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Dive into the research topics where Takafumi Kawanami is active.

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Featured researches published by Takafumi Kawanami.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2009

Proposal for a new clinical entity, IgG4-positive multiorgan lymphoproliferative syndrome: analysis of 64 cases of IgG4-related disorders

Yasufumi Masaki; Lingli Dong; Nozomu Kurose; Kazuko Kitagawa; Yuko Morikawa; Motohisa Yamamoto; Hiroki Takahashi; Yasuhisa Shinomura; Kohzoh Imai; Takako Saeki; Atsushi Azumi; Shinji Nakada; Eiji Sugiyama; Shoko Matsui; Tomoki Origuchi; Susumu Nishiyama; Isao Nishimori; Takayuki Nojima; Kazunori Yamada; Mitsuhiro Kawano; Yoh Zen; Masahiko Kaneko; Kana Miyazaki; Kazuo Tsubota; Katsumi Eguchi; Kouichi Tomoda; Toshioki Sawaki; Takafumi Kawanami; Masao Tanaka; Toshihiro Fukushima

Background: Mikulicz’s disease (MD) has been considered as one manifestation of Sjögren’s syndrome (SS). Recently, it has also been considered as an IgG4-related disorder. Objective: To determine the differences between IgG4-related disorders including MD and SS. Methods: A study was undertaken to investigate patients with MD and IgG4-related disorders registered in Japan and to set up provisional criteria for the new clinical entity IgG4-positive multiorgan lymphoproliferative syndrome (IgG4+MOLPS). The preliminary diagnostic criteria include raised serum levels of IgG4 (>135 mg/dl) and infiltration of IgG4+ plasma cells in the tissue (IgG4+/IgG+ plasma cells >50%) with fibrosis or sclerosis. The clinical features, laboratory data and pathologies of 64 patients with IgG4+MOLPS and 31 patients with typical SS were compared. Results: The incidence of xerostomia, xerophthalmia and arthralgia, rheumatoid factor and antinuclear, antiSS-A/Ro and antiSS-B/La antibodies was significantly lower in patients with IgG4+MOLPS than in those with typical SS. Allergic rhinitis and autoimmune pancreatitis were significantly more frequent and total IgG, IgG2, IgG4 and IgE levels were significantly increased in IgG4+MOLPS. Histological specimens from patients with IgG4+MOLPS revealed marked IgG4+ plasma cell infiltration. Many patients with IgG4+MOLPS had lymphocytic follicle formation, but lymphoepithelial lesions were rare. Few IgG4+ cells were seen in the tissue of patients with typical SS. Thirty-eight patients with IgG4+MOLPS treated with glucocorticoids showed marked clinical improvement. Conclusion: Despite similarities in the involved organs, there are considerable clinical and pathological differences between IgG4+MOLPS and SS. Based on the clinical features and good response to glucocorticoids, we propose a new clinical entity: IgG4+MOLPS.


International Journal of Rheumatology | 2012

Cutoff Values of Serum IgG4 and Histopathological IgG4+ Plasma Cells for Diagnosis of Patients with IgG4-Related Disease.

Yasufumi Masaki; Nozomu Kurose; Motohisa Yamamoto; Hiroki Takahashi; Takako Saeki; Atsushi Azumi; Shinji Nakada; Shoko Matsui; Tomoki Origuchi; Susumu Nishiyama; Kazunori Yamada; Mitsuhiro Kawano; Akira Hirabayashi; Keita Fujikawa; Tomoko Sugiura; Masanobu Horikoshi; Naoto Umeda; Hiroshi Minato; Takuji Nakamura; Haruka Iwao; Akio Nakajima; Miyuki Miki; Tomoyuki Sakai; Toshioki Sawaki; Takafumi Kawanami; Yoshimasa Fujita; Masao Tanaka; Toshihiro Fukushima; Katumi Eguchi; Susumu Sugai

IgG4-related disease is a new disease classification established in Japan in the 21st century. Patients with IgG4-related disease display hyper-IgG4-gammaglobulinemia, massive infiltration of IgG4+ plasma cells into tissue, and good response to glucocorticoids. Since IgG4 overexpression is also observed in other disorders, it is necessary to diagnose IgG4-related disease carefully and correctly. We therefore sought to determine cutoff values for serum IgG4 and IgG4/IgG and for IgG4+/IgG+ plasma cells in tissue diagnostic of IgG4-related disease. Patients and Methods. We retrospectively analyzed serum IgG4 concentrations and IgG4/IgG ratio and IgG4+/IgG+ plasma cell ratio in tissues of 132 patients with IgG4-related disease and 48 patients with other disorders. Result. Serum IgG4 >135  mg/dl demonstrated a sensitivity of 97.0% and a specificity of 79.6% in diagnosing IgG4-related disease, and serum IgG4/IgG ratios >8% had a sensitivity and specificity of 95.5% and 87.5%, respectively. IgG4+cell/IgG+ cell ratio in tissues >40% had a sensitivity and specificity of 94.4% and 85.7%, respectively. However, the number of IgG4+ cells was reduced in severely fibrotic parts of tissues. Conclusion. Although a recent unanimous consensus of all relevant researchers in Japan recently established the diagnostic criteria for IgG4-related disease, findings such as ours indicate that further discussion is needed.


International Journal of Hematology | 2016

Proposed diagnostic criteria, disease severity classification and treatment strategy for TAFRO syndrome, 2015 version

Yasufumi Masaki; Hiroshi Kawabata; Kazue Takai; Masaru Kojima; Norifumi Tsukamoto; Yasuhito Ishigaki; Nozomu Kurose; Makoto Ide; Jun Murakami; Kenji Nara; Hiroshi Yamamoto; Yoko Ozawa; Hidekazu Takahashi; Katsuhiro Miura; Tsutomu Miyauchi; Shinichirou Yoshida; Akihito Momoi; Nobuyasu Awano; Soichiro Ikushima; Yasunori Ohta; Natsue Furuta; Shino Fujimoto; Haruka Kawanami; Tomoyuki Sakai; Takafumi Kawanami; Yoshimasa Fujita; Toshihiro Fukushima; Shigeo Nakamura; Tomohiro Kinoshita; Sadao Aoki

TAFRO syndrome is a systemic inflammatory disorder characterized by thrombocytopenia, anasarca including pleural effusion and ascites, fever, renal insufficiency, and organomegaly including hepatosplenomegaly and lymphadenopathy. Its onset may be acute or sub-acute, but its etiology is undetermined. Although several clinical and pathological characteristics of TAFRO syndrome resemble those of multicentric Castleman disease (MCD), other specific features can differentiate between them. Some TAFRO syndrome patients have been successfully treated with glucocorticoids and/or immunosuppressants, including cyclosporin A, tocilizumab and rituximab, whereas others are refractory to treatment, and eventually succumb to the disease. Early and reliable diagnoses and early treatments with appropriate agents are essential to enhancing patient survival. The present article reports the 2015 updated diagnostic criteria, disease severity classification and treatment strategy for TAFRO syndrome, as formulated by Japanese research teams. These criteria and classification have been applied and retrospectively validated on clinicopathologic data of 28 patients with this and similar conditions (e.g. MCD with serositis and thrombocytopenia).


FEBS Journal | 2010

DIP2 disco-interacting protein 2 homolog A (Drosophila) is a candidate receptor for follistatin-related protein/follistatin-like 1--analysis of their binding with TGF-β superfamily proteins.

Masao Tanaka; Kosaku Murakami; Shoichi Ozaki; Yoshitaka Imura; Xiao-Peng Tong; Takuo Watanabe; Toshioki Sawaki; Takafumi Kawanami; Daisuke Kawabata; Takashi Usui; Yasufumi Masaki; Toshihiro Fukushima; Zhe-Xiong Jin; Hisanori Umehara; Tsuneyo Mimori

Follistatin‐related protein (FRP)/follistatin‐like 1 (FSTL1) is a member of the follistatin protein family, all of which share a characteristic structure unit found in follistatin, called the FS domain. Developmental studies have suggested that FRP regulates organ tissue formation in embryos. Immunological studies showed that FRP modifies joint inflammation in arthritic disease, and modulates allograft tolerance. However, the principle physiological function of FRP is currently unknown. To address this issue, we cloned four FRP‐associated proteins using a two‐hybrid cloning method: disco‐interacting protein 2 homolog A from Drosophila (DIP2A), CD14, glypican 1 and titin. Only DIP2A was expected to be a membrane receptor protein with intracellular regions. Over‐expression of FLAG epitope‐tagged DIP2A augmented the suppressive effect of FRP on FBJ murine osteosarcoma viral oncogene homolog (FOS) expression, and the Fab fragment of IgG to FLAG blocked this effect. Knockdown of Dip2a leaded to Fos gene up‐regulation, and this was not affected by exogenous FRP. These in vitro experiments confirmed that DIP2A could be a cell‐surface receptor protein and mediate a FOS down‐regulation signal of FRP. Moreover, molecular interaction analyses using Biacore demonstrated that FRP bound to DIP2A and CD14, and also with proteins of the TGF‐β superfamily, i.e. activin, TGF‐β, bone morphogenetic protein 2/4 (BMP‐2/4), their receptors and follistatin. FRP binding to DIP2A was blocked by CD14, follistatin, activin and BMP‐2. FRP blocked the ligand–receptor binding of activin and BMP‐2, but integrated itself with that of BMP‐4. This multi‐specific binding may reflect the broad physiological activity of FRP.


International Immunology | 2008

Impaired TCR signaling through dysfunction of lipid rafts in sphingomyelin synthase 1 (SMS1)-knockdown T cells

Zhe-Xiong Jin; Cheng-Ri Huang; Lingli Dong; Seiji Goda; Takafumi Kawanami; Toshioki Sawaki; Tomoyuki Sakai; Xiao-Peng Tong; Yasufumi Masaki; Toshihiro Fukushima; Masao Tanaka; Tsuneyo Mimori; Hiromasa Tojo; Eda T. Bloom; Toshiro Okazaki; Hisanori Umehara

During T cell activation, TCRs cluster at the center of the T cell-antigen-presenting cell interface forming the central supramolecular activation cluster. Although it has been suggested that sphingolipid- and cholesterol-rich microdomains, termed lipid rafts, form platforms for the regulation and transduction of TCR signals, an actual role for membrane sphingomyelin (SM), a key component of lipid rafts, has not been reported. After cloning a gene responsible for SM synthesis, sphingomyelin synthase (SMS) 1, we established a SM-knockdown cell line (Jurkat-SMS1/kd) by transfection of SMS1-short-interfering RNA into Jurkat T cells, which is deficient in membrane expression of SM. Upon CD3 stimulation, expression of CD69 (the earliest leukocyte activation antigen), activation-induced cell adhesion and proliferation as well as TCR clustering was severely impaired in Jurkat-SMS1/kd cells. CD3-induced tyrosine phosphorylation and association of linker for activation of T cell with ZAP-70 and Grb2 and phosphorylation of protein kinase C (PKC) were also severely impaired in Jurkat-SMS1/kd cells. Finally, translocation of TCR, ZAP-70 and PKC into lipid rafts was markedly decreased in Jurkat-SMS1/kd cells. These findings indicate that membrane SM is crucial for TCR signal transduction, leading to full T cell activation through lipid raft function.


British Journal of Haematology | 2004

Analyses for binding of the transferrin family of proteins to the transferrin receptor 2.

Hiroshi Kawabata; Xiangjun Tong; Takafumi Kawanami; Yuji Wano; Yuko Hirose; Susumu Sugai; H. Phillip Koeffler

Transferrin receptor 2α (TfR2α), the major product of the TfR2 gene, is the second receptor for transferrin (Tf), which can mediate cellular iron uptake in vitro. Homozygous mutations of TfR2 cause haemochromatosis, suggesting that TfR2α may not be a simple iron transporter, but a regulator of iron by identifying iron‐Tf. In this study, we analysed the ligand specificity of TfR2α using human transferrin receptor 1 (TfR1) and TfR2α‐stably transfected and expressing cells and flow‐cytometric techniques. We showed that human TfR2α interacted with both human and bovine Tf, whereas human TfR1 interacted only with human Tf. Neither human TfR1 nor TfR2α interacted with either lactoferrin or melanotransferrin. In addition, by creating point mutations in human TfR2α, the RGD sequence in the extracellular domain of TfR2α was shown to be crucial for Tf‐binding. Furthermore, we demonstrated that mutated TfR2α (Y250X), which has been reported in patients with hereditary haemochromatosis, also lost its ability to interact with both human and bovine Tf. Although human TfR1 and TfR2α share an essential structure (RGD) for ligand‐binding, they have clearly different ligand specificities, which may be related to the differences in their roles in iron metabolism.


International Immunology | 2014

IgG4-related disease and its pathogenesis-cross-talk between innate and acquired immunity.

Hisanori Umehara; Akio Nakajima; Takuji Nakamura; Takafumi Kawanami; Masao Tanaka; Lingli Dong; Mitsuhiro Kawano

IgG4-RD, a novel disease involving many immune-system components


Journal of Immunology | 2014

Deficient leptin signaling ameliorates systemic lupus erythematosus lesions in MRL/Mp-Fas lpr mice.

Yoshimasa Fujita; Tsuneyo Mimori; Tomomi Sato; Takuji Nakamura; Haruka Iwao; Akio Nakajima; Miyuki Miki; Tomoyuki Sakai; Takafumi Kawanami; Masao Tanaka; Yasufumi Masaki; Toshihiro Fukushima; Toshiro Okazaki; Hisanori Umehara

Leptin is secreted by adipocytes, the placenta, and the stomach. It not only controls appetite through leptin receptors in the hypothalamus, it also regulates immunity. In the current study, we produced leptin-deficient MRL/Mp-Faslpr mice to investigate the potential role of leptin in autoimmunity. C57BL/6J-ob/ob mice were backcrossed with MRL/Mp-Faslpr mice, which develop human systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)-like lesions. The effects of leptin deficiency on various SLE-like manifestations were investigated in MRL/Mp-Faslpr mice. The regulatory T cell population in the spleen was analyzed by flow cytometry, and the effects of leptin on regulatory T cells and Th17 cells were evaluated in vitro. Compared with leptin-producing MRL/Mp-Faslpr mice, leptin-deficient MRL/Mp-Faslpr mice showed less marked splenomegaly and a particularly low population of CD3+CD4−CD8−B220+ T cells (lpr cells). Their serum concentrations of Abs to dsDNA were lower, and renal histological changes at age 20 wk were ameliorated. Regulatory T cells were increased in the spleens of leptin-deficient MRL/Mp-Faslpr mice. Leptin suppressed regulatory T cells and enhanced Th17 cells in vitro. In conclusion, blockade of leptin signaling may be of therapeutic benefit in patients with SLE and other autoimmune diseases.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2015

The SSB-positive/SSA-negative antibody profile is not associated with key phenotypic features of Sjögren's syndrome

Alan N. Baer; Mara McAdams DeMarco; Stephen Shiboski; Mi Y. Lam; Stephen Challacombe; Troy E. Daniels; Yi Dong; John S. Greenspan; Bruce Kirkham; Hector Lanfranchi; Morten Schiødt; Muthiah Srinivasan; Hisanori Umehara; Frederick B. Vivino; Cristina F. Vollenweider; Yan Zhao; Lindsey A. Criswell; Caroline H. Shiboski; Darren P. Cox; Richard Jordan; D. Lee; Yvonne DeSouza; D. Drury; A. Do; L. Scott; M. Lam; J. Nespeco; J. Whiteford; M. Margaret; I. Adler

Objective To determine whether the Sjögrens syndrome B (SSB)-positive/Sjögrens syndrome A (SSA)-negative antibody profile is associated with key phenotypic features of SS. Methods Among registrants in the Sjögrens International Collaborative Clinical Alliance (SICCA) with possible or established SS, we compared anti-SSA/anti-SSB reactivity profiles against concurrent phenotypic features. We fitted logistic regression models to explore the association between anti-SSA/anti-SSB reactivity profile and each key SS phenotypic feature, controlling for potential confounders. Results Among 3297 participants, 2061 (63%) had negative anti-SSA/anti-SSB, 1162 (35%) had anti-SSA with or without anti-SSB, and 74 (2%) anti-SSB alone. Key SS phenotypic features were more prevalent and had measures indicative of greater disease activity in those participants with anti-SSA, either alone or with anti-SSB, than in those with anti-SSB alone or negative SSA/SSB serology. These between-group differences were highly significant and not explained by confounding by age, race/ethnicity or gender. Participants with anti-SSB alone were comparable to those with negative SSA/SSB serology in their association with these key phenotypic features. Among SICCA participants classified with SS on the basis of the American-European Consensus Group or American College of Rheumatology criteria, only 2% required the anti-SSB-alone test result to meet these criteria. Conclusions The presence of anti-SSB, without anti-SSA antibodies, had no significant association with SS phenotypic features, relative to seronegative participants. The solitary presence of anti-SSB antibodies does not provide any more support than negative serology for the diagnosis of SS. This serological profile should thus be interpreted cautiously in clinical practice and potentially eliminated from future classification criteria.


Clinical and Experimental Immunology | 2007

Clonality analysis of lymphoproliferative disorders in patients with Sjögren's syndrome

Lingli Dong; Yasufumi Masaki; Tsutomu Takegami; Zhe-Xiong Jin; Cheng-Ri Huang; Toshihiro Fukushima; Toshioki Sawaki; Takafumi Kawanami; Takako Saeki; Kazuko Kitagawa; Susumu Sugai; Toshiro Okazaki; Yuko Hirose; Hisanori Umehara

The aim of this study was to clarify the nature of the clonal lymphocyte infiltration in Sjögrens syndrome (SS) patients associated with lymphoproliferative disorders. We examined B cell clonality in lymphoproliferative tissues from six primary SS patients associated with lymphoproliferative disorders or lymphoma by cloning and sequencing of the gene rearrangement of the immunoglobulin heavy chain complementarity determining region 3 (IgVH–CDR3). Three patients with sequential observation showed progressional clonal expansion with the presence of the same subclone in different tissues during the course of disease. Among them, one patient developed mucosa‐associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma in glandular parotid. The other three SS patients concomitant with malignant B cells lymphomas showed different clonal expansion of B cells between nodal sites and salivary glands. The cloanality analysis indicated that monoclonal B cell population could spread from one glandular site to another site during the course of SS, suggesting that the malignant clone may arise from the general abnormal microenvironment, not restricted to the glandular tissue, in some SS patients.

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Yasufumi Masaki

Kanazawa Medical University

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Hisanori Umehara

Kanazawa Medical University

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Toshioki Sawaki

Kanazawa Medical University

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Tomoyuki Sakai

Kanazawa Medical University

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Yoshimasa Fujita

Kanazawa Medical University

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Akio Nakajima

Kanazawa Medical University

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Haruka Iwao

Kanazawa Medical University

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Miyuki Miki

Kanazawa Medical University

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