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Maki K Yamada

makiky-tky@umin.ac.jp

Journal articles

2008
 
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Yuki Sugiura, Shuichi Shimma, Yoshiyuki Konishi, Maki K Yamada, Mitsutoshi Setou (2008)  Imaging mass spectrometry technology and application on ganglioside study; visualization of age-dependent accumulation of C20-ganglioside molecular species in the mouse hippocampus.   PLoS ONE 3: 9. 09  
Abstract: Gangliosides are particularly abundant in the central nervous system (CNS) and thought to play important roles in memory formation, neuritogenesis, synaptic transmission, and other neural functions. Although several molecular species of gangliosides have been characterized and their individual functions elucidated, their differential distribution in the CNS are not well understood. In particular, whether the different molecular species show different distribution patterns in the brain remains unclear. We report the distinct and characteristic distributions of ganglioside molecular species, as revealed by imaging mass spectrometry (IMS). This technique can discriminate the molecular species, raised from both oligosaccharide and ceramide structure by determining the difference of the mass-to-charge ratio, and structural analysis by tandem mass spectrometry. Gangliosides in the CNS are characterized by the structure of the long-chain base (LCB) in the ceramide moiety. The LCB of the main ganglioside species has either 18 or 20 carbons (i.e., C18- or C20-sphingosine); we found that these 2 types of gangliosides are differentially distributed in the mouse brain. While the C18-species was widely distributed throughout the frontal brain, the C20-species selectively localized along the entorhinal-hippocampus projections, especially in the molecular layer (ML) of the dentate gyrus (DG). We revealed development- and aging-related accumulation of the C-20 species in the ML-DG. Thus it is possible to consider that this brain-region specific regulation of LCB chain length is particularly important for the distinct function in cells of CNS.
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Yamada, Konishi, Kakinoki, Ikegami, Setou (2008)  Enhancement of Trk Signaling Pathways by the Cholestane Amide Conjugate MCC-257.   J Pharmacol Sci Aug  
Abstract: The cholestane amide conjugate MCC-257 has been shown to augment the effects of nerve growth factor (NGF) on cell survival and on tyrosine phosphorylation of the TrkA receptor in PC12 cells. Recent findings suggest that signaling pathways downstream of Trk are regulated independently. We describe here our finding that the NGF-induced phosphorylation of both ERK and Akt are accelerated by MCC-257. Analysis of the common features of the augmented pathways suggests that TrkA is most likely to be the primary target of MCC-257 and that both ERK and Akt may be involved in the cellular effects of this compound.
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2007
 
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Jenru Chen, Takuma Kitanishi, Takamitsu Ikeda, Norio Matsuki, Maki K Yamada (2007)  Contextual learning induces an increase in the number of hippocampal CA1 neurons expressing high levels of BDNF.   Neurobiol Learn Mem 88: 4. 409-415 Nov  
Abstract: We examined behaviorally induced expression of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) in area CA1 of the hippocampus. Sprague-Dawley rats were trained in a contextual fear conditioning (CFC) task, sacrificed 4h later, and their brains were processed for immunohistochemistry. We found distinctively high levels of BDNF immunoreactivity in a small number ( approximately 1%) of CA1 neurons in untrained animals. The number of these exceptional neurons, which are identified as BDNF(++) in this study, was increased by up to approximately 3% after CFC. This increase was blocked in the presence of a memory-impairing dose of a NMDA receptor antagonist (MK801 0.3 mg/kg, i.p.) given 30 min prior to training. The BDNF signal intensity in BDNF(++) neurons correlated with that of surrounding glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) 65. This correlation between GAD65 and BDNF signal intensities suggests that BDNF upregulation was associated with increased signaling via inhibitory GABAergic synapses that would lessen further intervening neuronal activity. Our observation that neurons which upregulate BDNF expression following a learning experience are rich in GAD65-enriched afferent synapses suggests that these neurons may have distinct roles in memory consolidation.
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Ryuta Koyama, Rieko Muramatsu, Takuya Sasaki, Rie Kimura, Chihiro Ueyama, Makoto Tamura, Naohiro Tamura, Junya Ichikawa, Naoya Takahashi, Atsushi Usami, Maki K Yamada, Norio Matsuki, Yuji Ikegaya (2007)  A low-cost method for brain slice cultures.   J Pharmacol Sci 104: 2. 191-194 Jun  
Abstract: Low-cost, simple procedures for organotypic tissue cultures are desirable for high-throughput biological experiments such as large-scale medical/drug screening. We present a practical and economical method to cultivate brain slices using hydrophilic filtration membranes. With a cost reduction of more than 90%, this technique allows us to prepare hippocampal slice cultures that are morphologically and functionally indistinguishable from those obtained by the widely used Millicell-CM method.
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2006
 
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Makoto Tamura, Ryuta Koyama, Yuji Ikegaya, Norio Matsuki, Maki K Yamada (2006)  K252a, an inhibitor of Trk, disturbs pathfinding of hippocampal mossy fibers.   Neuroreport 17: 5. 481-486 Apr  
Abstract: Hippocampal mossy fibers, which are the axons of dentate granule cells, are continuously generated owing to adult neurogenesis of granule cells. They extend exclusively into the stratum lucidum, a proximal layer of the CA3 pyramidal cells. We visualized the mossy fiber tracts by Timm histochemical staining and DiI labeling in the cultured hippocampal slices from newborn rats. The fibers were abnormally expanded when the slices were cultured in the presence of K252a, an inhibitor of the neurotrophin receptor Trk. Similar defasciculation was observed with an inhibitor of MEK, which is one of the signaling molecules downstream of Trk. This study suggests for the first time that Trk and the MEK pathway are required for mossy fiber pathfinding.
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Takamitsu Ikeda, Naohiro Tamura, Norio Matsuki, Maki K Yamada (2006)  Conserved role of brain-derived neurotrophic factor in Val66Met: target-selective reinforcement of GABAergic synapses.   Neuroreport 17: 18. 1847-1851 Dec  
Abstract: Brain-derived neurotrophic factor has been implicated in higher cognitive functions, and several neurological and psychiatric disorders. Recently, a variant brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNFMet), having a substitution referred to as Val66Met, was reported as a product of a bdnf allele with a common single nucleotide polymorphism. It has been reported that BDNFMet is impaired in its potential for activity-dependent release. We sparsely transfected cultured hippocampal neurons with BDNFMet or wild-type BDNFVal cDNAs and examined the amount of GABA-synthetic enzyme glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 (GAD65) in the adjacent region, probably in the GABAergic synapses. BDNFMet transfection increased the GAD65 level to the same extent as transfection with BDNFVal. Our findings suggest that the activity-independent secretion of brain-derived neurotrophic factor may be sufficient to induce inhibitory regulation.
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Takamitsu Ikeda, Norio Matsuki, Maki K Yamada (2006)  Estrogen produced in cultured hippocampal neurons is a functional regulator of a GABAergic machinery.   J Neurosci Res 84: 8. 1771-1777 Dec  
Abstract: Accumulating evidence suggests that estrogen is produced locally by the neurons in the brain. We observed that a 48-hr treatment with the estrogen receptor antagonists ICI 182780 and tamoxifen decreased the level of glutamate decarboxylase (GAD)-65, a rate-limiting gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-synthesizing enzyme, in a dissociated hippocampal neuronal culture. Aromatase is an essential enzyme for estrogen biosynthesis. Treatment with an aromatase inhibitor decreased the GAD 65 level, indicating that estrogen biogenesis functions to maintain the level of this enzyme for GABAergic neurotransmission. Furthermore, insofar as the effect of ICI 182780 was observed equivalently in the presence of either brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) or BDNF-receptor inhibitor K252a, estrogen probably regulates GAD level independently of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF). Thus, estrogen produced by neurons is considered to be an intrinsic regulatory factor for neuronal networks that maintain GABAergic neurotransmission.
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2005
 
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Akira Futatsugi, Takeshi Nakamura, Maki K Yamada, Etsuko Ebisui, Kyoko Nakamura, Keiko Uchida, Tetsuya Kitaguchi, Hiromi Takahashi-Iwanaga, Tetsuo Noda, Jun Aruga, Katsuhiko Mikoshiba (2005)  IP3 receptor types 2 and 3 mediate exocrine secretion underlying energy metabolism.   Science 309: 5744. 2232-2234 Sep  
Abstract: Type 2 and type 3 inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptors (IP3R2 and IP3R3) are intracellular calcium-release channels whose physiological roles are unknown. We show exocrine dysfunction in IP3R2 and IP3R3 double knock-out mice, which caused difficulties in nutrient digestion. Severely impaired calcium signaling in acinar cells of the salivary glands and the pancreas in the double mutants ascribed the secretion deficits to a lack of intracellular calcium release. Despite a normal caloric intake, the double mutants were hypoglycemic and lean. These results reveal IP3R2 and IP3R3 as key molecules in exocrine physiology underlying energy metabolism and animal growth.
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Shizu Ohba, Takamitsu Ikeda, Yuji Ikegaya, Nobuyoshi Nishiyama, Norio Matsuki, Maki K Yamada (2005)  BDNF locally potentiates GABAergic presynaptic machineries: target-selective circuit inhibition.   Cereb Cortex 15: 3. 291-298 Mar  
Abstract: Inhibitory neurotransmission is critical for neuronal circuit formation. To examine whether inhibitory neurotransmission receives target-selective modulation in the long term, we expressed the cDNA of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), which has been shown to induce the augmentation of GABAergic synapses in vivo and in vitro, in a small population of cultured hippocampal neurons. At 48 h after transfection, the expression level of glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 (GAD65), a GABA synthetic enzyme that resides mainly in GABAergic terminals, was selectively enhanced around the BDNF-expressing neurons, in comparison with the neighboring control neurons interposed between the BDNF-expressing neurons and inhibitory neurons. Exogenous BDNF application for 48 h also increased the GAD level and enhanced the GABA release probability. These potentiating effects were attenuated in inhibitory synapses on neurons expressing a dominant negative form of the BDNF receptor (tTrkB). This suggests that postsynaptic BDNF-TrkB signaling contributes to the target-selective potentiation of inhibitory presynaptic machineries. Since BDNF is expressed in an activity-dependent manner in vivo, this selectivity may be one of the key mechanisms by which the independence of functional neuronal circuits is maintained.
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2004
 
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Ryuta Koyama, Maki K Yamada, Nobuyoshi Nishiyama, Norio Matsuki, Yuji Ikegaya (2004)  Developmental switch in axon guidance modes of hippocampal mossy fibers in vitro.   Dev Biol 267: 1. 29-42 Mar  
Abstract: Hippocampal mossy fibers (MFs), axons of dentate granule cells, run through a narrow strip, called the stratum lucidum, and make synaptic contacts with CA3 pyramidal cells. This stereotyped pathfinding is assumed to require a tightly controlled guidance system, but the responsible mechanisms have not been proven directly. To clarify the cellular basis for the MF pathfinding, microslices of the dentate gyrus (DG) and Ammon's horn (AH) were topographically arranged in an organotypic explant coculture system. When collagen gels were interposed between DG and AH slices prepared from postnatal day 6 (P6) rats, the MFs passed across this intervening gap and reached CA3 stratum lucidum. Even when the recipient AH was chemically pre-fixed with paraformaldehyde, the axons were still capable of accessing their normal target area only if the DG and AH slices were directly juxtaposed without a collagen bridge. The data imply that diffusible and contact cues are both involved in MF guidance. To determine how these different cues contribute to MF pathfinding during development, a P6 DG slice was apposed simultaneously to two AH slices prepared from P0 and P13 rats. MFs projected normally to both the host slices, whereas they rarely invaded P0 AH when the two hosts were fixed. Early in development, therefore, the MFs are guided mainly by a chemoattractant gradient, and thereafter, they can find their trajectories by a contact factor, probably via fasciculation with pre-established MFs. The present study proposes a dynamic paradigm in CNS axon pathfinding, that is, developmental changes in axon guidance cues.
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Ryuta Koyama, Maki K Yamada, Shigeyoshi Fujisawa, Ritsuko Katoh-Semba, Norio Matsuki, Yuji Ikegaya (2004)  Brain-derived neurotrophic factor induces hyperexcitable reentrant circuits in the dentate gyrus.   J Neurosci 24: 33. 7215-7224 Aug  
Abstract: Aberrant sprouting and synaptic reorganization of the mossy fiber (MF) axons are commonly found in the hippocampus of temporal lobe epilepsy patients and result in the formation of excitatory feedback loops in the dentate gyrus, a putative cellular basis for recurrent epileptic seizures. Using ex vivo hippocampal cultures, we show that prolonged hyperactivity induces MF sprouting and the resultant network reorganizations and that brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is necessary and sufficient to evoke these pathogenic plasticities. Hyperexcitation induced an upregulation of BDNF protein expression in the MF pathway, an effect mediated by L-type Ca2+ channels. The neurotrophin receptor tyrosine kinase (Trk)B inhibitor K252a or function-blocking anti-BDNF antibody prevented hyperactivity-induced MF sprouting. Even under blockade of neural activity, local application of BDNF to the hilus, but not other subregions, was capable of initiating MF axonal remodeling, eventually leading to dentate hyperexcitability. Transfecting granule cells with dominant-negative TrkB prevented axonal branching. Thus, excessive activation of L-type Ca2+ channels causes granule cells to express BDNF, and extracellularly released BDNF stimulates TrkB receptors present on the hilar segment of the MFs to induce axonal branching, which may establish hyperexcitable dentate circuits.
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M Akimoto, A Baba, Y Ikeda-Matsuo, M K Yamada, R Itamura, N Nishiyama, Y Ikegaya, N Matsuki (2004)  Hepatocyte growth factor as an enhancer of nmda currents and synaptic plasticity in the hippocampus.   Neuroscience 128: 1. 155-162  
Abstract: Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) promotes the survival and migration of immature neurons, but its role in the mature brain has remained elusive. In the hippocampus of juvenile rats, we found that the HGF receptor c-Met was expressed in neurons. Furthermore, it was highly Tyr-phosphorylated, more so than in the liver under normal conditions, suggesting that the receptor is activated and that HGF may act continuously in the intact brain. Exogenously applied HGF enhanced synaptic long-term potentiation (LTP) in the CA1 region of hippocampus, but did not affect long-term depression. We further found that HGF augmented N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor-mediated currents in both slices and dissociated neurons. This augmentation is likely to underlie the enhancement of LTP. Considering that the expression of both HGF and c-Met are known to be induced by ischemic stimuli, this modulation would provide a novel understanding of a neuronal regulatory systems shared with pathogenic ischemic states.
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Jeong-Ah Kim, Ryuta Koyama, Ryuji X Yamada, Maki K Yamada, Nobuyoshi Nishiyama, Norio Matsuki, Yuji Ikegaya (2004)  Environmental control of the survival and differentiation of dentate granule neurons.   Cereb Cortex 14: 12. 1358-1364 Dec  
Abstract: Dentate granule cells (DGCs) and their microcircuits have been implicated in hippocampus-dependent memory encoding and epileptogenesis. Little is known about how the proper maturation of DGCs is determined by their intrinsic programs or external factors during development. In order to explore this, we dispersed premature DGCs on living hippocampal slices. Here we report that the survival and network formation of DGCs are supported by local cues present in the dentate gyrus ex vivo. The density of surviving DGCs was almost uniform throughout the host slices 12 h after implantation but gradually became heterogenous across substrata, with the cells engrafted onto the stratum granulosum scoring the highest rate of survival. The mossy fiber axons arising from DGCs growing on this substratum were properly guided towards CA3, whereas other misplaced DGCs exhibited heterotopic axon projection. In particular, about half of the axons originating from the hilus were misguided into the molecular layer, which resembles the supragranular mossy fiber sprouting seen in epileptic disorders. These results suggest that local environmental factors influence the cell adhesion, neurite polarization and axon guidance of DGCs.
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Shigeyoshi Fujisawa, Maki K Yamada, Nobuyoshi Nishiyama, Norio Matsuki, Yuji Ikegaya (2004)  BDNF boosts spike fidelity in chaotic neural oscillations.   Biophys J 86: 3. 1820-1828 Mar  
Abstract: Oscillatory activity and its nonlinear dynamics are of fundamental importance for information processing in the central nervous system. Here we show that in aperiodic oscillations, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), a member of the neurotrophin family, enhances the accuracy of action potentials in terms of spike reliability and temporal precision. Cultured hippocampal neurons displayed irregular oscillations of membrane potential in response to sinusoidal 20-Hz somatic current injection, yielding wobbly orbits in the phase space, i.e., a strange attractor. Brief application of BDNF suppressed this unpredictable dynamics and stabilized membrane potential fluctuations, leading to rhythmical firing. Even in complex oscillations induced by external stimuli of 40 Hz (gamma) on a 5-Hz (theta) carrier, BDNF-treated neurons generated more precisely timed spikes, i.e., phase-locked firing, coupled with theta-phase precession. These phenomena were sensitive to K252a, an inhibitor of tyrosine receptor kinases and appeared attributable to BDNF-evoked Na(+) current. The data are the first indication of pharmacological control of endogenous chaos. BDNF diminishes the ambiguity of spike time jitter and thereby might assure neural encoding, such as spike timing-dependent synaptic plasticity.
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2003
 
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Masako Tsukamoto, Takuya Yasui, Maki K Yamada, Nobuyoshi Nishiyama, Norio Matsuki, Yuji Ikegaya (2003)  Mossy fibre synaptic NMDA receptors trigger non-Hebbian long-term potentiation at entorhino-CA3 synapses in the rat.   J Physiol 546: Pt 3. 665-675 Feb  
Abstract: Hippocampal CA3 pyramidal cells receive two independent afferents from the enthorinal cortex, i.e. a direct input via the temporoammonic pathway (TA, perforant path) and an indirect input via the mossy fibres (MF) of dentate granule cells. In spite of past suggestions that the TA is assigned an important role in exciting the pyramidal cells, little is known about their physiological properties. By surgically making an incision through the sulcus hippocampi and a small part of the dentate molecular layer, we succeeded in isolating TA-mediated monosynaptic responses in CA3 stratum lacunosum-moleculare. The TA-CA3 synaptic transmission was completely blocked by a combination of D,L-2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (AP5) and 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX), NMDA and non-NMDA receptor antagonists, respectively, and displayed paired-pulse facilitation and NMDA receptor-dependent long-term potentiation, which are all typical of glutamatergic synapses. We next addressed the heterosynaptic interaction between TA-CA3 and MF-CA3 synapses. The TA-CA3 transmission was partially attenuated by single-pulse MF pre-stimulation at inter-pulse intervals of up to 70 ms. However, surprisingly, burst stimulation of the MF alone induced long-lasting facilitation of TA-CA3 synaptic efficacy. This non-Hebbian form of synaptic plasticity was efficiently prevented by local application of AP5 into the MF synapse-rich area. Therefore, MF-activated NMDA receptors are responsible for the heterosynaptic modification of TA-CA3 transmission, and thereby, the history of MF activity may be etched into TA-CA3 synaptic strength. Our findings predict a novel form of spatiotemporal information processing in the hippocampus, i.e. a use-dependent intersynaptic memory transfer.
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Kazuhito Nakao, Yuji Ikegaya, Maki K Yamada, Nobuyoshi Nishiyama, Norio Matsuki (2003)  Fimbrial control of bidirectional synaptic plasticity of medial perforant path-dentate transmission.   Synapse 47: 3. 163-168 Mar  
Abstract: Lesions of the fimbria-fornix (FF) tract cause profound impairments of cognitive ability in animals. Our previous study showed that spatial performance correlates with long-term potentiation (LTP) of the dentate gyrus (DG), but not of the CA1 region, in rats with bilateral FF lesions, suggesting that FF lesions selectively inhibited LTP in the DG. The cortical input to the DG is anatomically and physiologically divided into two types of afferents, i.e., the medial perforant path (MPP) and the lateral perforant path (LPP), which show distinct synaptic properties. To elucidate the difference in the FF modulation of these two inputs, field responses were recorded from MPP- or LPP-DG synapses in anesthetized rats. MPP-DG synapses of rats with FF lesions displayed neither LTP in response to theta-burst stimulation nor long-term depression (LTD) in response to low-frequency burst stimulation. In contrast to the MPP, LPP-DG synapses showed normal LTP in rats with FF lesions. The low-frequency burst stimulation could not induce LTD at LPP-DG synapses in either intact or FF-lesioned rats. These results suggest that the FF pathway selectively supports the mechanisms of bidirectional synaptic plasticity at MPP-DG synapses. This study provides new insights into external control of information processing in the hippocampus.
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Atsushi Baba, Takuya Yasui, Shigeyoshi Fujisawa, Ryuji X Yamada, Maki K Yamada, Nobuyoshi Nishiyama, Norio Matsuki, Yuji Ikegaya (2003)  Activity-evoked capacitative Ca2+ entry: implications in synaptic plasticity.   J Neurosci 23: 21. 7737-7741 Aug  
Abstract: The Ca2+ influx controlled by intracellular Ca2+ stores, called store-operated Ca2+ entry (SOC), occurs in various eukaryotic cells, but whether CNS neurons are endowed with SOC capability and how they may operate have been contentious issues. Using Ca2+ imaging, we present evidence for the presence of SOC in cultured hippocampal pyramidal neurons. Depletion of internal Ca2+ stores by thapsigargin caused intracellular Ca2+ elevation, which was prevented by SOC channel inhibitors 2-aminoethoxydiphenyl borate (2-APB), SKF96365, and La3+. Interestingly, these inhibitors also accelerated the decay of NMDA-induced Ca2+ transients without affecting their peak amplitude. In addition, SOC channel inhibitors attenuated tetanus-induced dendritic Ca2+ accumulation and long-term potentiation at Schaffer collateral-CA1 synapses in hippocampal slice preparations. These data suggest a novel link between ionotropic receptor-activated SOC and neuroplasticity.
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Jeong-Ah Kim, Maki K Yamada, Nobuyoshi Nishiyama, Norio Matsuki, Yuji Ikegaya (2003)  Mossy fiber pathfinding in multilayer organotypic cultures of rat hippocampal slices.   Cell Mol Neurobiol 23: 1. 115-119 Feb  
Abstract: 1. Using a novel technique of organotypic cultures, in which two hippocampal slices were cocultured in a bilayer style, we found that the mossy fibers arising from the dentate gyrus grafted onto another dentate tissue grew along the CA3 stratum lucidum of the host hippocampal slice. The same transplantation of a CA1 microslice failed to form a network with the host hippocampus. 2. Thus the type of grafted neurons is important to determine whether they can form an appropriate network after transplantation.
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Atsushi Baba, Kazuhiko Mitsumori, Maki K Yamada, Nobuyoshi Nishiyama, Norio Matsuki, Yuji Ikegaya (2003)  Beta-amyloid prevents excitotoxicity via recruitment of glial glutamate transporters.   Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol 368: 3. 234-238 Sep  
Abstract: Amyloid beta-protein (Abeta), a putative pathogenic endotoxin involved in Alzheimer's disease, induces redistribution of glutamate transporters in astrocytes and promotes their pump activity. Because the transporters are assumed to protect neurons against excitotoxicity by removing extracellular glutamate, we hypothesized that Abeta alters the vulnerability of neurons to glutamate. Cerebrocortical neuron-astroglial co-cultures were exposed to glutamate, the concentration of which was selected so that only 20% of the neurons exhibited degeneration. When cultures were pre-treated with Abeta, exposure to the same "mild" glutamate concentration failed to damage neurons. The Abeta-induced protection was abolished by a glial glutamate transporter inhibitor. Thus, Abeta can alleviate excitotoxicity through glutamate transporter activity. The present results may challenge prevailing concepts that Abeta-induced neuron loss causes Alzheimer's dementia and also provide practical insights into neuro-glial interactions in glutamate toxicity.
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2002
 
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Atsushi Baba, Maki K Yamada, Nobuyoshi Nishiyama, Norio Matsuki, Yuji Ikegaya (2002)  Different Ca2+ dynamics between isolated hippocampal pyramidal cells and dentate granule cells.   J Neurocytol 31: 1. 41-48 Jan  
Abstract: The hippocampal formation contains a variety of neuronal types. The principal neurons are granule cells in the dentate gyrus and pyramidal cells in Ammon's horn. These two neuron types show distinct cell morphology and display a different vulnerability to ischemic injury or various neurotoxins. In order to illustrate the difference in the pathophysiological properties of these neurons, we established a method for separately culturing granule cells and pyramidal cells. They were prepared from the dentate gyrus and Ammon's horn of 3-day-old Wistar rat pups and maintained for 7-9 days in culture. After transient exposure to N-methyl-D-aspartate or glutamate, both the cultured neuron populations displayed somatic Ca(2+) transients with similar amplitudes, but the subsequent recovery to baseline was about twice as fast in granule cells than in pyramidal cells. Similar results were obtained for K(+) depolarization-induced Ca(2+) elevation, suggesting that the relatively rapid Ca(2+) clearance in granule cells is independent of Ca(2+) influx pathways. The present study provides the first evidence for a difference in Ca(2+) dynamics and homeostasis between granule and pyramidal cells and may represent a cellular basis for the differential vulnerability of hippocampal neurons.
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Sayaka Ueno, Masako Tsukamoto, Tomoya Hirano, Kazuya Kikuchi, Maki K Yamada, Nobuyoshi Nishiyama, Tetsuo Nagano, Norio Matsuki, Yuji Ikegaya (2002)  Mossy fiber Zn2+ spillover modulates heterosynaptic N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor activity in hippocampal CA3 circuits.   J Cell Biol 158: 2. 215-220 Jul  
Abstract: Although Zn2+ is contained in large amounts in the synaptic terminals of hippocampal mossy fibers (MFs), its physiological role in synaptic transmission is poorly understood. By using the newly developed high-sensitivity Zn2+ indicator ZnAF-2, the spatiotemporal dynamics of Zn2+ was monitored in rat hippocampal slices. When high-frequency stimulation was delivered to the MFs, the concentration of extracellular Zn2+ was immediately elevated in the stratum lucidum, followed by a mild increase in the stratum radiatum adjacent to the stratum lucidum, but not in the distal area of stratum radiatum. The Zn2+ increase was insensitive to a non-N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist but was efficiently attenuated by tetrodotoxin or Ca2+-free medium, suggesting that Zn2+ is released by MF synaptic terminals in an activity-dependent manner, and thereafter diffuses extracellularly into the neighboring stratum radiatum. Electrophysiological analyses revealed that NMDA receptor-mediated synaptic responses in CA3 proximal stratum radiatum were inhibited in the immediate aftermath of MF activation and that this inhibition was no longer observed in the presence of a Zn2+-chelating agent. Thus, Zn2+ serves as a spatiotemporal mediator in imprinting the history of MF activity in contiguous hippocampal networks. We predict herein a novel form of metaplasticity, i.e., an experience-dependent non-Hebbian modulation of synaptic plasticity.
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Yuji Ikegaya, Ryuta Koyama, Maki K Yamada, Nobuyoshi Nishiyama, Norio Matsuki (2002)  Rapid regrowth of hippocampal mossy fibres and preceding maturation of NMDA receptor-mediated neurotransmission.   Eur J Neurosci 15: 11. 1859-1862 Jun  
Abstract: Early in postnatal development, glutamatergic synapses contain primarily NMDA receptors and progressively acquire AMPA receptor function. To determine whether this transformation occurs in a process of regenerative synaptogenesis following axotomy, we investigated the recovery of AMPA and NMDA receptor-mediated neurotransmission after the transection of mossy fibres (MF) in organotypic hippocampal cultures. An NMDA component could already be elicited 1 day after the lesion and reached a saturated level after 3 days. Thereafter, an AMPA component appeared and slowly matured after 10 days. The preceding establishment of NMDA receptor function implies that immature MF synapses are functionally silent at least for the first several days of recovery. The appearance of AMPA receptor-mediated neurotransmission was unchanged in the presence of an NMDA-receptor antagonist or tetrodotoxin, which suggests that the AMPA receptor maturation is virtually independent of neuronal activity. Thus, the conversion of silent to functional synapses is not unique to synaptic plasticity or developmental processes but also occurs in recovery after brain damage, but its mechanism is likely to differ from NMDA receptor-dependent recruitment of AMPA receptors in synaptic plasticity.
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Sigeru Matsuura, Yuji Ikegaya, Maki K Yamada, Nobuyoshi Nishiyama, Norio Matsuki (2002)  Endothelin downregulates the glutamate transporter GLAST in cAMP-differentiated astrocytes in vitro.   Glia 37: 2. 178-182 Feb  
Abstract: Endothelin (ET) is a putative pathogenetic mediator associated with brain trauma and ischemia. Because a link between neuronal damage after these injuries and glial Na(+)-dependent L-glutamate transporter activity has been suggested, we investigated the effect of ET on the glutamate clearance ability of astrocytes. Dibutyryl cyclic adenosine monophosphate (dBcAMP), which is widely used to induce differentiation of cultured astrocytes, markedly increased [(3)H]glutamate transport activity in a concentration- and time-dependent manner. In the presence of ET, however, dBcAMP decreased the glutamate uptake. This effect was efficiently prevented by an antagonist of ET(B) receptor, but not of ET(A) receptor. ET per se was virtually ineffective. Eadie-Hofstee analysis demonstrated that dBcAMP increased the V(max) value of glutamate uptake activity by 43.4% in the absence of ET, but decreased it by 41.4% in the presence of ET, without apparent changes in the K(m) value. Accordingly, Western blot analysis indicated that the change in transport activity correlated closely with that in expression level of the glial glutamate transporter GLAST. These results may represent the mechanisms by which ET aggravates trauma- and ischemia-elicited neuronal damage.
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Ryuta Koyama, Maki Kobayashi Yamada, Nobuyoshi Nishiyama, Norio Matsuki, Yuji Ikegaya (2002)  Group II metabotropic glutamate receptor activation is required for normal hippocampal mossy fibre development in the rat.   J Physiol 539: Pt 1. 157-162 Feb  
Abstract: Glutamate is the main neurotransmitter at hippocampal mossy fibre (MF) terminals. Because neurotransmitters have been proposed as regulating factors of neural network formation and neurite morphogenesis in the developing CNS, we examined the possible contribution of glutamate to MF pathfinding. Entorhino-hippocampal slices prepared from early postnatal rats were cultivated in the presence of glutamate receptor antagonists. Timm histochemical staining revealed that pharmacological blockade of metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluR), but not of ionotropic glutamate receptors, induced abnormal outgrowth of the MFs. When slices were cultured in the presence of mGluR antagonists, DiI-labelled MF axons displayed a great degree of defasciculation, and MF-mediated EPSPs in the CA3 pyramidal cells were altered. Similar results were obtained for a selective antagonist of group II mGluR, but not of group I or III mGluR. Glutamate is, therefore, likely to regulate MF outgrowth via activation of group II mGluR. The present study may provide a novel role of glutamate in hippocampal development.
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Yuji Ikegaya, Sigeru Matsuura, Sayaka Ueno, Atsushi Baba, Maki K Yamada, Nobuyoshi Nishiyama, Norio Matsuki (2002)  Beta-amyloid enhances glial glutamate uptake activity and attenuates synaptic efficacy.   J Biol Chem 277: 35. 32180-32186 Aug  
Abstract: Although amyloid beta-protein (A beta) has long been implicated in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease, little is known about the mechanism by which A beta causes dementia. A beta leads to neuronal cell death in vivo and in vitro, but recent evidence suggests that the property of the amnesic characteristic of Alzheimer's disease can be explained by a malfunction of synapses rather than a loss of neurons. Here we show that prolonged treatment with A beta augments the glutamate clearance ability of cultured astrocytes and induces a dramatic decrease in glutamatergic synaptic activity of neurons cocultured with the astrocytes. Biotinylation assay revealed that the enhancement of glutamate uptake activity was associated with an increase in cell-surface expression of GLAST, a subtype of glial glutamate transporters, without apparent changes in the total amount of GLAST. This phenomenon was blocked efficiently by actin-disrupting agents. Thus, A beta-induced actin-dependent GLAST redistribution and relevant synaptic malfunction may be a cellular basis for the amnesia of Alzheimer's disease.
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PMID 
Maki K Yamada, Kohsuke Nakanishi, Shizu Ohba, Takeshi Nakamura, Yuji Ikegaya, Nobuyoshi Nishiyama, Norio Matsuki (2002)  Brain-derived neurotrophic factor promotes the maturation of GABAergic mechanisms in cultured hippocampal neurons.   J Neurosci 22: 17. 7580-7585 Sep  
Abstract: Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) has been implicated in activity-dependent plasticity of neuronal function and network arrangement. To clarify how BDNF exerts its action, we evaluated the physiological, histological, and biochemical characteristics of cultured hippocampal neurons after long-term treatment with BDNF. Here we show that BDNF facilitates high K(+)-elicited release of GABA but not of glutamate and induces an increase in immunoreactive signals of glutamic acid decarboxylase, a GABA-synthesizing enzyme. The soma size of GABAergic neurons was enlarged in BDNF-treated cultures, whereas the average soma size of all neurons was virtually unchanged. BDNF also upregulated protein levels of GABA(A) receptors but not of glutamate receptors. These data imply that BDNF selectively advances the maturation of GABAergic synapses. However, immunocytochemical analyses revealed that a significant expression of TrkB, a high-affinity receptor for BDNF, was detected in non-GABAergic as well as GABAergic neurons. BDNF also increased to total amount of synaptic vesicle-associated proteins without affecting the number of presynaptic vesicles that can be labeled with FM1-43 after K(+) depolarization. Together, our findings indicate that BDNF principally promotes GABAergic maturation but may also potentially contribute to excitatory synapse development via increasing resting synaptic vesicles.
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PMID 
Kazuhito Nakao, Yuji Ikegaya, Maki K Yamada, Nobuyoshi Nishiyama, Norio Matsuki (2002)  Hippocampal long-term depression as an index of spatial working memory.   Eur J Neurosci 16: 5. 970-974 Sep  
Abstract: Long-term potentiation (LTP), a form of synaptic plasticity in the hippocampus, is a cellular model for the neural basis of learning and memory, but few studies have investigated the contribution of long-term depression (LTD), a counterpart of LTP. To address the possible relationship between hippocampal LTD and spatial performance, the spatial cognitive ability of a rat was assessed in a spontaneous alternation test and, thereafter, LTD in response to low-frequency burst stimulation (LFBS) was monitored in the dentate gyrus of the same rat under anaesthesia. To enhance a divergence in the ability for spatial performance, some of the animals received fimbria-fornix (FF) transection 14 days before the experiments. LTD was reliably induced by application of LFBS to the medial perforant path of intact rats, while no apparent LTD was elicited in rats with FF lesions. The behavioural parameters of spatial memory showed a significant correlation with the magnitude of LTD. We found no evidence that the cognitive ability correlated with other electrophysiological parameters, e.g. basal synaptic responses, stimulus intensity to produce half-maximal responses, paired-pulse facilitation or paired-pulse depression. These results suggest that the magnitude of LTD in the dentate gyrus serves as a reliable index of spatial cognitive ability, providing insights into the functional significance of hippocampal LTD.
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PMID 
Jeong-Ah Kim, Kayo Mitsukawa, Maki K Yamada, Nobuyoshi Nishiyama, Norio Matsuki, Yuji Ikegaya (2002)  Cytoskeleton disruption causes apoptotic degeneration of dentate granule cells in hippocampal slice cultures.   Neuropharmacology 42: 8. 1109-1118 Jun  
Abstract: Colchicine, a potent microtubule-depolymerizing agent, is well known to selectively kill dentate granule cells in the hippocampal formation in vivo. Using organotypic cultures of rat entorhino-hippocampal slices, we confirmed that in vitro exposure to 1 microM and 10 microM of colchicine reproduced a specific degeneration of the granule cells after 24 h. Similar results were obtained with other types of microtubule-disrupting agents, i.e., nocodazole, vinblastine, and Taxol. Interestingly, the actin-depolymerizing agents cytochalasin D and latrunculin A also elicited selective neurotoxicity in the dentate gyrus without affecting survival of hippocampal pyramidal cells. The selective pattern of degeneration was observable 24 h after a brief treatment with the toxins as short as 5 min, but this delayed neuronal death was unlikely to be a result of excitotoxicity because it was virtually unaffected by glutamate receptor antagonists, tetrodotoxin, or extracellular Ca(2+)-free conditions. The damaged tissues contained a large number of TUNEL-positive neurons and exhibited an increased level in caspase-3-like activity, suggesting that cytoskeleton disruption triggers an apoptosis-like process in dentate granule cells. Thus, this study may provide a basis for understanding the distinctive mechanism that supports granule cell survival.
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2001
 
PMID 
Y Muto, T Nagao, M Yamada, K Mikoshiba, T Urushidani (2001)  A proposed mechanism for the potentiation of cAMP-mediated acid secretion by carbachol.   Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 280: 1. C155-C165 Jan  
Abstract: Acid secretion in isolated rabbit gastric glands was monitored by the accumulation of [(14)C]aminopyrine. Stimulation of the glands with carbachol synergistically augmented the response to dibutyryl cAMP. The augmentation persisted even after carbachol was washed out and was resistant to chelated extracellular Ca(2+) and to inhibitors of either protein kinase C or calmodulin kinase II. Cytochalasin D at 10 microM preferentially blocked the secretory effect of carbachol and its synergism with cAMP, whereas it had no effect on histamine- or cAMP-stimulated acid secretion within 15 min. Cytochalasin D inhibited the carbachol-stimulated intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) increase due to release from the Ca(2+) store. Treatment of the glands with cytochalasin D redistributed type 3 inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor (the major subtype in the parietal cell) from the fraction containing membranes of large size to the microsomal fraction, suggesting a dissociation of the store from the plasma membrane. These findings suggest that intracellular Ca(2+) release by cholinergic stimulation is critical for determining synergism with cAMP in parietal cell activation and that functional coupling between the Ca(2+) store and the receptor is maintained by actin microfilaments.
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PMID 
K Nakao, Y Ikegaya, M K Yamada, N Nishiyama, N Matsuki (2001)  Spatial performance correlates with long-term potentiation of the dentate gyrus but not of the CA1 region in rats with fimbria-fornix lesions.   Neurosci Lett 307: 3. 159-162 Jul  
Abstract: Although hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP) is generally assumed to be a cellular mechanism of learning and memory, there has not been definitive evidence for this hypothesis. In the present study, therefore, we addressed the possible relationship between spatial learning ability and LTP by using rats with bilateral fimbria-fornix lesions. The animals were tested for spatial performance in spontaneous alternation behaviors with further in vivo investigation of LTP. The behavioral parameters of spatial memory showed a significant correlation with LTP in the dentate gyrus, but we found no evidence for a linkage with LTP in the CA1 region. Thus, LTP in the dentate gyrus may be important for spatial cognitive ability.
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1999
 
PMID 
T Michikawa, J Hirota, S Kawano, M Hiraoka, M Yamada, T Furuichi, K Mikoshiba (1999)  Calmodulin mediates calcium-dependent inactivation of the cerebellar type 1 inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor.   Neuron 23: 4. 799-808 Aug  
Abstract: The dependency of purified mouse cerebellar type 1 inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor (IP3R1)/Ca2+ channel function on cytoplasmic Ca2+ was examined. In contrast to the channels in crude systems, the purified IP3R1 reconstituted into planar lipid bilayers did not show the bell-shaped dependence on Ca2+. It was activated with increasing Ca2+ sublinearly without inhibition even up to 200 microM. The addition of calmodulin to the cytoplasmic side inhibited the channel at high Ca2+ concentrations. Calmodulin antagonists reversed the Ca2+-dependent inactivation of the native channels in cerebellar microsomes. These results indicate that the bell-shaped dependence on cytoplasmic Ca2+ is not an intrinsic property of the IP3R1, and the Ca2+-dependent inactivation is directly mediated by calmodulin.
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1997
 
PMID 
K Morikawa, T Ohbayashi, M Nakagawa, Y Konishi, Y Makino, M Yamada, A Miyawaki, T Furuichi, K Mikoshiba, T Tamura (1997)  Transcription initiation sites and promoter structure of the mouse type 2 inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor gene.   Gene 196: 1-2. 181-185 Sep  
Abstract: Transcription initiation sites and the promoter sequence of the ubiquitously expressed mouse type 2 inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor (IP3R2) gene were determined. In contrast to the nervous system-enriched IP3R1, the IP3R2 gene had multiple (seven major) transcription initiation sites located 334 to 269 bp upstream from the first ATG codon. Transient luciferase assay revealed promoter activity of the IP3R2 sequence upstream from the transcription initiation sites. The IP3R2 promoter was GC-rich and had no conventional TATA box, but had a GC box in the proximal promoter. Multiple transcription start sites were flanked by CpG islands, and various cis elements were located in the promoter. These structural features are considered to be responsible for a profile of IP3R2 gene expression.
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PMID 
H Yoneshima, E Nagata, M Matsumoto, M Yamada, K Nakajima, T Miyata, M Ogawa, K Mikoshiba (1997)  A novel neurological mutant mouse, yotari, which exhibits reeler-like phenotype but expresses CR-50 antigen/reelin.   Neurosci Res 29: 3. 217-223 Nov  
Abstract: We present yotari, a novel neurological mutant mouse whose mutation is transmitted in an autosomal recessive manner. The phenotype of yotari is very similar to that of reeler. yotari mutants are recognizable by their unstable gait and tremor and by their early deaths at around the time of weaning. The cerebella of homozygous yotari are hypoplastic and have no foliation. A molecular and a granular cell layer can be identified, but Purkinje cells are scattered throughout both the granular layer and white matter. The laminar structure of the cerebral cortex and the hippocampal formation are also distorted. To test whether the mutated gene in yotari is the reeler gene, reelin, yotari heterozygotes were mated with reeler homozygotes or heterozygotes. The absence of abnormal offspring indicated that the yotari gene is distinct from reelin. Furthermore, expression of mRNA and protein of reelin was verified by Northern blotting and immunohistochemistry using a CR-50 monoclonal antibody (mAb) which is specific to Reelin, the reelin gene product. Although the mutation of several genes, including cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk 5), p35 and LIS1, 45 kDa subunits of platelet-activating factor acetylhydrolase (PAF-AH) Ib, in Miller-Dieker lissencephaly syndrome (MDS) has been reported to cause abnormal laminar structure in the brain, no abnormality was found in yotari by Western blotting with antibodies (Ab's) against these molecules. The close similarity of the phenotypes of yotari and reeler and the expression of reelin in yotari may suggest that the gene mutated in yotari encodes a molecule that is on the same signaling pathway as Reelin, the product of reelin. yotari will provide valuable clues to explore the molecular mechanism of neuronal migration and orderly laminar structure formation of the brain.
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1996
 
DOI   
PMID 
M Matsumoto, T Nakagawa, T Inoue, E Nagata, K Tanaka, H Takano, O Minowa, J Kuno, S Sakakibara, M Yamada, H Yoneshima, A Miyawaki, Y Fukuuchi, T Furuichi, H Okano, K Mikoshiba, T Noda (1996)  Ataxia and epileptic seizures in mice lacking type 1 inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor.   Nature 379: 6561. 168-171 Jan  
Abstract: The inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (InsP3) receptor acts as an InsP3-gated Ca2+ release channel in a variety of cell types. Type 1 InsP3 receptor (IP3R1) is the major neuronal member of the IP3R family in the central nervous system, predominantly enriched in cerebellar Purkinje cells but also concentrated in neurons in the hippocampal CA1 region, caudate-putamen, and cerebral cortex. Here we report that most IP3R1-deficient mice generated by gene targeting die in utero, and born animals have severe ataxia and tonic or tonic-clonic seizures and die by the weaning period. An electroencephalogram showed that they suffer from epilepsy, indicating that IP3R1 is essential for proper brain function. However, observation by light microscope of the haematoxylin-eosin staining of the brain and peripheral tissues of IP3R1-deficient mice showed no abnormality, and the unique electrophysiological properties of the cerebellar Purkinje cells of IP3R1-deficient mice were not severely impaired.
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1995
 
PMID 
M Yamada, A Miyawaki, K Saito, T Nakajima, M Yamamoto-Hino, Y Ryo, T Furuichi, K Mikoshiba (1995)  The calmodulin-binding domain in the mouse type 1 inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor.   Biochem J 308 ( Pt 1): 83-88 May  
Abstract: We determined the amino acid sequence responsible for the calmodulin (CaM)-binding ability of mouse type 1 Ins(1,4,5)P3 receptor (IP3R1). We expressed various parts of IP3R1 from deleted cDNA and examined their CaM-binding ability. It was shown that the sequence stretching from Lys-1564 to Arg-1585 is necessary for the binding. The full-length IP3R1 with replacement of Trp-1576 by Ala lost its CaM-binding ability. Antibody against residues 1564-1585 of IP3R1 inhibited cerebellar IP3R1 from binding CaM. The fluorescence spectrum of the peptide that corresponds to residues 1564-1585 shifted when Ca(2+)-CaM was added. From the change in the fluorescence spectrum, we estimated the dissociation constant (KD) between the peptide and CaM to be 0.7 microM. The submicromolar value of KD suggests an actual interaction between CaM and IP3R1 within cells. The CaM-binding ability of other types of IP3Rs was also examined. A part of the type 2IP3R, including the region showing sequence identity with the CaM-binding domain of IP3R1, also bound CaM, while the expressed full-length type 3 IP3R did not.
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