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Dive into the research topics where Yuki Kuwano is active.

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Featured researches published by Yuki Kuwano.


PLOS ONE | 2008

p16INK4a translation suppressed by miR-24

Ashish Lal; Hyeon-Ho Kim; Kotb Abdelmohsen; Yuki Kuwano; Rudolf Pullmann; Subramanya Srikantan; Ramesh Subrahmanyam; Jennifer L. Martindale; Xiaoling Yang; Fariyal Ahmed; Francisco Navarro; Derek M. Dykxhoorn; Judy Lieberman; Myriam Gorospe

Background Expression of the tumor suppressor p16INK4a increases during aging and replicative senescence. Methodology/Principal Findings Here, we report that the microRNA miR-24 suppresses p16 expression in human diploid fibroblasts and cervical carcinoma cells. Increased p16 expression with replicative senescence was associated with decreased levels of miR-24, a microRNA that was predicted to associate with the p16 mRNA coding and 3′-untranslated regions. Ectopic miR-24 overexpression reduced p16 protein but not p16 mRNA levels. Conversely, introduction of antisense (AS)-miR-24 blocked miR-24 expression and markedly enhanced p16 protein levels, p16 translation, and the production of EGFP-p16 reporter bearing the miR-24 target recognition sites. Conclusions/Significance Together, our results suggest that miR-24 represses the initiation and elongation phases of p16 translation.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2008

RNA-Binding Proteins HuR and PTB Promote the Translation of Hypoxia-Inducible Factor 1α

Stefanie Galban; Yuki Kuwano; Rudolf Pullmann; Jennifer L. Martindale; Hyeon Ho Kim; Ashish Lal; Kotb Abdelmohsen; Xiaoling Yang; Youngjun Dang; Jun O. Liu; Stephen M. Lewis; Martin Holcik; Myriam Gorospe

ABSTRACT The levels of hypoxia-inducible factor 1α (HIF-1α) are tightly controlled. Here, we investigated the posttranscriptional regulation of HIF-1α expression in human cervical carcinoma HeLa cells responding to the hypoxia mimetic CoCl2. Undetectable in untreated cells, HIF-1α levels increased dramatically in CoCl2-treated cells, while HIF-1α mRNA levels were unchanged. HIF-1α translation was potently elevated by CoCl2 treatment, as determined by de novo translation analysis and by monitoring the polysomal association of HIF-1α mRNA. An internal ribosome entry site in the HIF-1α 5′ untranslated region (UTR) was found to enhance translation constitutively, but it did not further induce translation in response to CoCl2 treatment. Instead, we postulated that RNA-binding proteins HuR and PTB, previously shown to bind HIF-1α mRNA, participated in its translational upregulation after CoCl2 treatment. Indeed, both RNA-binding proteins were found to bind HIF-1α mRNA in a CoCl2-inducible manner as assessed by immunoprecipitation of endogenous ribonucleoprotein complexes. Using a chimeric reporter, polypyrimidine tract-binding protein (PTB) was found to bind the HIF-1α 3′UTR, while HuR associated principally with the 5′UTR. Lowering PTB expression or HuR expression using RNA interference reduced HIF-1α translation and expression levels but not HIF-1α mRNA abundance. Conversely, HIF-1α expression and translation in response to CoCl2 were markedly elevated after HuR overexpression. We propose that HuR and PTB jointly upregulate HIF-1α translation in response to CoCl2.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2008

MKP-1 mRNA Stabilization and Translational Control by RNA-Binding Proteins HuR and NF90†

Yuki Kuwano; Hyeon Ho Kim; Kotb Abdelmohsen; Rudolf Pullmann; Jennifer L. Martindale; Xiaoling Yang; Myriam Gorospe

ABSTRACT The mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase phosphatase 1 (MKP-1) plays a major role in dephosphorylating and thereby inactivating the MAP kinases extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), and p38. Here, we examine the posttranscriptional events underlying the robust MKP-1 induction by oxidants in HeLa cells. H2O2 treatment potently stabilized the MKP-1 mRNA and increased the association of MKP-1 mRNA with the translation machinery. Four RNA-binding proteins (RNA-BPs) that influence mRNA turnover and/or translation (HuR, NF90, TIAR, and TIA-1) were found to bind to biotinylated transcripts spanning the MKP-1 AU-rich 3′ untranslated region. By using ribonucleoprotein immunoprecipitation analysis, we showed that H2O2 treatment increased the association of MKP-1 mRNA with HuR and NF90 and decreased its association with the translational repressors TIAR and TIA-1. HuR or NF90 silencing significantly diminished the H2O2-stimulated MKP-1 mRNA stability; HuR silencing also markedly decreased MKP-1 translation. In turn, lowering MKP-1 expression in HuR-silenced cultures resulted in substantially elevated phosphorylation of JNK and p38 after H2O2 treatment. Collectively, MKP-1 upregulation by oxidative stress is potently influenced by increased mRNA stability and translation, mediated at least in part by the RNA-BPs HuR and NF90.


Biological Chemistry | 2008

Posttranscriptional gene regulation by RNA-binding proteins during oxidative stress: implications for cellular senescence.

Kotb Abdelmohsen; Yuki Kuwano; Hyeon Ho Kim; Myriam Gorospe

Abstract To respond adequately to oxidative stress, mammalian cells elicit rapid and tightly controlled changes in gene expression patterns. Besides alterations in the subsets of transcribed genes, two posttranscriptional processes prominently influence the oxidant-triggered gene expression programs: mRNA turnover and translation. Here, we review recent progress in our knowledge of the turnover and translation regulatory (TTR) mRNA-binding proteins (RBPs) that influence gene expression in response to oxidative damage. Specifically, we identify oxidant damage-regulated mRNAs that are targets of TTR-RBPs, we review the oxidant-triggered signaling pathways that govern TTR-RBP function, and we examine emerging evidence that TTR-RBP activity is altered with senescence and aging. Given the potent influence of TTR-RBPs upon oxidant-regulated gene expression profiles, we propose that the senescence-associated changes in TTR-RBPs directly contribute to the impaired responses to oxidant damage that characterize cellular senescence and advancing age.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

miR-519 reduces cell proliferation by lowering RNA-binding protein HuR levels

Kotb Abdelmohsen; Subramanya Srikantan; Yuki Kuwano; Myriam Gorospe

Gene expression is potently regulated through the action of RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) and microRNAs (miRNAs). Here, we present evidence of a miRNA regulating an RBP. The RBP HuR can stabilize and modulate the translation of numerous target mRNAs involved in cell proliferation, but little is known about the mechanisms that regulate HuR abundance. We identified two putative sites of miR-519 interaction on the HuR mRNA, one in its coding region (CR), one in its 3′-untranslated region (UTR). In several human carcinoma cell lines tested, HeLa (cervical), HCT116 and RKO (colon), and A2780 (ovarian), overexpression of a miR-519 precursor [(Pre)miR-519] reduced HuR abundance, while inhibiting miR-519 by using an antisense RNA [(AS)miR-519] elevated HuR levels. The influence of miR-519 was recapitulated using heterologous reporter constructs that revealed a greater repressive effect on the HuR CR than the HuR 3′-UTR target sequences. miR-519 did not alter HuR mRNA abundance, but reduced HuR biosynthesis, as determined by measuring nascent HuR translation and HuR mRNA association with polysomes. Modulation of miR-519 leading to altered HuR levels in turn affected the levels of proteins encoded by HuR target mRNAs. In keeping with HuRs proliferative influence, (AS)miR-519 significantly increased cell number and [3H]-thymidine incorporation, while (Pre)miR-519 reduced these parameters. Importantly, the growth-promoting effects of (AS)miR-519 required the presence of HuR, because downregulation of HuR by RNAi dramatically suppressed its proliferative action. In sum, miR-519 represses HuR translation, in turn reducing HuR-regulated gene expression and cell division.


Cancer Research | 2009

The mRNA-destabilizing protein tristetraprolin is suppressed in many cancers, altering tumorigenic phenotypes and patient prognosis

Sarah E. Brennan; Yuki Kuwano; Nadim W. Alkharouf; Perry J. Blackshear; Myriam Gorospe; Gerald M. Wilson

AU-rich element-binding proteins (ARE-BP) regulate the stability and/or translational efficiency of mRNAs containing cognate binding sites. Many targeted transcripts encode factors that control processes such as cell division, apoptosis, and angiogenesis, suggesting that dysregulated ARE-BP expression could dramatically influence oncogenic phenotypes. Using several approaches, we evaluated the expression of four well-characterized ARE-BPs across a variety of human neoplastic syndromes. AUF1, TIA-1, and HuR mRNAs were not systematically dysregulated in cancers; however, tristetraprolin mRNA levels were significantly decreased across many tumor types, including advanced cancers of the breast and prostate. Restoring tristetraprolin expression in an aggressive tumor cell line suppressed three key tumorgenic phenotypes: cell proliferation, resistance to proapoptotic stimuli, and expression of vascular endothelial growth factor mRNA. However, the cellular consequences of tristetraprolin expression varied across different cell models. Analyses of gene array data sets revealed that suppression of tristetraprolin expression is a negative prognostic indicator in breast cancer, because patients with low tumor tristetraprolin mRNA levels were more likely to present increased pathologic tumor grade, vascular endothelial growth factor expression, and mortality from recurrent disease. Collectively, these data establish that tristetraprolin expression is frequently suppressed in human cancers, which in turn can alter tumorigenic phenotypes that influence patient outcomes.


Journal of Immunology | 2004

Role of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidase 1 in oxidative burst response to toll-like receptor 5 signaling in large intestinal epithelial cells

Tsukasa Kawahara; Yuki Kuwano; Shigetada Teshima-Kondo; Ryu Takeya; Hideki Sumimoto; Kyoichi Kishi; Shohko Tsunawaki; Toshiya Hirayama; Kazuhito Rokutan

The NADPH oxidase 1 (Nox1) is a gp91phox homologue preferentially expressed in the colon. We have established primary cultures of guinea pig large intestinal epithelial cells giving 90% purity of surface mucous cells. These cells spontaneously released superoxide anion (O2−) of 160 nmol/mg protein/h and expressed the Nox1, p22phox, p67phox, and Rac1 mRNAs, but not the gp91phox, Nox4, p47phox, p40phox, and Rac2 mRNAs. They also expressed novel homologues of p47phox and p67phox (p41nox and p51nox, respectively). Human colon cancer cell lines (T84 and Caco2 cells) expressed the Nox1, p22phox, p51nox, and Rac1 mRNAs, but not the other NADPH component mRNAs, and secreted only small amounts of O2− (<2 nmol/mg protein/h). Cotransfection of p41nox and p51nox cDNAs in T84 cells enhanced PMA-stimulated O2− release 5-fold. Treatment of the transfected T84 cells with recombinant flagellin (rFliC) from Salmonella enteritidis further augmented the O2− release in association with the induction of Nox1 protein. The enhanced O2− production by cotransfection of p41nox and p51nox vectors further augmented the rFliC-stimulated IL-8 release from T84 cells. T84 cells expressed the Toll-like receptor 5, and rFliC rapidly phosphorylated TGF-β-activated kinase 1 and TGF-β-activated kinase 1-binding protein 1. A potent inhibitor for NF-κB (pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate) significantly blocked the rFliC-primed increase in O2− production and induction of Nox1 protein. These results suggest that p41nox and p51nox are involved in the Nox1 activation in surface mucous cells of the colon, and besides that, epithelial cells discern pathogenicities among bacteria to appropriately operate Nox1 for the host defense.


The EMBO Journal | 2009

Ubiquitin‐mediated proteolysis of HuR by heat shock

Kotb Abdelmohsen; Subramanya Srikantan; Xiaoling Yang; Ashish Lal; Hyeon Ho Kim; Yuki Kuwano; Stefanie Galban; Kevin G. Becker; Davida Kamara; Rafael de Cabo; Myriam Gorospe

The RNA‐binding protein HuR regulates the stability and translation of numerous mRNAs encoding stress‐response and proliferative proteins. Although its post‐transcriptional influence has been linked primarily to its cytoplasmic translocation, here we report that moderate heat shock (HS) potently reduces HuR levels, thereby altering the expression of HuR target mRNAs. HS did not change HuR mRNA levels or de novo translation, but instead reduced HuR protein stability. Supporting the involvement of the ubiquitin–proteasome system in this process were results showing that (1) HuR was ubiquitinated in vitro and in intact cells, (2) proteasome inhibition increased HuR abundance after HS, and (3) the HuR kinase checkpoint kinase 2 protected against the loss of HuR by HS. Within a central, HS‐labile ∼110‐amino‐acid region, K182 was found to be essential for HuR ubiquitination and proteolysis as mutant HuR(K182R) was left virtually unubiquitinated and was refractory to HS‐triggered degradation. Our findings reveal that HS transiently lowers HuR by proteolysis linked to K182 ubiquitination and that HuR reduction enhances cell survival following HS.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2010

miR-375 Inhibits Differentiation of Neurites by Lowering HuD Levels

Kotb Abdelmohsen; Emmette R. Hutchison; Eun Kyung Lee; Yuki Kuwano; Mihee M. Kim; Kiyoshi Masuda; Subramanya Srikantan; Sarah S. Subaran; Bernard S. Marasa; Mark P. Mattson; Myriam Gorospe

ABSTRACT Neuronal development and plasticity are maintained by tightly regulated gene expression programs. Here, we report that the developmentally regulated microRNA miR-375 affects dendrite formation and maintenance. miR-375 overexpression in mouse hippocampus potently reduced dendrite density. We identified the predominantly neuronal RNA-binding protein HuD as a key effector of miR-375 influence on dendrite maintenance. Heterologous reporter analysis verified that miR-375 repressed HuD expression through a specific, evolutionarily conserved site on the HuD 3′ untranslated region. miR-375 overexpression lowered both HuD mRNA stability and translation and recapitulated the effects of HuD silencing, which reduced the levels of target proteins with key functions in neuronal signaling and cytoskeleton organization (N-cadherin, PSD-95, RhoA, NCAM1, and integrin α1). Moreover, the increase in neurite outgrowth after brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) treatment was diminished by miR-375 overexpression; this effect was rescued by reexpression of miR-375-refractory HuD. Our findings indicate that miR-375 modulates neuronal HuD expression and function, in turn affecting dendrite abundance.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2010

hnRNP C promotes APP translation by competing with FMRP for APP mRNA recruitment to P bodies

Eun Kyung Lee; Hyeon Ho Kim; Yuki Kuwano; Kotb Abdelmohsen; Subramanya Srikantan; Sarah S. Subaran; Marc Gleichmann; Mohammed Mughal; Jennifer L. Martindale; Xiaoling Yang; Paul F. Worley; Mark P. Mattson; Myriam Gorospe

Amyloid precursor protein (APP) regulates neuronal synapse function, and its cleavage product Aβ is linked to Alzheimers disease. Here, we present evidence that the RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (hnRNP) C and fragile X mental retardation protein (FMRP) associate with the same APP mRNA coding region element, and they influence APP translation competitively and in opposite directions. Silencing hnRNP C increased FMRP binding to APP mRNA and repressed APP translation, whereas silencing FMRP enhanced hnRNP C binding and promoted translation. Repression of APP translation was linked to colocalization of FMRP and tagged APP RNA within processing bodies; this colocalization was abrogated by hnRNP C overexpression or FMRP silencing. Our findings indicate that FMRP represses translation by recruiting APP mRNA to processing bodies, whereas hnRNP C promotes APP translation by displacing FMRP, thereby relieving the translational block.

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Myriam Gorospe

National Institutes of Health

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Ken Kurokawa

University of Tokushima

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Yoko Akaike

University of Tokushima

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