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Dive into the research topics where Shigeaki Saitoh is active.

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Featured researches published by Shigeaki Saitoh.


The EMBO Journal | 1994

Fission yeast cut3 and cut14, members of a ubiquitous protein family, are required for chromosome condensation and segregation in mitosis.

Yasushi Saka; Takashi Sutani; Yukiko M. Yamashita; Shigeaki Saitoh; Masahiro Takeuchi; Yukinobu Nakaseko; Mitsuhiro Yanagida

Fission yeast temperature‐sensitive mutants cut3‐477 and cut14‐208 fail to condense chromosomes but small portions of the chromosomes can separate along the spindle during mitosis, producing phi‐shaped chromosomes. Septation and cell division occur in the absence of normal nuclear division, causing the cut phenotype. Fluorescence in situ hybridization demonstrated that the contraction of the chromosome arm during mitosis was defective. Mutant chromosomes are apparently not rigid enough to be transported poleward by the spindle. Loss of the cut3 protein by gene disruption fails to maintain the nuclear chromatin architecture even in interphase. Both cut3 and cut14 proteins contain a putative nucleoside triphosphate (NTP)‐binding domain and belong to the same ubiquitous protein family which includes the budding yeast Smc1 protein. The cut3 mutant was suppressed by an increase in the cut14+ gene dosage. The cut3 protein, having the highest similarity to the mouse protein, is localized in the nucleus throughout the cell cycle. Plasmids carrying the DNA topoisomerase I gene partly suppressed the temperature sensitive phenotype of cut3‐477, suggesting that the cut3 protein might be involved in chromosome DNA topology.


Cell | 1997

Mis6, a fission yeast inner centromere protein, acts during G1/S and forms specialized chromatin required for equal segregation.

Shigeaki Saitoh; Kohta Takahashi; Mitsuhiro Yanagida

Disorder in sister chromatid separation can lead to genome instability and cancer. A temperature-sensitive S. pombe mis6-302 frequently loses a minichromosome at 26 degrees C and abolishes equal segregation of regular chromosomes at 36 degrees C. The mis6+ gene is essential for viability, and its deletion results in missegregation identical to mis6-302. Mis6 acts before or at the onset of S phase, and mitotic missegregation defects are produced only after the passage of G1/S at 36 degrees C. Mis6 locates at the centromeres throughout the cell cycle. In the mutant, positioning of the centromeres becomes abnormal, and specialized chromatin in the inner centromeres, which give the smear micrococcal nuclease pattern in wild type, is disrupted. The ability to establish correct biorientation of sister centromeres in metaphase cells requires the Mis6-containing chromatin and originates during the passage of G1/S.


Cell | 2002

Cid13 is a cytoplasmic poly(A) polymerase that regulates ribonucleotide reductase mRNA.

Shigeaki Saitoh; Andrei Chabes; W. Hayes McDonald; Lars Thelander; John R. Yates; Paul Russell

Fission yeast Cid13 and budding yeast Trf4/5 are members of a newly identified nucleotidyltransferase family conserved from yeast to man. Trf4/5 are thought to be essential DNA polymerases. We report that Cid13 is a poly(A) polymerase. Unlike conventional poly(A) polymerases, which act in the nucleus and indiscriminately polyadenylate all mRNA, Cid13 is a cytoplasmic enzyme that specifically targets suc22 mRNA that encodes a subunit of ribonucleotide reductase (RNR). cid13 mutants have reduced dNTP pools and are sensitive to hydroxyurea, an RNR inhibitor. We propose that Cid13 defines a cytoplasmic form of poly(A) polymerase important for DNA replication and genome maintenance.


Molecular Cell | 2003

A Cell Cycle-Regulated GATA Factor Promotes Centromeric Localization of CENP-A in Fission Yeast

Ee Sin Chen; Shigeaki Saitoh; Mitsuhiro Yanagida; Kohta Takahashi

CENP-A, the centromere-specific histone H3 variant, plays a crucial role in organizing kinetochore chromatin for precise chromosome segregation. We have isolated Ams2, a Daxx-like motif-containing GATA factor, and histone H4, as multicopy suppressors of cnp1-1, an S. pombe CENP-A mutant. While depletion of Ams2 results in the reduction of CENP-A binding to the centromere and chromosome missegregation, increasing its dosage restores association of a CENP-A mutant protein with centromeres. Conversely, overexpression of CENP-A or histone H4 suppresses an ams2 disruptant. The intracellular amount of Ams2 thus affects centromeric nucleosomal constituents. Ams2 is abundant in S phase and associates with chromatin, including the central centromeres through binding to GATA-core sequences. Ams2 is thus a cell cycle-regulated GATA factor that is required for centromere function.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2010

CENP-A Reduction Induces a p53-Dependent Cellular Senescence Response To Protect Cells from Executing Defective Mitoses

Kayoko Maehara; Kohta Takahashi; Shigeaki Saitoh

ABSTRACT Cellular senescence is an irreversible growth arrest and is presumed to be a natural barrier to tumor development. Like telomere shortening, certain defects in chromosome integrity can trigger senescence; however, the roles of centromere proteins in regulating commitment to the senescent state remains to be established. We examined chromatin structure in senescent human primary fibroblasts and found that CENP-A protein levels are diminished in senescent cells. Senescence-associated reduction of CENP-A is caused by transcriptional and posttranslational control. Surprisingly, forced reduction of CENP-A by short-hairpin RNA was found to cause premature senescence in human primary fibroblasts. This premature senescence is dependent on a tumor suppressor, p53, but not on p16INK4a-Rb; the depletion of CENP-A in p53-deficient cells results in aberrant mitosis with chromosome missegregation. We propose that p53-dependent senescence that arises from CENP-A reduction acts as a “self-defense mechanism” to prevent centromere-defective cells from undergoing mitotic proliferation that potentially leads to massive generation of aneuploid cells.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2005

Two distinct pathways responsible for the loading of CENP-A to centromeres in the fission yeast cell cycle

Kohta Takahashi; Yuko Takayama; Fumie Masuda; Yasuyo Kobayashi; Shigeaki Saitoh

CENP-A is a centromere-specific histone H3 variant that is- essential for faithful chromosome segregation in all eukaryotes thus far investigated. We genetically identified two factors, Ams2 and Mis6, each of which is required for the correct centromere localization of SpCENP-A (Cnp1), the fission yeast homologue of CENP-A. Ams2 is a cell-cycle-regulated GATA factor that localizes on the nuclear chromatin, including on centromeres, during the S phase. Ams2 may be responsible for the replication-coupled loading of SpCENP-A by facilitating nucleosomal formation during the S phase. Consistently, overproduction of histone H4, but not that of H3, suppressed the defect of SpCENP-A localization in Ams2-deficient cells. We demonstrated the existence of at least two distinct phases for SpCENP-A loading during the cell cycle: the S phase and the late-G2 phase. Ectopically induced SpCENP-A was efficiently loaded onto the centromeres in G2-arrested cells, indicating that SpCENP-A probably undergoes replication-uncoupled loading after the completion of S phase. This G2 loading pathway of SpCENP-A may require Mis6, a constitutive centromere-binding protein that is also implicated in the Mad2-dependent spindle attachment checkpoint response. Here, we discuss the functional relationship between the flexible loading mechanism of CENP-A and the plasticity of centromere chromatin formation in fission yeast.


FEBS Journal | 2011

Specific biomarkers for stochastic division patterns and starvation-induced quiescence under limited glucose levels in fission yeast

Tomáš Pluskal; Takeshi Hayashi; Shigeaki Saitoh; Asuka Fujisawa; Mitsuhiro Yanagida

Glucose as a source of energy is centrally important to our understanding of life. We investigated the cell division–quiescence behavior of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe under a wide range of glucose concentrations (0–111 mm). The mode of S. pombe cell division under a microfluidic perfusion system was surprisingly normal under highly diluted glucose concentrations (5.6 mm, 1/20 of the standard medium, within human blood sugar levels). Division became stochastic, accompanied by a curious division‐timing inheritance, in 2.2–4.4 mm glucose. A critical transition from division to quiescence occurred within a narrow range of concentrations (2.2–1.7 mm). Under starvation (1.1 mm) conditions, cells were mostly quiescent and only a small population of cells divided. Under fasting (0 mm) conditions, division was immediately arrested with a short chronological lifespan (16 h). When cells were first glucose starved prior to fasting, they possessed a substantially extended lifespan (∼14 days). We employed a quantitative metabolomic approach for S. pombe cell extracts, and identified specific metabolites (e.g. biotin, trehalose, ergothioneine, S‐adenosyl methionine and CDP‐choline), which increased or decreased at different glucose concentrations, whereas nucleotide triphosphates, such as ATP, maintained high concentrations even under starvation. Under starvation, the level of S‐adenosyl methionine increased sharply, accompanied by an increase in methylated amino acids and nucleotides. Under fasting, cells rapidly lost antioxidant and energy compounds, such as glutathione and ATP, but, in fasting cells after starvation, these and other metabolites ensuring longevity remained abundant. Glucose‐starved cells became resistant to 40 mm H2O2 as a result of the accumulation of antioxidant compounds.


Current Biology | 2012

Epigenetic Inactivation and Subsequent Heterochromatinization of a Centromere Stabilize Dicentric Chromosomes

Hiroshi Sato; Fumie Masuda; Yuko Takayama; Kohta Takahashi; Shigeaki Saitoh

BACKGROUND The kinetochore is a multiprotein complex that forms on a chromosomal locus designated as the centromere, which links the chromosome to the spindle during mitosis and meiosis. Most eukaryotes, with the exception of holocentric species, have a single distinct centromere per chromosome, and the presence of multiple centromeres on a single chromosome is predicted to cause breakage and/or loss of that chromosome. However, some stably maintained non-Robertsonian translocated chromosomes have been reported, suggesting that the excessive centromeres are inactivated by an as yet undetermined mechanism. RESULTS We have developed systems to generate dicentric chromosomes containing two centromeres by fusing two chromosomes in fission yeast. Although the majority of cells harboring the artificial dicentric chromosome are arrested with elongated cell morphology in a manner dependent on the DNA structure checkpoint genes, a portion of the cells survive by converting the dicentric chromosome into a stable functional monocentric chromosome; either centromere was inactivated epigenetically or by DNA rearrangement. Mutations compromising kinetochore formation increased the frequency of epigenetic centromere inactivation. The inactivated centromere is occupied by heterochromatin and frequently reactivated in heterochromatin- or histone deacetylase-deficient mutants. CONCLUSIONS Chromosomes with multiple centromeres are stabilized by epigenetic centromere inactivation, which is initiated by kinetochore disassembly. Consequent heterochromatinization and histone deacetylation expanding from pericentric repeats to the central domain prevent reactivation of the inactivated centromere.


Developmental Cell | 2010

Hsk1- and SCFPof3-Dependent Proteolysis of S. pombe Ams2 Ensures Histone Homeostasis and Centromere Function

Yuko Takayama; Yasmine M. Mamnun; Michelle Trickey; Susheela Dhut; Fumie Masuda; Hiroyuki Yamano; Takashi Toda; Shigeaki Saitoh

Summary Schizosaccharomyces pombe GATA factor Ams2 is responsible for cell cycle-dependent transcriptional activation of all the core histone genes peaking at G1/S phase. Intriguingly, its own protein level also fluctuates concurrently. Here, we show that Ams2 is ubiquitylated and degraded through the SCF (Skp1-Cdc53/Cullin-1-F-box) ubiquitin ligase, in which F box protein Pof3 binds this protein. Ams2 is phosphorylated at multiple sites, which is required for SCFPof3-dependent proteolysis. Hsk1/Cdc7 kinase physically associates with and phosphorylates Ams2. Even mild overexpression of Ams2 induces constitutive histone expression and chromosome instability, and its toxicity is exaggerated when Hsk1 function is compromised. This is partly attributable to abnormal incorporation of canonical H3 into the central CENP-A/Cnp1-rich centromere, thereby reversing specific chromatin structures to apparently normal nucleosomes. We propose that Hsk1 plays a vital role during post S phase in genome stability via SCFPof3-mediated degradation of Ams2, thereby maintaining centromere integrity.


Methods in Enzymology | 1997

Use of green fluorescent protein for intracellular protein localization in living fission yeast cells.

Kentaro Nabeshima; Shigeaki Saitoh; Mitsuhiro Yanagida

Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the use of green fluorescent protein (GFP) for intracellular protein localization in living fission yeast cells. GFP is a 238-amino acid protein derived from the jellyfish Aequorea Victoria. Green fluorescent protein absorbs blue light and emits green fluorescence in the absence of bound ligand. The light absorbance spectrum of the wild-type GFP has two peaks, one at 395 nm (major peak) and the other at 470 nm (minor peak). The emission spectrum also has two peaks, one at 509 nm (major) and the other at 504 nm (minor). Living Schizosaccharomyces pombe cells expressing specific gene products fused with GFP were found to produce green fluorescence along distinct cellular structures, such as microtubules, spindle pole bodies (SPBs), kinetochores, and nuclear chromatin depending on the fused genes employed.

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Mitsuhiro Yanagida

Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology

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Ayaka Mori

Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology

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Lisa Uehara

Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology

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