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Dive into the research topics where Peter Igarashi is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter Igarashi.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Kidney-specific inactivation of the KIF3A subunit of kinesin-II inhibits renal ciliogenesis and produces polycystic kidney disease

Fangming Lin; Thomas Hiesberger; Kimberly R. Cordes; Angus M. Sinclair; Lawrence S.B. Goldstein; Stefan Somlo; Peter Igarashi

Polycystic kidney disease (PKD) is the most common genetic cause of renal failure in humans. Several proteins that are encoded by genes associated with PKD have recently been identified in primary cilia in renal tubular epithelia. These findings have suggested that abnormalities in cilia formation and function may play a role in the pathogenesis of PKD. To directly determine whether cilia are essential to maintain tubular integrity, we conditionally inactivated KIF3A, a subunit of kinesin-II that is essential for cilia formation, in renal epithelia. Constitutive inactivation of KIF3A produces abnormalities of left–right axis determination and embryonic lethality. Here we show that tissue-specific inactivation of KIF3A in renal tubular epithelial cells results in viable offspring with normal-appearing kidneys at birth. Cysts begin to develop in the kidney at postnatal day 5 and cause renal failure by postnatal day 21. The cyst epithelial cells lack primary cilia and exhibit increased proliferation and apoptosis, apical mislocalization of the epidermal growth factor receptor, increased expression of β-catenin and c-Myc, and inhibition of p21CIP1. These results demonstrate that the absence of renal cilia produces both the clinical and cell biological findings associated with PKD. Most generally, the phenotype of Kif3a mutant mice suggests a role for primary cilia in the maintenance of lumen-forming epithelial differentiation.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2002

Genetics and Pathogenesis of Polycystic Kidney Disease

Peter Igarashi; Stefan Somlo

Eberhard Ritz Polycystic kidney disease (PKD), a common genetic cause of chronic renal failure in children and adults, is characterized by the accumulation of fluid-filled cysts in the kidney and other organs. The renal cysts originate from the epithelia of the nephrons and renal collecting system


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1998

HOXA10 is expressed in response to sex steroids at the time of implantation in the human endometrium.

Hugh S. Taylor; Aydin Arici; David L. Olive; Peter Igarashi

Hox genes are well-known transcriptional regulators that play an essential role in directing embryonic development. Mice that are homozygous for a targeted disruption of the Hoxa10 gene exhibit uterine factor infertility. We have recently demonstrated that HOXA10 is expressed in the adult human uterus. To examine expression of HOXA10 during the menstrual cycle, Northern blot analysis and in situ hybridization were performed. Expression of HOXA10 dramatically increased during the midsecretory phase of the menstrual cycle, corresponding to the time of implantation and increase in circulating progesterone. Expression of HOXA10 in cultured endometrial cells was stimulated by estrogen or progesterone. Stimulation of HOXA10 by progesterone was concentration-dependent within the physiologic range, and the effect of estrogen was inhibited by cycloheximide. These results identify sex steroids as novel regulators of HOX gene expression. HOXA10 may have an important function in regulating endometrial development during the menstrual cycle and in establishing conditions necessary for implantation in the human.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2003

Hematopoietic Stem Cells Contribute to the Regeneration of Renal Tubules after Renal Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury in Mice

Fangming Lin; Kimberly R. Cordes; Linheng Li; Leroy Hood; William G. Couser; Stuart J. Shankland; Peter Igarashi

Ischemia-reperfusion injury (I/R injury) is a common cause of acute renal failure. Recovery from I/R injury requires renal tubular regeneration. Hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) have been shown to be capable of differentiating into hepatocytes, cardiac myocytes, gastrointestinal epithelial cells, and vascular endothelial cells during tissue repair. The current study tested the hypothesis that murine HSC can contribute to the regeneration of renal tubular epithelial cells after I/R injury. HSC isolated from male Rosa26 mice that express beta-galactosidase constitutively were transplanted into female nontransgenic mice after unilateral renal I/R injury. Four weeks after HSC transplantation, beta-galactosidase-positive cells were detected in renal tubules of the recipients by X-Gal staining. PCR analysis of the male-specific Sry gene and Y chromosome fluorescence in situ hybridization confirmed the presence of male-derived cells in the kidneys of female recipients. Antibody co-staining showed that beta-galactosidase was primarily expressed in renal proximal tubules. This is the first report to show that HSC can differentiate into renal tubular cells after I/R injury. Because of their availability, HSC may be useful for cell replacement therapy of acute renal failure.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2005

Intrarenal cells, not bone marrow–derived cells, are the major source for regeneration in postischemic kidney

Fangming Lin; Ashley Moran; Peter Igarashi

Ischemic injury to the kidney produces acute tubular necrosis and apoptosis followed by tubular regeneration and recovery of renal function. Although mitotic cells are present in the tubules of postischemic kidneys, the origins of the proliferating cells are not known. Bone marrow cells (BMCs) can differentiate across lineages to repair injured organs, including the kidney. However, the relative contribution of intrarenal cells and extrarenal cells to kidney regeneration is not clear. We produced transgenic mice that expressed enhanced GFP (EGFP) specifically and permanently in mature renal tubular epithelial cells. Following ischemia/reperfusion injury (IRI), EGFP-positive cells showed incorporation of BrdU and expression of vimentin, which provides direct evidence that the cells composing regenerating tubules are derived from renal tubular epithelial cells. In BMC-transplanted mice, 89% of proliferating epithelial cells originated from host cells, and 11% originated from donor BMCs. Twenty-eight days after IRI, the kidneys contained 8% donor-derived cells, of which 8.4% were epithelial cells, 10.6% were glomerular cells, and 81% were interstitial cells. No renal functional improvement was observed in mice that were transplanted with exogenous BMCs. These results show that intrarenal cells are the main source of renal repair, and a single injection of BMCs does not make a significant contribution to renal functional or structural recovery.


Nature Genetics | 2009

Wnt9b signaling regulates planar cell polarity and kidney tubule morphogenesis

Courtney M. Karner; Rani Chirumamilla; Shigehisa Aoki; Peter Igarashi; John B. Wallingford; Thomas J. Carroll

Although many vertebrate organs, such as kidneys, lungs and liver, are composed of epithelial tubules, little is known of the mechanisms that establish the length or diameter of these tubules. In the kidney, defects in the establishment or maintenance of tubule diameter are associated with one of the most common inherited human disorders, polycystic kidney disease. Here we show that attenuation of Wnt9b signaling during kidney morphogenesis affects the planar cell polarity of the epithelium and leads to tubules with significantly increased diameter. Although previous studies showed that polarized cell divisions maintain the diameter of postnatal kidney tubules, we find that cell divisions are randomly oriented during embryonic development. Our data suggest that diameter is established during early morphogenetic stages by convergent extension processes and maintained by polarized cell divisions. Wnt9b, signaling through the non-canonical Rho/Jnk branch of the Wnt pathway, is necessary for both of these processes.


The EMBO Journal | 2004

A transcriptional network in polycystic kidney disease

Lionel Gresh; Evelyne Fischer; Andreas Reimann; Myriam Tanguy; Serge Garbay; Xinli Shao; Thomas Hiesberger; Laurence Fiette; Peter Igarashi; Moshe Yaniv; Marco Pontoglio

Mutations in cystic kidney disease genes represent a major genetic cause of end‐stage renal disease. However, the molecular cascades controlling the expression of these genes are still poorly understood. Hepatocyte Nuclear Factor 1β (HNF1β) is a homeoprotein predominantly expressed in renal, pancreatic and hepatic epithelia. We report here that mice with renal‐specific inactivation of HNF1β develop polycystic kidney disease. We show that renal cyst formation is accompanied by a drastic defect in the transcriptional activation of Umod, Pkhd1 and Pkd2 genes, whose mutations are responsible for distinct cystic kidney syndromes. In vivo chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments demonstrated that HNF1β binds to several DNA elements in murine Umod, Pkhd1, Pkd2 and Tg737/Polaris genomic sequences. Our results uncover a direct transcriptional hierarchy between HNF1β and cystic disease genes. Interestingly, most of the identified HNF1β target gene products colocalize to the primary cilium, a crucial organelle that plays an important role in controlling the proliferation of tubular cells. This may explain the increased proliferation of cystic cells in MODY5 patients carrying autosomal dominant mutations in HNF1β.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2008

Acute kidney injury and aberrant planar cell polarity induce cyst formation in mice lacking renal cilia

Vishal Patel; Ling Li; Patricia Cobo-Stark; Xinli Shao; Stefan Somlo; Fangming Lin; Peter Igarashi

Polycystic kidney disease (PKD) is an inherited disorder that is characterized by the accumulation of cysts in the renal parenchyma and progressive decline in renal function. Recent studies suggest that PKD arises from abnormalities of the primary cilium. We have previously shown that kidney-specific inactivation of the ciliogenic gene Kif3a during embryonic development produces kidney cysts and renal failure. Here, we used tamoxifen-inducible, kidney-specific gene targeting to inactivate Kif3a in the postnatal mouse kidney. Kidney-specific inactivation of Kif3a in newborn mice resulted in the loss of primary cilia and produced kidney cysts primarily in the loops of Henle, whereas inactivation in adult mice did not lead to the rapid development of cysts despite a comparable loss of primary cilia. The age-dependence and locations of the cysts suggested that cyst formation required increased rates of cell proliferation. To test this possibility, we stimulated cell proliferation in the adult kidney by inducing acute kidney injury and tubular regeneration. Acute kidney injury induced cyst formation in adult Kif3a mutant mice. Analysis of pre-cystic tubules in Kif3a mutant mice showed that the loss of cilia did not stimulate cell proliferation but instead resulted in aberrant planar cell polarity as manifested by abnormalities in the orientation of cell division. We conclude that primary cilia are required for the maintenance of planar cell polarity in the mammalian kidney and that acute kidney injury exacerbates cystic disease.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2004

Mechanical stimuli induce cleavage and nuclear translocation of the polycystin-1 C terminus

Veronique Chauvet; Xin Tian; Hervé Husson; David H. Grimm; Tong Wang; Thomas Hieseberger; Peter Igarashi; Anton M. Bennett; Oxana Ibraghimov-Beskrovnaya; Stefan Somlo; Michael J. Caplan

Polycystin-1, which is encoded by a gene that is mutated in autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (ADPKD), is involved in cell-matrix interactions as well as in ciliary signaling. The precise mechanisms by which it functions, however, remain unclear. Here we find that polycystin-1 undergoes a proteolytic cleavage that releases its C-terminal tail (CTT), which enters the nucleus and initiates signaling processes. The cleavage occurs in vivo in association with alterations in mechanical stimuli. Polycystin-2, the product of the second gene mutated in ADPKD, modulates the signaling properties of the polycystin-1 CTT. These data reveal a novel pathway by which polycystin-1 transmits messages directly to the nucleus.


Nature Cell Biology | 2010

Primary cilia regulate mTORC1 activity and cell size through Lkb1

Christopher Boehlke; Fruzsina Kotsis; Vishal Patel; Simone Braeg; Henriette Voelker; Saskia Bredt; Theresa Beyer; Heike Janusch; Christoph Hamann; Markus Gödel; Klaus Müller; Martin Herbst; Miriam Hornung; Mara Doerken; Michael Köttgen; Roland Nitschke; Peter Igarashi; Gerd Walz; E. Wolfgang Kuehn

The mTOR pathway is the central regulator of cell size. External signals from growth factors and nutrients converge on the mTORC1 multi-protein complex to modulate downstream targets, but how the different inputs are integrated and translated into specific cellular responses is incompletely understood. Deregulation of the mTOR pathway occurs in polycystic kidney disease (PKD), where cilia (filiform sensory organelles) fail to sense urine flow because of inherited mutations in ciliary proteins. We therefore investigated if cilia have a role in mTOR regulation. Here, we show that ablation of cilia in transgenic mice results in enlarged cells when compared with control animals. In vitro analysis demonstrated that bending of the cilia by flow is required for mTOR downregulation and cell-size control. Surprisingly, regulation of cell size by cilia is independent of flow-induced calcium transients, or Akt. However, the tumour-suppressor protein Lkb1 localises in the cilium, and flow results in increased AMPK phosphorylation at the basal body. Conversely, knockdown of Lkb1 prevents normal cell-size regulation under flow conditions. Our results demonstrate that the cilium regulates mTOR signalling and cell size, and identify the cilium-basal body compartment as a spatially restricted activation site for Lkb1 signalling.

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Vishal Patel

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Xinli Shao

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Thomas Hiesberger

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Marco Pontoglio

Paris Descartes University

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Fangming Lin

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Karam Aboudehen

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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