Taku Hibino
University of Tokyo
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Featured researches published by Taku Hibino.
Development Growth & Differentiation | 1998
Taku Hibino; Takahito Nishikata; Hiroki Nishida
The mechanism of unequal cleavage is one of the most intriguing subjects in cell biology. Previous studies of unequal cleavage have focused on a limited number of organisms such as yeasts, nematodes, sea urchins and annelids. The cleavage pattern of the ascidian embryo is invariant. In the ascidian embryo, the posterior‐most blastomeres divide unequally in three successive cleavages. In the present study, it was shown that the ascidian embryo provides another good experimental system with which to analyze the mechanism of unequal cleavage. A novel structure, designated as CAB (centrosome‐attracting body), which was found specifically in the unequally cleaving blastomeres was described. In the course of unequal cleavages, first, a thick microtubule bundle appeared between CAB and one of the centrosomes. Then with the shortening of the microtubule bundle, the nucleus with the centrosome was drawn toward CAB, situated at the posterior cortex of the blastomere. Finally, a cleavage furrow formed in the middle of the asymmetrically located mitotic apparatus and produced two blastomeres of different size, generating a smaller cell that inherits CAB. The CAB seemed to play an essential role in the unequal cleavages in the ascidian embryo.
Nature | 2003
Hiroaki Nakano; Taku Hibino; Tatsuo Oji; Yuko Hara; Shonan Amemiya
The embryos and larvae of stalked crinoids, which are considered the most basal group of extant echinoderms, have not previously been described. In contrast, much is known about the development of the more accessible stalkless crinoids (feather stars), which are phylogenetically derived from stalked forms. Here we describe the development of a sea lily from fertilization to larval settlement. There are two successive larval stages: the first is a non-feeding auricularia stage with partly longitudinal ciliary bands (similar to the auricularia and bipinnaria larvae of holothurian and asteroid echinoderms, respectively); the second is a doliolaria larva with circumferential ciliary bands (similar to the earliest larval stage of stalkless crinoids). We suggest that a dipleurula-type larva is primitive for echinoderms and is the starting point for the evolution of additional larval forms within the phylum. From a wider evolutionary viewpoint, the demonstration that the most basal kind of echinoderm larva is a dipleurula is consistent with Garstangs auricularia theory for the phylogenetic origin of the chordate neural tube.
Development Genes and Evolution | 2006
Taku Hibino; Yuichiro Ishii; Michael Levin; Atsuo Nishino
The degree of conservation among phyla of early mechanisms that pattern the left–right (LR) axis is poorly understood. Larvae of sea urchins exhibit consistently oriented LR asymmetry. The main part of the adult rudiment is formed from the left coelomic sac of larvae, the left hydrocoel. Although this left preference is conserved among all echinoderm larvae, its mechanism is largely not understood. Using two marker genes, HpNot and HpFoxFQ-like, which are asymmetrically expressed during larval development of the sea urchin Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus, we examined in this study the possibility that the recently discovered ion flux mechanism controls asymmetry in sea urchins as it does in several vertebrate species. Several ion-transporter inhibitors were screened for the ability to alter the expression of the asymmetric marker genes. Blockers of the H+/K+-ATPase (omeprazole, lansoprazole and SCH28080), as well as a calcium ionophore (A23187), significantly altered the normal sidedness of asymmetric gene expression. Exposure to omeprazole disrupted the consistent asymmetry of adult rudiment formation in larvae. Immuno-detection revealed that H+/K+-ATPase-like antigens in sea urchin embryos were present through blastula stage and exhibited a striking asymmetry being present in a single blastomere in 32-cell embryos. These results suggest that, as in vertebrates, endogenous spatially-regulated early transport of H+ and/or K+, and also of Ca2+, functions in the establishment of LR asymmetry in sea urchin development.
Developmental and Comparative Immunology | 2010
Julie Ghosh; Katherine M. Buckley; Sham V. Nair; David A. Raftos; Chase Miller; Audrey J. Majeske; Taku Hibino; Jonathan P. Rast; Mattias Roth; L. Courtney Smith
The Sp185/333 system of genes, messages and proteins are expressed in the coelomocytes of the purple sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, and is an extraordinary example of diversification of a putative innate immune response system in an invertebrate. Reviewed here, is the current understanding of this complex system as illustrated by sequence comparisons of the genes, messages and deduced proteins with descriptions of diversity, including preliminary results on genomic organization and descriptions of 185/333 in other echinoids. Sp185/333 gene expression in adults and embryos occurs in response to immune challenge and includes changes in the frequencies of Sp185/333-positive coelomocytes in the adults. The diversity of the Sp185/333 protein repertoire in coelomocytes is far greater than the sequence diversity encoded in the genes, which may be the result of rapid gene recombination, RNA editing and/or low-fidelity transcription, plus post-translational modifications. This review concludes with preliminary results and speculations on protein function.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
Natsuko Kawano; Naoya Araki; Kaoru Yoshida; Taku Hibino; Naoko Ohnami; Maako Makino; Seiya Kanai; Hidetoshi Hasuwa; Manabu Yoshida; Kenji Miyado; Akihiro Umezawa
Significance Male mice lacking seminal vesicle secretion 2 (SVS2) protein, which is a major component of seminal vesicle secretions, display prominently reduced fertility. However, their epididymal sperm are able to fertilize eggs normally in vitro, suggesting that SVS2 is only essential for in vivo fertilization. We demonstrate that infertility in SVS2−/− male mice is caused not only by failed copulatory plug formation but also by the disruption of ejaculated sperm in the uterus by uterus-derived cytotoxic factors. SVS2 acts to protect sperm against these uterus-derived cytotoxic factors by coating the sperm surface and preventing uterine attack. Thus, our results provide evidence that mammalian males have developed a protective strategy against female attack at the gamete level. In mammals, sperm migrate through the female reproductive tract to reach the egg; however, our understanding of this journey is highly limited. To shed light on this process, we focused on defining the functions of seminal vesicle secretion 2 (SVS2). SVS2−/− male mice produced sperm but were severely subfertile, and formation of a copulatory plug to cover the female genital opening did not occur. Surprisingly, even when artificial insemination was performed with silicon as a substitute for the plug, sperm fertility in the absence of SVS2 remained severely reduced because the sperm were already dead in the uterus. Thus, our results provide evidence that the uterus induces sperm cell death and that SVS2 protects sperm from uterine attack.
Immunology and Cell Biology | 2016
Eric C.H. Ho; Katherine M. Buckley; Catherine S. Schrankel; Nicholas W Schuh; Taku Hibino; Cynthia M. Solek; Koeun Bae; Guizhi Wang; Jonathan P. Rast
The purple sea urchin (Strongylocentrotus purpuratus) genome sequence contains a complex repertoire of genes encoding innate immune recognition proteins and homologs of important vertebrate immune regulatory factors. To characterize how this immune system is deployed within an experimentally tractable, intact animal, we investigate the immune capability of the larval stage. Sea urchin embryos and larvae are morphologically simple and transparent, providing an organism‐wide model to view immune response at cellular resolution. Here we present evidence for immune function in five mesenchymal cell types based on morphology, behavior and gene expression. Two cell types are phagocytic; the others interact at sites of microbial detection or injury. We characterize immune‐associated gene markers for three cell types, including a perforin‐like molecule, a scavenger receptor, a complement‐like thioester‐containing protein and the echinoderm‐specific immune response factor 185/333. We elicit larval immune responses by (1) bacterial injection into the blastocoel and (2) seawater exposure to the marine bacterium Vibrio diazotrophicus to perturb immune state in the gut. Exposure at the epithelium induces a strong response in which pigment cells (one type of immune cell) migrate from the ectoderm to interact with the gut epithelium. Bacteria that accumulate in the gut later invade the blastocoel, where they are cleared by phagocytic and granular immune cells. The complexity of this coordinated, dynamic inflammatory program within the simple larval morphology provides a system in which to characterize processes that direct both aspects of the echinoderm‐specific immune response as well as those that are shared with other deuterostomes, including vertebrates.
Development Growth & Differentiation | 2006
Taku Hibino; Atsuo Nishino; Shonan Amemiya
Chordates and echinoderms are two of the three major deuterostome phyla and show conspicuous left‐right (LR) asymmetry. The establishment of LR asymmetry has been explored in vertebrates, but is largely unknown in echinoderms. Here, we report the expression pattern of genes that are orthologous to the chordate left‐side specific gene Pitx, cloned from the sea urchin Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus (HpPitx) and the starfish Asterina pectinifera (ApPitx). HpPitx transcripts were first detected bilaterally in one cell of the ventrolateral primary mesenchyme‐cell aggregate of early prism larvae. New expression was detected asymmetrically in the right counterpart of a bilateral pair of mesodermal coelomic pouches and in the right ectoderm. In starfish bipinnaria larvae, the ApPitx signal was detected in the right coelomic pouch and in the right half of the ectoderm along the ciliary bands. These results suggest that the function of Pitx in establishing LR asymmetry was introduced in the last common ancestor of echinoderms and chordates. However, the right‐side specific expression in echinoderm larvae is inverted compared to chordate embryos. This indicates that the LR axis is inversely represented between echinoderms and chordates, which supports the scenario that dorsoventral axis inversion was introduced into the chordate lineage by turning upside down.
eLife | 2017
Katherine M. Buckley; Eric Chun Hei Ho; Taku Hibino; Catherine S. Schrankel; Nicholas W Schuh; Guizhi Wang; Jonathan P. Rast
IL17 cytokines are central mediators of mammalian immunity. In vertebrates, these factors derive from diverse cellular sources. Sea urchins share a molecular heritage with chordates that includes the IL17 system. Here, we characterize the role of epithelial expression of IL17 in the larval gut-associated immune response. The purple sea urchin genome encodes 10 IL17 subfamilies (35 genes) and 2 IL17 receptors. Most of these subfamilies are conserved throughout echinoderms. Two IL17 subfamilies are sequentially strongly upregulated and attenuated in the gut epithelium in response to bacterial disturbance. IL17R1 signal perturbation results in reduced expression of several response genes including an IL17 subtype, indicating a potential feedback. A third IL17 subfamily is activated in adult immune cells indicating that expression in immune cells and epithelia is divided among families. The larva provides a tractable model to investigate the regulation and consequences of gut epithelial IL17 expression across the organism. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.23481.001
Development Genes and Evolution | 2004
Taku Hibino; Yoshito Harada; Takuya Minokawa; Masaru Nonaka; Shonan Amemiya
The expression patterns of Brachyury (Bra) orthologs in the development of four species of sand dollars (order: Clypeasteroida), including a direct-developing species, and of a sea urchin species (order: Echinoida) were investigated during the period from blastula to the pluteus stage, with special attention paid to the relationship between the expression pattern and the mode of gastrulation. The sand dollar species shared two expression domains of the Bra orthologs with the Echinoida species, in the vegetal ring (the first domain) and the oral ectoderm (the second domain). The following heterotopic changes in the expression of the Bra genes were found among the sand dollar species and between the sand dollars and the Echinoida species. (1) The vegetal ring expressing Bra in the sand dollars was much wider and was located at a higher position along the AV axis, compared with that in the Echinoida species. The characteristic Bra expression in the vegetal ring of the sand dollar embryos was thought to be involved in the mode of gastrulation, in which involution continues from the beginning of invagination until the end of gastrulation. (2) Two of the three indirect-developing sand dollar species that were examined exhibited a third domain, in which Bra was expressed on the oral side of the archenteron. (3) In the direct-developing sand dollar embryos, Bra was expressed with an oral-aboral asymmetry in the vegetal ring and with a left-right asymmetry in the oral ectoderm. In the Echinoida species, Bra was expressed in the vestibule at the six-armed pluteus stage.
Acta Zoologica | 2015
Shonan Amemiya; Taku Hibino; Hiroaki Nakano; Masaaki Yamaguchi; Ritsu Kuraishi; Masato Kiyomoto
Embryos and larvae of an isocrinid sea lily, Metacrinus rotundus, are described by scanning electron microscopy. Around hatching (35 h after fertilization), the outer surface of the gastrula becomes ubiquitously covered with short cilia. At 40 h, the hatched swimming embryo develops a cilia-free zone of ectoderm on the ventral side. By 3 days, the very early dipleurula larva develops a cilia-free zone ventrally, densely ciliated regions laterally, and a sparsely ciliated region dorsally. At this stage, the posterior and anterior ciliary bands first appear: the former runs along a low ridge separating the densely from the sparsely ciliated epidermal regions, while the latter is visible, at first discontinuously, along the boundary between the densely ciliated lateral regions and the cilia-free ventral zone. In the late dipleurula larva (5 days after fertilization), the anterior and posterior loops of ciliary bands are well defined. The transition from the dipleurula to the semidoliolaria larva occurs at 6 days as the posterior loop becomes rearranged to form incompletely circumferential ciliary bands. The larva becomes competent to settle at this stage. The arrangement of the ciliary bands on the semidoliolaria is maintained during the second week of development, while the larva retains its competence to settle. The larval ciliary patterns described here are compared with those of stalkless crinoids and eleutherozoan echinoderms. The closest morphological similarities are between M. rotundus and the basal eleutherozoan class Asteroidea.