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Featured researches published by Naoki Kaneko.


Oncology Reports | 2015

Increased expression of interleukin-6 predicts poor response to chemoradiotherapy and unfavorable prognosis in oral squamous cell carcinoma

Teppei Jinno; Shintaro Kawano; Yasuyuki Maruse; Ryota Matsubara; Yuichi Goto; Taiki Sakamoto; Yuma Hashiguchi; Naoki Kaneko; Hideaki Tanaka; Ryoji Kitamura; Takeshi Toyoshima; Akiko Jinno; Masafumi Moriyama; Kazunari Oobu; Tamotsu Kiyoshima; Seiji Nakamura

Recent studies have revealed that cancer cells are exacerbated by chronic inflammation. The present study examined the immunohistochemical expression for interleukin-6 (IL-6), a pleiotropic inflammatory cytokine, in oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) to elucidate the association of IL-6 expression with tumor progression, chemoresistance and prognosis. Seventy-eight patients with primary OSCC were analyzed by immunohistochemical staining for IL-6. These labeling indexes (LIs) were calculated and evaluated in association with the clinicopathologic characteristics and prognosis in the OSCC patients. The patients were divided into three groups as follows: negative group = LI <5%; low IL-6 group = 5% ≤ LI <30%; high IL-6 group = LI ≥30%. The patient numbers of the negative, low and high expression groups were 24, 22 and 32, respectively. In the high IL-6 expression group, IL-6 receptor (IL-6R), phospho-signal tranducer and activator of transcription 3 (p-STAT3) were also detected in almost all the cancer cells. The prevalence of the cervical lymph node or the distant metastasis in the high expression group was significantly higher than those in the negative and low expression groups. Furthermore, the high expression group had a significantly poorer tumor response to the preoperative chemoradiotherapy and a more unfavourable prognosis than the negative and the low expression groups. Interestingly, IL-6, IL-6R and p-STAT3 were expressed in the residual cancer cells of all the patients in the high expression group with poor response to chemoradiotherapy. These results suggested that IL-6 signaling possibly is involved in the progression and treatment-resistance of OSCC and IL-6 expression in cancer cells could be a useful predictive factor of poor response to chemoradiotherapy and unfavorable prognosis.


Oral Oncology | 2017

Critical roles of Wnt5a–Ror2 signaling in aggressiveness of tongue squamous cell carcinoma and production of matrix metalloproteinase-2 via ΔNp63β-mediated epithelial–mesenchymal transition

Taiki Sakamoto; Shintaro Kawano; Ryota Matsubara; Yuichi Goto; Teppei Jinno; Yasuyuki Maruse; Naoki Kaneko; Yuma Hashiguchi; Taichi Hattori; Shoichi Tanaka; Ryoji Kitamura; Tamotsu Kiyoshima; Seiji Nakamura

OBJECTIVES We previously showed that ΔNp63β, a splicing variant of ΔNp63, mediated EMT and affected cell motility. DNA microarray was thus performed to elucidate the mechanism that ΔNp63β affects cell motility. As the results, Wnt5a was significantly down-regulated by ΔNp63β overexpression in tongue SCC cell line (SQUU-B) with EMT phenotype. MATERIALS AND METHODS Seven OSCC cell lines were used. Expression of ΔNp63, Wnt5a, its receptor Ror2, and matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) were analyzed by RT-PCR, real-time PCR, and western blotting, and gelatin zymography. Furthermore, we examined the effects of siRNA for Wnt5a or Ror2 and recombinant human Wnt5a (rhWnt5a) on motility of tongue SCC cells. Biopsy specimens from tongue SCC patients were used for immunohistochemical staining of Wnt5a and Ror2. RESULTS Wnt5a and Ror2 were expressed only in SQUU-B cells without ΔNp63 expression, and negatively associated with ΔNp63 expression in other cells. ΔNp63β overexpression in SQUU-B cells decreased Wnt5a and Ror2 expression. By Wnt5a or Ror2 knockdown, cell motility was remarkably inhibited, but EMT markers expression was unaffected. MMP-2 expression and the activities inversely correlated with ΔNp63 expression, and were inhibited by Wnt5a or Ror2 knockdown. Cell motility and MMP-2 activities were recovered by adding rhWnt5a in the cells with Wnt5a knockdown, but not in those with Ror2 knockdown. Moreover, immunohistochemical analyses in tongue SCC specimens found that high expression of Wnt5a or Ror2 was associated with poorer prognosis. CONCLUSION Wnt5a-Ror2 signaling enhanced tongue SCC cell aggressiveness and promoted production of MMP-2 following ΔNp63β-mediated EMT.


International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2018

Significant association of increased PD-L1 and PD-1 expression with nodal metastasis and a poor prognosis in oral squamous cell carcinoma

Yasuyuki Maruse; Shintaro Kawano; Teppei Jinno; Ryota Matsubara; Yuichi Goto; Naoki Kaneko; Taiki Sakamoto; Yuma Hashiguchi; Masafumi Moriyama; Takeshi Toyoshima; Ryoji Kitamura; Hideaki Tanaka; Kazunari Oobu; Tamotsu Kiyoshima; Seiji Nakamura

Programmed cell death ligand 1 (PD-L1) and its receptor PD-1 are immune checkpoint molecules that attenuate the immune response. Blockade of PD-L1 enhances the immune response in a variety of tumours and thus serves as an effective anti-cancer treatment. However, the biological and prognostic roles of PD-L1/PD-1 signalling in oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) remain to be elucidated. The purpose of this study was to examine the correlation of PD-L1/PD-1 signalling with the prognosis of OSCC patients to assess its potential therapeutic relevance. The expression of PD-L1 and of PD-1 was determined immunohistochemically in 97 patients with OSCC and the association of this expression with clinicopathological characteristics was examined. Increased expression of PD-L1 was found in 64.9% of OSCC cases and increased expression of PD-1 was found in 61.9%. Univariate and multivariate analysis revealed that increased expression of PD-L1 and PD-1 positively correlated with cervical lymph node metastasis. The expression of CD25, an activated T-cell marker, was negatively correlated with the labelling index of PD-L1 and PD-1. Moreover, the patient group with PD-L1-positive and PD-1-positive expression showed a more unfavourable prognosis than the group with PD-L1-negative and PD-1-negative expression. These data suggest that increased PD-L1 and PD-1 expression is predictive of nodal metastasis and a poor prognosis and is possibly involved in cancer progression via attenuating the immune response.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2018

Tumor-suppressive roles of ΔNp63β-miR-205 axis in epithelial–mesenchymal transition of oral squamous cell carcinoma via targeting ZEB1 and ZEB2

Yuma Hashiguchi; Shintaro Kawano; Yuichi Goto; Kaori Yasuda; Naoki Kaneko; Taiki Sakamoto; Ryota Matsubara; Teppei Jinno; Yasuyuki Maruse; Hideaki Tanaka; Masahiko Morioka; Taichi Hattori; Shoichi Tanaka; Tamotsu Kiyoshima; Seiji Nakamura

We previously revealed that epithelial‐to‐mesenchymal transition (EMT) was mediated by ΔNp63β, a splicing variant of ΔNp63, in oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). Recent studies have highlighted the involvement of microRNA (miRNA) in EMT of cancer cells, though the mechanism remains unclear. To identify miRNAs responsible for ΔNp63β‐mediated EMT, miRNA microarray analyses were performed by ΔNp63β‐overexpression in OSCC cells; SQUU‐B, which lacks ΔNp63 expression and displays EMT phenotypes. miRNAs microarray analyses revealed miR‐205 was the most up‐regulated following ΔNp63β‐overexpression. In OSCC cells, miR‐205 expression was positively associated with ΔNp63 and negatively with zinc‐finger E‐box binding homeobox (ZEB) 1 and ZEB2, potential targets of miR‐205. miR‐205 overexpression by miR‐205 mimic transfection into SQUU‐B cells led to decreasing ZEB1, ZEB2, and mesenchymal markers, increasing epithelial markers, and reducing cell motilities, suggesting inhibition of EMT phenotype. Interestingly, the results opposite to this phenomenon were obtained by transfection of miR‐205 inhibitor into OSCC cells, which express ΔNp63 and miR‐205. Furthermore, target protector analyses revealed direct regulation by miR‐205 of ZEB1 and ZEB2 expression. These results showed tumor‐suppressive roles of ΔNp63β and miR‐205 by inhibiting EMT thorough modulating ZEB1 and ZEB2 expression in OSCC.


Oral Oncology | 2017

Differential roles of kallikrein-related peptidase 6 in malignant transformation and ΔNp63β-mediated epithelial-mesenchymal transition of oral squamous cell carcinoma

Naoki Kaneko; Shintaro Kawano; Kaori Yasuda; Yuma Hashiguchi; Taiki Sakamoto; Ryota Matsubara; Yuichi Goto; Teppei Jinno; Yasuyuki Maruse; Masahiko Morioka; Taichi Hattori; Shoichi Tanaka; Hideaki Tanaka; Tamotsu Kiyoshima; Seiji Nakamura

We previously reported that epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) was mediated by ΔNp63β in oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). In this study, DNA microarray analyses were performed using ΔNp63β-overexpressing OSCC cells to identify genes associated with ΔNp63β-mediated EMT. Thereby, we focused on kallikrein-related peptidase (KLK) 6, most up-regulated following ΔNp63β-overexpression, that activates protease-activated receptors (PARs). In RT-PCR analyses, ΔNp63 was positively associated with KLK6 and PAR2 and negatively with PAR1 in OSCC cells. By ΔNp63 knockdown, KLK6 and PAR2 expression was decreased and PAR1 was increased. Furthermore, KLK6 knockdown led to enhancing migration and invasion, and inhibiting proliferation, suggesting EMT-phenotypes. Although, in the KLK6 or PAR2 knockdown cells, phosphorylation of ERK was reduced, it was restored in the KLK6 knockdown OSCC cells treated with recombinant KLK6 proteins. Immunohistochemistry showed ΔNp63, KLK6, and PAR2 were more strongly expressed in the epithelial dysplasia and central region of OSCC than normal oral epithelium, whereas PAR1 expression was undetectable. Interestingly, at the invasive front of OSCC, ΔNp63, KLK6, and PAR2 were reduced, but PAR1 was elevated. In addition, the OSCC patients with decreasing KLK6 expression at the invasive front had more unfavourable prognosis. These results suggested differential roles of KLK6 in malignant transformation and EMT; high ΔNp63β expression up-regulates KLK6-PAR2 and down-regulates PAR1, inducing malignant transformation in oral epithelium with stimulating proliferation through ERK signal activation. Moreover, KLK6-PAR2 expression is down-regulated and PAR1 is up-regulated when ΔNp63β expression is decreased, leading to EMT with enhancing migration and invasion through ERK signal reduction at the invasive front.


World Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2016

Erratum to: Tongue squamous cell carcinoma producing both parathyroid hormone-related protein and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor: A case report and literature review. [World J Surg Oncol., 14, (2016), (161)] DOI: 10.1186/s12957-016-0918-1

Naoki Kaneko; Shintaro Kawano; Ryota Matsubara; Yuichi Goto; Teppei Jinno; Yasuyuki Maruse; Taiki Sakamoto; Yuma Hashiguchi; Masakazu Iida; Seiji Nakamura

Erratum After publication of the original article [1] it was brought to our attention that the funding information was not correctly reflected in the article. The original Funding information contains an incorrect number. The original sentence reads as: This work was supported by a Grant-in-Aid (26463014, 60615798, and 26670869) from the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology. The revised sentence, with the correct number reads as follows: This work was supported by a Grant-in-Aid (26463014, 26861729, and 26670869) from the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology. Please note that the number 60615798 should instead be 26861729.


World Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2016

Tongue squamous cell carcinoma producing both parathyroid hormone-related protein and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor: a case report and literature review

Naoki Kaneko; Shintaro Kawano; Ryota Matsubara; Yuichi Goto; Teppei Jinno; Yasuyuki Maruse; Taiki Sakamoto; Yuma Hashiguchi; Masakazu Iida; Seiji Nakamura


Journal of Japanese Society of Oral Oncology | 2016

Two cases of lymphorrhea following radical neck dissection successfully treated with negative pressure wound therapy

Eiji Mitate; Shintaro Kawano; Ryota Matsubara; Yuma Hashiguchi; Naoki Kaneko; Taiki Sakamoto; Seiji Nakamura


Journal of Japanese Society of Oral Medicine | 2016

A Case of Pleomorphic Adenoma of the Sublingual Gland

Naoki Kaneko; Ryota Matsubara; Shintaro Kawano; Eiji Mitate; Teppei Jinno; Yasuyuki Maruse; Taiki Sakamoto; Yuma Hashiguchi; Tamotsu Kiyoshima; Seiji Nakamura


Program and Abstracts of Papers. Annual Meeting. Japanese Association for Dental Research | 2015

PD-1/PD-L1 coexpression is associated with poor prognosis in the oral squamous cell carcinoma patients

Yasuyuki Maruse; Shintaro Kawano; Ryota Matsubara; Yuichi Goto; Teppei Jinno; Naoki Kaneko; Taiki Sakamoto; Yuma Hashiguchi; K Obu; Seiji Nakamura

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