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Featured researches published by Natsuko Kawano.


Biology of Reproduction | 2003

Luteinizing Hormone Receptor Formation in Cumulus Cells Surrounding Porcine Oocytes and Its Role During Meiotic Maturation of Porcine Oocytes

Masayuki Shimada; Masahide Nishibori; Naoki Isobe; Natsuko Kawano; Takato Terada

Abstract We investigated the formation of LH receptor (LHR) in cumulus cells surrounding porcine oocytes and the role of LHR in meiotic maturation of oocytes. At least three splice variants of LHR mRNA were detected in cumulus cells, in addition to the full-length form. Low levels of three types of products were seen in cumulus cells from cumulus oocytes complexes (COCs), whereas the full-length form was significantly increased by 12-h cultivation with FSH. The addition of FSH also significantly increased the binding level of biotinylated hCG to COCs. The formation of LHR in FSH-stimulated cumulus cells was not affected by additional 0.5 mM phosphodiesterase inhibitor, 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX), and the oocytes were synchronized to the germinal vesicle (GV) II stage by exposure to 0.5 mM IBMX and FSH for 20 h. The binding of LH to its receptor induced a further increase in cAMP level and progesterone production and acceleration of meiotic progression to the metaphase I stage. The oocytes cultured with LH for 24 h following cultivation with FSH and IBMX were used for in vitro fertilization. At 6 days after in vitro fertilization, blastocyst rate in oocytes matured under these conditions was significantly higher than that of oocytes cultured in the absence of LH. Treatment of oocytes with FSH and 0.5 mM IBMX to express LH receptor in cumulus cells while holding oocytes at the GV II stage is a very beneficial way to produce in vitro-matured oocytes, which have high developmental competence.


Biology of Reproduction | 2010

Mice Lacking Two Sperm Serine Proteases, ACR and PRSS21, Are Subfertile, but the Mutant Sperm Are Infertile In Vitro

Natsuko Kawano; Woojin Kang; Misuzu Yamashita; Yoshitaka Koga; Taiga Yamazaki; Tamako Hata; Kenji Miyado; Tadashi Baba

Although sperm serine protease and proteasome have long been believed to play an important role in the fertilization process, the molecular mechanism is still controversial. In this study, we have produced double-knockout mice lacking two sperm serine proteases, ACR and PRSS21, to uncover the functional role of the trypsinlike activity in fertilization. The double-knockout male mice were subfertile, likely owing to the incompleteness of fertilization in the oviductal ampulla. Despite male subfertility, the mutant epididymal sperm exhibited the inability to undergo acrosomal exocytosis on the zona pellucida (ZP) surface and to traverse the ZP, thus resulting in the failure of fertilization in vitro. The double-knockout epididymal sperm were also defective in penetration through the cumulus matrix to reach the ZP. When epididymal sperm were artificially injected into the uterus of wild-type mice, the 2-cell embryos, which had previously been fertilized by double-knockout sperm, were recovered at a low but significant level. The mutant epididymal sperm were also capable of fertilizing the oocytes in the presence of uterine fluids in vitro. These data demonstrate that the trypsinlike protease activity of ACR and PRSS21 is essential for the process of sperm penetration through the cumulus matrix and ZP in vitro, and suggest that the female reproductive tract partially compensates for the loss of the sperm function. We therefore conclude that the sperm trypsinlike activity is still important but not essential for fertilization in vivo in the mouse.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Seminal vesicle protein SVS2 is required for sperm survival in the uterus

Natsuko Kawano; Naoya Araki; Kaoru Yoshida; Taku Hibino; Naoko Ohnami; Maako Makino; Seiya Kanai; Hidetoshi Hasuwa; Manabu Yoshida; Kenji Miyado; Akihiro Umezawa

Significance Male mice lacking seminal vesicle secretion 2 (SVS2) protein, which is a major component of seminal vesicle secretions, display prominently reduced fertility. However, their epididymal sperm are able to fertilize eggs normally in vitro, suggesting that SVS2 is only essential for in vivo fertilization. We demonstrate that infertility in SVS2−/− male mice is caused not only by failed copulatory plug formation but also by the disruption of ejaculated sperm in the uterus by uterus-derived cytotoxic factors. SVS2 acts to protect sperm against these uterus-derived cytotoxic factors by coating the sperm surface and preventing uterine attack. Thus, our results provide evidence that mammalian males have developed a protective strategy against female attack at the gamete level. In mammals, sperm migrate through the female reproductive tract to reach the egg; however, our understanding of this journey is highly limited. To shed light on this process, we focused on defining the functions of seminal vesicle secretion 2 (SVS2). SVS2−/− male mice produced sperm but were severely subfertile, and formation of a copulatory plug to cover the female genital opening did not occur. Surprisingly, even when artificial insemination was performed with silicon as a substitute for the plug, sperm fertility in the absence of SVS2 remained severely reduced because the sperm were already dead in the uterus. Thus, our results provide evidence that the uterus induces sperm cell death and that SVS2 protects sperm from uterine attack.


Biology Open | 2012

CD81 and CD9 work independently as extracellular components upon fusion of sperm and oocyte

Naoko Ohnami; Akihiro Nakamura; Mami Miyado; Masahiro Sato; Natsuko Kawano; Keiichi Yoshida; Yuichirou Harada; Youki Takezawa; Seiya Kanai; Chihiro Ono; Yuji Takahashi; Ken-ichi Kimura; Toshio Shida; Kenji Miyado; Akihiro Umezawa

Summary When a sperm and oocyte unite into one cell upon fertilization, membranous fusion between the sperm and oocyte occurs. In mice, Izumo1 and a tetraspanin molecule CD9 are required for sperm-oocyte fusion as one of the oocyte factors, and another tetraspanin molecule CD81 is also thought to involve in this process. Since these two tetraspanins often form a complex upon cell-cell interaction, it is probable that such a complex is also formed in sperm-oocyte interaction; however, this possibility is still under debate among researchers. Here we assessed this problem using mouse oocytes. Immunocytochemical analysis demonstrated that both CD9 and CD81 were widely distributed outside the oocyte cell membrane, but these molecules were separate, forming bilayers, confirmed by immunobiochemical analysis. Electron-microscopic analysis revealed the presence of CD9- or CD81-incorporated extracellular structures in those bilayers. Finally, microinjection of in vitro-synthesized RNA showed that CD9 reversed a fusion defect in CD81-deficient oocytes in addition to CD9-deficient oocytes, but CD81 failed in both oocytes. These results suggest that both CD9 and CD81 independently work upon sperm-oocyte fusion as extracellular components.


Biology of Reproduction | 2012

Impaired Fertilizing Ability of Superoxide Dismutase 1-Deficient Mouse Sperm During In Vitro Fertilization

Satoshi Tsunoda; Natsuko Kawano; Kenji Miyado; Naoko Kimura; Junichi Fujii

ABSTRACT The oxidative modification of gametes by a reactive oxygen species is a major deleterious factor that decreases the successful rate of in vitro fertilization. Superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) plays a pivotal role in antioxidation by scavenging the superoxide anion, and its deficiency causes infertility in female mice, but the significance of the enzyme in male mice remains unclear. In the present study, we characterized Sod1−/− (Sod1-KO) male reproductive organs and compiled the first report of the impaired fertilizing ability of Sod1-KO sperm in in vitro fertilization. Insemination of wild-type oocytes with Sod1-KO sperm exhibited lower rates of fertility compared with insemination by wild-type sperm. The low fertilizing ability found for Sod1-KO sperm was partially rescued by reductant 2-mercaptoethanol, which suggested the oxidative modification of sperm components. The numbers of motile and progressive sperm decreased during the in vitro fertilization process, and a decline in ATP content and elevation in lipid peroxidation occurred in the Sod1-KO sperm in an incubation time-dependent manner. Tyrosine phosphorylation, which is a hallmark for sperm capacitation, was also impaired in the Sod1-KO sperm. These results collectively suggest that machinery involved in sperm capacitation and motility are vulnerable to oxidative damage during the in vitro fertilization process, which could increase the rate of inefficient fertilization.


Current Biology | 2014

Mitochondrial Fission Factor Drp1 Maintains Oocyte Quality via Dynamic Rearrangement of Multiple Organelles

Osamu Udagawa; Takaya Ishihara; Maki Maeda; Yui Matsunaga; Satoshi Tsukamoto; Natsuko Kawano; Kenji Miyado; Hiroshi Shitara; Sadaki Yokota; Masatoshi Nomura; Katsuyoshi Mihara; Noboru Mizushima; Naotada Ishihara

Mitochondria are dynamic organelles that change their morphology by active fusion and fission in response to cellular signaling and differentiation. The in vivo role of mitochondrial fission in mammals has been examined by using tissue-specific knockout (KO) mice of the mitochondria fission-regulating GTPase Drp1, as well as analyzing a human patient harboring a point mutation in Drp1, showing that Drp1 is essential for embryonic and neonatal development and neuronal function. During oocyte maturation and aging, structures of various membrane organelles including mitochondria and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) are changed dynamically, and their organelle aggregation is related to germ cell formation and epigenetic regulation. However, the underlying molecular mechanisms of organelle dynamics during the development and aging of oocytes have not been well understood. Here, we analyzed oocyte-specific mitochondrial fission factor Drp1-deficient mice and found that mitochondrial fission is essential for follicular maturation and ovulation in an age-dependent manner. Mitochondria were highly aggregated with other organelles, such as the ER and secretory vesicles, in KO oocyte, which resulted in impaired Ca(2+) signaling, intercellular communication via secretion, and meiotic resumption. We further found that oocytes from aged mice displayed reduced Drp1-dependent mitochondrial fission and defective organelle morphogenesis, similar to Drp1 KO oocytes. On the basis of these findings, it appears that mitochondrial fission maintains the competency of oocytes via multiorganelle rearrangement.


Journal of Lipids | 2011

Lipid Rafts: Keys to Sperm Maturation, Fertilization, and Early Embryogenesis

Natsuko Kawano; Kaoru Yoshida; Kenji Miyado; Manabu Yoshida

Cell membranes are composed of many different lipids and protein receptors, which are important for regulating intracellular functions and cell signaling. To orchestrate these activities, the cell membrane is compartmentalized into microdomains that are stably or transiently formed. These compartments are called “lipid rafts”. In gamete cells that lack gene transcription, distribution of lipids and proteins on these lipid rafts is focused during changes in their structure and functions such as starting flagella movement and membrane fusion. In this paper, we describe the role of lipid rafts in gamete maturation, fertilization, and early embryogenesis.


Scientific Reports | 2011

β-catenin is a molecular switch that regulates transition of cell-cell adhesion to fusion

Youki Takezawa; Keiichi Yoshida; Kenji Miyado; Masahiro Sato; Akihiro Nakamura; Natsuko Kawano; Keiichi Sakakibara; Takahiko Kondo; Yuichirou Harada; Naoko Ohnami; Seiya Kanai; Mami Miyado; Hidekazu Saito; Yuji Takahashi; Hidenori Akutsu; Akihiro Umezawa

When a sperm and an oocyte unite upon fertilization, their cell membranes adhere and fuse, but little is known about the factors regulating sperm-oocyte adhesion. Here we explored the role of β-catenin in sperm-oocyte adhesion. Biochemical analysis revealed that E-cadherin and β-catenin formed a complex in oocytes and also in sperm. Sperm-oocyte adhesion was impaired when β-catenin-deficient oocytes were inseminated with sperm. Furthermore, expression of β-catenin decreased from the sperm head and the site of an oocyte to which a sperm adheres after completion of sperm-oocyte adhesion. UBE1-41, an inhibitor of ubiquitin-activating enzyme 1, inhibited the degradation of β-catenin, and reduced the fusing ability of wild-type (but not β-catenin-deficient) oocytes. These results indicate that β-catenin is not only involved in membrane adhesion, but also in the transition to membrane fusion upon fertilization.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2011

Innate immune system still works at diapause, a physiological state of dormancy in insects

Akihiro Nakamura; Kenji Miyado; Youki Takezawa; Naoko Ohnami; Masahiro Sato; Chihiro Ono; Yuichirou Harada; Keiichi Yoshida; Natsuko Kawano; Seiya Kanai; Mami Miyado; Akihiro Umezawa

Diapause is most often observed in insects and is a physiologically dormant state different from other types of dormancy, such as hibernation. It allows insects to survive in harsh environments or extend longevity. In general, larval, pupal, or adult non-diapausing insects possess an innate immune system preventing the invasion of microorganisms into their bodies; however, it is unclear whether this system works under the dormant condition of diapause. We here report the occurrence of innate cellular reactions during diapause using pupae of a giant silkmoth, Samia cynthia pryeri. Scanning electron microscopic analysis demonstrated the presence of two major types of cells in the body fluid isolated from the thoracic region of a pupa. Phagocytosis and encapsulation, characteristics of innate cellular reactions, by these cells were observed when latex beads as foreign targets were microinjected into the internal portion of a pupa. Such behavior by these cells was still observed even when pupae were continuously chilled at 4°C. Our results indicate that innate cellular reactions can work in diapausing insects in a dormant state.


Biology of Reproduction | 2015

Seminal Vesicle Secretion 2 Acts as a Protectant of Sperm Sterols and Prevents Ectopic Sperm Capacitation in Mice

Naoya Araki; György Trencsényi; Zoárd Tibor Krasznai; Enikő Nizsalóczki; Ayako Sakamoto; Natsuko Kawano; Kenji Miyado; Kaoru Yoshida; Manabu Yoshida

ABSTRACT Seminal vesicle secretion 2 (SVS2) is a protein secreted by the mouse seminal vesicle. We previously demonstrated that SVS2 regulates fertilization in mice; SVS2 is attached to a ganglioside GM1 on the plasma membrane of the sperm head and inhibits sperm capacitation in in vitro fertilization as a decapacitation factor. Furthermore, male mice lacking SVS2 display prominently reduced fertility in vivo, which indicates that SVS2 protects spermatozoa from some spermicidal attack in the uterus. In this study, we tried to investigate the mechanisms by which SVS2 controls in vivo sperm capacitation. SVS2-deficient males that mated with wild-type partners resulted in decreased cholesterol levels on ejaculated sperm in the uterine cavity. SVS2 prevented cholesterol efflux from the sperm plasma membrane and incorporated liberated cholesterol in the sperm plasma membrane, thereby reversibly preventing the induction of sperm capacitation by bovine serum albumin and methyl-beta-cyclodextrin in vitro. SVS2 enters the uterus and the uterotubal junction, arresting sperm capacitation in this area. Therefore, our results show that SVS2 keeps sterols on the sperm plasma membrane and plays a key role in unlocking sperm capacitation in vivo.

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Mami Miyado

The Nippon Dental University

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Kaoru Yoshida

Toin University of Yokohama

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