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Dive into the research topics where Yuji Nakayama is active.

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Featured researches published by Yuji Nakayama.


Genes to Cells | 2011

SIRT2 down-regulation in HeLa can induce p53 accumulation via p38 MAPK activation-dependent p300 decrease, eventually leading to apoptosis

Yanze Li; Haruka Matsumori; Yuji Nakayama; Mitsuhiko Osaki; Hirotada Kojima; Akihiro Kurimasa; Hisao Ito; Seiichi Mori; Motonobu Katoh; Mitsuo Oshimura; Toshiaki Inoue

We previously reported that sirtuin 2 (SIRT2), a mammalian member of the NAD+‐dependent protein deacetylases, participates in mitotic regulation, specifically, in efficient mitotic cell death caused by the spindle checkpoint. Here, we describe a novel function of SIRT2 that is different from mitotic regulation. SIRT2 down‐regulation using siRNA caused apoptosis in cancer cell lines such as HeLa cells, but not in normal cells. The apoptosis was caused by p53 accumulation, which is mediated by p38 MAPK activation‐dependent degradation of p300 and the subsequent MDM2 degradation. Sirtuin inhibitors are emerging as antitumor drugs, and this function has been ascribed to the inhibition of SIRT1, the most well‐characterized sirtuin that deacetylases p53 to promote cell survival and also binds to other proteins in response to genotoxic stress. This study suggests that SIRT2 can be a novel molecular target for cancer therapy and provides a molecular basis for the efficacy of SIRT2 for future cancer therapy.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2004

Trafficking of Lyn through the Golgi caveolin involves the charged residues on αE and αI helices in the kinase domain

Kousuke Kasahara; Yuji Nakayama; Kikuko Ikeda; Yuka Fukushima; Daisuke Matsuda; Shinya Horimoto; Naoto Yamaguchi

Src-family kinases, known to participate in signaling pathways of a variety of surface receptors, are localized to the cytoplasmic side of the plasma membrane through lipid modification. We show here that Lyn, a member of the Src-family kinases, is biosynthetically transported to the plasma membrane via the Golgi pool of caveolin along the secretory pathway. The trafficking of Lyn from the Golgi apparatus to the plasma membrane is inhibited by deletion of the kinase domain or Csk-induced “closed conformation” but not by kinase inactivation. Four residues (Asp346 and Glu353 on αE helix, and Asp498 and Asp499 on αI helix) present in the C-lobe of the kinase domain, which can be exposed to the molecular surface through an “open conformation,” are identified as being involved in export of Lyn from the Golgi apparatus toward the plasma membrane but not targeting to the Golgi apparatus. Thus, the kinase domain of Lyn plays a role in Lyn trafficking besides catalysis of substrate phosphorylation.


PLOS ONE | 2011

A Method for Producing Transgenic Cells Using a Multi-Integrase System on a Human Artificial Chromosome Vector

Shigeyuki Yamaguchi; Yasuhiro Kazuki; Yuji Nakayama; Eiji Nanba; Mitsuo Oshimura; Tetsuya Ohbayashi

The production of cells capable of expressing gene(s) of interest is important for a variety of applications in biomedicine and biotechnology, including gene therapy and animal transgenesis. The ability to insert transgenes at a precise location in the genome, using site-specific recombinases such as Cre, FLP, and ΦC31, has major benefits for the efficiency of transgenesis. Recent work on integrases from ΦC31, R4, TP901-1 and Bxb1 phages demonstrated that these recombinases catalyze site-specific recombination in mammalian cells. In the present study, we examined the activities of integrases on site-specific recombination and gene expression in mammalian cells. We designed a human artificial chromosome (HAC) vector containing five recombination sites (ΦC31 attP, R4 attP, TP901-1 attP, Bxb1 attP and FRT; multi-integrase HAC vector) and de novo mammalian codon-optimized integrases. The multi-integrase HAC vector has several functions, including gene integration in a precise locus and avoiding genomic position effects; therefore, it was used as a platform to investigate integrase activities. Integrases carried out site-specific recombination at frequencies ranging from 39.3–96.8%. Additionally, we observed homogenous gene expression in 77.3–87.5% of colonies obtained using the multi-integrase HAC vector. This vector is also transferable to another cell line, and is capable of accepting genes of interest in this environment. These data suggest that integrases have high DNA recombination efficiencies in mammalian cells. The multi-integrase HAC vector enables us to produce transgene-expressing cells efficiently and create platform cell lines for gene expression.


Cell Cycle | 2009

SIRT2 downregulation confers resistance to microtubule inhibitors by prolonging chronic mitotic arrest

Toshiaki Inoue; Yuji Nakayama; Hidetoshi Yamada; Yanze C. Li; Shigeyuki Yamaguchi; Mitsuhiko Osaki; Akihiro Kurimasa; Masaharu Hiratsuka; Motonobu Katoh; Mitsuo Oshimura

We previously identified SIRT2, a deacetylase for tubulin and histone H4, as a protein down-regulated in gliomas, and reported that exogenously-expressed SIRT2 arrests the cell cycle prior to entry into mitosis to prevent chromosomal instability in response to microtubule inhibitors (MTIs) such as nocodazole, characteristics previously reported for the CHFR protein. We herein investigated the effects of SIRT2 downregulation on sensitivity to MTIs using HCT116 cells, a mitotic checkpoint-proficient near-diploid cancer cell line used for studying checkpoints. We found that SIRT2 downregulation confers resistance to MTIs as well as that of BubR1, a well-characterized mitotic checkpoint protein, though by a different mechanism. While BubR1 suppression abolished spindle checkpoint functions, which is a requirement for cell death after release from the spindle checkpoint, SIRT2 downregulation prolonged chronic mitotic arrest from sustained activation of the mitotic checkpoint and consequently prevented a shift to secondary outcomes, including cell death, after release from chronic mitotic arrest. Consistent with this notion, BubR1 downregulation was dominant over SIRT2 knockdown in regard to mitotic regulation in the presence of nocodazole. These results suggest that SIRT2 functions to release chronic mitotic arrest in cells treated with MTIs, leading to other outcomes. We also found that SIRT2 downregulation caused centrosome fragmentation in response to nocodazole prior to the alteration in spindle checkpoint function, implying not only a novel function of SIRT2 for centrosome maintenance upon exposure to mitotic stress caused by MTIs, but also the existence of a centrosome-mediated signaling pathway to sustain the spindle checkpoint. Therefore, this study highlights a novel pathway leading to resistance to MTIs, in which SIRT2 downregulation participates.


Molecular Carcinogenesis | 1998

Mapping a novel cellular-senescence gene to human chromosome 2q37 by irradiation microcell-mediated chromosome transfer

Hiroshi Uejima; Tokuyuki Shinohara; Yuji Nakayama; Hiroyuki Kugoh; Mitsuo Oshimura

To identify the subchromosomal region that carries the cellular‐senescence–restoring program of the human cervical carcinoma cell line SiHa, we constructed by irradiation microcell‐mediated chromosome transfer a library of mouse A9 cells containing various fragments of human chromosome 2 tagged with pSV2neo in 2p11‐p12. Eighty‐seven clones were isolated and screened for the presence of human sequences by inter‐Alu and inter‐L1 polymerase chain reaction (PCR), and six clones exhibiting PCR‐laddering patterns that differed from those of the A9 cells containing an intact chromosome 2 were examined further. Chromosome analysis and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) using human‐specific repetitive sequences revealed that four of these clones contained single subchromosomal transferable fragments (STFs). Southern blot hybridization of 14 cosmid markers revealed that the STFs in A9 cells were derived from human chromosome 2. These STFs were transferred into SiHa cells by microcell fusion, and one of the STFs restored the cellular‐senescence program. The concordance of the cellular‐senescence–restoring program with the presence or absence of specific DNA fragments of chromosome 2 indicated that the putative cellular‐senescence gene was located in 2q32‐qter. For more detailed mapping, we constructed mouse A9 cells containing STFs derived from human chromosome 2 tagged with pSTneo at different regions in 2q31‐qter. PCR‐laddering and FISH analyses were used to identify six clones that contained different STFs. These STFs were transferred into SiHa cells, and one of the three clones that restored cellular senescence contained a small fragment of human chromosome 2. This STF was shown by PCR analysis using 14 human chromosome 2–specific primer pairs to be smaller than 12.2 cM and was mapped to the 2q37 region by FISH anaysis with inter‐Alu PCR. β‐Galactosidase activity, which is a biomarker of senescent cells, and telomerase activity similar to that found in parental SiHa cells were detected in SiHa microcell hybrids, suggesting that the putative cellular‐senescence gene was not involved in a telomerase pathway but rather in an alternate pathway of cellular senescence. Mol. Carcinog. 22:34–45, 1998.


FEBS Journal | 2014

SIRT2 knockdown increases basal autophagy and prevents postslippage death by abnormally prolonging the mitotic arrest that is induced by microtubule inhibitors.

Toshiaki Inoue; Yuji Nakayama; Yanze Li; Haruka Matsumori; Haruka Takahashi; Hirotada Kojima; Hideki Wanibuchi; Motonobu Katoh; Mitsuo Oshimura

Mitotic catastrophe, a form of cell death that occurs during mitosis and after mitotic slippage to a tetraploid state, plays important roles in the efficacy of cancer cell killing by microtubule inhibitors (MTIs). Prolonged mitotic arrest by the spindle assembly checkpoint is a well‐known requirement for mitotic catastrophe, and thus for conferring sensitivity to MTIs. We previously reported that turning off spindle assembly checkpoint activation after a defined period of time is another requirement for efficient postslippage death from a tetraploid state, and we identified SIRT2, a member of the sirtuin protein family, as a regulator of this process. Here, we investigated whether SIRT2 regulates basal autophagy and whether, in that case, autophagy regulation by SIRT2 is required for postslippage death, by analogy with previous insights into SIRT1 functions in autophagy. We show, by combined knockdown of autophagy genes and SIRT2, that SIRT2 serves this function at least partially by suppressing basal autophagy levels. Notably, increased autophagy induced by rapamycin and mild starvation caused mitotic arrest for an abnormally long period of time in the presence of MTIs, and this was followed by delayed postslippage death, which was also observed in cells with SIRT2 knockdown. These results underscore a causal association among increased autophagy levels, mitotic arrest for an abnormally long period of time after exposure to MTIs, and resistance to MTIs. Although autophagy acts as a tumor suppressor mechanism, this study highlights its negative aspects, as increased autophagy may cause mitotic catastrophe malfunction. Thus, SIRT2 offers a novel target for tumor therapy.


BMC Biotechnology | 2010

Exploitation of the interaction of measles virus fusogenic envelope proteins with the surface receptor CD46 on human cells for microcell-mediated chromosome transfer

Motonobu Katoh; Yasuhiro Kazuki; Kanako Kazuki; Naoyo Kajitani; Masato Takiguchi; Yuji Nakayama; Takafumi Nakamura; Mitsuo Oshimura

BackgroundMicrocell-mediated chromosome transfer (MMCT) is a technique by which a chromosome(s) is moved from donor to recipient cells by microcell fusion. Polyethylene glycol (PEG) has conventionally been used as a fusogen, and has been very successful in various genetic studies. However, PEG is not applicable for all types of recipient cells, because of its cell type-dependent toxicity. The cytotoxicity of PEG limits the yield of microcell hybrids to low level (10-6 to 10-5 per recipient cells). To harness the full potential of MMCT, a less toxic and more efficient fusion protocol that can be easily manipulated needs to be developed.ResultsMicrocell donor CHO cells carrying a human artificial chromosome (HAC) were transfected with genes encoding hemagglutinin (H) and fusion (F) proteins of an attenuated Measles Virus (MV) Edmonston strain. Mixed culture of the CHO transfectants and MV infection-competent human fibrosarcoma cells (HT1080) formed multinucleated syncytia, suggesting the functional expression of the MV-H/F in the CHO cells. Microcells were prepared and applied to HT1080 cells, human immortalized mesenchymal stem cells (hiMSC), and primary fibroblasts. Drug-resistant cells appeared after selection in culture with Blasticidin targeted against the tagged selection marker gene on the HAC. The fusion efficiency was determined by counting the total number of stable clones obtained in each experiment. Retention of the HAC in the microcell hybrids was confirmed by FISH analyses. The three recipient cell lines displayed distinct fusion efficiencies that depended on the cell-surface expression level of CD46, which acts as a receptor for MV. In HT1080 and hiMSC, the maximum efficiency observed was 50 and 100 times greater than that using conventional PEG fusion, respectively. However, the low efficiency of PEG-induced fusion with HFL1 was not improved by the MV fusogen.ConclusionsEctopic expression of MV envelope proteins provides an efficient recipient cell-oriented MMCT protocol, facilitating extensive applications for studies of gene function and genetic corrections.


Pacing and Clinical Electrophysiology | 2010

Identification, Isolation and Characterization of HCN4-Positive Pacemaking Cells Derived from Murine Embryonic Stem Cells during Cardiac Differentiation

Kumi Morikawa; Udin Bahrudin; Junichiro Miake; Osamu Igawa; Yasutaka Kurata; Yuji Nakayama; Yasuaki Shirayoshi; Ichiro Hisatome

Background: Development of biological pacemaker is a potential treatment for bradyarrhythmias. Pacemaker cells could be extracted from differentiated embryonic stem (ES) cells based on their specific cell marker hyperpolarization‐activated cyclic nucleotide‐gated (HCN)4. The goal of this study was to develop a method of identification, isolation, and characterization of pacemaking cells derived from differentiated ES cells with GFP driven by HCN4 promoter.


Scientific Reports | 2016

FAM83H and casein kinase I regulate the organization of the keratin cytoskeleton and formation of desmosomes

Takahisa Kuga; Mitsuho Sasaki; Toshinari Mikami; Yasuo Miake; Jun Adachi; Maiko Shimizu; Youhei Saito; Minako Koura; Yasunori Takeda; Junichiro Matsuda; Takeshi Tomonaga; Yuji Nakayama

FAM83H is essential for the formation of dental enamel because a mutation in the FAM83H gene causes amelogenesis imperfecta (AI). We previously reported that the overexpression of FAM83H often occurs and disorganizes the keratin cytoskeleton in colorectal cancer cells. We herein show that FAM83H regulates the organization of the keratin cytoskeleton and maintains the formation of desmosomes in ameloblastoma cells. FAM83H is expressed and localized on keratin filaments in human ameloblastoma cell lines and in mouse ameloblasts and epidermal germinative cells in vivo. FAM83H shows preferential localization to keratin filaments around the nucleus that often extend to cell-cell junctions. Alterations in the function of FAM83H by its overexpression, knockdown, or an AI-causing truncated mutant prevent the proper organization of the keratin cytoskeleton in ameloblastoma cells. Furthermore, the AI-causing mutant prevents desmosomal proteins from being localized to cell-cell junctions. The effects of the AI-causing mutant depend on its binding to and possible inhibition of casein kinase I (CK-1). The suppression of CK-1 by its inhibitor, D4476, disorganizes the keratin cytoskeleton. Our results suggest that AI caused by the FAM83H mutation is mediated by the disorganization of the keratin cytoskeleton and subsequent disruption of desmosomes in ameloblasts.


Clinical and Experimental Nephrology | 2004

A case of Wegener's granulomatosis with pulmonary bleeding successfully treated with double filtration plasmapheresis (DFPP)

Hirotsugu Iwatani; Takashi Uzu; Masahiro Kakihara; Yuji Nakayama; Keizo Kanasaki; Masaya Yamato; Yasuhiro Hirai; Koichi Umimoto; Atsushi Yamauchi

We report a case of a 41-year-old Japanese man who presented with rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis, chronic sinusitis, and positive cytoplasmic-antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (c-ANCA). Renal biopsy showed crescentic glomerulonephritis, and he was diagnosed as having Wegener’s granulomatosis. During the clinical course, he suffered from pulmonary bleeding, and combination therapy of steroid, immunosuppressant, and double filtration plasmapheresis (DFPP) was started. He rapidly entered remission after assistance through DFPP, suggesting the potential efficacy of DFPP for Wegener’s granulomatosis, especially with pulmonary bleeding.

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Takahisa Kuga

Kyoto Pharmaceutical University

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Youhei Saito

Kyoto Pharmaceutical University

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