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Dive into the research topics where Yoshimi Kuroiwa is active.

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Featured researches published by Yoshimi Kuroiwa.


Nature Biotechnology | 2002

Cloned transchromosomic calves producing human immunoglobulin

Yoshimi Kuroiwa; Poothappillai Kasinathan; Yoon J. Choi; Rizwan Naeem; Kazuma Tomizuka; Eddie Sullivan; Jason G. Knott; Anae Duteau; Richard A. Goldsby; Barbara A. Osborne; Isao Ishida; James M. Robl

Human polyclonal antibodies (hPABs) are useful therapeutics, but because they are available only from human donors, their supply and application is limited. To address this need, we prepared a human artificial chromosome (HAC) vector containing the entire unrearranged sequences of the human immunoglobulin (hIg) heavy-chain (H) and lambda (λ) light-chain loci. The HAC vector was introduced into bovine primary fetal fibroblasts using a microcell-mediated chromosome transfer (MMCT) approach. Primary selection was carried out, and the cells were used to produce cloned bovine fetuses. Secondary selection was done on the regenerated fetal cell lines, which were then used to produce four healthy transchromosomic (Tc) calves. The HAC was retained at a high rate (78–100% of cells) in calves and the hIg loci underwent rearrangement and expressed diversified transcripts. Human immunoglobulin proteins were detected in the blood of newborn calves. The production of Tc calves is an important step in the development of a system for producing therapeutic hPABs.


Nature Genetics | 1995

Peg1/Mest imprinted gene on chromosome 6 identified by cDNA subtraction hybridization

Tomoko Kaneko-Ishino; Yoshimi Kuroiwa; Naoki Miyoshi; Takashi Kohda; Rika Suzuki; Minesuke Yokoyama; Stéphane Viville; Sheila C. Barton; Fumitoshi Ishino; Surani Ma

Parthenogenesis in the mouse is embryonic lethal partly because of imprinted genes that are expressed only from the paternal genome. In a systematic screen using subtraction hybridization between cDNAs from normal and parthenogenetic embryos, we initially identified two apparently novel imprinted genes, Peg1 and Peg3. Peg1 (paternally expressed gene 1) or Mest, the first imprinted gene found on the mouse chromosome 6, may contribute to the lethality of parthenogenones and of embryos with a maternal duplication for the proximal chromosome 6. Peg1/Mest is widely expressed in mesodermal tissues and belongs to the alpha/beta hydrolase fold family. A similar approach with androgenones can be used to identify imprinted genes that are expressed from the maternal genome only.


Nature Genetics | 2004

Sequential targeting of the genes encoding immunoglobulin-mu and prion protein in cattle.

Yoshimi Kuroiwa; Poothappillai Kasinathan; Hiroaki Matsushita; Janaki Sathiyaselan; Eddie Sullivan; Makoto Kakitani; Kazuma Tomizuka; Isao Ishida; James M. Robl

Gene targeting is accomplished using embryonic stem cells in the mouse but has been successful, only using primary somatic cells followed by embryonic cloning, in other species. Gene targeting in somatic cells versus embryonic stem cells is a challenge; consequently, there are few reported successes and none include the targeting of transcriptionally silent genes or double targeting to produce homozygotes. Here, we report a sequential gene targeting system for primary fibroblast cells that we used to knock out both alleles of a silent gene, the bovine gene encoding immunoglobulin-μ (IGHM), and produce both heterozygous and homozygous knockout calves. We also carried out sequential knockout targeting of both alleles of a gene that is active in fibroblasts, encoding the bovine prion protein (PRNP), in the same genetic line to produce doubly homozygous knockout fetuses. The sequential gene targeting system we used alleviates the need for germline transmission for complex genetic modifications and should be broadly applicable to gene functional analysis and to biomedical and agricultural applications.


Nature Biotechnology | 2000

Manipulation of human minichromosomes to carry greater than megabase-sized chromosome inserts.

Yoshimi Kuroiwa; Kazuma Tomizuka; Tokuyuki Shinohara; Yasuhiro Kazuki; Hitoshi Yoshida; Atsuko Ohguma; Terumi Yamamoto; Sonoko Tanaka; Mitsuo Oshimura; Isao Ishida

For introducing regions of human chromosomes greater than a megabase into cells or animals, we have developed a chromosome-cloning system in which defined regions of human chromosomes can be cloned into a stable human minichromosome vector in homologous recombination-proficient chicken DT40 cells. The stable minichromosome vector allowed a 10 Mb-sized region of the mitotically unstable human chromosome 22 to be stably maintained in mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells, and in mice. Furthermore, we demonstrated functional expression of human genes from the HAC in mice. This study describes a stable cloning and expression system for greater than megabase–sized regions of human chromosomes.


Nature Biotechnology | 2009

Antigen-specific human polyclonal antibodies from hyperimmunized cattle

Yoshimi Kuroiwa; Poothappillai Kasinathan; Thillainayagen Sathiyaseelan; Jin-an Jiao; Hiroaki Matsushita; Janaki Sathiyaseelan; Hua Wu; Jenny Mellquist; Melissa Hammitt; Julie Koster; Satoru Kamoda; Katsumi Tachibana; Isao Ishida; James M. Robl

Antigen-specific human polyclonal antibodies (hpAbs), produced by hyperimmunization, could be useful for treating many human diseases. However, yields from available transgenic mice and transchromosomic (Tc) cattle carrying human immunoglobulin loci are too low for therapeutic applications. We report a Tc bovine system that produces large yields of hpAbs. Tc cattle were generated by transferring a human artificial chromosome vector carrying the entire unrearranged, human immunoglobulin heavy (hIGH) and κ-light (hIGK) chain loci to bovine fibroblasts in which two endogenous bovine IgH chain loci were inactivated. Plasma from the oldest animal contained >2 g/l of hIgG, paired with either human κ-light chain (up to ∼650 μg/ml, fully human) or with bovine κ- or λ-light chain (chimeric), with a normal hIgG subclass distribution. Hyperimmunization with anthrax protective antigen triggered a hIgG-mediated humoral immune response comprising a high proportion of antigen-specific hIgG. Purified, fully human and chimeric hIgGs were highly active in an in vitro toxin neutralization assay and protective in an in vivo mouse challenge assay.


Theriogenology | 2003

Artificial chromosome vectors and expression of complex proteins in transgenic animals

James Robl; Poothappillai Kasinathan; Eddie Sullivan; Yoshimi Kuroiwa; K Tomizuka; I Ishida

Artificial chromosome vectors are autonomous, replicating DNA sequences containing a centromere, two telomeres and origins of replication. Artificial chromosomes have been proposed as possible vectors for transferring very large sequences of DNA into animals. Our goal has been to insert the entire human heavy- and light-chain immunoglobulin loci into cattle as a step in developing a production system for large quantities of human therapeutic polyclonal antibodies. A mitotically stable fragment of chromosome 14, containing the human heavy-chain locus, was identified. A chromosome cloning system was used to transfer the human lambda locus from an unstable chromosome 22 fragment to the chromosome 14 fragment to create a human artificial chromosome (HAC) carrying both immunoglobulin loci. The HAC vector was introduced into bovine primary fibroblasts. Selected fibroblast clones were rejuvenated and expanded by producing cloned fetuses. Cloned fetal cells were selected and recloned to produce 21 healthy, transchromosomic (Tc) calves. Four were analyzed and shown to functionally rearrange both heavy- and light-chain human immunoglobulin loci and produce human polyclonal antibodies. These results demonstrate the feasibility of using HAC vectors for production of transgenic livestock. More importantly, Tc cattle containing human immunoglobulin genes may be used to produce novel human polyclonal therapeutics.


Genes to Cells | 2001

Tumour suppressor activity of human imprinted gene PEG3 in a glioma cell line

Takashi Kohda; Akio Asai; Yoshimi Kuroiwa; Shin Kobayashi; Kohzoh Aisaka; Goro Nagashima; Michihiro C. Yoshida; Yasumitsu Kondo; Naoto Kagiyama; Takaaki Kirino; Tomoko Kaneko-Ishino; Fumitoshi Ishino

Mouse imprinted gene Peg3 encodes a large C2H2 type zinc finger protein with unique characteristics. Peg3 knockout mice were found to show an impairment in maternal behaviour of the adult female. Mouse Peg3 is located on the proximal region of chromosome 7 which is syntenic to the long arm of human chromosome 19. It has been reported that a loss of heterozygosity (LOH) of chromosome 19q occurs frequently in several glioma types.


Gene Therapy | 2005

Human artificial chromosome (HAC) vector provides long-term therapeutic transgene expression in normal human primary fibroblasts.

Minoru Kakeda; Masaharu Hiratsuka; Keiko Nagata; Yoshimi Kuroiwa; Makoto Kakitani; Motonobu Katoh; Mitsuo Oshimura; Kazuma Tomizuka

Human artificial chromosomes (HACs) segregating freely from host chromosomes are potentially useful to ensure both safety and duration of gene expression in therapeutic gene delivery. However, low transfer efficiency of intact HACs to the cells has hampered the studies using normal human primary cells, the major targets for ex vivo gene therapy. To elucidate the potential of HACs to be vectors for gene therapy, we studied the introduction of the HAC vector, which is reduced in size and devoid of most expressed genes, into normal primary human fibroblasts (hPFs) with microcell-mediated chromosome transfer (MMCT). We demonstrated the generation of cytogenetically normal hPFs harboring the structurally defined and extra HAC vector. This introduced HAC vector was retained stably in hPFs without translocation of the HAC on host chromosomes. We also achieved the long-term production of human erythropoietin for at least 12 weeks in them. These results revealed the ability of HACs as novel options to circumvent issues of conventional vectors for gene therapy.


Gene Therapy | 2002

The use of chromosome-based vectors for animal transgenesis

Yoshimi Kuroiwa; H Yoshida; T Ohshima; T Shinohara; A Ohguma; Yasuhiro Kazuki; Mitsuo Oshimura; I Ishida; Kazuma Tomizuka

This article summarizes our efforts to use chromosome-based vectors for animal transgenesis, which may have a benefit for overcoming the size constraints of cloned transgenes in conventional techniques. Since the initial trial for introducing naturally occurring human chromosome fragments (hCFs) with large and complex immunogulobulin (Ig) loci into mice we have obtained several lines of trans-chromosomic (Tc) mice with transmittable hCFs. As expected the normal tissue-specific expression of introduced human genes was reproduced in them by inclusion of essential remote regulatory elements. Recent development of ‘chromosome cloning’ technique that enable construction of human artificial chromosomes (HACs) containing a defined chromosomal region should prevent the introduction of additional genes other than genes of interest and thus enhance the utility of chromosome vector system. Using this technique a panel of HACs harboring inserts ranging in size from 1.5 to 10 Mb from three human chromosomes (hChr2, 7, 22) has been constructed. Tc animals containing the HACs may be valuable not only as a powerful tool for functional genomics but also as an in vivo model to study therapeutic gene delivery by HACs.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2013

Trans-chromosomic mice containing a human CYP3A cluster for prediction of xenobiotic metabolism in humans

Yasuhiro Kazuki; Kaoru Kobayashi; Sasitorn Aueviriyavit; Takeshi Oshima; Yoshimi Kuroiwa; Yasuko Tsukazaki; Naoto Senda; Hiroki Kawakami; Sumio Ohtsuki; Satoshi Abe; Masato Takiguchi; Hidetoshi Hoshiya; Naoyo Kajitani; Shoko Takehara; Kinya Kubo; Tetsuya Terasaki; Kan Chiba; Kazuma Tomizuka; Mitsuo Oshimura

Human CYP3A is the most abundant P450 isozyme present in the human liver and small intestine, and metabolizes around 50% of medical drugs on the market. The human CYP3A subfamily comprises four members (CYP3A4, CYP3A5, CYP3A7, CYP3A43) encoded on human chromosome 7. However, transgenic mouse lines carrying the entire human CYP3A cluster have not been constructed because of limitations in conventional cloning techniques. Here, we show that the introduction of a human artificial chromosome (HAC) containing the entire genomic human CYP3A locus recapitulates tissue- and stage-specific expression of human CYP3A genes and xenobiotic metabolism in mice. About 700 kb of the entire CYP3A genomic segment was cloned into a HAC (CYP3A-HAC), and trans-chromosomic (Tc) mice carrying a single copy of germline-transmittable CYP3A-HAC were generated via a chromosome-engineering technique. The tissue- and stage-specific expression profiles of CYP3A genes were consistent with those seen in humans. We further generated mice carrying the CYP3A-HAC in the background homozygous for targeted deletion of most endogenous Cyp3a genes. In this mouse strain with fully humanized CYP3A genes, the kinetics of triazolam metabolism, CYP3A-mediated mechanism-based inactivation effects and formation of fetal-specific metabolites of dehydroepiandrosterone observed in humans were well reproduced. Thus, these mice are likely to be valuable in evaluating novel drugs metabolized by CYP3A enzymes and in studying the regulation of human CYP3A gene expression. Furthermore, this system can also be used for generating Tc mice carrying other human metabolic genes.

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Fumitoshi Ishino

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Takashi Kohda

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Poothappillai Kasinathan

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Naoki Miyoshi

Tokyo Institute of Technology

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