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Dive into the research topics where Yukiko M. Yamashita is active.

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Featured researches published by Yukiko M. Yamashita.


The EMBO Journal | 1994

Fission yeast cut3 and cut14, members of a ubiquitous protein family, are required for chromosome condensation and segregation in mitosis.

Yasushi Saka; Takashi Sutani; Yukiko M. Yamashita; Shigeaki Saitoh; Masahiro Takeuchi; Yukinobu Nakaseko; Mitsuhiro Yanagida

Fission yeast temperature‐sensitive mutants cut3‐477 and cut14‐208 fail to condense chromosomes but small portions of the chromosomes can separate along the spindle during mitosis, producing phi‐shaped chromosomes. Septation and cell division occur in the absence of normal nuclear division, causing the cut phenotype. Fluorescence in situ hybridization demonstrated that the contraction of the chromosome arm during mitosis was defective. Mutant chromosomes are apparently not rigid enough to be transported poleward by the spindle. Loss of the cut3 protein by gene disruption fails to maintain the nuclear chromatin architecture even in interphase. Both cut3 and cut14 proteins contain a putative nucleoside triphosphate (NTP)‐binding domain and belong to the same ubiquitous protein family which includes the budding yeast Smc1 protein. The cut3 mutant was suppressed by an increase in the cut14+ gene dosage. The cut3 protein, having the highest similarity to the mouse protein, is localized in the nucleus throughout the cell cycle. Plasmids carrying the DNA topoisomerase I gene partly suppressed the temperature sensitive phenotype of cut3‐477, suggesting that the cut3 protein might be involved in chromosome DNA topology.


The EMBO Journal | 1999

Mre11 is essential for the maintenance of chromosomal DNA in vertebrate cells

Yuko Yamaguchi-Iwai; Eiichiro Sonoda; Masao S. Sasaki; Ciaran G. Morrison; Tokuko Haraguchi; Yasushi Hiraoka; Yukiko M. Yamashita; Takashi Yagi; Minoru Takata; Carolyn M. Price; Naoki Kakazu; Shunichi Takeda

Yeast Mre11 functions with Rad50 and Xrs2 in a complex that has pivotal roles in homologous recombination (HR) and non‐homologous end‐joining (NHEJ) DNA double‐strand break (DSB) repair pathways. Vertebrate Mre11 is essential. Conditionally, MRE11 null chicken DT40 cells accumulate chromosome breaks and die upon Mre11 repression, showing frequent centrosome amplification. Mre11 deficiency also causes increased radiosensitivity and strongly reduced targeted integration frequencies. Mre11 is, therefore, crucial for HR and essential in mitosis through its role in chromosome maintenance by recombinational repair. Surprisingly perhaps, given the role of Mre11 in yeast NHEJ, disruption of NHEJ by deletion of KU70 greatly exacerbates the effects of MRE11 deficiency, revealing a significant Mre11‐independent component of metazoan NHEJ.


Nature | 2008

Centrosome misorientation reduces stem cell division during ageing.

Jun Cheng; Nezaket Turkel; Nahid Hemati; Margaret T. Fuller; Alan J. Hunt; Yukiko M. Yamashita

Asymmetric division of adult stem cells generates one self-renewing stem cell and one differentiating cell, thereby maintaining tissue homeostasis. A decline in stem cell function has been proposed to contribute to tissue ageing, although the underlying mechanism is poorly understood. Here we show that changes in the stem cell orientation with respect to the niche during ageing contribute to the decline in spermatogenesis in the male germ line of Drosophila. Throughout the cell cycle, centrosomes in germline stem cells (GSCs) are oriented within their niche and this ensures asymmetric division. We found that GSCs containing misoriented centrosomes accumulate with age and that these GSCs are arrested or delayed in the cell cycle. The cell cycle arrest is transient, and GSCs appear to re-enter the cell cycle on correction of centrosome orientation. On the basis of these findings, we propose that cell cycle arrest associated with centrosome misorientation functions as a mechanism to ensure asymmetric stem cell division, and that the inability of stem cells to maintain correct orientation during ageing contributes to the decline in spermatogenesis. We also show that some of the misoriented GSCs probably originate from dedifferentiation of spermatogonia.


Journal of Cell Science | 2005

Signaling in stem cell niches: lessons from the Drosophila germline

Yukiko M. Yamashita; Margaret T. Fuller; D. Leanne Jones

Stem cells are cells that, upon division, can produce new stem cells as well as daughter cells that initiate differentiation along a specific lineage. Studies using the Drosophila germline as a model system have demonstrated that signaling from the stem cell niche plays a crucial role in controlling stem cell behavior. Surrounding support cells secrete growth factors that activate signaling within adjacent stem cells to specify stem cell self-renewal and block differentiation. In addition, cell-cell adhesion between stem cells and surrounding support cells is important for holding stem cells close to self-renewal signals. Furthermore, a combination of localized signaling and autonomously acting proteins might polarize stem cells in such a way as to ensure asymmetric stem cell divisions. Recent results describing stem cell niches in other adult stem cells, including hematopoietic and neural stem cells, have demonstrated that the features characteristic of stem cell niches in Drosophila gonads might be conserved.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Homologous DNA recombination in vertebrate cells

Eiichiro Sonoda; Minoru Takata; Yukiko M. Yamashita; Ciaran G. Morrison; Shunichi Takeda

The RAD52 epistasis group genes are involved in homologous DNA recombination, and their primary structures are conserved from yeast to humans. Although biochemical studies have suggested that the fundamental mechanism of homologous DNA recombination is conserved from yeast to mammals, recent studies of vertebrate cells deficient in genes of the RAD52 epistasis group reveal that the role of each protein is not necessarily the same as that of the corresponding yeast gene product. This review addresses the roles and mechanisms of homologous recombination-mediated repair with a special emphasis on differences between yeast and vertebrate cells.


The EMBO Journal | 2002

RAD18 and RAD54 cooperatively contribute to maintenance of genomic stability in vertebrate cells

Yukiko M. Yamashita; Takashi Okada; Takahiro Matsusaka; Eiichiro Sonoda; Guang Yu Zhao; Kasumi Araki; Satoshi Tateishi; Masaru Yamaizumi; Shunichi Takeda

Translesion DNA synthesis (TLS) and homologous DNA recombination (HR) are two major pathways that account for survival after post‐replicational DNA damage. TLS functions by filling gaps on a daughter strand that remain after DNA replication caused by damage on the mother strand, while HR can repair gaps and breaks using the intact sister chromatid as a template. The RAD18 gene, which is conserved from lower eukaryotes to vertebrates, is essential for TLS in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. To investigate the role of RAD18, we disrupted RAD18 by gene targeting in the chicken B‐lymphocyte line DT40. RAD18−/− cells are sensitive to various DNA‐damaging agents including ultraviolet light and the cross‐linking agent cisplatin, consistent with its role in TLS. Interestingly, elevated sister chromatid exchange, which reflects HR‐ mediated post‐replicational repair, was observed in RAD18−/− cells during the cell cycle. Strikingly, double mutants of RAD18 and RAD54, a gene involved in HR, are synthetic lethal, although the single mutant in either gene can proliferate with nearly normal kinetics. These data suggest that RAD18 plays an essential role in maintaining chromosomal DNA in cooperation with the RAD54‐dependent DNA repair pathway.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2008

Asymmetric centrosome behavior and the mechanisms of stem cell division

Yukiko M. Yamashita; Margaret T. Fuller

The ability of dividing cells to produce daughters with different fates is an important developmental mechanism conserved from bacteria to fungi, plants, and metazoan animals. Asymmetric outcomes of a cell division can be specified by two general mechanisms: asymmetric segregation of intrinsic fate determinants or asymmetric placement of daughter cells into microenvironments that provide extrinsic signals that direct cells to different states. For both, spindle orientation must be coordinated with the localization of intrinsic determinants or source of extrinsic signals to achieve the proper asymmetric outcome. Recent work on spindle orientation in Drosophila melanogaster male germline stem cells and neuroblasts has brought into sharp focus the key role of differential centrosome behavior in developmentally programmed asymmetric division (for reviews see Cabernard, C., and C.Q. Doe. 2007. Curr. Biol. 17:R465–R467; Gonzalez, C. 2007. Nat. Rev. Genet. 8:462–472). These findings provide new insights and suggest intriguing new models for how cells coordinate spindle orientation with their cellular microenvironment to regulate and direct cell fate decisions within tissues.


The EMBO Journal | 2005

Functional relationships of FANCC to homologous recombination, translesion synthesis, and BLM

Seiki Hirano; Kazuhiko Yamamoto; Masamichi Ishiai; Mitsuyoshi Yamazoe; Masayuki Seki; Nobuko Matsushita; Mioko Ohzeki; Yukiko M. Yamashita; Hiroshi Arakawa; Jean Marie Buerstedde; Takemi Enomoto; Shunichi Takeda; Minoru Takata

Some of the restarting events of stalled replication forks lead to sister chromatid exchange (SCE) as a result of homologous recombination (HR) repair with crossing over. The rate of SCE is elevated by the loss of BLM helicase or by a defect in translesion synthesis (TLS). We found that spontaneous SCE levels were elevated ∼2‐fold in chicken DT40 cells deficient in Fanconi anemia (FA) gene FANCC. To investigate the mechanism of the elevated SCE, we deleted FANCC in cells lacking Rad51 paralog XRCC3, TLS factor RAD18, or BLM. The increased SCE in fancc cells required Xrcc3, whereas the fancc/rad18 double mutant exhibited higher SCE than either single mutant. Unexpectedly, SCE in the fancc/blm mutant was similar to that in blm cells, indicating functional linkage between FANCC and BLM. Furthermore, MMC‐induced formation of GFP‐BLM nuclear foci was severely compromised in both human and chicken fancc or fancd2 cells. Our cell survival data suggest that the FA proteins serve to facilitate HR, but not global TLS, during crosslink repair.


PLOS ONE | 2010

E-Cadherin Is Required for Centrosome and Spindle Orientation in Drosophila Male Germline Stem Cells

Mayu Inaba; Hebao Yuan; Viktoria Salzmann; Margaret T. Fuller; Yukiko M. Yamashita

Many adult stem cells reside in a special microenvironment known as the niche, where they receive essential signals that specify stem cell identity. Cell-cell adhesion mediated by cadherin and integrin plays a crucial role in maintaining stem cells within the niche. In Drosophila melanogaster, male germline stem cells (GSCs) are attached to niche component cells (i.e., the hub) via adherens junctions. The GSC centrosomes and spindle are oriented toward the hub-GSC junction, where E-cadherin-based adherens junctions are highly concentrated. For this reason, adherens junctions are thought to provide a polarity cue for GSCs to enable proper orientation of centrosomes and spindles, a critical step toward asymmetric stem cell division. However, understanding the role of E-cadherin in GSC polarity has been challenging, since GSCs carrying E-cadherin mutations are not maintained in the niche. Here, we tested whether E-cadherin is required for GSC polarity by expressing a dominant-negative form of E-cadherin. We found that E-cadherin is indeed required for polarizing GSCs toward the hub cells, an effect that may be mediated by Apc2. We also demonstrated that E-cadherin is required for the GSC centrosome orientation checkpoint, which prevents mitosis when centrosomes are not correctly oriented. We propose that E-cadherin orchestrates multiple aspects of stem cell behavior, including polarization of stem cells toward the stem cell-niche interface and adhesion of stem cells to the niche supporting cells.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

Involvement of Vertebrate Polκ in Rad18-independent Postreplication Repair of UV Damage

Takashi Okada; Eiichiro Sonoda; Yukiko M. Yamashita; Shogo Koyoshi; Satoshi Tateishi; Masaru Yamaizumi; Minoru Takata; Osamu Ogawa; Shunichi Takeda

DNA damage, which is left unrepaired by excision repair pathways, often blocks replication, leading to lesions such as breaks and gaps on the sister chromatids. These lesions may be processed by either homologous recombination (HR) repair or translesion DNA synthesis (TLS). Vertebrate Polκ belongs to the DNA polymerase Y family, as do most TLS polymerases. However, the role for Polκ in vertebrate cells is unclear because of the lack of reverse genetic studies. Here, we generated cells deficient in Polκ (polκ cells) from the chicken B lymphocyte line DT40. Although purified Polκ is unable to bypass ultraviolet (UV) damage,polκ cells exhibited increased UV sensitivity, and the phenotype was suppressed by expression of human and chicken Polκ, suggesting that Polκ is involved in TLS of UV photoproduct. Defects in both Polκ and Rad18, which regulates TLS in yeast, in DT40 showed an additive effect on UV sensitivity. Interestingly, the level of sister chromatid exchange, which reflects HR-mediated repair, was elevated in normally cycling polκ cells. This implies functional redundancy between HR and Polκ in maintaining chromosomal DNA. In conclusion, vertebrate Polκ is involved in Rad18-independent TLS of UV damage and plays a role in maintaining genomic stability.

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Mayu Inaba

University of Michigan

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Jun Cheng

University of Michigan

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Hebao Yuan

Life Sciences Institute

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Mitsuhiro Yanagida

Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology

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