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Dive into the research topics where Motoo Yamasaki is active.

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Featured researches published by Motoo Yamasaki.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

The absence of fucose but not the presence of galactose or bisecting N-acetylglucosamine of human IgG1 complex-type oligosaccharides shows the critical role of enhancing antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity

Toyohide Shinkawa; Kazuyasu Nakamura; Naoko Yamane; Emi Shoji-Hosaka; Yutaka Kanda; Mikiko Sakurada; Kazuhisa Uchida; Hideharu Anazawa; Mitsuo Satoh; Motoo Yamasaki; Nobuo Hanai; Kenya Shitara

An anti-human interleukin 5 receptor (hIL-5R) humanized immunoglobulin G1 (IgG1) and an anti-CD20 chimeric IgG1 produced by rat hybridoma YB2/0 cell lines showed more than 50-fold higher antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) using purified human peripheral blood mononuclear cells as effector than those produced by Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell lines. Monosaccharide composition and oligosaccharide profiling analysis showed that low fucose (Fuc) content of complex-type oligosaccharides was characteristic in YB2/0-produced IgG1s compared with high Fuc content of CHO-produced IgG1s. YB2/0-produced anti-hIL-5R IgG1 was subjected to Lens culinaris aggulutin affinity column and fractionated based on the contents of Fuc. The lower Fuc IgG1 had higher ADCC than the IgG1 before separation. In contrast, the content of bisecting GlcNAc of the IgG1 affected ADCC much less than that of Fuc. In addition, the correlation between Gal and ADCC was not observed. When the combined effect of Fuc and bisecting GlcNAc was examined in anti-CD20 IgG1, only a severalfold increase of ADCC was observed by the addition of GlcNAc to highly fucosylated IgG1. Quantitative PCR analysis indicated that YB2/0 cells had lower expression level of FUT8 mRNA, which codes α1,6-fucosyltransferase, than CHO cells. Overexpression of FUT8 mRNA in YB2/0 cells led to an increase of fucosylated oligosaccharides and decrease of ADCC of the IgG1. These results indicate that the lack of fucosylation of IgG1 has the most critical role in enhancement of ADCC, although several reports have suggested the importance of Gal or bisecting GlcNAc and provide important information to produce the effective therapeutic antibody.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1989

Mutagenesis of human granulocyte colony stimulating factor

Tetsuro Kuga; Yoshinori Komatsu; Motoo Yamasaki; Susumu Sekine; Hiromasa Miyaji; Tatsunari Nishi; Moriyuki Sato; Yoshiharu Yokoo; Makoto Asano; Masami Okabe; Makoto Morimoto; Seiga Itoh

To define the structure-function relationship, we have made a number of mutants of human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (hG-CSF) by in vitro mutagenesis. The results indicate that most of the mutations located in the internal and C-terminal regions of the molecule abolished the activity, whereas the mutants without N-terminal 4, 5, 7, or 11 amino acids retained the activity. N-terminal amino acids were also altered by cassette mutagenesis using a synthetic oligonucleotide mixture. Among them, KW2228, in which Thr-1, Leu-3, Gly-4, Pro-5 and Cys-17 were respectively substituted with Ala, Thr, Tyr, Arg and Ser, showed more potent granulopoietic activity than that of intact hG-CSF both in vitro and in vivo.


Experimental Hematology | 1999

Relationship between molecular mass and duration of activity of polyethylene glycol conjugated granulocyte colony-stimulating factor mutein

Sharon Bowen; Nadine Tare; Tomoaki Inoue; Motoo Yamasaki; Masami Okabe; Ikuo Horii; James F. Eliason

Proteins conjugated with polyethylene glycol (PEG) have increased in vivo activity compared to native proteins. We examined the activity of a variety of PEG conjugates prepared with a recombinant mutein of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (nartograstim [NTG], KW-2228). The total PEG mass was varied by the number and size of the PEG molecules conjugated. In vitro activity, determined using a proliferation assay with G-NFS-60 cells, demonstrated an inverse relationship between PEG mass and concentration required for half-maximal proliferation. In vivo activity was examined by injecting compounds subcutaneously into normal mice and determining neutrophil counts at various times. Initial experiments in C57BL/6J mice indicated that neutrophil levels were significantly elevated 5 days after a single injection of 25 micrograms/mouse of each PEG-NTG preparation. More detailed experiments were performed with several of the preparations in C3H/HeJ mice lacking endotoxin receptors. The results demonstrated that the time after injection at which neutrophil numbers reached a maximum increased with increasing size of PEG. Similar results were obtained with purified preparations containing 1, 2, or 3 units of 20-kDa PEG per molecule of NTG, showing that increasing the extent of PEGylation also increases in vivo activity. Dose-response studies with the 20-kDa PEG-NTG demonstrated a plateau at doses > 2.7 micrograms/mouse at day 3. The plateau dose increased to 8.4 micrograms/mouse at day 5, and no plateau was evident at the highest dose tested (50 micrograms/mL) at days 7 and 10. These results demonstrate that elevated neutrophil levels can be maintained for extended periods following single administration of high-molecular-weight PEG-NTG.


Journal of Clinical Oncology | 2001

Specific Targeting, Biodistribution, and Lack of Immunogenicity of Chimeric Anti-GD3 Monoclonal Antibody KM871 in Patients With Metastatic Melanoma: Results of a Phase I Trial

Andrew M. Scott; Fook-Thean Lee; Wendie Hopkins; Jonathan Cebon; Jennifer M. Wheatley; Zhanqi Liu; Fiona E. Smyth; Carmel Murone; Susan Sturrock; Duncan MacGregor; Nobuo Hanai; Kengo Inoue; Motoo Yamasaki; Martin W. Brechbiel; Ian D. Davis; Roger Murphy; Anthony Hannah; Michael Lim-Joon; Tony Chan; Geoffrey Chong; Gerd Ritter; Eric W. Hoffman; Antony W. Burgess; Lloyd J. Old

PURPOSE KM871 is a chimeric monoclonal antibody against the ganglioside antigen GD3, which is highly expressed on melanoma cells. We conducted an open-label, dose escalation phase I trial of KM871 in patients with metastatic melanoma. PATIENTS AND METHODS Seventeen patients were entered onto one of five dose levels (1, 5, 10, 20, and 40 mg/m2). Patients received three infusions of KM871 at 2-week intervals, with the first infusion of KM871 trace-labeled with indium-111 (111In) to enable assessment of biodistribution in vivo. Biopsies of metastatic melanoma sites were performed on days 7 to 10. RESULTS Fifteen of 17 patients completed a cycle of three infusions of KM871. No dose-limiting toxicity was observed during the trial; the maximum-tolerated dose was therefore not reached. Three patients (at the 1-, 5-, and 40-mg/m2 dose levels) developed pain and/or erythema at tumor sites consistent with an inflammatory response. No normal tissue uptake of 111In-KM871 was observed, and tumor uptake of 111In-KM871 was observed in all lesions greater than 1.5 cm (tumor biopsy 111KM871 uptake results: range, 0.001% to 0.026% injected dose/g). The ratio of maximum tumor to normal tissue was 15:1. Pharmacokinetic analysis revealed a 111In-KM871 terminal half-life of 7.68 +/- 2.94 days. One patient had a clinical partial response that lasted 11 months. There was no serologic evidence of human antichimeric antibody in any patient, including one patient who received 16 infusions over a 12-month period. CONCLUSION This study is the first to demonstrate the biodistribution and specific targeting of an anti-GD3 antibody to metastatic melanoma in patients. The long half-life and lack of immunogenicity of KM871 makes this antibody an attractive potential therapy for patients with metastatic melanoma.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2002

Enhanced tumor cell selectivity of adriamycin-monoclonal antibody conjugate via a poly(ethylene glycol)-based cleavable linker

Toshiyuki Suzawa; Satoru Nagamura; Hiromitsu Saito; So Ohta; Nobuo Hanai; J Kanazawa; M Okabe; Motoo Yamasaki

A novel linker consisting of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) and dipeptide was used for conjugation of adriamycin with tumor-specific monoclonal antibody, NL-1, to confirm that the linker can be cleaved selectively with the tumor specific enzyme to express cytotoxicity of the anti-tumor agent. Initially, adriamycin-conjugated PEG linkers through different amino acid compositions, alanyl-valine (Ala-Val), alanyl-proline (Ala-Pro), and glycyl-proline (Gly-Pro) sequences, were prepared to confirm selective digestion with model enzymes. Adriamycin was released by particular model endoproteases, thermolysin and proline endopeptidase, from the linkers with different efficiency. When conjugates were prepared using these adriamycin-bound linkers, conjugates had no loss of binding affinity and specificity for common acute lymphoblastic leukemia antigen (CALLA) expressed on the Daudi cell surfaces as the target of NL-1 antibody. In addition, adriamycin release from the conjugates was also confirmed by incubating them with specific proteases. Tumor cell growth was inhibited dose-dependently for the conjugates carrying Ala-Val and Gly-Pro linkers, whereas significant inhibitory effect was abolished for the conjugate carrying Ala-Pro linker, indicating that cytotoxic effect can be controlled by specificity of antibody and composition of linker peptide. IC(50) for Ala-Val linked conjugate was approximately 3.5 microg/ml and that for Gly-Pro linked conjugate was 5.2 microg/ml. PEG-dipeptidyl linker demonstrated here will be an effective tool for the preparation of immunoconjugate, especially specific activation of anti-tumor agents at desired tumor tissues.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2000

Synthesis of a novel duocarmycin derivative DU-257 and its application to immunoconjugate using poly(ethylene glycol)-dipeptidyl linker capable of tumor specific activation.

Toshiyuki Suzawa; Satoru Nagamura; Hiromitsu Saito; So Ohta; Nobuo Hanai; Motoo Yamasaki

Novel anti-tumor agent, duocarmycin derivative DU-257, was designed and synthesized to prepare immunoconjugate in order to confirm the feasibility of enzymatically cleavable linker consisting of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) and dipeptide, L-alanyl-L-valine. Oxyethylamine arm was introduced at 4-methoxy position of segment B of DU-86 to form DU-257 and evaluated its property. DU-257 retained similar stability and potency with DU-86 while enhanced hydrophilicity suggested. DU-257 was condensed to the PEG-dipeptidyl linker through carboxyl terminal of dipeptide, and enzymatic release of DU-257 using a model enzyme, thermolysin, similar enzyme of which was shown to be overexpressed at various tumor sites, was evaluated by HPLC analysis. Cleavage between the linker amino acids by the model protease and release of DU-257 as valine conjugated form was confirmed. The enzymatically released form of DU-257 expressed its cytotoxicity without loss of the potency for HeLaS3 and SW1116 tumor cell lines, although the efficacy was different in individual cells. DU-257 was then conjugated through the linker to KM231 monoclonal antibody specifically reactive to GD3 antigen which was shown to be expressed on the surface of many malignant tumors such as SW1116. The conjugate retained its binding specificity for SW1116 cell with a similar activity with KM231. Furthermore, the conjugate showed significant growth inhibition on SW1116 cell at a concentration of 75 microg/mL while no effect on antigen negative cell, HeLaS3. These results suggest that the conjugate retained its anti-tumor effect only when it bound on and was activated at the target cell, simultaneously. DU-257 will be one of the candidate of anti-tumor agent for application to immunoconjugate and its conjugate with KM231 via PEG-dipeptidyl linker will be a useful entity for cancer therapy related to sLe(a) expression.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2001

Vascular smooth muscle cell growth-promoting factor/F-spondin inhibits angiogenesis via the blockade of integrin αvβ3 on vascular endothelial cells

Yoshito Terai; Mayumi Abe; Kaoru Miyamoto; Masamichi Koike; Motoo Yamasaki; Masatsugu Ueda; Minoru Ueki; Yasufumi Sato

Vascular smooth muscle cell growth‐promoting factor (VSGP) was originally isolated from bovine ovarian follicular fluid as a stimulator of vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation. Homology searches indicate that bovine and human VSGPs are orthologs of rat F‐spondin. Here, we examined whether recombinant human VSGP/F‐spondin affected the biological activities of endothelial cells. VSGP/F‐spondin did not affect the proliferation of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs); however, it did inhibit VEGF‐ or bFGF‐stimulated HUVEC migration. To clarify the mechanism of this inhibitory effect, we examined the adhesion of HUVECs to extracellular matrix proteins. VSGP/F‐spondin specifically inhibited the spreading of HUVECs on vitronectin via the functional blockade of integrin αvβ3. As a result, VSGP/F‐spondin inhibited the tyrosine phosphorylation of focal adhesion kinase (FAK) when HUVECs were plated on vitronectin. Moreover, VSGP/F‐spondin inhibited the activation of Akt when HUVECs on vitronectin were stimulated with VEGF. VSGP/F‐spondin inhibited tube formation by HUVECs in vitro and neovascularization in the rat cornea in vivo. These results indicate that VSGP/F‐spondin inhibits angiogenesis at least in part by the blockade of endothelial integrin αvβ3.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2010

A Peptidomics Strategy for Discovering Endogenous Bioactive Peptides

Kazuki Sasaki; Noriyuki Takahashi; Mitsuo Satoh; Motoo Yamasaki; Naoto Minamino

Peptide hormones and neuropeptides constitute an important class of naturally occurring peptides that are generated from precursor proteins by limited proteolytic processing. An important but unaddressed issue in peptidomics is to pin down novel bioactive peptides in a bulk of peptide sequences provided by tandem mass spectrometry. Here, we describe an approach to simultaneously screen for bioactive peptides and their target tissues. The principle behind this approach is to identify intact secretory peptides that have the ability to raise intracellular calcium levels. In practice, we used nanoflow liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry to analyze peptides released by exocytosis from cultured cells. Peptide sequence information was utilized to deduce intact peptide forms, among which those highly conserved between species are selected and tested on an ex vivo calcium assay using tissue pieces from transgenic mice that systemically express the calcium indicator apoaequorin. The calcium assay can be applied to various cell types, including those not amenable to in vitro culture. We used this approach to identify novel bioactive neuropeptides derived from the neurosecretory protein VGF, which evoke a calcium response in the pituitary and hypothalamus.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2000

Synthesis and HPLC analysis of enzymatically cleavable linker consisting of poly(ethylene glycol) and dipeptide for the development of immunoconjugate.

Toshiyuki Suzawa; Satoru Nagamura; Hiromitsu Saito; So Ohta; Nobuo Hanai; Motoo Yamasaki

A model compound of anti-tumor agent, segment B of duocarmycin derivative DU-86, was conjugated to tumor-specific antibody via a cleavable linker consisting of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) and dipeptide, L-alanyl-L-valine (Ala-Val), to confirm the feasibility of the linker for application to immunoconjugate. The release of segment B from the linker was evaluated by HPLC analysis. When segment B was derivatized to have an amino residue and then linked to PEG through a dipeptide, segment B was cleaved at the peptide bond by a particular enzyme, thermolysin (EC 3.4.24.4), but not by plasmin (EC 3.4.2 1.7.), indicating that certain protease specifically expressed at the tumor site would be capable of peptide-specific digestion and release of anti-tumor agent since a thermolysin-like enzyme has been reported to be expressed at many tumor cells. Furthermore, the results showing that cell extract from G361 human melanoma had an ability to digest the linker peptide while the linker was stable in normal human serum suggested the tumor-specific activation of the conjugated agent. Segment B was conjugated via the linker to murine monoclonal antibody KM641 reactive to GD3 ganglioside to form immunoconjugate and the quantitative release of segment B under the treatment with the enzyme was also confirmed. These results indicate the possibility of double targeting based on both the recognition ability of tumor specific antibody and tumor specific activation of the anti-tumor agents to enhance tumor treatment efficacy and to decrease unwanted side effects.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 1996

MS-271, a novel inhibitor of calmodulin-activated myosin light chain kinase from Streptomyces sp.—I. isolation, structural determination and biological properties of MS-271

Keiichi Yano; Shinichiro Toki; Satoshi Nakanishi; Keiko Ochiai; Katsuhiko Ando; Mayumi Yoshida; Yuzuru Matsuda; Motoo Yamasaki

A novel cyclic peptide, MS-271, was isolated from the culture broth of an actinomycete, Streptomyces sp. M-271 as an inhibitor of smooth muscle myosin light chain kinase (MLCK). MS-271 inhibited the MLCK from chicken gizzard with an IC50 value of 8 microM. MS-271 did not inhibit cyclic AMP-dependent protein kinase, protein kinase C or calcium/calmodulin-dependent cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase at concentrations up to 400 microM. The primary structure of MS-271 was identical to that of siamycin I, an anti-HIV peptide isolated from a microbial source.

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