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Dive into the research topics where Shigenori Hirose is active.

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Featured researches published by Shigenori Hirose.


Current Biology | 2009

Polymorphic members of the lag gene family mediate kin discrimination in Dictyostelium.

Rocio Benabentos; Shigenori Hirose; Richard Sucgang; Tomaz Curk; Mariko Katoh; Elizabeth A. Ostrowski; Joan E. Strassmann; David C. Queller; Blaz Zupan; Gad Shaulsky; Adam Kuspa

Self and kin discrimination are observed in most kingdoms of life and are mediated by highly polymorphic plasma membrane proteins. Sequence polymorphism, which is essential for effective recognition, is maintained by balancing selection. Dictyostelium discoideum are social amoebas that propagate as unicellular organisms but aggregate upon starvation and form fruiting bodies with viable spores and dead stalk cells. Aggregative development exposes Dictyostelium to the perils of chimerism, including cheating, which raises questions about how the victims survive in nature and how social cooperation persists. Dictyostelids can minimize the cost of chimerism by preferential cooperation with kin, but the mechanisms of kin discrimination are largely unknown. Dictyostelium lag genes encode transmembrane proteins with multiple immunoglobulin (Ig) repeats that participate in cell adhesion and signaling. Here, we describe their role in kin discrimination. We show that lagB1 and lagC1 are highly polymorphic in natural populations and that their sequence dissimilarity correlates well with wild-strain segregation. Deleting lagB1 and lagC1 results in strain segregation in chimeras with wild-type cells, whereas elimination of the nearly invariant homolog lagD1 has no such consequences. These findings reveal an early evolutionary origin of kin discrimination and provide insight into the mechanism of social recognition and immunity.


Science | 2011

Self-Recognition in Social Amoebae Is Mediated by Allelic Pairs of Tiger Genes

Shigenori Hirose; Rocio Benabentos; Hsing-I Ho; Adam Kuspa; Gad Shaulsky

Polymorphic receptors prevent cheaters by avoiding altruistic cell death in Dictyostelium. Free-living cells of the social amoebae Dictyostelium discoideum can aggregate and develop into multicellular fruiting bodies in which many die altruistically as they become stalk cells that support the surviving spores. Dictyostelium cells exhibit kin discrimination—a potential defense against cheaters, which sporulate without contributing to the stalk. Kin discrimination depends on strain relatedness, and the polymorphic genes tgrB1 and tgrC1 are potential components of that mechanism. Here, we demonstrate a direct role for these genes in kin discrimination. We show that a matching pair of tgrB1 and tgrC1 alleles is necessary and sufficient for attractive self-recognition, which is mediated by differential cell-cell adhesion. We propose that TgrB1 and TgrC1 proteins mediate this adhesion through direct binding. This system is a genetically tractable ancient model of eukaryotic self-recognition.


Current Biology | 2013

Kin Recognition Protects Cooperators against Cheaters

Hsing-I Ho; Shigenori Hirose; Adam Kuspa; Gad Shaulsky

The evolution of sociality and altruism is enigmatic because cooperators are constantly threatened by cheaters who benefit from cooperation without incurring its full cost [1, 2]. Kin recognition is the ability to recognize and cooperate with genetically close relatives. It has also been proposed as a potential mechanism that limits cheating [3, 4], but there has been no direct experimental support for that possibility. Here we show that kin recognition protects cooperators against cheaters. The social amoebae Dictyostelium discoideum cooperate by forming multicellular aggregates that develop into fruiting bodies of viable spores and dead stalk cells. Cheaters preferentially differentiate into spores while their victims die as stalk cells in chimeric aggregates. We engineered syngeneic cheaters and victims that differed only in their kin-recognition genes, tgrB1 and tgrC1, and in a single cheater allele and found that the victims escaped exploitation by different types of nonkin cheaters. This protection depends on kin-recognition-mediated segregation because it is compromised when we disrupt strain segregation. These findings provide direct evidence for the role of kin recognition in cheater control and suggest a mechanism for the maintenance of stable cooperative systems.


Development | 2015

Allorecognition, via TgrB1 and TgrC1, mediates the transition from unicellularity to multicellularity in the social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum

Shigenori Hirose; Balaji Santhanam; Mariko Katoh-Kurosawa; Gad Shaulsky; Adam Kuspa

The social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum integrates into a multicellular organism when individual starving cells aggregate and form a mound. The cells then integrate into defined tissues and develop into a fruiting body that consists of a stalk and spores. Aggregation is initially orchestrated by waves of extracellular cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), and previous theory suggested that cAMP and other field-wide diffusible signals mediate tissue integration and terminal differentiation as well. Cooperation between cells depends on an allorecognition system comprising the polymorphic adhesion proteins TgrB1 and TgrC1. Binding between compatible TgrB1 and TgrC1 variants ensures that non-matching cells segregate into distinct aggregates prior to terminal development. Here, we have embedded a small number of cells with incompatible allotypes within fields of developing cells with compatible allotypes. We found that compatibility of the allotype encoded by the tgrB1 and tgrC1 genes is required for tissue integration, as manifested in cell polarization, coordinated movement and differentiation into prestalk and prespore cells. Our results show that the molecules that mediate allorecognition in D. discoideum also control the integration of individual cells into a unified developing organism, and this acts as a gating step for multicellularity. Summary: TgrB1 and TgrC1 - the molecules that mediate allorecognition in D. discoideum - also control the integration of individual cells into a unified developing organism, acting as a gating step for multicellularity.


Journal of Cell Science | 2017

The polymorphic proteins TgrB1 and TgrC1 function as a ligand-receptor pair in Dictyostelium allorecognition

Shigenori Hirose; Gong Chen; Adam Kuspa; Gad Shaulsky

ABSTRACT Allorecognition is a key factor in Dictyostelium development and sociality. It is mediated by two polymorphic transmembrane proteins, TgrB1 and TgrC1, which contain extracellular immunoglobulin domains. TgrB1 and TgrC1 are necessary and sufficient for allorecognition, and they carry out separate albeit overlapping functions in development, but their mechanism of action is unknown. Here, we show that TgrB1 acts as a receptor with TgrC1 as its ligand in cooperative aggregation and differentiation. The proteins bind each other in a sequence-specific manner; TgrB1 exhibits a cell-autonomous function and TgrC1 acts non-cell-autonomously. The TgrB1 cytoplasmic tail is essential for its function and it becomes phosphorylated upon association with TgrC1. Dominant mutations in TgrB1 activate the receptor function and confer partial ligand independence. These roles in development and sociality suggest that allorecognition is crucial in the integration of individual cells into a coherent organism. Highlighted Article: Two polymorphic membrane proteins that mediate allorecognition in Dictyostelium function as a ligand–receptor pair and their binding activates a signaling mechanism that is required for cooperative aggregation and differentiation.


Science | 2018

Lectins modulate the microbiota of social amoebae

Christopher Dinh; Timothy Farinholt; Shigenori Hirose; Olga Zhuchenko; Adam Kuspa

Sticky bacteria tolerated as future food Dictyostelium discoideum amoebae consume bacteria until the supply is exhausted. Then the amoeba cells clump together into a “slug” and initiate a complex multicellular reproductive phase. Specialized cells within aggregates rid the slug of any extracellular bacteria. However, some strains of amoeba tolerate live, intracellular bacteria. Dinh et al. discovered that these carrier strains bear surface lectins that bind Klebsiella bacteria, promote cell entry, and prevent the bacteria from being immediately digested. These bacteria then provide a future food source. Moreover, the internalized bacteria transfer DNA into the amoeba nucleus, resulting in transient genetic transformation. Science, this issue p. 402 Lectins facilitate bacterial uptake by eukaryotic cells through specific receptor recognition. The social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum maintains a microbiome during multicellular development; bacteria are carried in migrating slugs and as endosymbionts within amoebae and spores. Bacterial carriage and endosymbiosis are induced by the secreted lectin discoidin I that binds bacteria, protects them from extracellular killing, and alters their retention within amoebae. This altered handling of bacteria also occurs with bacteria coated by plant lectins and leads to DNA transfer from bacteria to amoebae. Thus, lectins alter the cellular response of D. discoideum to bacteria to establish the amoebae’s microbiome. Mammalian cells can also maintain intracellular bacteria when presented with bacteria coated with lectins, so heterologous lectins may induce endosymbiosis in animals. Our results suggest that endogenous or environmental lectins may influence microbiome homeostasis across eukaryotic phylogeny.


Differentiation | 2008

Involvements of a novel protein, DIA2, in cAMP signaling and spore differentiation during Dictyostelium development

Kaori Hirata; Aiko Amagai; Soo-Cheon Chae; Shigenori Hirose; Yasuo Maeda


Archive | 2013

Report Kin Recognition Protects Cooperators against Cheaters

Hsing-I Ho; Shigenori Hirose; Adam Kuspa; Gad Shaulsky; Marrs McLean


生物物理 | 2011

3C1322 強調的な細胞運動と自己組織化する集合シグナルとの相互依存性(3C 分子遺伝・遺伝情報制御、発生・分化、放射線生物/活性酵素,日本生物物理学会第49回年会)

Akihiko Nakajima; Shigenori Hirose; Daisuke Taniguchi; Gad Shaulsky; Adam Kuspa; Satoshi Sawai


Seibutsu Butsuri | 2011

3C1322 Relation between collective cell migration and self-organization of chemoattractant waves(3C Molecular genetics & Gene expression, Development & Differentation, Radiobiology & Active oxygen,The 49th Annual Meeting of the Biophysical Society of Japan)

Akihiko Nakajima; Shigenori Hirose; Daisuke Taniguchi; Gad Shaulsky; Adam Kuspa; Satoshi Sawai

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Adam Kuspa

Baylor College of Medicine

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Gad Shaulsky

Baylor College of Medicine

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Hsing-I Ho

Baylor College of Medicine

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Rocio Benabentos

Baylor College of Medicine

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Balaji Santhanam

Baylor College of Medicine

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Christopher Dinh

Baylor College of Medicine

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David C. Queller

Washington University in St. Louis

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