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Featured researches published by Ryuji Koike.


FEBS Letters | 1996

Ceramide induces apoptosis via CPP32 activation

Noboru Mizushima; Ryuji Koike; Hitoshi Kohsaka; Yasunori Kushi; Shizuo Handa; Hideo Yagita; Nobuyuki Miyasaka

Although both ceramide and interleukin‐1β converting enzyme (ICE) family proteases are key molecules during apoptosis, their relationship remains to be elucidated. We report here that cell‐permeable ceramide induced cleavage and activation of CPP32, a Ced‐3/ICE‐like protease, but not ICE. Ceramide‐induced apoptosis of Jurkat cells was blocked by the CPP32‐specific tetrapeptide inhibitor DEVD‐CHO, but not by the ICE inhibitor YVAD‐CHO. Furthermore, variant Jurkat cells with defective CPP32 activation were resistant to both antiFas‐ and ceramide‐induced apoptosis. These results indicate that CPP32 activation is required for ceramide‐induced apoptosis, and suggest sphingomyelin‐ceramide pathway functions upstream of CPP32.


Arthritis Care and Research | 2009

Pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia in patients with rheumatoid arthritis treated with infliximab: A retrospective review and case–control study of 21 patients

Yukiko Komano; Masayoshi Harigai; Ryuji Koike; Haruhito Sugiyama; Jun Ogawa; Kazuyoshi Saito; Naoya Sekiguchi; Masayuki Inoo; Ikuko Onishi; Hiroyuki Ohashi; Fujio Amamoto; Masayuki Miyata; Hideo Ohtsubo; Kazuko Hiramatsu; Masahiro Iwamoto; Seiji Minota; Naoki Matsuoka; Goichi Kageyama; Kazuyoshi Imaizumi; Hitoshi Tokuda; Yasumi Okochi; Koichiro Kudo; Yoshiya Tanaka; Tsutomu Takeuchi; Nobuyuki Miyasaka

OBJECTIVE To establish proper management of Pneumocystis jiroveci pneumonia (PCP) in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients treated with infliximab. PCP has been observed in 0.4% of patients with RA treated with infliximab in Japan. METHODS Data from patients with RA (n = 21) who were diagnosed with PCP during infliximab treatment and from 102 patients with RA who did not develop PCP during infliximab therapy were collected from 14 rheumatology referral centers in Japan. A retrospective review of these patients and a case-control study to compare patients with and without PCP were performed. RESULTS The median length of time from the first infliximab infusion to the development of PCP was 8.5 weeks. At the onset of PCP, the median dosages of prednisolone and methotrexate were 7.5 mg/day and 8 mg/week, respectively. Pneumocystis jiroveci was microscopically identified in only 2 patients, although the polymerase chain reaction test for the organism was positive in 20 patients. The patients with PCP had significantly lower serum albumin levels (P < 0.001) and lower serum IgG levels (P < 0.001) than the patients without PCP. Computed tomography of the chest in all patients with PCP revealed ground-glass opacity either with sharp demarcation by interlobular septa or without interlobular septal boundaries. Sixteen of the 21 patients with PCP developed acute respiratory failure, but all survived. CONCLUSION PCP is a serious complication that may occur early in the course of infliximab therapy in patients with RA. For the proper clinical management of this infectious disease, physicians need to be aware of the possibility of PCP developing during infliximab therapy.


The Journal of Rheumatology | 2011

Incidence and Risk Factors for Serious Infection in Patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis Treated with Tumor Necrosis Factor Inhibitors: A Report from the Registry of Japanese Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients for Longterm Safety

Yukiko Komano; Michi Tanaka; Toshihiro Nanki; Ryuji Koike; Ryoko Sakai; Hideto Kameda; Atsuo Nakajima; Kazuyoshi Saito; Mitsuhiro Takeno; Tatsuya Atsumi; Shigeto Tohma; Satoshi Ito; Naoto Tamura; Tetsuji Sawada; Hiroaki Ida; Akira Hashiramoto; Takao Koike; Yoshiaki Ishigatsubo; Katsumi Eguchi; Yoshiya Tanaka; Tsutomu Takeuchi; Nobuyuki Miyasaka; Masayoshi Harigai

Objective. To compare tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) inhibitors to nonbiological disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARD) for the risk of serious infection in Japanese patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Methods. Serious infections occurring within the first year of the observation period were examined using the records for patients recruited to the Registry of Japanese Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients for Longterm Safety (REAL), a hospital-based prospective cohort of patients with RA. The analysis included 1144 patients, 646 of whom were treated with either infliximab or etanercept [exposed group: 592.4 patient-years (PY)]. The remaining 498 patients received nonbiological DMARD with no biologics (unexposed group: 454.7 PY). Results. In the unexposed group, the incidence rate for all serious adverse events (SAE) was 9.02/100 PY and for serious infections, 2.64/100 PY. In the exposed group, SAE occurred in 16.04/100 PY and serious infections in 6.42/100 PY. The crude incidence rate ratio comparing serious infections in the exposed group with the unexposed group was 2.43 (95% CI 1.27–4.65), a significant increase. A multivariate analysis revealed that the use of TNF inhibitors is a significant independent risk factor for serious infection (relative risk 2.37, 95% CI 1.11–5.05, p = 0.026). Conclusion. Our study has provided the first epidemiological data on Japanese patients with RA for the safety of TNF inhibitors compared to nonbiological DMARD for up to 1 year of treatment. Anti-TNF therapy was associated with a significantly increased risk for serious infections, compared to treatment with nonbiological DMARD.


Modern Rheumatology | 2009

Japan College of Rheumatology 2009 guidelines for the use of tocilizumab, a humanized anti-interleukin-6 receptor monoclonal antibody, in rheumatoid arthritis

Ryuji Koike; Masayoshi Harigai; Tatsuya Atsumi; Koichi Amano; Shinichi Kawai; Kazuyoshi Saito; Tomoyuki Saito; Masahiro Yamamura; Tsukasa Matsubara; Nobuyuki Miyasaka

The introduction of biological agents targeting tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) has brought about a paradigm shift in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Although these anti-TNF agents have excellent efficacy against RA, a substantial number of patients still show inadequate responses. In Western countries, such patients are already being treated with new classes of antirheumatic drugs such as abatacept and rituximab. Tocilizumab (TCZ) is a humanized monoclonal antibody developed in Japan against the human interleukin-6 (IL-6) receptor. TCZ does not only alleviate the signs and symptoms of RA but also seems to prevent progressive bone and joint destruction. However, there is a concern that TCZ might increase the risk of adverse events such as infections since IL-6 plays a pivotal role in the immune system. Calculating the relative risks of specific adverse outcomes with TCZ use remains difficult, due to insufficient patient numbers enrolled in clinical trials to date. This review presents tentative guidelines for the use of TCZ for RA patients prepared by the Japan College of Rheumatology and based on results of clinical trials in Japan and Western countries. The guidelines are intended as a guide for postmarketing surveillance and clinical practice, and will be revised periodically based on the surveillance.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2015

Somatic NLRP3 mosaicism in Muckle-Wells syndrome. A genetic mechanism shared by different phenotypes of cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes

Kenji Nakagawa; Eva González-Roca; Alejandro Souto; T Kawai; Hiroaki Umebayashi; Josep M. Campistol; Jerónima Cañellas; Syuji Takei; Norimoto Kobayashi; José Luis Callejas-Rubio; Norberto Ortego-Centeno; Estibaliz Ruiz-Ortiz; Fina Rius; Jordi Anton; Estíbaliz Iglesias; Santiago Jiménez-Treviño; Carmen Vargas; Julián Fernández-Martin; Inmaculada Calvo; José Hernández-Rodríguez; Maria Méndez; María Teresa Dordal; Maria Basagaña; Segundo Buján; Masato Yashiro; Tetsuo Kubota; Ryuji Koike; Naoko Akuta; Kumiko Shimoyama; Naomi Iwata

UNLABELLED : Familial cold autoinflammatory syndrome, Muckle-Wells syndrome (MWS), and chronic, infantile, neurological, cutaneous and articular (CINCA) syndrome are dominantly inherited autoinflammatory diseases associated to gain-of-function NLRP3 mutations and included in the cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes (CAPS). A variable degree of somatic NLRP3 mosaicism has been detected in ≈35% of patients with CINCA. However, no data are currently available regarding the relevance of this mechanism in other CAPS phenotypes. OBJECTIVE To evaluate somatic NLRP3 mosaicism as the disease-causing mechanism in patients with clinical CAPS phenotypes other than CINCA and NLRP3 mutation-negative. METHODS NLRP3 analyses were performed by Sanger sequencing and by massively parallel sequencing. Apoptosis-associated Speck-like protein containing a CARD (ASC)-dependent nuclear factor kappa-light chain-enhancer of activated B cells (NF-κB) activation and transfection-induced THP-1 cell death assays determined the functional consequences of the detected variants. RESULTS A variable degree (5.5-34.9%) of somatic NLRP3 mosaicism was detected in 12.5% of enrolled patients, all of them with a MWS phenotype. Six different missense variants, three novel (p.D303A, p.K355T and p.L411F), were identified. Bioinformatics and functional analyses confirmed that they were disease-causing, gain-of-function NLRP3 mutations. All patients treated with anti-interleukin1 drugs showed long-lasting positive responses. CONCLUSIONS We herein show somatic NLRP3 mosaicism underlying MWS, probably representing a shared genetic mechanism in CAPS not restricted to CINCA syndrome. The data here described allowed definitive diagnoses of these patients, which had serious implications for gaining access to anti-interleukin 1 treatments under legal indication and for genetic counselling. The detection of somatic mosaicism is difficult when using conventional methods. Potential candidates should benefit from the use of modern genetic tools.


Journal of Immunology | 2000

Stage-Specific Expression of Mucosal Addressin Cell Adhesion Molecule-1 During Embryogenesis in Rats

Toshihiko Iizuka; Toshiyuki Tanaka; Makoto Suematsu; Soichiro Miura; Toshiki Watanabe; Ryuji Koike; Yuzuru Ishimura; Hiromasa Ishii; Nobuyuki Miyasaka; Masayuki Miyasaka

Mucosal addressin cell adhesion molecule-1 (MAdCAM-1) is essential for lymphocyte trafficking to gut-associated lymphoid tissues and is implicated in inflammatory disorders in the gut and pancreatic islets. In this study, we examined the functional role of MAdCAM-1 during rat ontogeny using newly generated specific mAb. As previously observed in mice and humans, MAdCAM-1 was preferentially expressed in high endothelial venules (HEV) in gut-associated lymphoid tissues and venules of lamina propria in adult rats. Lymphocyte rolling and adhesion on HEV in Peyer’s patches (PP) were completely abrogated with neutralizing anti-MAdCAM-1 mAb, in agreement with the notion that MAdCAM-1 is the principal HEV ligand for lymphocyte rolling and adhesion in adult PP. In the developing gastrointestinal tract, MAdCAM-1 was widely expressed in the venules of the lamina propria of fetal rats. In addition, MAdCAM-1 was also expressed in follicular dendritic cells in the neonatal PP. Interestingly, MAdCAM-1 expression was found also in nonmucosal tissues during ontogeny. MAdCAM-1 was transiently expressed in blood vascular endothelial cells in the fetal skin and neonatal thymus. Notably, MAdCAM-1-positive blood vessels were localized mainly in the cortico-medullary junction in the neonatal thymus and about 10–20% of thymocytes, most of which were either CD4, CD8 double positive or single positive specifically reacted with soluble MAdCAM-1 via integrin α4β7. After birth, MAdCAM-1 expression in thymus blood vessels disappeared and concomitantly, the soluble MAdCAM-1-reactive thymocytes were rapidly down-regulated. Our results suggest that MAdCAM-1 functions as a vascular addressin in not only mucosal, but also nonmucosal lymphoid tissues during ontogeny.


Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences | 2005

Cognitive dysfunction in systemic lupus erythematosus

Eisuke Matsushima; Okihiko Aihara; Katsuya Ohta; Ryuji Koike; Nobuyuki Miyasaka; Motoichiro Kato

Abstract  Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune‐mediated collagen disease that results in multiorgan failure. It is the collagen disease most frequently associated with neuropsychiatric symptoms, which have been hypothesized to stem from certain types of cognitive dysfunction. Subjects were 21 patients with SLE (one man, 20 women; aged 16–55 years; mean age, 35.1 ± 10.7 years) who were undergoing treatment in the rheumatology unit of a general hospital, and 17 healthy control subjects matched to the patient group with respect to age and gender (two men, 15 women; mean age, 35.9 ± 6.3 years). They were administered various tests of cognitive function including verbal reasoning, non‐verbal reasoning, verbal memory, non‐verbal memory, attention and mental flexibility, psychomotor speed and frontal lobe function. In addition, the SLE patients were tested for antiphospholipid antibodies. The SLE patients performed worse than the control group on immediate, delayed and interference of the Rey verbal test and paired associate tests of Wechsler Memory Scale, and their reaction time was slower in Trail A and Trail B tests. Moreover, these findings were more pronounced in the group with major neuropsychiatric symptoms. However, no relationship was apparent between these deficits in cognitive function and the presence or absence of antiphospholipid antibodies. The results suggest that verbal memory and psychomotor speed underlie the neuropsychiatric symptoms seen in SLE patients.


Arthritis Care and Research | 2012

Time‐dependent increased risk for serious infection from continuous use of tumor necrosis factor antagonists over three years in patients with rheumatoid arthritis

Ryoko Sakai; Yukiko Komano; Michi Tanaka; Toshihiro Nanki; Ryuji Koike; Hayato Nagasawa; Koichi Amano; Atsuo Nakajima; Tatsuya Atsumi; Takao Koike; Atsushi Ihata; Yoshiaki Ishigatsubo; Kazuyoshi Saito; Yoshiya Tanaka; Satoshi Ito; Takayuki Sumida; Shigeto Tohma; Naoto Tamura; Takahiko Sugihara; Atsushi Kawakami; Noboru Hagino; Yukitaka Ueki; Akira Hashiramoto; Kenji Nagasaka; Nobuyuki Miyasaka; Masayoshi Harigai

To investigate associations between continuous treatments with tumor necrosis factor (TNF) antagonists and risk for developing serious infections (SIs) over 3 years in Japanese patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) enrolled in the Registry of Japanese RA Patients for Long‐Term Safety (REAL) database.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 1999

Subacute severe steatohepatitis during prednisolone therapy for systemic lupus erythematosis.

Toshihiro Nanki; Ryuji Koike; Nobuyuki Miyasaka

Subacute Severe Steatohepatitis During Prednisolone Therapy for Systemic Lupus Erythematosis


Modern Rheumatology | 2010

Cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes: background and therapeutics

Tetsuo Kubota; Ryuji Koike

Cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes (CAPS) are caused by mutations of the gene encoding the NLR family protein NLRP3, which together with caspase-1 and adaptor proteins constitutes a protein complex termed the inflammasome. In innate immune reactions, a variety of stimuli activate the NLRP3 inflammasome, triggering caspase-1 to process proIL-1 and thus to produce mature IL-1. Excessive production of IL-1 by monocytes/macrophages is the central pathophysiology of CAPS, and daily injection of the IL-1 receptor antagonist anakinra rapidly ameliorates the inflammatory symptoms in most cases. Furthermore, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trials have recently confirmed the efficacy and safety of rilonacept, a fusion protein of the IL-1 receptor and IgG Fc, and canakinumab, a human anti-IL-1 monoclonal antibody, as novel long-lasting agents for treating CAPS.

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Nobuyuki Miyasaka

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Masayoshi Harigai

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Toshihiro Nanki

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Ryoko Sakai

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Tetsuo Kubota

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Hayato Yamazaki

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Michi Tanaka

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Hitoshi Kohsaka

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Kazuyoshi Saito

University of Occupational and Environmental Health Japan

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Yoshiya Tanaka

University of Occupational and Environmental Health Japan

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