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Dive into the research topics where Tetsuro Kusaba is active.

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Featured researches published by Tetsuro Kusaba.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Differentiated kidney epithelial cells repair injured proximal tubule

Tetsuro Kusaba; Matthew Lalli; Rafael Kramann; Akio Kobayashi; Benjamin D. Humphreys

Significance When epithelial cells in the proximal portion of the nephron are damaged they rapidly proliferate to repair the damage to the kidney. Whether a stem cell is responsible for this proliferative response or not is controversial. Although a scattered population of cells can be found in the human proximal tubule that seem to have stem-cell characteristics, they could also represent isolated damaged cells that have dedifferentiated and lost their epithelial characteristics. We resolve these conflicting models using genetic lineage analysis to demonstrate that fully differentiated proximal tubule cells not only proliferate after injury, but they also upregulate apparent stem-cell markers. This study shows that epithelial dedifferentiation is responsible for repair of mouse proximal tubule, rather than an adult stem-cell population. Whether kidney proximal tubule harbors a scattered population of epithelial stem cells is a major unsolved question. Lineage-tracing studies, histologic characterization, and ex vivo functional analysis results conflict. To address this controversy, we analyzed the lineage and clonal behavior of fully differentiated proximal tubule epithelial cells after injury. A CreERT2 cassette was knocked into the sodium-dependent inorganic phosphate transporter SLC34a1 locus, which is expressed only in differentiated proximal tubule. Tamoxifen-dependent recombination was absolutely specific to proximal tubule. Clonal analysis after injury and repair showed that the bulk of labeled cells proliferate after injury with increased clone size after severe compared with mild injury. Injury to labeled proximal tubule epithelia induced expression of CD24, CD133, vimentin, and kidney-injury molecule-1, markers of putative epithelial stem cells in the human kidney. Similar results were observed in cultured proximal tubules, in which labeled clones proliferated and expressed dedifferentiation and injury markers. When mice with completely labeled kidneys were subject to injury and repair there was no dilution of fate marker despite substantial proliferation, indicating that unlabeled progenitors do not contribute to kidney repair. During nephrogenesis and early kidney growth, single proximal tubule clones expanded, suggesting that differentiated cells also contribute to tubule elongation. These findings provide no evidence for an intratubular stem-cell population, but rather indicate that terminally differentiated epithelia reexpress apparent stem-cell markers during injury-induced dedifferentiation and repair.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Klotho is associated with VEGF receptor-2 and the transient receptor potential canonical-1 Ca2+ channel to maintain endothelial integrity

Tetsuro Kusaba; Mitsuhiko Okigaki; Akihiro Matui; Manabu Murakami; Kazuhiko Ishikawa; Taikou Kimura; Kazuhiro Sonomura; Yasushi Adachi; Masabumi Shibuya; Takeshi Shirayama; Shuji Tanda; Tsuguru Hatta; Susumu Sasaki; Yasukiyo Mori; Hiroaki Matsubara

Klotho is a circulating protein, and Klotho deficiency disturbs endothelial integrity, but the molecular mechanism is not fully clarified. We report that vascular endothelium in Klotho-deficient mice showed hyperpermeability with increased apoptosis and down-regulation of vascular endothelial (VE)-cadherin because of an increase in VEGF-mediated internal calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i) influx and hyperactivation of Ca2+-dependent proteases. Immunohistochemical analysis, the pull-down assay using Klotho-fixed agarose, and FRET confocal imaging confirmed that Klotho protein binds directly to VEGF receptor 2 (VEGFR-2) and endothelial, transient-receptor potential canonical Ca2+ channel 1 (TRPC-1) and strengthens the association to promote their cointernalization. An in vitro mutagenesis study revealed that the second hydrolase domain of Klotho interacts with sixth and seventh Ig domains of VEGFR-2 and the third extracellular loop of TRPC-1. In Klotho-deficient endothelial cells, VEGF-mediated internalization of the VEGFR-2/TRPC-1 complex was impaired, and surface TRPC-1 expression increased 2.2-fold; these effects were reversed by supplementation of Klotho protein. VEGF-mediated elevation of [Ca2+]i was sustained at higher levels in an extracellular Ca2+-dependent manner, and normalization of TRCP-1 expression restored the abnormal [Ca2+]i handling. These findings provide evidence that Klotho protein is associated with VEGFR-2/TRPC-1 in causing cointernalization, thus regulating TRPC-1–mediated Ca2+ entry to maintain endothelial integrity.


Circulation | 2007

Central Role of Calcium-Dependent Tyrosine Kinase PYK2 in Endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase–Mediated Angiogenic Response and Vascular Function

Akihiro Matsui; Mitsuhiko Okigaki; Katsuya Amano; Yasushi Adachi; Denan Jin; Shinji Takai; Tomoya Yamashita; Seinosuke Kawashima; Tatsuya Kurihara; Mizuo Miyazaki; Kento Tateishi; Shinsaku Matsunaga; Asako Katsume; Shoken Honshou; Tomosaburo Takahashi; Satoaki Matoba; Tetsuro Kusaba; Tetsuya Tatsumi; Hiroaki Matsubara

Background— The involvement of Ca2+-dependent tyrosine kinase PYK2 in the Akt/endothelial NO synthase pathway remains to be determined. Methods and Results— Blood flow recovery and neovessel formation after hind-limb ischemia were impaired in PYK2−/− mice with reduced mobilization of endothelial progenitors. Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)–mediated cytoplasmic Ca2+ mobilization and Ca2+-independent Akt activation were markedly decreased in the PYK2-deficient aortic endothelial cells, whereas the Ca2+-independent AMP-activated protein kinase/protein kinase-A pathway that phosphorylates endothelial NO synthase was not impaired. Acetylcholine-mediated aortic vasorelaxation and cGMP production were significantly decreased. Vascular endothelial growth factor–dependent migration, tube formation, and actin cytoskeletal reorganization associated with Rac1 activation were inhibited in PYK2-deficient endothelial cells. PI3-kinase is associated with vascular endothelial growth factor–induced PYK2/Src complex, and inhibition of Src blocked Akt activation. The vascular endothelial growth factor–mediated Src association with PLC&ggr;1 and phosphorylation of 783Tyr-PLC&ggr;1 also were abolished by PYK2 deficiency. Conclusion— These findings demonstrate that PYK2 is closely involved in receptor- or ischemia-activated signaling events via Src/PLC&ggr;1 and Src/PI3-kinase/Akt pathways, leading to endothelial NO synthase phosphorylation, and thus modulates endothelial NO synthase–mediated vasoactive function and angiogenic response.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2016

Paracrine Wnt1 Drives Interstitial Fibrosis without Inflammation by Tubulointerstitial Cross-Talk

Omar H. Maarouf; Anusha Aravamudhan; Deepika Rangarajan; Tetsuro Kusaba; Victor Zhang; Jeremy Welborn; Daniel Gauvin; Xiuyun Hou; Rafael Kramann; Benjamin D. Humphreys

AKI with incomplete epithelial repair is a major contributor to CKD characterized by tubulointerstitial fibrosis. Injury-induced epithelial secretion of profibrotic factors is hypothesized to underlie this link, but the identity of these factors and whether epithelial injury is required remain undefined. We previously showed that activation of the canonical Wnt signaling pathway in interstitial pericytes cell autonomously drives myofibroblast activation in vivo. Here, we show that inhibition of canonical Wnt signaling also substantially prevented TGFβ-dependent myofibroblast activation in vitro. To investigate whether Wnt ligand derived from proximal tubule is sufficient for renal fibrogenesis, we generated a novel mouse strain with inducible proximal tubule Wnt1 secretion. Adult mice were treated with vehicle or tamoxifen and euthanized at 12 or 24 weeks postinjection. Compared with vehicle-treated controls, kidneys with tamoxifen-induced Wnt1 expression from proximal tubules displayed interstitial myofibroblast activation and proliferation and increased matrix protein production. PDGF receptor β-positive myofibroblasts isolated from these kidneys exhibited increased canonical Wnt target gene expression compared with controls. Notably, fibrotic kidneys had no evidence of inflammatory cytokine expression, leukocyte infiltration, or epithelial injury, despite the close histologic correlation of each with CKD. These results provide the first example of noninflammatory renal fibrosis. The fact that epithelial-derived Wnt ligand is sufficient to drive interstitial fibrosis provides strong support for the maladaptive repair hypothesis in the AKI to CKD transition.


Kidney International | 2009

Sodium restriction improves the gustatory threshold for salty taste in patients with chronic kidney disease

Tetsuro Kusaba; Yasukiyo Mori; Okagaki Masami; Neriya Hiroko; Takaomi Adachi; Chikako Sugishita; Kazuhiro Sonomura; Taikou Kimura; Noriko Kishimoto; Hisako Nakagawa; Mitsuhiko Okigaki; Tsuguru Hatta; Hiroaki Matsubara

Sodium restriction is important in the treatment of chronic kidney disease; however, it is sometimes difficult to achieve. Decreased taste sensitivity may be a factor influencing inadequate control of oral salt intake and subsequent high blood pressure. To measure this, the gustatory threshold (recognition and detection) for salty taste was determined in 29 patients with chronic kidney disease using a sodium-impregnated test strip and relevant factors determining taste sensitivity were analyzed. Compared with 11 healthy volunteers, recognition and detection thresholds were increased in the patients with chronic kidney disease. Oral sodium intake correlated positively but serum zinc correlated negatively with the recognition threshold. Patients with diabetic nephropathy had a higher detection threshold than non-diabetic patients. Both recognition and detection thresholds were increased in patients with diuretic administration. After 1 week of sodium restriction, the average recognition threshold decreased significantly. Our study verified that latent taste dysfunction and zinc deficiency are common in patients with chronic kidney disease. Further, the recognition threshold for salty taste improved even after a short period of salt restriction.


Pediatric Nephrology | 2014

Controversies on the origin of proliferating epithelial cells after kidney injury

Tetsuro Kusaba; Benjamin D. Humphreys

The kidney possesses the capacity to repair after an acute insult, even one that causes complete organ failure. This regenerative response is characterized by robust proliferation of epithelial cells, principally those located in the proximal tubule. Because defining the origin of these reparative cells has important consequences for stem cell and regenerative approaches to treating kidney injury, this area has been the subject of intense investigation and debate. While progress has been made in narrowing the possible origin of these cells to an intratubular source, there has been no consensus between the possibility of a pre-existing intratubular stem or progenitor cell versus the possibility that fully differentiated epithelial cells re-enter the cell cycle after injury and generate new proximal tubule cells through self-duplication. This review will summarize the evidence on both sides of this active controversy and provide support for the notion that no pre-existing proximal tubule stem cell population exists, but rather all differentiated proximal tubule epithelia have the capacity to proliferate during repair by a mechanism of dedifferentiation and self-duplication.


Kidney International | 2012

The kinase Pyk2 is involved in renal fibrosis by means of mechanical stretch-induced growth factor expression in renal tubules

Kazuhiro Sonomura; Mitsuhiko Okigaki; Taikou Kimura; Eiko Matsuoka; Yayoi Shiotsu; Takaomi Adachi; Hiroshi Kado; Ryo Ishida; Tetsuro Kusaba; Hiroaki Matsubara; Yasukiyo Mori

Unilateral ureteral obstruction is a well-established experimental model of progressive renal fibrosis. We tested whether mechanical stretch and subsequent renal tubular distension might lead to renal fibrosis by first studying renal tubular epithelial cells in culture. We found that mechanical stretch induced reactive oxygen species that in turn activated the cytoplasmic proline-rich tyrosine kinase-2 (Pyk2). This kinase is abundantly expressed in tubular epithelial cells where it is activated by several stimuli. Using mice with deletion of Pyk2 we found that the expression of transforming growth factor-β1 induced by mechanical stretch in renal tubular epithelial cells was significantly reduced. The expression of connective tissue growth factor was also reduced in the Pyk2(-/-) mice. We also found that expression of connective tissue growth factor was independent of transforming growth factor-β1, but dependent on the Rho-associated coiled-coil forming protein kinase pathway. Thus, Pyk2 may be an important initiating factor in renal fibrosis and might be a new therapeutic target for ameliorating renal fibrosis.


Therapeutic Apheresis and Dialysis | 2007

A Case Report of Mycobacterium Abscessus Peritonitis in a Peritoneal Dialysis Patient

Hisako Kameyama; Yasukiyo Mori; Taiko Kimura; Chikako Sugishita; Takaomi Adachi; Kazuhiro Sonomura; Tetsuro Kusaba; Shuji Tanda; Noriko Kishimoto; Mitsuhiko Okigaki; Tsuguru Hatta; Hiroaki Matsubara

Abstract:  Peritonitis due to nontuberculous mycobacterium in peritoneal dialysis (PD) patients is rare. However, when it occurs, PD catheter removal is required in most cases because of resistance to antibiotic therapy. We report a case of Mycobacterium abscessus peritonitis subsequent to tunnel infection after PD catheter‐replacement surgery. The patient underwent this surgery as her tunnel infection had not resolved following the usual 3 month course of antibiotic therapy. After surgery, tunnel infection of the second catheter and peritonitis occurred. Nontuberculous mycobacteria were detected on acid‐fast stain from both the old and new exit‐site drainage and the peritoneal effluent. The mycobacteria were identified as M. abscessus. Removal of the new catheter and surgical excision of the previous catheter tunnel were performed and multiple antibiotics were started. After 3 months the postsurgical wounds had healed completely. This case demonstrates the importance of further evaluation of unidentified PD catheter‐related infections, including an examination for nontuberculous mycobacterium.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Robust circadian clock oscillation and osmotic rhythms in inner medulla reflecting cortico-medullary osmotic gradient rhythm in rodent kidney

Masayuki Hara; Yoichi Minami; Munehiro Ohashi; Yoshiki Tsuchiya; Tetsuro Kusaba; Keiichi Tamagaki; Nobuya Koike; Yasuhiro Umemura; Hitoshi Inokawa; Kazuhiro Yagita

Circadian clocks in mammals function in most organs and tissues throughout the body. Various renal functions such as the glomerular filtration and excretion of electrolytes exhibit circadian rhythms. Although it has been reported that the expression of the clock genes composing molecular oscillators show apparent daily rhythms in rodent kidneys, functional variations of regional clocks are not yet fully understood. In this study, using macroscopic bioluminescence imaging method of the PER2::Luciferase knock-in mouse kidney, we reveal that strong and robust circadian clock oscillation is observed in the medulla. In addition, the osmotic pressure in the inner medulla shows apparent daily fluctuation, but not in the cortex. Quantitative-PCR analysis of the genes contributing to the generation of high osmotic pressure or the water re-absorption in the inner medulla, such as vasopressin receptors (V1aR, V2R), urea transporter (UT-A2) and water channel (Aqp2) show diurnal variations as well as clock genes. Deficiency of an essential clock gene Bmal1 impairs day-night variations of osmotic pressure gradient in the inner medulla, suggesting that circadian clocks in the medulla part of the kidney may regulate the circadian rhythm of cortico-medullary osmotic pressure gradient, and may contribute physiological day-night rhythm of urination.


Molecular Therapy | 2016

Kidney-specific Sonoporation-mediated Gene Transfer.

Ryo Ishida; Daisuke Kami; Tetsuro Kusaba; Yuhei Kirita; Tsunao Kishida; Osam Mazda; Takaomi Adachi

Sonoporation can deliver agents to target local organs by systemic administration, while decreasing the associated risk of adverse effects. Sonoporation has been used for a variety of materials and in a variety of organs. Herein, we demonstrated that local sonoporation to the kidney can offer highly efficient transfer of oligonucleotides, which were systemically administrated to the tubular epithelium with high specificity. Ultrasonic wave irradiation to the kidney collapsed the microbubbles and transiently affected the glomerular filtration barrier and increased glomerular permeability. Oligonucleotides were passed through the barrier all at once and were absorbed throughout the tubular epithelium. Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα), which plays a central role in renal ischemia–reperfusion injury, was targeted using small interfering RNA (siRNA) with renal sonoporation in a murine model. The reduction of TNFα expression after single gene transfer significantly inhibited the expression of kidney injury markers, suggesting that systemic administration of siRNA under temporary and local sonoporation could be applicable in the clinical setting of ischemic acute kidney injury.

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Hiroaki Matsubara

Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine

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Keiichi Tamagaki

Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine

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Mitsuhiko Okigaki

Kyoto Prefectural University

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Ryo Ishida

Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine

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Yasukiyo Mori

Kansai Medical University

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Hisako Kameyama

Kyoto Prefectural University

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Susumu Sasaki

Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine

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Shuji Tanda

Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine

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Takaomi Adachi

Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine

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