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Dive into the research topics where Takanori Nishimura is active.

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Featured researches published by Takanori Nishimura.


Biology of Reproduction | 2011

CDK7 and CCNH Are Components of CDK-Activating Kinase and Are Required for Meiotic Progression of Pig Oocytes

Wataru Fujii; Takanori Nishimura; Kiyoshi Kano; Koji Sugiura; Kunihiko Naito

ABSTRACT CDK-activating kinase (CAK) phosphorylates threonine 161 (T161) of CDC2, a catalytic subunit of maturation/M-phase promoting factor (MPF), and is essential for MPF activation in mitosis. CAK has been thought to consist of a catalytic subunit, a regulatory subunit and an assembly factor: CDK7, CCNH (also known as cyclin H), and MNAT1 (also known as MAT1), respectively. Although it is known that the meiotic progression of oocytes is regulated by MPF activity, the role of CAK in meiosis is still unclear. In the present study, we attempted to confirm the involvement of CAK in the meiotic progression of porcine immature oocytes. The T161 phosphorylation of CDC2 was found around germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD) and thereafter from 18 to 48 h of culture. The GVBD rate at 18 h was increased by the overexpression of CDC2 but not mutated CDC2 (T161 replaced by alanine). Transcripts of CDK7, CCNH, and MNAT1 were detectable throughout the culture period, and their protein distribution patterns during oocyte maturation were the same as those reported in mitotic somatic cells. Overexpression of CDK7 or CCNH accelerated the meiotic events, such as meiotic resumption, T161 phosphorylation of CDC2, CCNB (also known as Cyclin B) synthesis, and MPF activation. On the contrary, knockdown of CDK7 or CCNH caused the inhibition of these meiotic events. In contrast, overexpression and antisense RNA injection of MNAT1 had no influence on meiotic resumption, the status of T161 phosphorylation of CDC2, or MPF activity. These results suggest that CDK7 and CCNH activate CDC2 by T161 phosphorylation and make up CAK, which is required for normal meiotic progression during porcine oocyte maturation.


Cell Cycle | 2009

Critical effect of pigWee1B on the regulation of meiotic resumption in porcine immature oocytes.

Takuma Shimaoka; Takanori Nishimura; Kiyoshi Kano; Kunihiko Naito

Porcine immature oocytes require protein synthesis for meiotic resumption, thus the importance of Cdc2 inhibitory phosphorylation in their meiotic arrest remains controversial. We examined the involvement of Cdc2 phosphorylation in the meiotic arrest of porcine oocytes with a special focus on Wee1B, an oocyte-specific Wee1 family member recently reported in mouse oocytes. We cloned a Wee1B homologue of pig by RT-PCR followed by 5’- and 3’-RACE. Overexpression of pigWee1B in porcine immature oocytes by the injection of pigWee1B mRNA almost completely blocked the germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD) under the low cAMP concentration, which could not block their spontaneous meiotic resumption by itself. The MPF activation and cyclin B synthesis were inhibited in these oocytes. Conversely, downregulation of pigWee1B expression by the injection of specific antisense mRNA induced GVBD in the oocytes, the spontaneous meiotic resumption of which was blocked by the high concentration of cAMP (dbcAMP). In these oocytes, the MPF activity was elevated and cyclin B was accumulated. Downregulation of pigMyt1, another Wee1 family member, could not induce the GVBD under the same condition. The inhibition of tyrosine phosphatase by vanadate blocked the GVBD even in the pigWee1B-downregulated oocytes. These results suggest that the inhibitory phosphorylation of CDC2, which is catalyzed by pigWee1B, but not pigMyt1, is involved in the meiotic arrest of porcine oocytes, and that the inactivation of Wee1B in combination with the phosphatase activation induces the conversion of pre-MPF to the active MPF and starts the cyclin B synthesis, follwed by a further increase of MPF and meiotic resumption.


Biology of Reproduction | 2013

A-Kinase Anchor Protein 1 (AKAP1) Regulates cAMP-Dependent Protein Kinase (PKA) Localization and Is Involved in Meiotic Maturation of Porcine Oocytes

Takanori Nishimura; Koji Sugiura; Kunihiko Naito

ABSTRACT In mammalian oocytes, cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) has critical functions in meiotic arrest and meiotic maturation. Although subcellular localization of PKA is regulated by A-kinase anchor proteins (AKAPs) and PKA compartmentalization is essential for PKA functions, the role of AKAPs in meiotic regulation has not been fully elucidated. In the present study, we performed far-Western blot analysis using porcine PRKAR2A for detection of AKAPs and found, to our knowledge, several novel signals in porcine oocytes. Among these signals, a 150-kDa AKAP showed the major expression and was the product of porcine AKAP1. Overexpression of AKAP1 changed the PKA localization and promoted meiotic resumption of porcine oocytes even in the presence of a high concentration of cAMP, which inhibits meiotic resumption by inducing high PKA activity. On the contrary, knockdown of AKAP1 showed inhibitory effects on meiotic resumption and oocyte maturation. In addition, the expression level of AKAP1 in porcine growing oocytes, which show meiotic incompetence and PKA mislocalization, was significantly lower than that in fully grown oocytes. However, AKAP1 insufficiency was not the primary cause of the meiotic incompetence of the growing oocytes. These results suggest that the regulation of PKA localization by AKAP1 may be involved in meiotic resumption and oocyte maturation but not in meiotic incompetence of porcine growing oocytes.


Biology of Reproduction | 2014

Cytoplasmic Anchoring of cAMP-Dependent Protein Kinase (PKA) by A-Kinase Anchor Proteins (AKAPs) Is Required for Meiotic Arrest of Porcine Full-Grown and Growing Oocytes

Takanori Nishimura; Wataru Fujii; Koji Sugiura; Kunihiko Naito

ABSTRACT Mammalian growing oocytes (GOs) lack the ability to resume meiosis, although the molecular mechanism of this limitation is not fully understood. We previously hypothesized that the meiotic incompetence of porcine GOs was attributed to complex spatial-temporal regulation of cAMP-dependent protein kinase (PKA) by A-kinase anchor proteins (AKAPs), but found that AKAP1 is not involved in the meiotic incompetence of porcine GOs. In the present study, we cloned porcine cDNAs of AKAP5 and AKAP7alpha, and found that inhibiting the expression of these AKAPs induced PKA translocation into the nucleus and promoted meiotic resumption of porcine GOs without affecting the total PKA activity of GOs, whereas overexpressing these AKAPs had no effect. Because AKAPs regulate PKA localization through binding with regulatory subunits of PKA (PKA-Rs), PKA-R binding with AKAPs was inhibited by AKAP-binding inhibition peptides or PKA-R expression inhibition by antisense RNAs. We found that the expression inhibition and binding inhibition of PRKAR1A, an isoform of mammalian PKA-R, promoted meiotic resumption of porcine GOs, whereas these inhibitions of PRKAR2A, another PKA-R isoform, had no effect. In contrast, the expression inhibition and binding inhibition of PRKAR2A had higher effects than those of PRKAR1A on meiotic resumption of porcine full-grown oocytes. These results suggest that cytoplasmic anchoring of PKA by AKAPs is required for meiotic arrest of oocytes and that the PKA-R isoform working for the maintenance of meiotic arrest changed from PRKAR1A to PRKAR2A during the acquisition of meiotic competence.


Biology of Reproduction | 2012

Analyses of the Involvement of PKA Regulation Mechanism in Meiotic Incompetence of Porcine Growing Oocytes

Takanori Nishimura; Wataru Fujii; Kiyoshi Kano; Koji Sugiura; Kunihiko Naito

ABSTRACT Mammalian growing oocytes (GOs) lack the ability to resume meiosis, although the molecular mechanism of this limitation is not fully understood. In the present study, we cloned cDNAs of cAMP-dependent protein-kinase (PKA) subunits from porcine oocytes and analyzed the involvement of the PKA regulation mechanism in the meiotic incompetence of GOs at the molecular level. We found a cAMP-independent high PKA activity in GOs throughout the in vitro culture using a porcine PKA assay system we established, and inhibition of the activity by injection of the antisense RNA of the PKA catalytic subunit (PKA-C) induced meiotic resumption in GOs. Then we examined the possibility that the amount of the PKA regulatory subunit (PKA-R), which can bind and inhibit PKA-C, was insufficient to suppress PKA activity in GOs because of the overexpression of two PKA-Rs, PRKAR1A and PRKAR2A. We found that neither of them affected PKA activity and induced meiotic resumption in GO although PRKAR2A could inhibit PKA activity and induce meiosis in cAMP-treated full-grown oocytes (FGOs). Finally, we analyzed the subcellular localization of PKA subunits and found that all the subunits were localized in the cytoplasm during meiotic arrest and that PKA-C and PRKAR2A, but not PRKAR1A, entered into the nucleus just before meiotic resumption in FGOs, whereas all of them remained in the cytoplasm in GOs throughout the culture period. Our findings suggest that the continuous high PKA activity is a primary cause of the meiotic incompetence of porcine GOs and that this PKA activity is not simply caused by an insufficient expression level of PKA-R, but can be attributed to more complex spatial-temporal regulation mechanisms.


Journal of Reproduction and Development | 2009

Insufficient Amount of Cdc2 and Continuous Activation of Wee1 B are the Cause of Meiotic Failure in Porcine Growing Oocytes

Takanori Nishimura; Takuma Shimaoka; Kiyoshi Kano; Kunihiko Naito


Journal of Reproduction and Development | 2011

Analyses of the regulatory mechanism of porcine WEE1B: the phosphorylation sites of porcine WEE1B and mouse WEE1B are different.

Takuma Shimaoka; Takanori Nishimura; Kiyoshi Kano; Kunihiko Naito


Journal of Mammalian Ova Research | 2010

Upstream Factors Regulating Maturation/M-Phase Promoting Factor Activity During Oocyte Maturation

Kunihiko Naito; Yukio Nishimura; Tadashi Yamamuro; Takuma Shimaoka; Wataru Fujii; Mari Suzuki; Takanori Nishimura; Kiyoshi Kano


Archive | 2014

Running title: PKA anchoring and meiotic arrest in pig oocytes Summary sentence: Cytoplasmic anchoring of PKA by AKAPs is required for meiotic arrest of pig oocytes and isoforms of PKA regulatory subunit working for the maintenance of meiotic arrest was replaced from PRKAR1A to PRKAR2A during acquisition of meiotic competence.

Takanori Nishimura; Wataru Fujii; Koji Sugiura; Kunihiko Naito


Biology of Reproduction | 2012

The Regulation Mechanism of Phosphorylation of CDC2 Threonine 161 During Porcine Oocyte Maturation.

Wataru Fujii; Takanori Nishimura; Kiyoshi Kano; Koji Sugiura; Kunihiko Naito

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