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Dive into the research topics where Takahiro K. Fujiwara is active.

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Featured researches published by Takahiro K. Fujiwara.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2002

Phospholipids undergo hop diffusion in compartmentalized cell membrane

Takahiro K. Fujiwara; Ken Ritchie; Hideji Murakoshi; Ken Jacobson; Akihiro Kusumi

The diffusion rate of lipids in the cell membrane is reduced by a factor of 5–100 from that in artificial bilayers. This slowing mechanism has puzzled cell biologists for the last 25 yr. Here we address this issue by studying the movement of unsaturated phospholipids in rat kidney fibroblasts at the single molecule level at the temporal resolution of 25 μs. The cell membrane was found to be compartmentalized: phospholipids are confined within 230-nm-diameter (φ) compartments for 11 ms on average before hopping to adjacent compartments. These 230-nm compartments exist within greater 750-nm-φ compartments where these phospholipids are confined for 0.33 s on average. The diffusion rate within 230-nm compartments is 5.4 μm2/s, which is nearly as fast as that in large unilamellar vesicles, indicating that the diffusion in the cell membrane is reduced not because diffusion per se is slow, but because the cell membrane is compartmentalized with regard to lateral diffusion of phospholipids. Such compartmentalization depends on the actin-based membrane skeleton, but not on the extracellular matrix, extracellular domains of membrane proteins, or cholesterol-enriched rafts. We propose that various transmembrane proteins anchored to the actin-based membrane skeleton meshwork act as rows of pickets that temporarily confine phospholipids.


Nature Cell Biology | 2003

Accumulation of anchored proteins forms membrane diffusion barriers during neuronal polarization

Chieko Nakada; Ken Ritchie; Yuichi Oba; Mitsuhiro Nakamura; Yoko Hotta; Ryota Iino; Rinshi S. Kasai; Kazuhiko Yamaguchi; Takahiro K. Fujiwara; Akihiro Kusumi

The formation and maintenance of polarized distributions of membrane proteins in the cell membrane are key to the function of polarized cells. In polarized neurons, various membrane proteins are localized to the somatodendritic domain or the axon. Neurons control polarized delivery of membrane proteins to each domain, and in addition, they must also block diffusional mixing of proteins between these domains. However, the presence of a diffusion barrier in the cell membrane of the axonal initial segment (IS), which separates these two domains, has been controversial: it is difficult to conceive barrier mechanisms by which an even diffusion of phospholipids could be blocked. Here, by observing the dynamics of individual phospholipid molecules in the plasma membrane of developing hippocampal neurons in culture, we found that their diffusion was blocked in the IS membrane. We also found that the diffusion barrier is formed in neurons 7–10 days after birth through the accumulation of various transmembrane proteins that are anchored to the dense actin-based membrane skeleton meshes being formed under the IS membrane. We conclude that various membrane proteins anchored to the dense membrane skeleton function as rows of pickets, which even stop the overall diffusion of phospholipids, and may represent a universal mechanism for formation of diffusion barriers in the cell membrane.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2006

Three-dimensional reconstruction of the membrane skeleton at the plasma membrane interface by electron tomography

Nobuhiro Morone; Takahiro K. Fujiwara; Kotono Murase; Rinshi S. Kasai; Hiroshi Ike; Shigeki Yuasa; Jiro Usukura; Akihiro Kusumi

Three-dimensional images of the undercoat structure on the cytoplasmic surface of the upper cell membrane of normal rat kidney fibroblast (NRK) cells and fetal rat skin keratinocytes were reconstructed by electron tomography, with 0.85-nm–thick consecutive sections made ∼100 nm from the cytoplasmic surface using rapidly frozen, deeply etched, platinum-replicated plasma membranes. The membrane skeleton (MSK) primarily consists of actin filaments and associated proteins. The MSK covers the entire cytoplasmic surface and is closely linked to clathrin-coated pits and caveolae. The actin filaments that are closely apposed to the cytoplasmic surface of the plasma membrane (within 10.2 nm) are likely to form the boundaries of the membrane compartments responsible for the temporary confinement of membrane molecules, thus partitioning the plasma membrane with regard to their lateral diffusion. The distribution of the MSK mesh size as determined by electron tomography and that of the compartment size as determined from high speed single-particle tracking of phospholipid diffusion agree well in both cell types, supporting the MSK fence and MSK-anchored protein picket models.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2011

Full characterization of GPCR monomer–dimer dynamic equilibrium by single molecule imaging

Rinshi S. Kasai; Kenichi Suzuki; Eric R. Prossnitz; Ikuko Koyama-Honda; Chieko Nakada; Takahiro K. Fujiwara; Akihiro Kusumi

A single-molecule tracking technique coupled with mathematical modeling was developed for fully determining the dynamic monomer–dimer equilibrium of molecules in or on the plasma membrane, which will provide a framework for understanding signal transduction pathways initiated and regulated by dynamic dimers of membrane-localized receptors.


Science | 2013

Oscillatory Control of Factors Determining Multipotency and Fate in Mouse Neural Progenitors

Itaru Imayoshi; Akihiro Isomura; Yukiko Harima; Kyogo Kawaguchi; Hiroshi Kori; Hitoshi Miyachi; Takahiro K. Fujiwara; Fumiyoshi Ishidate; Ryoichiro Kageyama

Oscillation Stabilizes the Progenitor State Transcription factors regulate fate choice between different neural lineages, but the same transcription factors are also expressed in neural progenitor cells. Imayoshi et al. (p. 1203, published online 31 October) analyzed the details of expression of several transcription factors in mouse neural cells. In neural progenitor cells, several different transcription factors were expressed in an oscillatory manner, whereas differentiated neurons stably expressed a single lineage-specific factor. During neural development, the differentiated state correlates with sustained expression of a single fate-determination factor. The basic helix-loop-helix transcription factors Ascl1/Mash1, Hes1, and Olig2 regulate fate choice of neurons, astrocytes, and oligodendrocytes, respectively. These same factors are coexpressed by neural progenitor cells. Here, we found by time-lapse imaging that these factors are expressed in an oscillatory manner by mouse neural progenitor cells. In each differentiation lineage, one of the factors becomes dominant. We used optogenetics to control expression of Ascl1 and found that, although sustained Ascl1 expression promotes neuronal fate determination, oscillatory Ascl1 expression maintains proliferating neural progenitor cells. Thus, the multipotent state correlates with oscillatory expression of several fate-determination factors, whereas the differentiated state correlates with sustained expression of a single factor.


Annual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology | 2012

Dynamic Organizing Principles of the Plasma Membrane that Regulate Signal Transduction: Commemorating the Fortieth Anniversary of Singer and Nicolson's Fluid-Mosaic Model

Akihiro Kusumi; Takahiro K. Fujiwara; Rahul Chadda; Min Xie; Taka A. Tsunoyama; Ziya Kalay; Rinshi S. Kasai; Kenichi Suzuki

The recent rapid accumulation of knowledge on the dynamics and structure of the plasma membrane has prompted major modifications of the textbook fluid-mosaic model. However, because the new data have been obtained in a variety of research contexts using various biological paradigms, the impact of the critical conceptual modifications on biomedical research and development has been limited. In this review, we try to synthesize our current biological, chemical, and physical knowledge about the plasma membrane to provide new fundamental organizing principles of this structure that underlie every molecular mechanism that realizes its functions. Special attention is paid to signal transduction function and the dynamic aspect of the organizing principles. We propose that the cooperative action of the hierarchical three-tiered mesoscale (2-300 nm) domains--actin-membrane-skeleton induced compartments (40-300 nm), raft domains (2-20 nm), and dynamic protein complex domains (3-10 nm)--is critical for membrane function and distinguishes the plasma membrane from a classical Singer-Nicolson-type model.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2007

Dynamic recruitment of phospholipase Cγ at transiently immobilized GPI-anchored receptor clusters induces IP3–Ca2+ signaling: single-molecule tracking study 2

Kenichi Suzuki; Takahiro K. Fujiwara; Michael Edidin; Akihiro Kusumi

Clusters of CD59, a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored receptor (GPI-AR), with physiological sizes of approximately six CD59 molecules, recruit Gαi2 and Lyn via protein–protein and raft interactions. Lyn is activated probably by the Gαi2 binding in the same CD59 cluster, inducing the CD59 clusters binding to F-actin, resulting in its immobilization, termed stimulation-induced temporary arrest of lateral diffusion (STALL; with a 0.57-s lifetime, occurring approximately every 2 s). Simultaneous single-molecule tracking of GFP-PLCγ2 and CD59 clusters revealed that PLCγ2 molecules are transiently (median = 0.25 s) recruited from the cytoplasm exclusively at the CD59 clusters undergoing STALL, producing the IP3–Ca2+ signal. Therefore, we propose that the CD59 cluster in STALL may be a key, albeit transient, platform for transducing the extracellular GPI-AR signal to the intracellular IP3–Ca2+ signal, via PLCγ2 recruitment. The prolonged, analogue, bulk IP3–Ca2+ signal, which lasts for more than several minutes, is likely generated by the sum of the short-lived, digital-like IP3 bursts, each created by the transient recruitment of PLCγ2 molecules to STALLed CD59.


Nature Methods | 2010

Membrane molecules mobile even after chemical fixation

Kenji Tanaka; Kenichi Suzuki; Yuki Shirai; Shusaku Shibutani; Manami Miyahara; Hisae Tsuboi; Miyako Yahara; Akihiko Yoshimura; Satyajit Mayor; Takahiro K. Fujiwara; Akihiro Kusumi

Lyn, H-ras, Cbp and TfR (we observed ~70% immobilization of GPI-anchored proteins, on average, depending strongly on the protein; Fig. 1b and Supplementary Figs. 3–5). Increasing glutaraldehyde concentration to 0.2% or methanol (100%) fixation resulted in immobilization of >80% GPI-anchored proteins but not of phospholipids or cholesterol. We then investigated antibody-induced clustering under different fixation conditions by measuring the fluorescence intensities of individual spots (Supplementary Fig. 6). Whereas treatment with 4% paraformaldehyde with or without 0.1% glutaraldehyde did not itself induce clustering, paraformaldehyde treatment did not block antibody-induced clustering of Halo-GPI and Halo–H-ras. Including 0.1% glutaraldehyde in addition to 4% paraformaldehyde suppressed clustering but did not entirely inhibit it. These results indicate that, in interpreting immunolocalization data, antibody-induced clustering Membrane molecules mobile even after chemical fixation


Molecular Membrane Biology | 2003

The fence and picket structure of the plasma membrane of live cells as revealed by single molecule techniques (Review)

Ken Ritchie; Ryota Iino; Takahiro K. Fujiwara; Kotono Murase; Akihiro Kusumi

Models of the organization of the plasma membrane of live cells as discovered through diffusion measurements of integral membrane molecules (transmembrane and GPI-anchored proteins, and lipid) at the single molecule level are discussed. Diffusion of transmembrane protein and, indeed, even lipid is anomalous in that the molecules tend to diffuse freely in limited size compartments, with infrequent intercompartment transitions. This average residency time in a compartment is dependent on the diffusing species and on its state of oligomerization, becoming completely confined to a single compartment upon sufficient oligomerization. This will be of great importance in determining cellular mechanisms for controlling the random diffusive motion of membrane molecules and in understanding signalling processes.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2012

Transient GPI-anchored protein homodimers are units for raft organization and function

Kenichi Suzuki; Rinshi S. Kasai; Koichiro M. Hirosawa; Yuri L. Nemoto; Munenori Ishibashi; Yoshihiro Miwa; Takahiro K. Fujiwara; Akihiro Kusumi

Advanced single-molecule fluorescent imaging was applied to study the dynamic organization of raft-associated glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored proteins (GPI-APs) in the plasma membrane and their stimulation-induced changes. In resting cells, virtually all of the GPI-APs are mobile and continually form transient (~200 ms) homodimers (termed homodimer rafts) through ectodomain protein interactions, stabilized by the presence of the GPI-anchoring chain and cholesterol. Heterodimers do not form, suggesting a fundamental role for the specific ectodomain protein interaction. Under higher physiological expression conditions , homodimers coalesce to form hetero- and homo-GPI-AP oligomer rafts through raft-based lipid interactions. When CD59 was ligated, it formed stable oligomer rafts containing up to four CD59 molecules, which triggered intracellular Ca(2+) responses that were dependent on GPI anchorage and cholesterol, suggesting a key part played by transient homodimer rafts. Transient homodimer rafts are most likely one of the basic units for the organization and function of raft domains containing GPI-APs.

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A. Kusumi

Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology

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Ryota Iino

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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