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Featured researches published by Toshiyuki Kakinuma.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Role of Stem Cells in Human Uterine Leiomyoma Growth

Masanori Ono; Wenan Qiang; Vanida Ann Serna; Ping Yin; John S. Coon; Antonia Navarro; Diana Monsivais; Toshiyuki Kakinuma; Matthew T. Dyson; Stacy A. Druschitz; Kenji Unno; Takeshi Kurita; Serdar E. Bulun

BACKGROUND Uterine leiomyoma is the most common benign tumor in reproductive-age women. Each leiomyoma is thought to be a benign monoclonal tumor arising from a single transformed myometrial smooth muscle cell; however, it is not known what leiomyoma cell type is responsible for tumor growth. Thus, we tested the hypothesis that a distinct stem/reservoir cell-enriched population, designated as the leiomyoma-derived side population (LMSP), is responsible for cell proliferation and tumor growth. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS LMSP comprised approximately 1% of all leiomyoma and 2% of all myometrium-derived cells. All LMSP and leiomyoma-derived main population (LMMP) but none of the side or main population cells isolated from adjacent myometrium carried a mediator complex subunit 12 mutation, a genetic marker of neoplastic transformation. Messenger RNA levels for estrogen receptor-α, progesterone receptor and smooth muscle cell markers were barely detectable and significantly lower in the LMSP compared with the LMMP. LMSP alone did not attach or survive in monolayer culture in the presence or absence of estradiol and progestin, whereas LMMP readily grew under these conditions. LMSP did attach and survive when directly mixed with unsorted myometrial cells in monolayer culture. After resorting and reculturing, LMSP gained full potential of proliferation. Intriguingly, xenografts comprised of LMSP and unsorted myometrial smooth muscle cells grew into relatively large tumors (3.67 ± 1.07 mm(3)), whereas xenografts comprised of LMMP and unsorted myometrial smooth muscle cells produced smaller tumors (0.54 ± 0.20 mm(3), p<0.05, n = 10 paired patient samples). LMSP xenografts displayed significantly higher proliferative activity compared with LMMP xenografts (p<0.05). CONCLUSIONS Our data suggest that LMSP, which have stem/reservoir cell characteristics, are necessary for in vivo growth of leiomyoma xenograft tumors. Lower estrogen and progesterone receptor levels in LMSP suggests an indirect paracrine effect of steroid hormones on stem cells via the mature neighboring cells.


PLOS Genetics | 2014

Genome-Wide DNA Methylation Analysis Predicts an Epigenetic Switch for GATA Factor Expression in Endometriosis

Matthew T. Dyson; Damian Roqueiro; Diana Monsivais; C. Mutlu Ercan; Mary Ellen Pavone; David C. Brooks; Toshiyuki Kakinuma; Masanori Ono; Nadereh Jafari; Yang Dai; Serdar E. Bulun

Endometriosis is a gynecological disease defined by the extrauterine growth of endometrial-like cells that cause chronic pain and infertility. The disease is limited to primates that exhibit spontaneous decidualization, and diseased cells are characterized by significant defects in the steroid-dependent genetic pathways that typify this process. Altered DNA methylation may underlie these defects, but few regions with differential methylation have been implicated in the disease. We mapped genome-wide differences in DNA methylation between healthy human endometrial and endometriotic stromal cells and correlated this with gene expression using an interaction analysis strategy. We identified 42,248 differentially methylated CpGs in endometriosis compared to healthy cells. These extensive differences were not unidirectional, but were focused intragenically and at sites distal to classic CpG islands where methylation status was typically negatively correlated with gene expression. Significant differences in methylation were mapped to 403 genes, which included a disproportionally large number of transcription factors. Furthermore, many of these genes are implicated in the pathology of endometriosis and decidualization. Our results tremendously improve the scope and resolution of differential methylation affecting the HOX gene clusters, nuclear receptor genes, and intriguingly the GATA family of transcription factors. Functional analysis of the GATA family revealed that GATA2 regulates key genes necessary for the hormone-driven differentiation of healthy stromal cells, but is hypermethylated and repressed in endometriotic cells. GATA6, which is hypomethylated and abundant in endometriotic cells, potently blocked hormone sensitivity, repressed GATA2, and induced markers of endometriosis when expressed in healthy endometrial cells. The unique epigenetic fingerprint in endometriosis suggests DNA methylation is an integral component of the disease, and identifies a novel role for the GATA family as key regulators of uterine physiology–aberrant DNA methylation in endometriotic cells correlates with a shift in GATA isoform expression that facilitates progesterone resistance and disease progression.


Seminars in Reproductive Medicine | 2015

Molecular biology of endometriosis: from aromatase to genomic abnormalities.

Serdar E. Bulun; Diana Monsivais; Toshiyuki Kakinuma; Yuichi Furukawa; Lia A. Bernardi; Mary Ellen Pavone; Matthew T. Dyson

Endometriosis has been initially described as the presence of ectopic endometrial tissue on pelvic organs or in extrapelvic sites; and this has been used as its key pathologic feature ever since. Endometriosis responds to fluctuations in estrogen and progesterone by growth and inflammation, leading to pain aggravated by menses. It was proposed that pelvic endometriosis primarily originate from retrograde menstruation of a critical number of eutopic endometrial cells with stem characteristics. This postulate is supported by the molecular defects found in ectopic endometriotic tissue. Genome-wide differences in CpG methylation between eutopic endometrial and endometriotic stromal cells are present. Defective CpG methylation affecting several genes that encode key transcription factors such as GATA6, steroidogenic factor-1, and estrogen receptor-β in endometriosis gives rise to overproduction of local estrogen and prostaglandins and suppression of progesterone receptor. Progesterone receptor deficiency leads to progesterone resistance, resulting in decreased retinol uptake and retinoic acid production and altered retinoic acid action. These molecular defects collectively give rise to poor cellular differentiation, enhanced survival, and increased inflammation, which are the biological hallmarks of endometriotic tissue.


Fertility and Sterility | 2012

Activated glucocorticoid and eicosanoid pathways in endometriosis

Diana Monsivais; Jeffrey D. Bray; Emily Su; Mary Ellen Pavone; Matthew T. Dyson; Antonia Navarro; Toshiyuki Kakinuma; Serdar E. Bulun

OBJECTIVE To define altered gene expression networks in endometriosis. DESIGN Experiments using endometriotic tissues and primary cells. SETTING Division of Reproductive Biology Research, Northwestern University. PATIENT(S) Premenopausal women. INTERVENTION(S) Matched samples of eutopic endometrium and ovarian endometriosis (n = 8 patients) were analyzed by microarray and verified in a separate set of tissues (n = 6 patients). Experiments to define signaling pathways were performed in primary endometriotic stromal cells (n = 12 patients). MAIN OUTCOMES MEASURE(S) Using a genome-wide in vivo approach, we identified 1,366 differentially expressed genes and a new gene network favoring increased glucocorticoid levels and action in endometriosis. RESULT(S) Transcript and protein levels of 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (HSD11B1), which produces cortisol, the biologically active glucocorticoid, were strikingly higher, whereas messenger RNA (mRNA) levels of the cortisol-degrading HSD11B2 enzyme were significantly lower in endometriotic tissue. Glucocorticoid receptor mRNA and protein levels were significantly higher in endometriosis. The inflammatory cytokine tumor necrosis factor robustly induced mRNA and protein levels of HSD11B1 and glucocorticoid receptor but suppressed HSD11B2 mRNA in primary endometriotic stromal cells, suggesting that tumor necrosis factor stimulates cortisol production and action. We also uncovered a subset of genes critical for prostaglandin synthesis and degradation, which favor high eicosanoid levels and activity in endometriosis. CONCLUSION(S) The proinflammatory milieu of the endometriotic lesion stimulates cortisol synthesis and action in endometriotic lesions.


Fertility and Sterility | 2015

Aberrant expression and localization of deoxyribonucleic acid methyltransferase 3B in endometriotic stromal cells

Matthew T. Dyson; Toshiyuki Kakinuma; Mary Ellen Pavone; Diana Monsivais; Antonia Navarro; Saurabh S. Malpani; Masanori Ono; Serdar E. Bulun

OBJECTIVE To define the expression and function of DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs) in response to decidualizing stimuli in endometriotic cells compared with healthy endometrial stroma. DESIGN Basic science. SETTING University research center. PATIENT(S) Premenopausal women with or without endometriosis. INTERVENTION(S) Primary cultures of stromal cells from healthy endometrium (E-IUM) or endometriomas (E-OSIS) were subjected to in vitro decidualization (IVD) using 1 μM medroxyprogesterone acetate, 35 nM 17β-estradiol, and 0.05 mM 8-Br-cAMP. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) Expression of DNMT1, DNMT3A, and DNMT3B in E-IUM and E-OSIS were assessed by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction and immunoblotting. Recruitment of DNMT3B to the promoters of steroidogenic factor 1 (SF-1) and estrogen receptor α (ESR1) was examined by chromatin immunoprecipitation. RESULT(S) IVD treatment reduced DNMT3B messenger RNA (74%) and protein levels (81%) only in E-IUM; DNMT1 and DNMT3A were unchanged in both cell types. Significantly more DNMT3B bound to the SF-1 promoter in E-IUM compared with E-OSIS, and IVD treatment reduced binding in E-IUM to levels similar to those in E-OSIS. Enrichment of DNMT3B across 3 ESR1 promoters was reduced in E-IUM after IVD, although the more-distal promoter showed increased DNMT3B enrichment in E-OSIS after IVD. CONCLUSION(S) The inability to downregulate DNMT3B expression in E-OSIS may contribute to an aberrant epigenetic fingerprint that misdirects gene expression in endometriosis and contributes to its altered response to steroid hormones.


Fertility and Sterility | 2012

Differences in retinoid uptake and metabolism causes altered paracrine signaling in endometriosis

Mary Ellen Pavone; Saurabh S. Malpani; Matthew T. Dyson; Diana Monsivais; Toshiyuki Kakinuma; Serdar E. Bulun


Biology of Reproduction | 2012

ERβ Regulates Genes That Have Kinase and GTPase Functions and Enhance Cell Survival in Endometriosis.

Diana Monsivais; Emily Su; Matthew T. Dyson; Antonia Navarro; Mary Ellen Pavone; Toshiyuki Kakinuma; Serdar E. Bulun


Biology of Reproduction | 2012

Interrogating Altered DNA Methylation in Human Endometriotic Stromal Cells.

Matthew T. Dyson; Toshiyuki Kakinuma; Diana Monsivais; Serdar E. Bulun


Fertility and Sterility | 2011

Aberrant regulation of DNA methyltransferase 3B observed in women with endometriosis

Toshiyuki Kakinuma; Matthew T. Dyson; Mary Ellen Pavone; Diana Monsivais; Serdar E. Bulun


Fertility and Sterility | 2011

Alterations in retinoid signaling in endometriosis may lead to differences in decidualization

Mary Ellen Pavone; Matthew T. Dyson; E. Pearson; Toshiyuki Kakinuma; Serdar E. Bulun

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Masanori Ono

Northwestern University

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Emily Su

Northwestern University

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Damian Roqueiro

University of Illinois at Chicago

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