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Dive into the research topics where Yohei Shinmyo is active.

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Featured researches published by Yohei Shinmyo.


Science | 2009

Draxin, a repulsive guidance protein for spinal cord and forebrain commissures.

Shahidul M. Islam; Yohei Shinmyo; Tatsuya Okafuji; Yuhong Su; Iftekhar Bin Naser; Giasuddin Ahmed; Sanbing Zhang; Sandy Chen; Kunimasa Ohta; Hiroshi Kiyonari; Takaya Abe; Satomi S. Tanaka; Ryuichi Nishinakamura; Toshio Terashima; Toshio Kitamura; Hideaki Tanaka

Axon guidance proteins are critical for the correct wiring of the nervous system during development. Several axon guidance cues and their family members have been well characterized. More unidentified axon guidance cues are assumed to participate in the formation of the extremely complex nervous system. We identified a secreted protein, draxin, that shares no homology with known guidance cues. Draxin inhibited or repelled neurite outgrowth from dorsal spinal cord and cortical explants in vitro. Ectopically expressed draxin inhibited growth or caused misrouting of chick spinal cord commissural axons in vivo. draxin knockout mice showed defasciculation of spinal cord commissural axons and absence of all forebrain commissures. Thus, draxin is a previously unknown chemorepulsive axon guidance molecule required for the development of spinal cord and forebrain commissures.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

Draxin Inhibits Axonal Outgrowth through the Netrin Receptor DCC

Giasuddin Ahmed; Yohei Shinmyo; Kunimasa Ohta; Shahidul M. Islam; Mahmud Hossain; Iftekhar Bin Naser; M. Asrafuzzaman Riyadh; Yuhong Su; Sanbing Zhang; Marc Tessier-Lavigne; Hideaki Tanaka

Draxin, a recently identified axon guidance protein, is essential for the formation of forebrain commissures, and can mediate repulsion of netrin-stimulated spinal commissural axons. Here, we report that draxin binds multiple netrin receptors: DCC (deleted in colorectal cancer), Neogenin, UNC5s (H1, H2, H3), and DSCAM (Downs syndrome cell adhesion molecule). Since draxin and Dcc knockouts showed similar phenotype in forebrain commissures formation, we show here the functional importance of draxin/DCC interaction. Draxin interacts with subnanomolar affinity to the netrin receptor DCC, in a region of DCC distinct from its netrin-binding domain. In vitro, neurite outgrowth from cortical and olfactory bulb explants of Dcc knock-out mice is significantly less inhibited by draxin, when compared with neurites from explants of wild-type mice. Furthermore, in comparison with wild-type mice, the growth cone collapse in response to draxin is largely abolished in Dcc-deficient cortical neurons. In vivo, double heteros of draxin/Dcc mice show markedly higher frequency of complete agenesis of corpus callosum than either of the single hetero. These results identify DCC as a convergent receptor for netrin and draxin in axon growth and guidance.


Current Biology | 2010

Imaging of Transgenic Cricket Embryos Reveals Cell Movements Consistent with a Syncytial Patterning Mechanism

Taro Nakamura; Masato Yoshizaki; Shotaro Ogawa; Haruko Okamoto; Yohei Shinmyo; Tetsuya Bando; Hideyo Ohuchi; Sumihare Noji; Taro Mito

The mode of insect embryogenesis varies among species, reflecting adaptations to different life history strategies [1, 2]. In holometabolous insects, which include the model systems, such as the fruit fly and the red flour beetle, a large proportion of the blastoderm produces an embryo, whereas hemimetabolous embryos generally arise from a small region of the blastoderm [3]. Despite their importance in evolutionary studies, information of early developmental dynamics of hemimetabolous insects remains limited. Here, to clarify how maternal and gap gene products act in patterning the embryo of basal hemimetabolous insects, we analyzed the dynamic segmentation process in transgenic embryos of an intermediate-germ insect species, the cricket, Gryllus bimaculatus. Our data based on live imaging of fluorescently labeled embryonic cells and nuclei suggest that the positional specification of the cellular blastoderm may be established in the syncytium, where maternally derived gradients could act fundamentally in a way that is similar to that of Drosophila, namely throughout the egg. Then, the blastoderm cells move dynamically, retaining their positional information to form the posteriorly localized germ anlage. Furthermore, we find that the anterior head region of the cricket embryo is specified by orthodenticle in a cellular environment earlier than the gnathal and thoracic regions. Our findings imply that the syncytial mode of the early segmentation in long-germ insects evolved from a dynamic syncytial-to-cellular mode found in the present study, accompanied by a heterochronic shift of gap gene action.


Development | 2011

Ancestral functions of Delta/Notch signaling in the formation of body and leg segments in the cricket Gryllus bimaculatus

Taro Mito; Yohei Shinmyo; Kazuki Kurita; Taro Nakamura; Hideyo Ohuchi; Sumihare Noji

Delta/Notch signaling controls a wide spectrum of developmental processes, including body and leg segmentation in arthropods. The various functions of Delta/Notch signaling vary among species. For instance, in Cupiennius spiders, Delta/Notch signaling is essential for body and leg segmentation, whereas in Drosophila fruit flies it is involved in leg segmentation but not body segmentation. Therefore, to gain further insight into the functional evolution of Delta/Notch signaling in arthropod body and leg segmentation, we analyzed the function of the Delta (Gb′Delta) and Notch (Gb′Notch) genes in the hemimetabolous, intermediate-germ cricket Gryllus bimaculatus. We found that Gb′Delta and Gb′Notch were expressed in developing legs, and that RNAi silencing of Gb′Notch resulted in a marked reduction in leg length with a loss of joints. Our results suggest that the role of Notch signaling in leg segmentation is conserved in hemimetabolous insects. Furthermore, we found that Gb′Delta was expressed transiently in the posterior growth zone of the germband and in segmental stripes earlier than the appearance of wingless segmental stripes, whereas Gb′Notch was uniformly expressed in early germbands. RNAi knockdown of Gb′Delta or Gb′Notch expression resulted in malformation in body segments and a loss of posterior segments, the latter probably due to a defect in posterior growth. Therefore, in the cricket, Delta/Notch signaling might be required for proper morphogenesis of body segments and posterior elongation, but not for specification of segment boundaries.


Scientific Reports | 2016

CRISPR/Cas9-mediated gene knockout in the mouse brain using in utero electroporation

Yohei Shinmyo; Satoshi Tanaka; Shinichi Tsunoda; Kazuyoshi Hosomichi; Atsushi Tajima; Hiroshi Kawasaki

The CRISPR/Cas9 system has recently been adapted for generating knockout mice to investigate physiological functions and pathological mechanisms. Here, we report a highly efficient procedure for brain-specific disruption of genes of interest in vivo. We constructed pX330 plasmids expressing humanized Cas9 and single-guide RNAs (sgRNAs) against the Satb2 gene, which encodes an AT-rich DNA-binding transcription factor and is responsible for callosal axon projections in the developing mouse brain. We first confirmed that these constructs efficiently induced double-strand breaks (DSBs) in target sites of exogenous plasmids both in vitro and in vivo. We then found that the introduction of pX330-Satb2 into the developing mouse brain using in utero electroporation led to a dramatic reduction of Satb2 expression in the transfected cerebral cortex, suggesting DSBs had occurred in the Satb2 gene with high efficiency. Furthermore, we found that Cas9-mediated targeting of the Satb2 gene induced abnormalities in axonal projection patterns, which is consistent with the phenotypes previously observed in Satb2 mutant mice. Introduction of pX330-NeuN using our procedure also resulted in the efficient disruption of the NeuN gene. Thus, our procedure combining the CRISPR/Cas9 system and in utero electroporation is an effective and rapid approach to achieve brain-specific gene knockout in vivo.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2010

Tsukushi is required for anterior commissure formation in mouse brain.

Ayako Ito; Yohei Shinmyo; Takaya Abe; Naoko Oshima; Hideaki Tanaka; Kunimasa Ohta

The anterior commissure (AC) is one of the important commissure projections in the brain that conveys information from one side of the nervous system to the other. During development, the axons from the anterior AC (aAC) and the posterior AC (pAC) course in the same dorsoventral plane and converge into a common fascicle for midline crossing. Previously, we reported that Tsukushi (TSK), a member of the secreted small leucine rich repeat proteoglycan family, functions as a key coordinator of multiple pathways outside of cells through the regulation of an extracellular signaling network. Here, we show evidence that TSK is critical for the formation of the AC. In mice lacking TSK, the aAC and the pAC axons fail to cross the midline, leading to an almost total absence of the AC in adult mice. DiI labeling indicated that the aAC axons grew out from the anterior olfactory nucleus and migrated along normal pathways but never crossed the midline. Therefore, we have uncovered a crucial role for TSK for AC formation in the mouse brain.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Pathophysiological analyses of cortical malformation using gyrencephalic mammals.

Kosuke Masuda; Tomohisa Toda; Yohei Shinmyo; Haruka Ebisu; Yoshio Hoshiba; Mayu Wakimoto; Yoshie Ichikawa; Hiroshi Kawasaki

One of the most prominent features of the cerebral cortex of higher mammals is the presence of gyri. Because malformations of the cortical gyri are associated with severe disability in brain function, the mechanisms underlying malformations of the cortical gyri have been of great interest. Combining gyrencephalic carnivore ferrets and genetic manipulations using in utero electroporation, here we successfully recapitulated the cortical phenotypes of thanatophoric dysplasia (TD) by expressing fibroblast growth factor 8 in the ferret cerebral cortex. Strikingly, in contrast to TD mice, our TD ferret model showed not only megalencephaly but also polymicrogyria. We further uncovered that outer radial glial cells (oRGs) and intermediate progenitor cells (IPs) were markedly increased. Because it has been proposed that increased oRGs and/or IPs resulted in the appearance of cortical gyri during evolution, it seemed possible that increased oRGs and IPs underlie the pathogenesis of polymicrogyria. Our findings should help shed light on the molecular mechanisms underlying the formation and malformation of cortical gyri in higher mammals.


Developmental Biology | 2009

Analysis of a repulsive axon guidance molecule, draxin, on ventrally directed axon projection in chick early embryonic midbrain.

Iftekhar Bin Naser; Yuhong Su; Shahidul M. Islam; Yohei Shinmyo; Sanbing Zhang; Giasuddin Ahmed; Sandy Chen; Hideaki Tanaka

The mesencephalic V neurons and tectobulbar axons in chick embryo project over long distances that appear during the early development of the chick optic tectum. The mesencephalic V neuron and tectobulbar axonal growth begin at Hamburger and Hamilton stage 14 and stage 18, respectively. Both fibers proceed downward from the dorsal to the ventral side of the lateral wall of the optic tectum and then turn caudally and join the medial longitudinal fasciculus. Their axons appear in the most superficial layer of the tectum at early stages and do not cross the dorsal midline of the tectum. Here, we report the role of draxin, a recently identified axon guidance protein, in the formation of the ventrally directed tectum axonal tracts in chicken embryo. draxin is expressed in a high dorsal to low ventral gradient in chick optic tectum. In vitro experiments show that draxin repels neurite outgrowth from dorsal tectum explants. In vivo overexpression resulted in inhibition or misrouting of axon growth in the tectum. Therefore, draxin may be an important member of the collection of repulsive guidance molecules that regulate the formation of the ventrally directed tectum axon tracts.


Scientific Reports | 2016

An essential role of SVZ progenitors in cortical folding in gyrencephalic mammals

Tomohisa Toda; Yohei Shinmyo; Tung Anh Dinh Duong; Kosuke Masuda; Hiroshi Kawasaki

Because folding of the cerebral cortex in the mammalian brain is believed to be crucial for higher brain functions, the mechanisms underlying its formation during development and evolution are of great interest. Although it has been proposed that increased neural progenitors in the subventricular zone (SVZ) are responsible for making cortical folds, their roles in cortical folding are still largely unclear, mainly because genetic methods for gyrencephalic mammals had been poorly available. Here, by taking an advantage of our newly developed in utero electroporation technique for the gyrencephalic brain of ferrets, we investigated the role of SVZ progenitors in cortical folding. We found regional differences in the abundance of SVZ progenitors in the developing ferret brain even before cortical folds began to be formed. When Tbr2 transcription factor was inhibited, intermediate progenitor cells were markedly reduced in the ferret cerebral cortex. Interestingly, outer radial glial cells were also reduced by inhibiting Tbr2. We uncovered that reduced numbers of SVZ progenitors resulted in impaired cortical folding. When Tbr2 was inhibited, upper cortical layers were preferentially reduced in gyri compared to those in sulci. Our findings indicate the biological importance of SVZ progenitors in cortical folding in the gyrencephalic brain.


Neuroscience Research | 2010

Draxin, a repulsive axon guidance protein, is involved in hippocampal development

Sanbing Zhang; Yuhong Su; Yohei Shinmyo; Shahidul M. Islam; Iftekhar Bin Naser; Giasuddin Ahmed; Nobuaki Tamamaki; Hideaki Tanaka

The hippocampus plays an essential role in learning and memory and is one of the major sites implicated in neural diseases. The proper organization of the hippocampus during development is important for its function. We found that draxin, a repulsive axon guidance cue, was widely expressed in the developing hippocampus and draxin deficient mice possessed a smaller hippocampus, particularly in the anterior part of the structure. Quantification of this reduction revealed that the volume of the dentate gyrus of the mutant was significantly smaller compared to the normal counterpart. This size reduction seemed to be dependent on apoptosis rather than due to a decrease in the rate of cell division.

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