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Dive into the research topics where Naoki Irie is active.

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Featured researches published by Naoki Irie.


Nature Genetics | 2013

The draft genomes of soft-shell turtle and green sea turtle yield insights into the development and evolution of the turtle-specific body plan

Zhuo Wang; Juan Pascual-Anaya; Amonida Zadissa; Wenqi Li; Yoshihito Niimura; Zhiyong Huang; Chunyi Li; Simon White; Zhiqiang Xiong; Dongming Fang; Bo Wang; Yao Ming; Yan Chen; Yuan Zheng; Shigehiro Kuraku; Miguel Pignatelli; Javier Herrero; Kathryn Beal; Masafumi Nozawa; Qiye Li; Juan Wang; Hongyan Zhang; Lili Yu; Shuji Shigenobu; Wang J; Jiannan Liu; Paul Flicek; Steve Searle; Jun Wang; Shigeru Kuratani

The unique anatomical features of turtles have raised unanswered questions about the origin of their unique body plan. We generated and analyzed draft genomes of the soft-shell turtle (Pelodiscus sinensis) and the green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas); our results indicated the close relationship of the turtles to the bird-crocodilian lineage, from which they split ∼267.9–248.3 million years ago (Upper Permian to Triassic). We also found extensive expansion of olfactory receptor genes in these turtles. Embryonic gene expression analysis identified an hourglass-like divergence of turtle and chicken embryogenesis, with maximal conservation around the vertebrate phylotypic period, rather than at later stages that show the amniote-common pattern. Wnt5a expression was found in the growth zone of the dorsal shell, supporting the possible co-option of limb-associated Wnt signaling in the acquisition of this turtle-specific novelty. Our results suggest that turtle evolution was accompanied by an unexpectedly conservative vertebrate phylotypic period, followed by turtle-specific repatterning of development to yield the novel structure of the shell.The unique anatomical features of turtles have raised unanswered questions about the origin of their unique body plan. We generated and analyzed draft genomes of the soft-shell turtle (Pelodiscus sinensis) and the green sea turtle (Chelonia mydas); our results indicated the close relationship of the turtles to the bird-crocodilian lineage, from which they split ∼267.9-248.3 million years ago (Upper Permian to Triassic). We also found extensive expansion of olfactory receptor genes in these turtles. Embryonic gene expression analysis identified an hourglass-like divergence of turtle and chicken embryogenesis, with maximal conservation around the vertebrate phylotypic period, rather than at later stages that show the amniote-common pattern. Wnt5a expression was found in the growth zone of the dorsal shell, supporting the possible co-option of limb-associated Wnt signaling in the acquisition of this turtle-specific novelty. Our results suggest that turtle evolution was accompanied by an unexpectedly conservative vertebrate phylotypic period, followed by turtle-specific repatterning of development to yield the novel structure of the shell.


Science | 2014

Three crocodilian genomes reveal ancestral patterns of evolution among archosaurs

Richard E. Green; Edward L. Braun; Joel Armstrong; Dent Earl; Ngan Nguyen; Glenn Hickey; Michael W. Vandewege; John St. John; Salvador Capella-Gutiérrez; Todd A. Castoe; Colin Kern; Matthew K. Fujita; Juan C. Opazo; Jerzy Jurka; Kenji K. Kojima; Juan Caballero; Robert Hubley; Arian Smit; Roy N. Platt; Christine Lavoie; Meganathan P. Ramakodi; John W. Finger; Alexander Suh; Sally R. Isberg; Lee G. Miles; Amanda Y. Chong; Weerachai Jaratlerdsiri; Jaime Gongora; C. Moran; Andrés Iriarte

INTRODUCTION Crocodilians and birds are the two extant clades of archosaurs, a group that includes the extinct dinosaurs and pterosaurs. Fossils suggest that living crocodilians (alligators, crocodiles, and gharials) have a most recent common ancestor 80 to 100 million years ago. Extant crocodilians are notable for their distinct morphology, limited intraspecific variation, and slow karyotype evolution. Despite their unique biology and phylogenetic position, little is known about genome evolution within crocodilians. Evolutionary rates of tetrapods inferred from DNA sequences anchored by ultraconserved elements. Evolutionary rates among reptiles vary, with especially low rates among extant crocodilians but high rates among squamates. We have reconstructed the genomes of the common ancestor of birds and of all archosaurs (shown in gray silhouette, although the morphology of these species is uncertain). RATIONALE Genome sequences for the American alligator, saltwater crocodile, and Indian gharial—representatives of all three extant crocodilian families—were obtained to facilitate better understanding of the unique biology of this group and provide a context for studying avian genome evolution. Sequence data from these three crocodilians and birds also allow reconstruction of the ancestral archosaurian genome. RESULTS We sequenced shotgun genomic libraries from each species and used a variety of assembly strategies to obtain draft genomes for these three crocodilians. The assembled scaffold N50 was highest for the alligator (508 kilobases). Using a panel of reptile genome sequences, we generated phylogenies that confirm the sister relationship between crocodiles and gharials, the relationship with birds as members of extant Archosauria, and the outgroup status of turtles relative to birds and crocodilians. We also estimated evolutionary rates along branches of the tetrapod phylogeny using two approaches: ultraconserved element–anchored sequences and fourfold degenerate sites within stringently filtered orthologous gene alignments. Both analyses indicate that the rates of base substitution along the crocodilian and turtle lineages are extremely low. Supporting observations were made for transposable element content and for gene family evolution. Analysis of whole-genome alignments across a panel of reptiles and mammals showed that the rate of accumulation of micro-insertions and microdeletions is proportionally lower in crocodilians, consistent with a single underlying cause of a reduced rate of evolutionary change rather than intrinsic differences in base repair machinery. We hypothesize that this single cause may be a consistently longer generation time over the evolutionary history of Crocodylia. Low heterozygosity was observed in each genome, consistent with previous analyses, including the Chinese alligator. Pairwise sequential Markov chain analysis of regional heterozygosity indicates that during glacial cycles of the Pleistocene, each species suffered reductions in effective population size. The reduction was especially strong for the American alligator, whose current range extends farthest into regions of temperate climates. CONCLUSION We used crocodilian, avian, and outgroup genomes to reconstruct 584 megabases of the archosaurian common ancestor genome and the genomes of key ancestral nodes. The estimated accuracy of the archosaurian genome reconstruction is 91% and is higher for conserved regions such as genes. The reconstructed genome can be improved by adding more crocodilian and avian genome assemblies and may provide a unique window to the genomes of extinct organisms such as dinosaurs and pterosaurs. To provide context for the diversification of archosaurs—the group that includes crocodilians, dinosaurs, and birds—we generated draft genomes of three crocodilians: Alligator mississippiensis (the American alligator), Crocodylus porosus (the saltwater crocodile), and Gavialis gangeticus (the Indian gharial). We observed an exceptionally slow rate of genome evolution within crocodilians at all levels, including nucleotide substitutions, indels, transposable element content and movement, gene family evolution, and chromosomal synteny. When placed within the context of related taxa including birds and turtles, this suggests that the common ancestor of all of these taxa also exhibited slow genome evolution and that the comparatively rapid evolution is derived in birds. The data also provided the opportunity to analyze heterozygosity in crocodilians, which indicates a likely reduction in population size for all three taxa through the Pleistocene. Finally, these data combined with newly published bird genomes allowed us to reconstruct the partial genome of the common ancestor of archosaurs, thereby providing a tool to investigate the genetic starting material of crocodilians, birds, and dinosaurs.


Pediatrics | 2008

Maternal Microchimerism in Underlying Pathogenesis of Biliary Atresia: Quantification and Phenotypes of Maternal Cells in the Liver

Toshihiro Muraji; Naoki Hosaka; Naoki Irie; Makiko Yoshida; Yukihiro Imai; Kohichi Tanaka; Yasutsugu Takada; Seisuke Sakamoto; Hironori Haga; Susumu Ikehara

OBJECTIVE. The goal was to examine whether microchimerism plays a crucial role in the pathogenesis of biliary atresia; we analyzed the localization of maternal microchimeric cells and their phenotypes. METHODS. Liver biopsy specimens from 8 male infants with biliary atresia and 6 control subjects with other liver diseases were investigated for maternal chimeric cells and their phenotypes through double-staining fluorescence in situ hybridization and immunohistochemical analyses. RESULTS. Significantly larger numbers of maternal XX+ cells were found in the portal area and sinusoids of patients with biliary atresia, in comparison with control patients. In phenotypic analyses of XX+ cells, CD8+ T cells, CD45+ cells, and cytokeratin-positive cells were found, and the numbers and proportions among total CD8+ T cells were significantly higher than those in control patients. CONCLUSIONS. Significantly more maternal chimeric CD8+ T cells in the livers of patients with biliary atresia suggest that maternal immunologic insults represent the underlying pathogenesis in biliary atresia. The findings support the recently postulated mechanisms of alloautoimmune and/or autoalloimmune responses.


Expert Review of Gastroenterology & Hepatology | 2009

Biliary atresia: a new immunological insight into etiopathogenesis

Toshihiro Muraji; David L. Suskind; Naoki Irie

Biliary atresia is an idiopathic neonatal cholestatic disease characterized by the destruction of both the intra- and extra-hepatic biliary ducts. There are two clinical manifestations of the disease: an embryonal subtype, which often presents at birth and is associated with congenital malformations, and a ‘perinatal’ subtype, which is probably an acquired disease due to unknown etiology. Over the last two decades, researchers have focused on activation of the cell-mediated immunity as the mechanism for biliary epithelial cell destruction for the latter subtype. A proposed trigger of this immune response is an initial viral infection, inducing biliary epithelial cells to become antigen-presenting cells and thus instigating immune-mediated destruction of the biliary tract. However, putative viruses have never been confirmed. More recently, a novel hypothesis – that maternal microchimerism may initiate a host immunologic response towards the bile duct epithelia – has been proposed. This paper discusses the etiology of biliary atresia in the context of the current research.


Development | 2014

The developmental hourglass model: a predictor of the basic body plan?

Naoki Irie; Shigeru Kuratani

The hourglass model of embryonic evolution predicts an hourglass-like divergence during animal embryogenesis – with embryos being more divergent at the earliest and latest stages but conserved during a mid-embryonic (phylotypic) period that serves as a source of the basic body plan for animals within a phylum. Morphological observations have suggested hourglass-like divergence in various vertebrate and invertebrate groups, and recent molecular data support this model. However, further investigation is required to determine whether the phylotypic period represents a basic body plan for each animal phylum, and whether this principle might apply at higher taxonomic levels. Here, we discuss the relationship between the basic body plan and the phylotypic stage, and address the possible mechanisms that underlie hourglass-like divergence.


Nature Communications | 2017

Functional roles of Aves class-specific cis-regulatory elements on macroevolution of bird-specific features

Ryohei Seki; Cai Li; Qi Fang; Shinichi Hayashi; Shiro Egawa; Jiang Hu; Luohao Xu; Hailin Pan; Mao Kondo; Tomohiko Sato; Haruka Matsubara; Namiko Kamiyama; Keiichi Kitajima; Daisuke Saito; Yang Liu; M. Thomas P. Gilbert; Qi Zhou; Xing Xu; Toshihiko Shiroishi; Naoki Irie; Koji Tamura; Guojie Zhang

Unlike microevolutionary processes, little is known about the genetic basis of macroevolutionary processes. One of these magnificent examples is the transition from non-avian dinosaurs to birds that has created numerous evolutionary innovations such as self-powered flight and its associated wings with flight feathers. By analysing 48 bird genomes, we identified millions of avian-specific highly conserved elements (ASHCEs) that predominantly (>99%) reside in non-coding regions. Many ASHCEs show differential histone modifications that may participate in regulation of limb development. Comparative embryonic gene expression analyses across tetrapod species suggest ASHCE-associated genes have unique roles in developing avian limbs. In particular, we demonstrate how the ASHCE driven avian-specific expression of gene Sim1 driven by ASHCE may be associated with the evolution and development of flight feathers. Together, these findings demonstrate regulatory roles of ASHCEs in the creation of avian-specific traits, and further highlight the importance of cis-regulatory rewiring during macroevolutionary changes.


Annual Review of Genomics and Human Genetics | 2014

The Evolutionary Origin of the Vertebrate Body Plan: The Problem of Head Segmentation

Takayuki Onai; Naoki Irie; Shigeru Kuratani

The basic body plan of vertebrates, as typified by the complex head structure, evolved from the last common ancestor approximately 530 Mya. In this review, we present a brief overview of historical discussions to disentangle the various concepts and arguments regarding the evolutionary development of the vertebrate body plan. We then explain the historical transition of the arguments about the vertebrate body plan from merely epistemological comparative morphology to comparative embryology as a scientific treatment on this topic. Finally, we review the current progress of molecular evidence regarding the basic vertebrate body plan, focusing on the link between the basic vertebrate body plan and the evolutionarily conserved developmental stages (phylotypic stages).


Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition | 2009

Maternal HLA class I compatibility in patients with biliary atresia

Naoki Irie; Toshihiro Muraji; Naoki Hosaka; Yasutsugu Takada; Seisuke Sakamoto; Kohichi Tanaka

Biliary atresia (BA) is an inflammatory cholangiopathy of unknown etiology. Maternal microchimerism has been identified in the livers of patients with BA. We analyzed the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) compatibility between 57 BA patient-mother pairs and 50 control-mother pairs. The HLA class I matching was significantly more frequent in BA pairs (odds ratio [OR] = 2.46) than controls. Similar results were also found in child-to-mother HLA compatibility (OR = 2.16). Our results indicate that patients with BA have an immunogenetic histocompatible relationship with their mothers, which may result in an increase in maternal microchimerism found in BA.


Zoological Letters | 2015

Unexpected link between polyketide synthase and calcium carbonate biomineralization

Motoki Hojo; Ai Omi; Gen Hamanaka; Kazutoshi Shindo; Atsuko Shimada; Mariko Kondo; Takanori Narita; Masato Kiyomoto; Yohei Katsuyama; Yasuo Ohnishi; Naoki Irie; Hiroyuki Takeda

IntroductionCalcium carbonate biominerals participate in diverse physiological functions. Despite intensive studies, little is known about how mineralization is initiated in organisms.ResultsWe analyzed the medaka spontaneous mutant, ha, defective in otolith (calcareous ear stone) formation. ha lacks a trigger for otolith mineralization, and the causative gene was found to encode polyketide synthase (pks), a multifunctional enzyme mainly found in bacteria, fungi, and plant. Subsequent experiments demonstrate that the products of medaka PKS, most likely polyketides or their derivatives, act as nucleation facilitators in otolith mineralization. The generality of this novel PKS function is supported by the essential role of echinoderm PKS in calcareous skeleton formation together with the presence of PKSs in a much wider range of animals from coral to vertebrates.ConclusionThe present study first links PKS to biomineralization and provides a genetic cue for biogeochemistry of carbon and calcium cycles.


Nature Ecology and Evolution | 2017

Constrained vertebrate evolution by pleiotropic genes

Haiyang Hu; Masahiro Uesaka; Song Guo; Kotaro Shimai; Tsai-Ming Lu; Fang Li; Satoko Fujimoto; Masato Ishikawa; Shiping Liu; Yohei Sasagawa; Guojie Zhang; Shigeru Kuratani; Jr-Kai Yu; Takehiro G. Kusakabe; Philipp Khaitovich; Naoki Irie

Despite morphological diversification of chordates over 550 million years of evolution, their shared basic anatomical pattern (or ‘bodyplan’) remains conserved by unknown mechanisms. The developmental hourglass model attributes this to phylum-wide conserved, constrained organogenesis stages that pattern the bodyplan (the phylotype hypothesis); however, there has been no quantitative testing of this idea with a phylum-wide comparison of species. Here, based on data from early-to-late embryonic transcriptomes collected from eight chordates, we suggest that the phylotype hypothesis would be better applied to vertebrates than chordates. Furthermore, we found that vertebrates’ conserved mid-embryonic developmental programmes are intensively recruited to other developmental processes, and the degree of the recruitment positively correlates with their evolutionary conservation and essentiality for normal development. Thus, we propose that the intensively recruited genetic system during vertebrates’ organogenesis period imposed constraints on its diversification through pleiotropic constraints, which ultimately led to the common anatomical pattern observed in vertebrates.Basic anatomical patterns are conserved in chordates. Here, the authors show mid-embryonic conservation during vertebrates’ development and evolutionary constraints introduced by recruitment of mid-embryonic programmes to later stages of development.

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Toshihiro Muraji

Boston Children's Hospital

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Naoki Hosaka

Kansai Medical University

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