; Kimiyo Hamura; Kazuya Kawano; Sayaka Ohshima; Risa Chihara; Kikuji Itoh; Shin Yonehara; Hiroshi Ohno

The recently identified CXCL16 has dual functions as a transmembrane adhesion molecule and a soluble chemokine. In this study we found that CXCL16 mRNA and protein were expressed constitutively on the follicle-associated epithelium covering Peyer’s patches (PPs), isolated lymphoid follicles, and cecal patches, but minimally on the villous epithelium in the murine gastrointestinal tract. The CXCL16 receptor CXCR6/Bonzo was constitutively expressed on subpopulations of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells isolated from PPs. The expression of CXCR6/Bonzo on the PP T cells was up-regulated after stimulation with anti-CD3 and anti-CD28 mAbs. The activated PP T cells showed chemotactic migration in response to the soluble N-terminal chemokine domain of CXCL16. Furthermore, the activated PP T cells selectively adhered to cells expressing murine CXCL16. To determine the physiological role of CXCL16 in GALT, we first carefully analyzed T cell distribution in PPs. T cells localized not only in the interfollicular region but also at a lesser frequency in the subepithelial dome (SED) and in the germinal center of lymphoid follicles. Consistently, the majority of the adoptive transferred activated T cells migrated into the SED and the interfollicular region. However, the neutralization of CXCL16 specifically reduced the migration of the adoptive, transferred, activated T cells into the SED of PPs. These data suggest that CXCL16 expressed on the follicle-associated epithelium plays an important role in the recruitment and retention of activated T cells in the SED and should, at least partially, be responsible for lymphocyte compartmentalization in GALT.


Cellular Microbiology | 2006

Role of Shiga toxin versus H7 flagellin in enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli signalling of human colon epithelium in vivo

Yukiko Miyamoto; Mitsutoshi Iimura; James B. Kaper; Alfredo G. Torres; Martin F. Kagnoff

Enterohaemorrhagic Escherichia coli O157:H7 (EHEC) is a clinically important foodborne pathogen that colonizes human colon epithelium and induces acute colonic inflammation, but does not invade the epithelial cells. Whereas Shiga toxin (Stx) and bacterial flagellin have been studied for their ability to upregulate the production of proinflammatory chemokines by cultured human colon cancer cell lines, the relevance of studies in colon cancer cell lines to the production of proinflammatory signals by normal epithelial cells in EHEC‐infected human colon is not known. We show herein that Stx does not bind to human colon epithelium in vivo. Moreover, globotriaosylceramide (Gb3/CD77) synthase, the enzyme required for synthesis of the Gb3/CD77 receptor for Stx, was not expressed by normal or inflamed human colon epithelium in vivo. In contrast, Toll‐like receptor (TLR) 5, the receptor for bacterial flagellin, was expressed by normal human colon epithelium and by colon epithelium in human intestinal xenografts. EHEC H7 flagellin instilled in the lumen of human colon xenografts that contain an intact human epithelium upregulated the expression of epithelial cell proinflammatory chemokines, which was accompanied by a subepithelial influx of neutrophils. Isogenic mutants of EHEC that lacked flagellin did not significantly upregulate prototypic neutrophil and dendritic cell chemoattractants by model human colon epithelia, irrespective of Stx production. We conclude that EHEC H7 flagellin and not Stx is the major EHEC factor that directly upregulates proinflammatory chemokine production by human colon epithelium in vivo.


Science | 2005

Nod2 Mutation in Crohn's Disease Potentiates NF-κB Activity and IL-1ß Processing

Shin Maeda; Li-Chung Hsu; Hongjun Liu; Laurie A. Bankston; Mitsutoshi Iimura; Martin F. Kagnoff; Lars Eckmann; Michael Karin


Science | 2005

Nod2 mutation in Crohn's disease potentiates NF-kappaB activity and IL-1beta processing

Shin Maeda; Li-Chung Hsu; Hongjun Liu; Laurie A. Bankston; Mitsutoshi Iimura; Martin F. Kagnoff; Lars Eckmann; Michael Karin


Gastroenterology | 2003

Expression of LL-37 by Human Gastric Epithelial Cells as a Potential Host Defense Mechanism Against Helicobacter pylori

Koji Hase; Masamoto Murakami; Mitsutoshi Iimura; Sheri P. Cole; Yoshimune Horibe; Takaaki Ohtake; Marygorret Obonyo; Richard L. Gallo; Lars Eckmann; Martin F. Kagnoff


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2004

Regulated production of the chemokine CCL28 in human colon epithelium

Hiroyuki Ogawa; Mitsutoshi Iimura; Lars Eckmann; Martin F. Kagnoff

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Lars Eckmann

University of California

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Michael Karin

University of California

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Shin Maeda

Yokohama City University Medical Center

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Li-Chung Hsu

National Taiwan University

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