Takako Negishi-Koga
Tokyo Medical and Dental University
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Featured researches published by Takako Negishi-Koga.
Nature Medicine | 2011
Takako Negishi-Koga; Masahiro Shinohara; Noriko Komatsu; Haruhiko Bito; Tatsuhiko Kodama; Roland H. Friedel; Hiroshi Takayanagi
Most of the currently available drugs for osteoporosis inhibit osteoclastic bone resorption; only a few drugs promote osteoblastic bone formation. It is thus becoming increasingly necessary to identify the factors that regulate bone formation. We found that osteoclasts express semaphorin 4D (Sema4D), previously shown to be an axon guidance molecule, which potently inhibits bone formation. The binding of Sema4D to its receptor Plexin-B1 on osteoblasts resulted in the activation of the small GTPase RhoA, which inhibits bone formation by suppressing insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) signaling and by modulating osteoblast motility. Sema4d−/− mice, Plxnb1−/− mice and mice expressing a dominant-negative RhoA specifically in osteoblasts showed an osteosclerotic phenotype due to augmented bone formation. Notably, Sema4D-specific antibody treatment markedly prevented bone loss in a model of postmenopausal osteoporosis. Thus, Sema4D has emerged as a new therapeutic target for the discovery and development of bone-increasing drugs.
Immunological Reviews | 2009
Takako Negishi-Koga; Hiroshi Takayanagi
Summary: Osteoclasts are unique, multinucleated giant cells that decalcify and degrade the bone matrix. They originate from hematopoietic cells and their differentiation is dependent on a tumor necrosis factor (TNF) family cytokine, receptor activator of nuclear factor‐κB (NF‐κB) ligand (RANKL), as well as macrophage‐colony stimulating factor (M‐CSF). Recent studies have unveiled the precise molecular mechanism underlying osteoclastogenesis. In particular, the discovery of nuclear factor of activated T cells c1 (NFATc1), the master regulator of osteoclastogenesis, has proven to be a breakthrough in this field. NFATc1 is activated by Ca2+ signaling induced by the activation of the immunoglobulin‐like receptor signaling associated with immunoreceptor tyrosine‐based activation motif (ITAM)‐harboring adapters. The long‐lasting Ca2+ oscillation, which is evident during osteoclastogenesis, may ensure the robust induction of NFATc1 through an autoamplification mechanism. Thus, intracellular Ca2+ is a critical attribute of osteoclastogenic signaling. In addition, osteoclasts are exposed to a very high extracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]o) in the bone microenvironment and respond to the change in [Ca2+]o by increasing the intracellular Ca2+, which regulates diverse cellular functions. Investigation of the molecular mechanisms underlying the regulation of intracellular Ca2+ dynamics may open up new directions for therapeutic strategies in bone disease.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011
Alexander D. Barrow; Nicolas Raynal; Thomas Levin Andersen; David A. Slatter; Dominique Bihan; Nicholas Pugh; Marina Cella; Tae Soo Kim; Jaerang Rho; Takako Negishi-Koga; Jean-Marie Delaissé; Hiroshi Takayanagi; Joseph A. Lorenzo; Marco Colonna; Richard W. Farndale; Yongwon Choi; John Trowsdale
Osteoclasts are terminally differentiated leukocytes that erode the mineralized bone matrix. Osteoclastogenesis requires costimulatory receptor signaling through adaptors containing immunoreceptor tyrosine-based activation motifs (ITAMs), such as Fc receptor common γ (FcRγ) and DNAX-activating protein of 12 kDa. Identification of these ITAM-containing receptors and their ligands remains a high research priority, since the stimuli for osteoclastogenesis are only partly defined. Osteoclast-associated receptor (OSCAR) was proposed to be a potent FcRγ-associated costimulatory receptor expressed by preosteoclasts in vitro, but OSCAR lacks a cognate ligand and its role in vivo has been unclear. Using samples from mice and patients deficient in various ITAM signaling pathways, we show here that OSCAR costimulates one of the major FcRγ-associated pathways required for osteoclastogenesis in vivo. Furthermore, we found that OSCAR binds to specific motifs within fibrillar collagens in the ECM that become revealed on nonquiescent bone surfaces in which osteoclasts undergo maturation and terminal differentiation in vivo. OSCAR promoted osteoclastogenesis in vivo, and OSCAR binding to its collagen motif led to signaling that increased numbers of osteoclasts in culture. Thus, our results suggest that ITAM-containing receptors can respond to exposed ligands in collagen, leading to the functional differentiation of leukocytes, which provides what we believe to be a new concept for ITAM regulation of cytokine receptors in different tissue microenvironments.
Nature Medicine | 2012
Koji Fujita; Makiko Iwasaki; Hiroki Ochi; Toru Fukuda; Chengshan Ma; Takeshi Miyamoto; Kimitaka Takitani; Takako Negishi-Koga; Satoko Sunamura; Tatsuhiko Kodama; Hiroshi Takayanagi; Hiroshi Tamai; Shigeaki Kato; Hiroyuki Arai; Kenichi Shinomiya; Hiroshi Itoh; Atsushi Okawa; Shu Takeda
Bone homeostasis is maintained by the balance between osteoblastic bone formation and osteoclastic bone resorption. Osteoclasts are multinucleated cells that are formed by mononuclear preosteoclast fusion. Fat-soluble vitamins such as vitamin D are pivotal in maintaining skeletal integrity. However, the role of vitamin E in bone remodeling is unknown. Here, we show that mice deficient in α-tocopherol transfer protein (Ttpa(-/-) mice), a mouse model of genetic vitamin E deficiency, have high bone mass as a result of a decrease in bone resorption. Cell-based assays indicated that α-tocopherol stimulated osteoclast fusion, independent of its antioxidant capacity, by inducing the expression of dendritic-cell-specific transmembrane protein, an essential molecule for osteoclast fusion, through activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase 14 (p38) and microphthalmia-associated transcription factor, as well as its direct recruitment to the Tm7sf4 (a gene encoding DC-STAMP) promoter. Indeed, the bone abnormality seen in Ttpa(-/-) mice was rescued by a Tm7sf4 transgene. Moreover, wild-type mice or rats fed an α-tocopherol-supplemented diet, which contains a comparable amount of α-tocopherol to supplements consumed by many people, lost bone mass. These results show that serum vitamin E is a determinant of bone mass through its regulation of osteoclast fusion.Bone homeostasis is maintained by the balance between osteoblastic bone formation and osteoclastic bone resorption. Osteoclasts are multinucleated cells that are formed by mononuclear preosteoclast fusion. Fat-soluble vitamins such as vitamin D are pivotal in maintaining skeletal integrity. However, the role of vitamin E in bone remodeling is unknown. Here, we show that mice deficient in α-tocopherol transfer protein (Ttpa−/− mice), a mouse model of genetic vitamin E deficiency, have high bone mass as a result of a decrease in bone resorption. Cell-based assays indicated that α-tocopherol stimulated osteoclast fusion, independent of its antioxidant capacity, by inducing the expression of dendritic-cell–specific transmembrane protein, an essential molecule for osteoclast fusion, through activation of mitogen-activated protein kinase 14 (p38) and microphthalmia-associated transcription factor, as well as its direct recruitment to the Tm7sf4 (a gene encoding DC-STAMP) promoter. Indeed, the bone abnormality seen in Ttpa−/− mice was rescued by a Tm7sf4 transgene. Moreover, wild-type mice or rats fed an α-tocopherol–supplemented diet, which contains a comparable amount of α-tocopherol to supplements consumed by many people, lost bone mass. These results show that serum vitamin E is a determinant of bone mass through its regulation of osteoclast fusion.
Nature Communications | 2015
Takako Negishi-Koga; Hans Jürgen Gober; Eriko Sumiya; Noriko Komatsu; Kazuo Okamoto; Shinichiro Sawa; Ayako Suematsu; Tomomi Suda; Kojiro Sato; Toshiyuki Takai; Hiroshi Takayanagi
Autoantibody production and immune complex (IC) formation are frequently observed in autoimmune diseases associated with bone loss. However, it has been poorly understood whether ICs regulate bone metabolism directly. Here we show that the level of osteoclastogenesis is determined by the strength of FcRγ signalling, which is dependent on the relative expression of positive and negative FcγRs (FcγRI/III/IV and IIB, respectively) as well as the availability of their ligands, ICs. Under physiological conditions, unexpectedly, FcγRIII inhibits osteoclastogenesis by depriving other osteoclastogenic Ig-like receptors of FcRγ. Fcgr2b(-/-) mice lose bone upon the onset of a hypergammaglobulinemia or the administration of IgG1 ICs, which act mainly through FcγRIII. The IgG2 IC activates osteoclastogenesis by binding to FcγRI and FcγRIV, which is induced under inflammatory conditions. These results demonstrate a link between the adaptive immunity and bone, suggesting a regulatory role for ICs in bone resorption in general, and not only in inflammatory diseases.
Physiological Reviews | 2017
Kazuo Okamoto; Tomoki Nakashima; Masahiro Shinohara; Takako Negishi-Koga; Noriko Komatsu; Asuka Terashima; Shinichiro Sawa; Takeshi Nitta; Hiroshi Takayanagi
The immune and skeletal systems share a variety of molecules, including cytokines, chemokines, hormones, receptors, and transcription factors. Bone cells interact with immune cells under physiological and pathological conditions. Osteoimmunology was created as a new interdisciplinary field in large part to highlight the shared molecules and reciprocal interactions between the two systems in both heath and disease. Receptor activator of NF-κB ligand (RANKL) plays an essential role not only in the development of immune organs and bones, but also in autoimmune diseases affecting bone, thus effectively comprising the molecule that links the two systems. Here we review the function, gene regulation, and signal transduction of osteoimmune molecules, including RANKL, in the context of osteoclastogenesis as well as multiple other regulatory functions. Osteoimmunology has become indispensable for understanding the pathogenesis of a number of diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis (RA). We review the various osteoimmune pathologies, including the bone destruction in RA, in which pathogenic helper T cell subsets [such as IL-17-expressing helper T (Th17) cells] induce bone erosion through aberrant RANKL expression. We also focus on cellular interactions and the identification of the communication factors in the bone marrow, discussing the contribution of bone cells to the maintenance and regulation of hematopoietic stem and progenitors cells. Thus the time has come for a basic reappraisal of the framework for understanding both the immune and bone systems. The concept of a unified osteoimmune system will be absolutely indispensable for basic and translational approaches to diseases related to bone and/or the immune system.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Kaori Tsuji-Takechi; Takako Negishi-Koga; Eriko Sumiya; Akiko Kukita; Shigeaki Kato; Takahiro Maeda; Pier Paolo Pandolfi; Keiji Moriyama; Hiroshi Takayanagi
Cell fate determination is tightly regulated by transcriptional activators and repressors. Leukemia/lymphoma-related factor (LRF; encoded by Zbtb7a), known as a POK (POZ/BTB and Krüppel) family transcriptional repressor, is induced during the development of bone-resorbing osteoclasts, but the physiological significance of LRF in bone metabolism and the molecular mechanisms underlying the transcriptional regulation of osteoclastogenesis by LRF have not been elucidated. Here we show that LRF negatively regulates osteoclast differentiation by repressing nuclear factor of activated T cells c1 (NFATc1) induction in the early phase of osteoclast development, while positively regulating osteoclast-specific genes by functioning as a coactivator of NFATc1 in the bone resorption phase. The stage-specific distinct functions of LRF were demonstrated in two lines of conditional knockout mice in which LRF was deleted in the early or late phase of osteoclast development. Thus, this study shows that LRF plays stage-specific distinct roles in osteoclast differentiation, exemplifying the delicate transcriptional regulation at work in lineage commitment.
Ibms Bonekey | 2009
Takako Negishi-Koga; Hiroshi Takayanagi
Nuclear factor of activated T cells c1 (NFATc1) activation by Ca signaling is an essential part of the signaling axis in osteoclast differentiation. Although the molecular signaling cascade downstream of receptor activator of nuclear factor-κB ligand (RANKL) has been extensively studied, the origin of the intracellular Ca increase and the dynamics required for efficient NFATc1 activation have been unclear. Using mice lacking inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate (IP3) receptor (IP3R) type 2 (IP3R2) and IP3R3, a study from last year by Kuroda and coauthors found that RANKL-induced Ca oscillation and osteoclast differentiation were impaired in vitro, but that there was no defect in osteoclastogenesis in vivo (1). To understand this discrepancy, the authors focused on the role of osteoblasts, which have the ability to induce osteoclastogenesis in IP3R2/3-deficient cells. Surprisingly, Ca oscillation was not detected in the coculture system, but NFATc1 induction and osteoclastogenesis were observed. Their findings suggest the existence of an as yet unidentified (possibly Ca oscillationindependent) regulatory mechanism for NFATc1 activation mediated by osteoblasts, and may open up new directions for research on Ca signaling during osteoclastogenesis.
Cell Metabolism | 2013
Hyun-Soo Kim; Tae Soo Kim; Byung-Chul Jeong; Iltaeg Cho; Daehee Han; Noriko Takegahara; Takako Negishi-Koga; Hiroshi Takayanagi; Jae Hee Lee; Jai-Yoon Sul; Vikram Prasad; Seoung Hoon Lee; Yongwon Choi
bonekey Reports | 2012
Takako Negishi-Koga; Hiroshi Takayanagi