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Dive into the research topics where Yoshio Takei is active.

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Featured researches published by Yoshio Takei.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 2003

Molecular biology of major components of chloride cells

Shigehisa Hirose; Toyoji Kaneko; Nobuko Naito; Yoshio Takei

Current understanding of chloride cells (CCs) is briefly reviewed with emphasis on molecular aspects of their channels, transporters and regulators. Seawater-type and freshwater-type CCs have been identified based on their shape, location and response to different ionic conditions. Among the freshwater-type CCs, subpopulations are emerging that are implicated in the uptake of Na(+), Cl(-) and Ca(2+), respectively, and can be distinguished by their shape of apical crypt and affinity for lectins. The major function of the seawater CC is transcellular secretion of Cl(-), which is accomplished by four major channels and transporters: (1). CFTR Cl(-) channel, (2). Na(+),K(+)-ATPase, (3). Na(+)/K(+)/2Cl(-) cotransporter and (4). a K(+) channel. The first three components have been cloned and characterized, but concerning the K(+) channel that is essential for the continued generation of the driving force by Na(+),K(+)-ATPase, only one candidate is identified. Although controversial, freshwater CCs seem to perform the uptake of Na(+), Cl(-) and Ca(2+) in a manner analogous to but slightly different from that seen in the absorptive epithelia of mammalian kidney and intestine since freshwater CCs face larger concentration gradients than ordinary epithelial cells. The components involved in these processes are beginning to be cloned, but their CC localization remains to be established definitively. The most important yet controversial issue is the mechanism of Na(+) uptake. Two models have been postulated: (i). the original one involves amiloride-sensitive electroneutral Na(+)/H(+) exchanger (NHE) with the driving force generated by Na(+),K(+)-ATPase and carbonic anhydrase (CA) and (ii). the current model suggests that Na(+) uptake occurs through an amiloride-sensitive epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) electrogenically coupled to H(+)-ATPase. While fish ENaC remains to be identified by molecular cloning and database mining, fish NHE has been cloned and shown to be highly expressed on the apical membrane of CCs, reviving the original model. The CC is also involved in acid-base regulation. Analysis using Osorezan dace (Tribolodon hakonensis) living in a pH 3.5 lake demonstrated marked inductions of Na(+),K(+)-ATPase, CA-II, NHE3, Na(+)/HCO(3)(-) cotransporter-1 and aquaporin-3 in the CCs on acidification, leading to a working hypothesis for the mechanism of Na(+) retention and acid-base regulation.


FEBS Letters | 2004

Identification of novel adrenomedullin in mammals: a potent cardiovascular and renal regulator

Yoshio Takei; Koji Inoue; Maho Ogoshi; Tetsushi Kawahara; Hideo Bannai; Satoru Miyano

We have identified cDNA encoding a new member of the adrenomedullin (AM) family, AM2, for the first time in mammals (mouse, rat and human). The predicted precursor carried mature AM2 in the C‐terminus, which had an intramolecular ring formed by an S–S bond and a possibly amidated C‐terminus. Phylogenetic analyses clustered AM2 and AM into two distinct but closely related groups. Similarity of exon–intron structure and synteny of neighboring genes showed that mammalian AM2 is an ortholog of pufferfish AM2 and a paralog of mammalian AM. AM2 mRNA was expressed in submaxillary gland, kidney, stomach, ovary, lymphoid tissues and pancreas of mice, but not in adrenal and testis. Intravenous injection of synthetic mature AM2 decreased arterial pressure more potently than AM, and induced antidiuresis and antinatriuresis in mice. These results show that at least two peptides, AM and AM2, comprise an adrenomedullin family in mammals, and that AM2 may play pivotal roles in cardiovascular and body fluid regulation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Four functionally distinct C-type natriuretic peptides found in fish reveal evolutionary history of the natriuretic peptide system

Koji Inoue; Kiyoshi Naruse; Sayaka Yamagami; Hiroshi Mitani; Norio Suzuki; Yoshio Takei

Natriuretic peptides (NPs) are major cardiovascular and osmoregulatory hormones in vertebrates. Although tetrapods generally have three subtypes, atrial NP (ANP), B-type NP (BNP), and C-type NP (CNP), some teleosts lack BNP, and sharks and hagfish have only one NP. Thus, NPs have diverged during fish evolution, possibly reflecting changes in osmoregulatory systems. In this study, we found, by cDNA cloning, four distinct CNPs (1 through 4) in the medaka (Oryzias latipes) and puffer fish (Takifugu rubripes), although to our knowledge no more than two CNPs have been isolated from a vertebrate species. Predicted mature CNP-1 was most similar, and CNP-4 was most dissimilar, to mammalian CNPs. However, synthetic CNP-4 most potently activated OlGC1, a medaka CNP-specific receptor (NPR-B) expressed in cultured cells, whereas CNP-1 and CNP-3 most activated OlGC7 and OlGC2, two medaka homologues of the ANP/BNP receptor (NPR-A), respectively. Linkage mapping in medaka followed by comparative genomic analyses among fishes and humans located four CNP genes in separate medaka chromosomes corresponding to human chromosomes 1, 2, 12, and 17. From conserved synteny, the following evolutionary history of NPs was evoked: (i) four CNP genes were generated by chromosomal duplications before the divergence of elasmobranchs; (ii) the CNP-3 gene generated ANP and BNP genes through tandem duplication before the divergence of tetrapods and teleosts; (iii) CNP-1 and -2 genes were retained in the teleost lineage but not in the tetrapod lineage; (iv) the CNP-3 gene disappeared from the tetrapod lineage after divergence of amphibians; and (v) the CNP-4 gene is retained in humans as CNP.


International Review of Cytology-a Survey of Cell Biology | 1999

Structural and Functional Evolution of the Natriuretic Peptide System in Vertebrates

Yoshio Takei

The natriuretic peptide (NP) system consists of three types of hormones [atrial NP (ANP), brain or B-type NP (BNP), and C-type NP (CNP)] and three types of receptors [NP receptor (R)-A, NPR-B, and NPR-C]. ANP and BNP are circulating hormones secreted from the heart, whereas CNP is basically a neuropeptide. NPR-A and NPR-B are membrane-bound guanylyl cyclases, whereas NPR-C is assumed to function as a clearance-type receptor. ANP, BNP, and CNP occur commonly in all tetrapods, but ventricular NP replaces BNP in teleost fish. In elasmobranchs, only CNP is found, even in the heart, suggesting that CNP is an ancestral form. A new guanylyl cyclase-uncoupled receptor named NPR-D has been identified in the eel in addition to NPR-A, -B, and -C. The NP system plays pivotal roles in cardiovascular and body fluid homeostasis. ANP is secreted in response to an increase in blood volume and acts on various organs to decrease both water and Na+, resulting in restoration of blood volume. In the eel, however, ANP is secreted in response to an increase in plasma osmolality and decreases Na+ specifically, thereby promoting seawater adaptation. Therefore, it seems that the family of NPs were originally Na(+)-extruding hormones in fishes; however, they evolved to be volume-depleting hormones promoting the excretion of both Na+ and water in tetrapods in which both are always regulated in the same direction. Vertebrates expanded their habitats from fresh water to the sea or to land during evolution. The structure and function of osmoregulatory hormones have also undergone evolution during this ecological evolution. Thus, a comparative approach to the study of the NP family affords new insights into the essential function of this osmoregulatory hormone.


Zoological Science | 2002

Diverse Adaptability in Oryzias Species to High Environmental Salinity

Koji Inoue; Yoshio Takei

Abstract The genus Oryzias containing freshwater (FW) and seawater (SW) species is a potential model for studying mechanisms of osmotic adaptation. In this study, we compared SW adaptability of four Oryzias species, O. javanicus, O. dancena, O. latipes and O. marmoratus inhabiting different osmotic environments. SW adaptability was evaluated at several stages of the lifecycle: (i) survival rates of adult fish after transfer from FW to 50%SW or SW, (ii) spawning ability in FW and SW, (iii) fertilization rates in FW and SW, and (iv) hatching rates in FW, 50%SW and SW. Results obtained agreed with the natural habitat of each species: O. javanicus, which inhabits SW or brackish water (BW), is fully adaptable to both SW and FW at all the stages examined. The BW species O. dancena also revealed high SW adaptability except for the hatching rate. O. marmoratus, confined in FW, exhibited low SW adaptability at all stages examined while O. latipes, another FW species, was adaptable to SW at most stages examined. Based on these results, the role of SW adaptability to the distribution area of each species is discussed.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 2003

Asian medaka fishes offer new models for studying mechanisms of seawater adaptation

Koji Inoue; Yoshio Takei

Japanese medaka (Oryzias latipes) is a freshwater (FW) teleost that is popular throughout the world for laboratory use. In this paper, we discuss the utility of Japanese medaka and related species for studying mechanisms of seawater (SW) adaptation. In addition to general advantages as an experimental animal such as their daily spawning activity, transparency of embryos, short generation time and established transgenic techniques, Japanese medaka have some adaptability to SW unlike the strictly stenohaline zebrafish (Danio rerio). Since other species in the genus Oryzias exhibit different degrees of adaptability to SW, comparative studies between Japanese medaka, where molecular-biological and genetic information is abundant, and other Oryzias species are expected to present varying approaches to solving the problems of SW adaptation. We introduce some examples of interspecies comparison for SW adaptabilities both in adult fish and in embryos. Oryzias species are good models for evolutionary, ecological and zoogeographical studies and a relationship between SW adaptability and geographic distribution has been suggested. Medaka fishes may thus deliver new insights into our understanding of how fish have expanded their distribution to a wide variety of osmotic environments.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Multiplicity, structures, and endocrine and exocrine natures of eel fucose-binding lectins.

Shinji Honda; Masahide Kashiwagi; Kentaro Miyamoto; Yoshio Takei; Shigehisa Hirose

Lectins, a group of proteins that bind to cell surface carbohydrates and play important roles in innate immunity, are widely used experimentally to distinguish cell types and to induce cell proliferation. Eel serum lectins have been useful as anti-H hemagglutinins and also in lectin histochemistry as fucose-binding lectins (fucolectins), but their structures have not been determined. Here we report the primary structures and the sites of synthesis of eel fucolectins. Eel serum fucolectins were separated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and sequenced. cDNA cloning, based on the amino acid sequence information, and Northern blot analysis indicated that 1) the fucose-binding lectins are secretory proteins and have unique structures among the lectins, exhibiting only weak similarities to frog pentraxin, horseshoe crab tachylectin-4, and fly fw protein; 2) there are at least seven closely related members; and 3) their messages are abundantly expressed in the liver and in significant levels in the gill and intestine. The lectin-producing hepatic cells were identified by immunostaining; in the gill, exocrine mucous cells were stained, suggesting that serum fucolectins derive from the liver. Using primary culture of eel hepatocytes, the message levels were shown to be increased by lipopolysaccharide, suggesting a role for fucolectins in host defense. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis showed that eel fucolectins have a SDS-resistant tetrameric structure consisting of two disulfide-linked dimers.


Peptides | 2004

Novel fish-derived adrenomedullin in mammals: structure and possible function.

Yoshio Takei; Susumu Hyodo; Takeshi Katafuchi; Naoto Minamino

Adrenomedullin (AM) has been recognized as a member of the calcitonin (CT)/CT gene-related peptide (CGRP) family. However, an independent AM family consisting of five paralogous peptides exists in teleost fish. Among them, the peptide named AM1 is an ortholog of mammalian AM as determined by the linkage analysis of orthologous genes and the presence of proAM N-terminal 20 peptide (PAMP)-like sequence in the prosegment. Since the peptides named AM2 and 3 are distinct from other members with respect to the precursor sequence, tissue distribution of the transcripts, and exon-intron organization, we searched for their mammalian orthologs from genome databases, which resulted in an identification of AM2 in human, rat, and mouse. AM2 was expressed abundantly in the submaxillary gland, kidney, and some vascular and digestive tissues of mice. AM2 injected in vivo induced potent cardiovascular and renal effects in mice. In the heart and kidney of mice, AM2 was localized in endothelial cells of the coronary vessels and in glomeruli and vasa recta, respectively. AM2 increased cAMP accumulation in cells expressing human CT receptor-like receptor (CRLR) and one of receptor activity-modifying proteins (RAMPs), but it was no more potent than CGRP and AM. AM2 was also less potent than CT in cells expressing CT receptor and RAMP. There remains a possibility that a new AM2-specific receptor or an additional RAMP that enables CRLR to be an AM2-specific receptor, exists in mammals.


General and Comparative Endocrinology | 1979

Angiotensin and water intake in the Japanese eel, Anguilla japonica

Yoshio Takei; Tetsuya Hirano; Hideshi Kobayashi

Abstract Intraarterial injection of Asn1-Val5 angiotensin II amide (AII) into water-replete eels in fresh water elicited drinking within a few minutes after the injection. The reliable drinking was induced at 50 ng/100 g and the amount of water intake increased in a dose-dependent manner. Semipurified eel angiotensins were as potent as AII for induction of drinking. In dehydrated eels in seawater, AII accelerated the drinking rate. AII was still effective in freshwater eels after destruction of various forebrain and midbrain regions and even in the decerebrated eels in which the telencephalon, diencephalon, and a part of mesencephalon were removed. However, vagotomized eels failed to respond to AII by drinking. These results seem to indicate that AII acts on the central nervous system at a level lower than the diencephalon in the eel.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1989

Amino acid sequence and relative biological activity of eel atrial natriuretic peptide

Yoshio Takei; Akiyoshi Takahashi; Takushi X. Watanabe; Kiichiro Nakajima; Shumpei Sakakibara

A peptide exhibiting vasodepressor and natriuretic activities in rats was isolated from eel atria, and its primary structure was determined as H-Ser-Lys-Ser-Ser-Ser-Pro-Cys-Phe-Gly-Gly-Lys-Leu-Asp-Arg-Ile-Gly-Ser-Tyr-Ser- Gly-Leu-Gly-Cys-Asn-Ser-Arg-Lys-OH. This peptide, termed eel atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP), has sequence homology of 59% to mammalian (human or rat) ANP, 52% to fowl ANP, and 46% to frog ANP. When the biological activity of synthetic eel ANP was compared with that of human ANP, the eel peptide was 110 times more potent for the vasodepressor activity in eels, nearly equipotent for the vasodepressor activity in quails, and 20 times less potent for the vasodepressor and natriuretic activity in rats.

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Shigehisa Hirose

Tokyo Institute of Technology

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Kiichiro Nakajima

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Takushi X. Watanabe

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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Neil Hazon

University of St Andrews

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