Updated on 2025/05/27

写真a

 
NAKAOKA Hirofumi
 
Organization
Research Field in Medicine and Health Sciences, Medical and Dental Sciences Area Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences Advanced Therapeutics Course Professor
Title
Professor
External link

Degree

  • Doctor of Agriculture ( 2008.3   Kyoto University )

  • Master of Agriculture ( 2005.3   Kyoto University )

Research Interests

  • Statistical genetics

  • Genomic medicine

  • Multi-omics analysis

  • Data science

  • Bioinformatics

Research Areas

  • Life Science / Genetics

  • Life Science / Medical biochemistry

  • Life Science / System genome science

  • Life Science / Genome biology

  • Life Science / Tumor biology

Education

  • Kyoto University   Graduate School of Agriculture   Division of Applied Biosciences

    2005.4 - 2008.3

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    Country: Japan

    Notes: Doctoral Program

  • Kyoto University   Graduate School of Agriculture   Division of Applied Biosciences

    2003.4 - 2005.3

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    Country: Japan

    Notes: Master's Program

  • Kyoto University   Faculty of Agriculture

    1999.4 - 2003.3

Research History

  • Kagoshima University   Department of Data Science   Professor

    2025.4

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    Country:Japan

  • Sasaki Institute   Department of Cancer Genome Research   Manager(Dean)

    2020.4 - 2025.3

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    Country:Japan

  • National Institute of Genetics   Division of Human Genetics   Assistant Professor

    2015.4 - 2020.3

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    Country:Japan

Committee Memberships

  • Genes & Genetic Systems   Editor  

    2023   

  • Human Cell   Associate Editor  

    2022   

  • Japan Human Cell Society   Board Member and Councilor  

    2022   

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    Committee type:Academic society

 

Papers

  • Phuong Thanh Nguyen, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Shigeki Mitsunaga, Hiromichi Aoyama, Hiroshi Kitamura, Kenichi Saigo, Ituro Inoue .  Applications of donor-derived cell-free DNA in kidney transplantation healthcare: view from a prospective single-center study .      2025.5

  • Tanya J. Major, Riku Takei, Hirotaka Matsuo, Megan P. Leask, Nicholas A. Sumpter, Ruth K. Topless, Yuya Shirai, Wei Wang, Murray J. Cadzow, Amanda J. Phipps-Green, Zhiqiang Li, Aichang Ji, Marilyn E. Merriman, Emily Morice, Eric E. Kelley, Wen-Hua Wei, Sally P. A. McCormick, Matthew J. Bixley, Richard J. Reynolds, Kenneth G. Saag, Tayaza Fadason, Evgenia Golovina, Justin M. O’Sullivan, Lisa K. Stamp, Nicola Dalbeth, Abhishek Abhishek, Michael Doherty, Edward Roddy, Lennart T. H. Jacobsson, Meliha C. Kapetanovic, Olle Melander, Mariano Andrés, Fernando Pérez-Ruiz, Rosa J. Torres, Timothy Radstake, Timothy L. Jansen, Matthijs Janssen, Leo A. B. Joosten, Ruiqi Liu, Orsolya I. Gaal, Tania O. Crişan, Simona Rednic, Fina Kurreeman, Tom W. J. Huizinga, René Toes, Frédéric Lioté, Pascal Richette, Thomas Bardin, Hang Korng Ea, Tristan Pascart, Geraldine M. McCarthy, Laura Helbert, Blanka Stibůrková, Anne-K. Tausche, Till Uhlig, Véronique Vitart, Thibaud S. Boutin, Caroline Hayward, Philip L. Riches, Stuart H. Ralston, Archie Campbell, Thomas M. MacDonald, Akiyoshi Nakayama, Tappei Takada, Masahiro Nakatochi, Seiko Shimizu, Yusuke Kawamura, Yu Toyoda, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Ken Yamamoto, Keitaro Matsuo, Nariyoshi Shinomiya, Kimiyoshi Ichida, Chaeyoung Lee, Linda A. Bradbury, Matthew A. Brown, Philip C. Robinson, Russell R. C. Buchanan, Catherine L. Hill, Susan Lester, Malcolm D. Smith, Maureen Rischmueller, Hyon K. Choi, Eli A. Stahl, Jeff N. Miner, Daniel H. Solomon, Jing Cui, Kathleen M. Giacomini, Deanna J. Brackman, Eric M. Jorgenson, Hongbo Liu, Katalin Susztak, Suyash Shringapure, Suyash Shringarpure, Alexander So, Yukinori Okada, Changgui Li, Yongyong Shi, Tony R. Merriman .  A genome-wide association analysis reveals new pathogenic pathways in gout .  Nature Genetics56 ( 11 ) 2392 - 2406   2024.10

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    Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:Springer Science and Business Media LLC  

    DOI: 10.1038/s41588-024-01921-5

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    Other Link: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41588-024-01921-5

  • Kotaro Takahashi, Nozomi Yachida, Ryo Tamura, Sosuke Adachi, Shuhei Kondo, Tatsuya Abé, Hajime Umezu, Hiromi Nyuzuki, Shujiro Okuda, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Kosuke Yoshihara .  Clonal origin and genomic diversity in Lynch syndrome‐associated endometrial cancer with multiple synchronous tumors: Identification of the pathogenicity of <scp><i>MLH1</i></scp> p.<scp>L582H</scp> .  Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer63 ( 3 )   2024.3

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    Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:Wiley  

    Abstract

    Lynch syndrome‐associated endometrial cancer patients often present multiple synchronous tumors and this assessment can affect treatment strategies. We present a case of a 27‐year‐old woman with tumors in the uterine corpus, cervix, and ovaries who was diagnosed with endometrial cancer and exhibited cervical invasion and ovarian metastasis. Her family history suggested Lynch syndrome, and genetic testing identified a variant of uncertain significance, MLH1 p.L582H. We conducted immunohistochemical staining, microsatellite instability analysis, and Sanger sequencing for Lynch syndrome‐associated cancers in three generations of the family and identified consistent MLH1 loss. Whole‐exome sequencing for the corpus, cervical, and ovarian tumors of the proband identified a copy‐neutral loss of heterozygosity (LOH) occurring at the MLH1 position in all tumors. This indicated that the germline variant and the copy‐neutral LOH led to biallelic loss of MLH1 and was the cause of cancer initiation. All tumors shared a portion of somatic mutations with high mutant allele frequencies, suggesting a common clonal origin. There were no mutations shared only between the cervix and ovary samples. The profiles of mutant allele frequencies shared between the corpus and cervix or ovary indicated that two different subclones originating from the corpus independently metastasized to the cervix or ovary. Additionally, all tumors presented unique mutations in endometrial cancer‐associated genes such as ARID1A and PIK3CA. In conclusion, we demonstrated clonal origin and genomic diversity in a Lynch syndrome‐associated endometrial cancer, suggesting the importance of evaluating multiple sites in Lynch syndrome patients with synchronous tumors.

    DOI: 10.1002/gcc.23231

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  • Luca Nishimura, Akio Tanino, Mayumi Ajimoto, Takafumi Katsumura, Motoyuki Ogawa, Kae Koganebuchi, Daisuke Waku, Masahiko Kumagai, Ryota Sugimoto, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Hiroki Oota, Ituro Inoue .  Metagenomic analyses of 7000 to 5500 years old coprolites excavated from the Torihama shell-mound site in the Japanese archipelago. .  PloS one19 ( 1 ) e0295924   2024International journal

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    Coprolites contain various kinds of ancient DNAs derived from gut micro-organisms, viruses, and foods, which can help to determine the gut environment of ancient peoples. Their genomic information should be helpful in elucidating the interaction between hosts and microbes for thousands of years, as well as characterizing the dietary behaviors of ancient people. We performed shotgun metagenomic sequencing on four coprolites excavated from the Torihama shell-mound site in the Japanese archipelago. The coprolites were found in the layers of the Early Jomon period, corresponding stratigraphically to 7000 to 5500 years ago. After shotgun sequencing, we found that a significant number of reads showed homology with known gut microbe, viruses, and food genomes typically found in the feces of modern humans. We detected reads derived from several types of phages and their host bacteria simultaneously, suggesting the coexistence of viruses and their hosts. The food genomes provide biological evidence for the dietary behavior of the Jomon people, consistent with previous archaeological findings. These results indicate that ancient genomic analysis of coprolites is useful for understanding the gut environment and lifestyle of ancient peoples.

    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0295924

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  • Shigeki Mitsunaga, Naoko Fujito, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Ryoko Imazeki, Eiichiro Nagata, Ituro Inoue .  Detection of APP gene recombinant in human blood plasma .  Scientific Reports13 ( 1 )   2023.12

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    Abstract

    The pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is believed to involve the accumulation of amyloid-β in the brain, which is produced by the sequential cleavage of amyloid precursor protein (APP) by β-secretase and γ-secretase. Recently, analysis of genomic DNA and mRNA from postmortem brain neurons has revealed intra-exonic recombinants of APP (gencDNA), which have been implicated in the accumulation of amyloid-β. In this study, we computationally analyzed publicly available sequence data (SRA) using probe sequences we constructed to screen APP gencDNAs. APP gencDNAs were detected in SRAs constructed from both genomic DNA and RNA obtained from the postmortem brain and in the SRA constructed from plasma cell-free mRNA (cf-mRNA). The SRA constructed from plasma cf-mRNA showed a significant difference in the number of APP gencDNA reads between SAD and NCI: the p-value from the Mann–Whitney U test was 5.14 × 10<sup>−6</sup>. The transcripts were also found in circulating nucleic acids (CNA) from our plasma samples with NGS analysis. These data indicate that transcripts of APP gencDNA can be detected in blood plasma and suggest the possibility of using them as blood biomarkers for Alzheimer's disease.

    DOI: 10.1038/s41598-023-48993-7

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    Other Link: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-48993-7

  • Hidehiko Akashi, Nozomi Yachida, Haruka Ueda, Manako Yamaguchi, Kaoru Yamawaki, Ryo Tamura, Kazuaki Suda, Tatsuya Ishiguro, Sosuke Adachi, Yoshikazu Nagase, Yutaka Ueda, Masashi Ueda, Kaoru Abiko, Masahiro Kagabu, Tsukasa Baba, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Takayuki Enomoto, Junko Murai, Kosuke Yoshihara .  SLFN11 is a BRCA independent biomarker for the response to platinum-based chemotherapy in high-grade serous ovarian cancer and clear cell ovarian carcinoma. .  Molecular cancer therapeutics23 ( 1 ) 106 - 116   2023.9International journal

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    BRCA1/2 mutations are robust biomarkers for platinum-based chemotherapy in epithelial ovarian cancers. However, BRCA1/2 mutations in clear cell ovarian carcinoma (CCC) are less frequent compared to high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSC). The discovery of biomarkers that can be applied to CCC is an unmet need in chemotherapy. Schlafen 11 (SLFN11) has attracted attention as a novel sensitizer for DNA-damaging agents including platinum. In this study, we investigated the utility of SLFN11 in HGSC and CCC for platinum-based chemotherapy. SLFN11 expression was analyzed retrospectively by immunohistochemistry across 326 ovarian cancer samples. The clinicopathologic significance of SLFN11 expression was analyzed across 57 advanced HGSC as a discovery set, 96 advanced HGSC as a validation set, and 57 advanced CCC cases, all of whom received platinum-based chemotherapy. BRCA1/2 mutation was analyzed using targeted-gene sequencing. In the HGSC cohort, the SLFN11-positive and BRCA mutation group showed significantly longer while the SLFN11-negative and BRCA wild-type group showed significantly shorter progression-free survival and overall survival. Moreover, SLFN11-positive HGSC shrunk significantly better than SLFN11-negative HGSC after neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Comparable results were obtained with CCC but without consideration of BRCA1/2 mutation due to a small population. Multivariate analysis identified SLFN11 as an independent factor for better survival in HGSC and CCC. The SLFN11-dependent sensitivity to platinum and PARP inhibitors were validated with genetically modified non-HGSC ovarian cancer cell lines. Our study reveals that SLFN11 predicts platinum sensitivity in HGSC and CCC independently of BRCA1/2 mutation status, indicating that SLFN11 assessment can guide treatment selection in HGSC and CCC.

    DOI: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-23-0257

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  • Ryo Tamura, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Nozomi Yachida, Haruka Ueda, Tatsuya Ishiguro, Teiichi Motoyama, Ituro Inoue, Takayuki Enomoto, Kosuke Yoshihara .  Spatial genomic diversity associated with APOBEC mutagenesis in squamous cell carcinoma arising from ovarian teratoma. .  Cancer science114 ( 5 ) 2145 - 2157   2023.5International journal

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    Although the gross and microscopic features of squamous cell carcinoma arising from ovarian mature cystic teratoma (MCT-SCC) vary from case to case, the spatial spreading of genomic alterations within the tumor remains unclear. To clarify the spatial genomic diversity in MCT-SCCs, we performed whole-exome sequencing by collecting 16 samples from histologically different parts of two MCT-SCCs. Both cases showed histological diversity within the tumors (case 1: nonkeratinizing and keratinizing SCC and case 2: nonkeratinizing SCC and anaplastic carcinoma) and had different somatic mutation profiles by histological findings. Mutation signature analysis revealed a significantly enriched apolipoprotein B mRNA editing enzyme catalytic subunit (APOBEC) signature at all sites. Intriguingly, the spread of genomic alterations within the tumor and the clonal evolution patterns from nonmalignant epithelium to cancer sites differed between cases. TP53 mutation and copy number alterations were widespread at all sites, including the nonmalignant epithelium, in case 1. Keratinizing and nonkeratinizing SCCs were differentiated by the occurrence of unique somatic mutations from a common ancestral clone. In contrast, the nonmalignant epithelium showed almost no somatic mutations in case 2. TP53 mutation and the copy number alteration similarities were observed only in nonkeratinizing SCC samples. Nonkeratinizing SCC and anaplastic carcinoma shared almost no somatic mutations, suggesting that each locally and independently arose in the MCT. We demonstrated that two MCT-SCCs with different histologic findings were highly heterogeneous tumors with clearly different clones associated with APOBEC-mediated mutagenesis, suggesting the importance of evaluating intratumor histological and genetic heterogeneity among multiple sites of MCT-SCC.

    DOI: 10.1111/cas.15754

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  • Detecting and Quantifying Donor derived cell free DNA in the blood of kidney transplant recipients as a biomarker for graft injury and immunosuppression .  Organ Biology30 ( 1 ) 7 - 14   2023.2Reviewed

  • Yu Toyoda, Masahiro Nakatochi, Akiyoshi Nakayama, Yusuke Kawamura, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Kenji Wakai, Keitaro Matsuo, Hirotaka Matsuo .  SNP-based heritability estimates of gout and its subtypes determined by genome-wide association studies of clinically defined gout. .  Rheumatology (Oxford, England)   2022.10International journal

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    DOI: 10.1093/rheumatology/keac597

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  • Piu Banerjee, Fumi Kubo, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Rieko Ajima, Takuya Sato, Tatsumi Hirata, Takuji Iwasato .  Spontaneous activity in whisker-innervating region of neonatal mouse trigeminal ganglion .  Scientific Reports12 ( 1 )   2022.9Reviewed

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    Abstract

    Spontaneous activity during the early postnatal period is thought to be crucial for the establishment of mature neural circuits. It remains unclear if the peripheral structure of the developing somatosensory system exhibits spontaneous activity, similar to that observed in the retina and cochlea of developing mammals. By establishing an ex vivo calcium imaging system, here we found that neurons in the whisker-innervating region of the trigeminal ganglion (TG) of neonatal mice generate spontaneous activity. A small percentage of neurons showed some obvious correlated activity, and these neurons were mostly located close to one another. TG spontaneous activity was majorly exhibited by medium-to-large diameter neurons, a characteristic of mechanosensory neurons, and was blocked by chelation of extracellular calcium. Moreover, this activity was diminished by the adult stage. Spontaneous activity in the TG during the first postnatal week could be a source of spontaneous activity observed in the neonatal mouse barrel cortex.

    DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-20068-z

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    Other Link: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-022-20068-z

  • Sundaramoorthy Revathidevi, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Toyoaki Natsume, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Naoko T. Fujito, Hisako Akatsuka, Takehito Sato, Arasambattu Kannan Munirajan, Ituro Inoue .  AMBRA1 p.Gln30Arg Mutation, Identified in a Cowden Syndrome Family, Exhibits Hyperproliferative Potential in hTERT-RPE1 Cells .  International Journal of Molecular Sciences23 ( 19 ) 11124 - 11124   2022.9

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    Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:MDPI AG  

    Cowden syndrome (CS) is a rare autosomal dominant disorder associated with multiple hamartomatous and neoplastic lesions in various organs. Most CS patients have been found to have germline mutations in the PTEN tumor suppressor. In the present study, we investigated the causative gene of CS in a family of PTEN (phosphatase and tensin homolog deleted on chromosome 10) -negative CS patients. Whole exome sequencing analysis revealed AMBRA1 (Autophagy and Beclin 1 Regulator 1) as a novel candidate gene harboring two germline variants: p.Gln30Arg (Q30R) and p.Arg1195Ser (R1195S). AMBRA1 is a key regulator of the autophagy signaling network and a tumor suppressor. To functionally validate the role of AMBRA1 in the clinical manifestations of CS, we generated AMBRA1 depletion and Q30R mutation in hTERT-RPE1 (humanTelomerase Reverse Transcriptase-immortalized Retinal Pigmented Epithelial cells) using the CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing system. We observed that both AMBRA1-depleted and mutant cells showed accumulation in the S phase, leading to hyperproliferation, which is a characteristic of hamartomatous lesions. Specifically, the AMBRA1 Q30R mutation disturbed the G1/S transition of cells, leading to continuous mitotic entry of mutant cells, irrespective of the extracellular condition. From our analysis of primary ciliogenesis in these cells, we speculated that the mitotic entry of AMBRA1 Q30R mutants could be due to non-functional primary cilia that lead to impaired processing of extracellular sensory signals. Additionally, we observed a situs inversus phenotype in ambra1-depleted zebrafish, a developmental abnormality resulting from dysregulated primary ciliogenesis. Taken together, we established that the AMBRA1 Q30R mutation that we observed in CS patients might play an important role in inducing the hyperproliferative potential of cells through regulating primary ciliogenesis.

    DOI: 10.3390/ijms231911124

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  • Yu Toyoda, Akiyoshi Nakayama, Masahiro Nakatochi, Yusuke Kawamura, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Ken Yamamoto, Seiko Shimizu, Hiroshi Ooyama, Keiko Ooyama, Toru Shimizu, Mitsuo Nagase, Yuji Hidaka, Kimiyoshi Ichida, Ituro Inoue, Nariyoshi Shinomiya, Hirotaka Matsuo .  Genome-wide meta-analysis between renal overload type and renal underexcretion type of clinically defined gout in Japanese populations. .  Molecular genetics and metabolism136 ( 3 ) 186 - 189   2022.7International journal

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    Despite progress in understanding of the genetic basis of gout, the precise factors affecting differences in gout susceptibility among different gout subtypes remain unclear. Using clinically diagnosed gout patients, we conducted a genome-wide meta-analysis of two distinct gout subtypes: the renal overload type and the renal underexcretion type. We provide genetic evidence at a genome-wide level of significance that supports a positive association between ABCG2 dysfunction and acquisition of the renal overload type.

    DOI: 10.1016/j.ymgme.2022.01.100

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  • Ai Yoshioka, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Takeshi Fukumoto, Ituro Inoue, Chikako Nishigori, Makoto Kunisada .  The landscape of genetic alterations of <scp>UVB</scp> ‐induced skin tumors in <scp>DNA</scp> repair‐deficient mice .  Experimental Dermatology   2022.6

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    Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:Wiley  

    DOI: 10.1111/exd.14634

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  • Mathew Maria Rose, Shankar Dhamodharan, Sundaramoorthy Revathidevi, Sundaram Reddy Chakkarappan, Mani G Jagadeesan, Shanmugam Subbiah, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Ituro Inoue, Avaniyapuram Kannan Murugan, Arasambattu Kannan Munirajan .  High incidence of PI3K pathway gene mutations in South Indian cervical cancers .  Cancer Genetics264-265   100 - 108   2022.6Reviewed

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    Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:Elsevier BV  

    DOI: 10.1016/j.cancergen.2022.05.002

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  • Keiichi Iwaya, Hisae Arai, Nanao Takatou, Yuka Morita, Rinko Ozeki, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Masaru Sakamoto, Tsutomu Kouno, Masayoshi Soma .  A sheet pocket to prevent cross-contamination of formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded block for application in next generation sequencing .  PLOS ONE17 ( 5 ) e0266947 - e0266947   2022.5Reviewed

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    Language:English   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:Public Library of Science (PLoS)  

    Formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (FFPE) blocks are used as biomaterials for next-generation sequencing of cancer panels. Cross-contamination is detected in approximately 5% of the DNA extracted from FFPE samples, which reduces the detection rate of genetic abnormalities. There are no effective methods available for processing FFPE blocks that prevent cells from mixing with other specimens. The present study evaluated 897 sheets that could potentially prevent cell transmission but allow for the movement of various solvents used in FFPE blocks. According to the International Organization for Standardization and Japanese Industrial Standards, six requirements were established for the screening of packing sheets: 1) filter opening ≤5 μm, 2) thickness ≤100 μm, 3) chemical resistance, 4) permeability ≥1.0 × 10<sup>−3</sup> cm/s, 5) water retention rate &lt;200%, and 6) cell transit test (≤2 cells/10 high-power fields). Polyamide, polyethylene terephthalate, and polypropylene/polyethylene composite sheets met all criteria. A pocket, which was designed to wrap the tissue uniformly, was made of these sheets and was found to effectively block the entry of all cell types during FFPE block processing. Using a sheet pocket, no single cell from the cell pellet could pass through the outer layer. The presence or absence of the sheet pocket did not affect hematoxylin and eosin staining. When processing FFPE blocks as a biomaterial for next-generation sequencing, the sheet pocket was effective in preventing cross-contamination. This technology will in part support the precise translation of histopathological data into genome sequencing data in general pathology laboratories.

    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0266947

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  • Saori Sakaue, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Jun Hirata, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Keiko Yamazaki, Makoto Yawata, Nobuyo Yawata, Tatsuhiko Naito, Junji Umeno, Takaaki Kawaguchi, Toshiyuki Matsui, Satoshi Motoya, Yasuo Suzuki, Hidetoshi Inoko, Atsushi Tajima, Takayuki Morisaki, Koichi Matsuda, Yoichiro Kamatani, Kazuhiko Yamamoto, Ituro Inoue, Yukinori Okada .  Decoding the diversity of killer immunoglobulin-like receptors by deep sequencing and a high-resolution imputation method .  Cell Genomics2 ( 3 ) 100101 - 100101   2022.3

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    Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:Elsevier BV  

    DOI: 10.1016/j.xgen.2022.100101

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  • Manako Yamaguchi, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Kazuaki Suda, Kosuke Yoshihara, Tatsuya Ishiguro, Nozomi Yachida, Kyota Saito, Haruka Ueda, Kentaro Sugino, Yutaro Mori, Kaoru Yamawaki, Ryo Tamura, Sundaramoorthy Revathidevi, Teiichi Motoyama, Kazuki Tainaka, Roel G W Verhaak, Ituro Inoue, Takayuki Enomoto .  Spatiotemporal dynamics of clonal selection and diversification in normal endometrial epithelium. .  Nature communications13 ( 1 ) 943 - 943   2022.2International journal

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    It has become evident that somatic mutations in cancer-associated genes accumulate in the normal endometrium, but spatiotemporal understanding of the evolution and expansion of mutant clones is limited. To elucidate the timing and mechanism of the clonal expansion of somatic mutations in cancer-associated genes in the normal endometrium, we sequence 1311 endometrial glands from 37 women. By collecting endometrial glands from different parts of the endometrium, we show that multiple glands with the same somatic mutations occupy substantial areas of the endometrium. We demonstrate that "rhizome structures", in which the basal glands run horizontally along the muscular layer and multiple vertical glands rise from the basal gland, originate from the same ancestral clone. Moreover, mutant clones detected in the vertical glands diversify by acquiring additional mutations. These results suggest that clonal expansions through the rhizome structures are involved in the mechanism by which mutant clones extend their territories. Furthermore, we show clonal expansions and copy neutral loss-of-heterozygosity events occur early in life, suggesting such events can be tolerated many years in the normal endometrium. Our results of the evolutionary dynamics of mutant clones in the human endometrium will lead to a better understanding of the mechanisms of endometrial regeneration during the menstrual cycle and the development of therapies for the prevention and treatment of endometrium-related diseases.

    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-28568-2

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  • Sundaramoorthy Revathidevi, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Kazuaki Suda, Naoko Fujito, Arasambattu Kannan Munirajan, Kosuke Yoshihara, Takayuki Enomoto, Ituro Inoue .  APOBEC mediated mutagenesis drives genomic heterogeneity in endometriosis .  Journal of Human Genetics67 ( 6 ) 323 - 329   2022.1

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    DOI: 10.1038/s10038-021-01003-y

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    Other Link: https://www.nature.com/articles/s10038-021-01003-y

  • Masahiko Takahashi, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Haruhito Sakata, Naoya Uesato, Kentaro Murakami, Masayuki Kano, Takeshi Toyozumi, Yasunori Matsumoto, Tetsuro Isozaki, Nobufumi Sekino, Ryota Otsuka, Itsuro Inoue, Hisahiro Matsubara .  Biased expression of mutant alleles in cancer-related genes in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. .  Esophagus : official journal of the Japan Esophageal Society19 ( 2 ) 294 - 302   2022.1

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    BACKGROUND: Recent progress of large-scale international studies has provided comprehensive catalogs of somatic mutations in cancers. Additionally, it has become evident that allelic imbalance in the abundance of somatic mutations between DNA and RNA were pervasive in various types of cancer. However, the allelic imbalance of the abundance of somatic mutations in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC) has not been fully analyzed. METHODS: We performed exome sequencing for 25 Japanese patients with ESCC to detect a comprehensive catalog of somatic mutations in ESCC. Additionally, we performed mRNA sequencing to evaluate the allelic imbalance of the identified somatic mutations at the transcriptional level by comparing the mutant allele frequencies between RNA and DNA. RESULTS: The exome sequencing showed that TP53 and ZNF750 were significantly mutated genes. The expression levels of TP53 and ZNF750 were different depending on the mutation status. In almost all the tumors with missense mutations in TP53 and ZNF750, the mutant allele frequencies were higher in the RNA sequencing than those in the exome sequencing, indicating that the mutant alleles were preferentially expressed. By examining the allelic imbalances for all the identified missense mutations, we demonstrated that genes showing preferential expressions of the mutant alleles were involved in the pathways including cell cycle, cell death, and chromatin modification. CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study suggest that the allelic imbalance of the abundance of somatic mutations plays important roles in the initiation and progression of ESCC by modulating cancer-related biological pathways.

    DOI: 10.1007/s10388-021-00900-7

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  • Timothy A Jinam, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Maude E Phipps, Naruya Saitou, Ituro Inoue .  Allelic and haplotypic HLA diversity in indigenous Malaysian populations explored using Next Generation Sequencing. .  Human immunology83 ( 1 ) 17 - 26   2021.10International journal

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    The heterogenous population of Malaysia includes more than 50 indigenous groups, and characterizing their HLA diversity would not only provide insights to their ancestry, but also on the effects of natural selection on their genome. We utilized hybridization-based sequence capture and short-read sequencing on the HLA region of 172 individuals representing seven indigenous groups in Malaysia (Jehai, Kintaq, Temiar, Mah Meri, Seletar, Temuan, Bidayuh). Allele and haplotype frequencies of HLA-A, -B, -C, -DRB1, -DQA1, -DQB1, -DPA1, and -DPB1 revealed several ancestry-informative markers. Using SNP-based heterozygosity and pairwise Fst, we observed signals of natural selection, particularly in HLA-A, -C and -DPB1 genes. Consequently, we showed the impact of natural selection on phylogenetic inference using HLA and non-HLA SNPs. We demonstrate the utility of Next Generation Sequencing for generating unambiguous, high-throughput, high-resolution HLA data that adds to our knowledge of HLA diversity and natural selection in indigenous minority groups.

    DOI: 10.1016/j.humimm.2021.09.005

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  • Ryota Sugimoto, Luca Nishimura, Phuong Thanh Nguyen, Jumpei Ito, Nicholas F Parrish, Hiroshi Mori, Ken Kurokawa, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Ituro Inoue .  Comprehensive discovery of CRISPR-targeted terminally redundant sequences in the human gut metagenome: Viruses, plasmids, and more. .  PLoS computational biology17 ( 10 ) e1009428   2021.10International journal

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    Viruses are the most numerous biological entity, existing in all environments and infecting all cellular organisms. Compared with cellular life, the evolution and origin of viruses are poorly understood; viruses are enormously diverse, and most lack sequence similarity to cellular genes. To uncover viral sequences without relying on either reference viral sequences from databases or marker genes that characterize specific viral taxa, we developed an analysis pipeline for virus inference based on clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR). CRISPR is a prokaryotic nucleic acid restriction system that stores the memory of previous exposure. Our protocol can infer CRISPR-targeted sequences, including viruses, plasmids, and previously uncharacterized elements, and predict their hosts using unassembled short-read metagenomic sequencing data. By analyzing human gut metagenomic data, we extracted 11,391 terminally redundant CRISPR-targeted sequences, which are likely complete circular genomes. The sequences included 2,154 tailed-phage genomes, together with 257 complete crAssphage genomes, 11 genomes larger than 200 kilobases, 766 genomes of Microviridae species, 56 genomes of Inoviridae species, and 95 previously uncharacterized circular small genomes that have no reliably predicted protein-coding gene. We predicted the host(s) of approximately 70% of the discovered genomes at the taxonomic level of phylum by linking protospacers to taxonomically assigned CRISPR direct repeats. These results demonstrate that our protocol is efficient for de novo inference of CRISPR-targeted sequences and their host prediction.

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  • Ryo Tamura, Kosuke Yoshihara, Koji Matsuo, Nozomi Yachida, Ai Miyoshi, Kotaro Takahashi, Kentaro Sugino, Manako Yamaguchi, Yutaro Mori, Kazuaki Suda, Tatsuya Ishiguro, Shujiro Okuda, Teiichi Motoyama, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Akira Kikuchi, Yutaka Ueda, Ituro Inoue, Takayuki Enomoto .  Proposing a molecular classification associated with hypercoagulation in ovarian clear cell carcinoma .  Gynecologic Oncology163 ( 2 ) 327 - 333   2021.8Reviewed International journal

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    BACKGROUND: Although ovarian clear cell carcinoma (CCC) is associated with high incidence of thromboembolism, the clinicopathological and biological significance of hypercoagulable status in CCC remains unclear. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We retrospectively analyzed pretreatment D-dimer levels, thromboembolic status, and clinical outcome of 125 CCCs in the discovery set and 143 CCCs in two other independent validation sets. Next, we performed RNA sequencing of 93 CCCs and compared coagulation-related gene profiles with 2492 pan-cancer data. We investigated differences in molecular characteristics of CCC subclasses based on coagulation status. RESULTS: In the discovery dataset, D-dimer elevation above the normal range was significantly associated with shorter progression-free and overall survival, irrespective to thromboembolic status. Multivariate analysis identified D-dimer elevation and clinical stage as an independent prognostic factors. We confirmed the prognostic significance of D-dimer elevation in the validation sets. Tissue factor and IL6, which are considered key elements of cancer-induced hypercoagulation, were highly expressed in CCC than in other cancers regardless of D-dimer level. Higher activity of various oncogenic pathways was observed in CCC with compared to without D-dimer elevation. Moreover, hierarchical cluster analysis divided 57 CCCs with D-dimer elevation into immunologically hot and cold tumor subtypes. Hot tumors were characterized by enrichment of T-cell inflamed phenotype, inflammation, the epithelial-mesenchymal transition, and high serum levels of CRP, and cold tumors by enrichment of cell cycle and MYC pathways. CONCLUSIONS: CCC represents hypercoagulable disease and elevate D-dimer is a prognostic factor for decreased survival in CCC. D-dimer high CCC has distinct molecular characteristics into the inflammatory-driven pathway (hot tumor) and the immune-suppressive pathway (cold tumor). Treatment implication of our proposed molecular classification merits further investigation.

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  • Waleed Aamer, Hisham Y. Hassan, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Martin Jaeger, Hanan Tahir, Mohammed H. Abdelraheem, Mihai G. Netea, Ituro Inoue .  Analysis of HLA gene polymorphisms in East Africans reveals evidence of gene flow in two Semitic populations from Sudan .  European Journal of Human Genetics29 ( 8 ) 1259 - 1271   2021.8Reviewed International journal

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    Sudan, a northeastern African country, is characterized by high levels of cultural, linguistic, and genetic diversity, which is believed to be affected by continuous migration from neighboring countries. Consistent with such demographic effect, genome-wide SNP data revealed a shared ancestral component among Sudanese Afro-Asiatic speaking groups and non-African populations, mainly from West Asia. Although this component is shared among all Afro-Asiatic speaking groups, the extent of this sharing in Semitic groups, such as Sudanese Arab, is still unknown. Using genotypes of six polymorphic human leukocyte antigen (HLA) genes (i.e., HLA-A, -C, -B, -DRB1, -DQB1, and -DPB1), we examined the genetic structure of eight East African ethnic groups with origins in Sudan, South Sudan, and Ethiopia. We identified informative HLA alleles using principal component analysis, which revealed that the two Semitic groups (Gaalien and Shokrya) constituted a distinct cluster from the other Afro-Asiatic speaking groups in this study. The HLA alleles that distinguished Semitic Arabs co-exist in the same extended HLA haplotype, and those alleles are in strong linkage disequilibrium. Interestingly, we find the four-locus haplotype "C*12:02-B*52:01-DRB1*15:02-DQB1*06:01" exclusively in non-African populations and it is widely spread across Asia. The identification of this haplotype suggests a gene flow from Asia, and likely these haplotypes were brought to Africa through back migration from the Near East. These findings will be of interest to biomedical and anthropological studies that examine the demographic history of northeast Africa.

    DOI: 10.1038/s41431-021-00845-6

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  • Nozomi Yachida, Kosuke Yoshihara, Kazuaki Suda, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Haruka Ueda, Kentaro Sugino, Manako Yamaguchi, Yutaro Mori, Kaoru Yamawaki, Ryo Tamura, Tatsuya Ishiguro, Hiroaki Kase, Teiichi Motoyama, Takayuki Enomoto .  Biological significance of KRAS mutant allele expression in ovarian endometriosis .  Cancer Science112 ( 5 ) 2020 - 2032   2021.5Reviewed International journal

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    KRAS is the most frequently mutated in ovarian endometriosis. However, it is unclear whether the KRAS mutant allele's mRNA is expressed and plays a biological role in ovarian endometriosis. Here, we performed mutation-specific RNA in situ hybridization to evaluate mutant allele expression of KRAS p.G12V, the most frequently detected mutation in ovarian endometriosis in our previous study, in formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue (FFPE) samples of ovarian endometriosis, cancer cell lines, and ovarian cancers. First, we verified that mutant or wild-type allele of KRAS were expressed in all 5 cancer cell lines and 9 ovarian cancer cases corresponding to the mutation status. Next, we applied this assay to 26 ovarian endometriosis cases, and observed mutant allele expression of KRAS p.G12V in 10 cases. Mutant or wild-type allele of KRAS were expressed in line with mutation status in 12 available endometriosis cases for which KRAS gene sequence was determined. Comparison of clinical features between ovarian endometriosis with KRAS p.G12V mutant allele expression and with KRAS wild-type showed that KRAS p.G12V mutant allele expression was significantly associated with inflammation in ovarian endometriosis. Finally, we assessed the spatial distribution of KRAS mutant allele expression in 5 endometriosis cases by performing multiregional sampling. Intratumor heterogeneity of KRAS mutant allele expression was observed in two endometriosis cases, whereas the spatial distribution of KRAS p.G12V mutation signals were diffuse and homogenous in ovarian cancer. In conclusion, evaluation of oncogene mutant expression will be useful for clarifying the biological significance of oncogene mutations in benign tumors.

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  • Yu Toyoda, Yusuke Kawamura, Akiyoshi Nakayama, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Toshihide Higashino, Seiko Shimizu, Hiroshi Ooyama, Keito Morimoto, Naohiro Uchida, Ryuichiro Shigesawa, Kenji Takeuchi, Ituro Inoue, Kimiyoshi Ichida, Hiroshi Suzuki, Nariyoshi Shinomiya, Tappei Takada, Hirotaka Matsuo .  Substantial anti-gout effect conferred by common and rare dysfunctional variants of URAT1/SLC22A12 .  Rheumatology60 ( 11 ) 5224 - 5232   2021.4Reviewed International journal

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    <title>Abstract</title>
    <sec>
    <title>Objectives</title>
    Gout, caused by chronic elevation of serum uric acid levels, is the commonest form of inflammatory arthritis. The causative effect of common and rare variants of ATP-binding cassette transporter G2 (ABCG2/BCRP) on gout risk has been studied, but little attention has been paid to the effect of common (rs121907892, p.W258X) and rare variants of urate transporter 1 (URAT1/SLC22A12) on gout, despite dysfunctional variants of URAT1 having been identified as pathophysiological causes of renal hypouricaemia.


    </sec>
    <sec>
    <title>Methods</title>
    To address this important but overlooked issue, we investigated the effects of these URAT1 variants on gout susceptibility, using targeted exon sequencing on 480 clinically defined gout cases and 480 controls of Japanese males in combination with a series of functional analyses of newly identified URAT1 variants.


    </sec>
    <sec>
    <title>Results</title>
    Our results show that both common and rare dysfunctional variants of URAT1 markedly decrease the risk of gout (OR 0.0338, reciprocal OR 29.6, P = 7.66 × 10−8). Interestingly, we also found that the URAT1-related protective effect on gout eclipsed the ABCG2-related causative effect (OR 2.30–3.32). Our findings reveal only one dysfunctional variant of URAT1 to have a substantial anti-gout effect, even in the presence of causative variants of ABCG2, a ‘gout gene’.


    </sec>
    <sec>
    <title>Conclusion</title>
    Our findings provide a better understanding of gout/hyperuricaemia and its aetiology that is highly relevant to personalized health care. The substantial anti-gout effect of common and rare variants of URAT1 identified in the present study support the genetic concept of a ‘Common Disease, Multiple Common and Rare Variant’ model.


    </sec>

    DOI: 10.1093/rheumatology/keab327

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  • Manako Yamaguchi, Kosuke Yoshihara, Kazuaki Suda, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Nozomi Yachida, Haruka Ueda, Kentaro Sugino, Yutaro Mori, Kaoru Yamawaki, Ryo Tamura, Tatsuya Ishiguro, Teiichi Motoyama, Yu Watanabe, Shujiro Okuda, Kazuki Tainaka, Takayuki Enomoto .  Three-dimensional understanding of the morphological complexity of the human uterine endometrium .  iScience24 ( 4 ) 102258 - 102258   2021.4Reviewed International journal

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    The fundamental morphology of the endometrial glands is not sufficiently understood by 2D observation because these glands have complicated winding and branching patterns. To construct a large picture of the endometrial gland structure, we performed tissue-clearing-based 3D imaging of human uterine endometrial tissue. Our 3D immunohistochemistry and layer analyses revealed that the endometrial glands form a plexus network in the stratum basalis and expand horizontally along the muscular layer, similar to the rhizome of grass. We then extended our method to assess the 3D morphology of tissue affected by adenomyosis, a representative "endometrium-related disease," and observed its 3D morphological features, including the direct invasion of endometrial glands into the myometrium and an ant colony-like network of ectopic endometrial glands within the myometrium. Thus, further understanding of the morphology of the human endometrium based on 3D analysis will lead to the identification of the pathogenesis of endometrium-related diseases.

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  • Luca Nishimura, Ryota Sugimoto, Jun Inoue, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Hideaki Kanzawa-Kiriyama, Ken-ichi Shinoda, Ituro Inoue .  Identification of ancient viruses from metagenomic data of the Jomon people .  Journal of Human Genetics66 ( 3 ) 287 - 296   2021.3Reviewed

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  • Yuki Matsumoto, Hiromichi Nagayama, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Atsushi Toyoda, Tatsuhiko Goto, Tsuyoshi Koide .  Combined change of behavioral traits for domestication and gene‐networks in mice selectively bred for active tameness .  Genes, Brain and Behavior20 ( 3 ) e12721   2021.3Reviewed International journal

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    Tameness is a major element of animal domestication and involves two components: motivation to approach humans (active tameness) and reluctance to avoid humans (passive tameness). To understand the behavioral and genetic mechanisms of active tameness in mice, we had previously conducted selective breeding for long durations of contact and heading toward human hands in an active tameness test using a wild-derived heterogeneous stock. Although the study showed a significant increase in contacting and heading with the 12th generation of breeding, the effect on other behavioral indices related to tameness and change of gene expression levels underlying selective breeding was unclear. Here, we analyzed nine tameness-related traits at a later stage of selective breeding and analyzed how gene expression levels were changed by the selective breeding. We found that five traits, including contacting and heading, showed behavioral change in the selective groups comparing to the control through the generations. Furthermore, we conducted cluster analyses to evaluate the relationships among the nine traits and found that contacting and heading combined in an independent cluster in the selected groups, but not in the control groups. RNA-Seq of hippocampal tissue revealed differential expression of 136 genes between the selection and control groups, while the pathway analysis identified the networks associated with these genes. These results suggest that active tameness was hidden in the control groups but became apparent in the selected populations by selective breeding, potentially driven by changes in gene expression networks.

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  • Saya Nakakura, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Shinya Uchino, Akiko Murakami, Akira Oka, Ituro Inoue, Hirofumi Nakaoka .  HLA-B*39:01:01 is a novel risk factor for antithyroid drug-induced agranulocytosis in Japanese population .  The Pharmacogenomics Journal21 ( 1 ) 94 - 101   2021.2Reviewed International journal

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    Antithyroid drug (ATD) is a mainstay of Graves' disease (GD). About 0.1-0.5% of patients with GD treated with ATD exhibit ATD-induced agranulocytosis, which is characterized by severe reduction of circulating neutrophils. Immune-mediated responses have been proposed as a possible mechanism for the pathogenesis of ATD-induced agranulocytosis. Although it has been reported that the HLA class II allele (HLA-DRB1*08:03) was associated with ATD-induced agranulocytosis in multiple populations, the entire HLA region have not been explored in Japanese. Therefore, we performed HLA sequencing for 10 class I and 11 class II genes in 87 patients with ATD-induced agranulocytosis and 384 patients with GD who did not show ATD-induced agranulocytosis. By conducting case-control association studies at the HLA allele and haplotype levels, we replicated the association between HLA-DRB1*08:03:02 and ATD-induced agranulocytosis (P = 5.2 × 10-7, odds ratio = 2.80), and identified HLA-B*39:01:01 as an independent risk factor (P = 1.4 × 10-3, odds ratio = 3.35). To verify reproducibility of the novel association of HLA-B*39:01:01, we reanalyzed allele frequency data for HLA-B*39:01:01 from previous case-control association studies. The association of HLA-B*39:01:01 was significantly replicated in Chinese (P = 9.0 × 10-3), Taiwanese (P = 1.1 × 10-3), and European populations (P = 5.2 × 10-4). A meta-analysis combining results from the previous and current studies reinforced evidence of the association between HLA-B*39:01:01 and ATD-induced agranulocytosis (Pmeta = 1.2 × 10-9, pooled OR = 3.66, 95% CI; 2.41-5.57). The results of this study will provide a better understanding of the pathogenesis of ATD-induced agranulocytosis in the context of HLA-mediated hypersensitivity reactions.

    DOI: 10.1038/s41397-020-00187-4

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  • Sundaramoorthy Revathidevi, Avaniyapuram Kannan Murugan, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Ituro Inoue, Arasambattu Kannan Munirajan .  APOBEC: A molecular driver in cervical cancer pathogenesis. .  Cancer letters496   104 - 116   2021.1International journal

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    Cervical cancer is one of the foremost common cancers in women. Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection remains a major risk factor of cervical cancer. In addition, numerous other genetic and epigenetic factors also are involved in the underlying pathogenesis of cervical cancer. Recently, it has been reported that apolipoprotein B mRNA editing enzyme catalytic polypeptide like (APOBEC), DNA-editing protein plays an important role in the molecular pathogenesis of cancer. Particularly, the APOBEC3 family was shown to induce tumor mutations by aberrant DNA editing mechanism. In general, APOBEC3 enzymes play a pivotal role in the deamination of cytidine to uridine in DNA and RNA to control diverse biological processes such as regulation of protein expression, innate immunity, and embryonic development. Innate antiviral activity of the APOBEC3 family members restrict retroviruses, endogenous retro-element, and DNA viruses including the HPV that is the leading risk factor for cervical cancer. This review briefly describes the pathogenesis of cervical cancer and discusses in detail the recent findings on the role of APOBEC in the molecular pathogenesis of cervical cancer.

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  • Aisha Yesbolatova, Yuichiro Saito, Naomi Kitamoto, Hatsune Makino-Itou, Rieko Ajima, Risako Nakano, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Kosuke Fukui, Kanae Gamo, Yusuke Tominari, Haruki Takeuchi, Yumiko Saga, Ken-Ichiro Hayashi, Masato T Kanemaki .  The auxin-inducible degron 2 technology provides sharp degradation control in yeast, mammalian cells, and mice. .  Nature communications11 ( 1 ) 5701 - 5701   2020.11International journal

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    Protein knockdown using the auxin-inducible degron (AID) technology is useful to study protein function in living cells because it induces rapid depletion, which makes it possible to observe an immediate phenotype. However, the current AID system has two major drawbacks: leaky degradation and the requirement for a high dose of auxin. These negative features make it difficult to control precisely the expression level of a protein of interest in living cells and to apply this method to mice. Here, we overcome these problems by taking advantage of a bump-and-hole approach to establish the AID version 2 (AID2) system. AID2, which employs an OsTIR1(F74G) mutant and a ligand, 5-Ph-IAA, shows no detectable leaky degradation, requires a 670-times lower ligand concentration, and achieves even quicker degradation than the conventional AID. We demonstrate successful generation of human cell mutants for genes that were previously difficult to deal with, and show that AID2 achieves rapid target depletion not only in yeast and mammalian cells, but also in mice.

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  • Jumpei Ito, Izumi Kimura, Andrew Soper, Alexandre Coudray, Yoshio Koyanagi, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Ituro Inoue, Priscilla Turelli, Didier Trono, Kei Sato .  Endogenous retroviruses drive KRAB zinc-finger protein family expression for tumor suppression. .  Science advances6 ( 43 )   2020.10International journal

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    Gene expression aberration is a hallmark of cancers, but the mechanisms underlying such aberrations remain unclear. Human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs) are genomic repetitive elements that potentially function as enhancers. Since numerous HERVs are epigenetically activated in tumors, their activation could cause global gene expression aberrations in tumors. Here, we show that HERV activation in tumors leads to the up-regulation of hundreds of transcriptional suppressors, namely, Krüppel-associated box domain-containing zinc-finger family proteins (KZFPs). KZFP genes are preferentially encoded nearby the activated HERVs in tumors and transcriptionally regulated by these adjacent HERVs. Increased HERV and KZFP expression in tumors was associated with better disease conditions. Increased KZFP expression in cancer cells altered the expression of genes related to the cell cycle and cell-matrix adhesion and suppressed cellular growth, migration, and invasion abilities. Our data suggest that HERV activation in tumors drives the synchronized elevation of KZFP expression, presumably leading to tumor suppression.

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  • Nozomi Yachida, Kosuke Yoshihara, Kazuaki Suda, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Haruka Ueda, Kentaro Sugino, Manako Yamaguchi, Yutaro Mori, Kaoru Yamawaki, Ryo Tamura, Tatsuya Ishiguro, Masanori Isobe, Teiichi Motoyama, Ituro Inoue, Takayuki Enomoto .  ARID1A protein expression is retained in ovarian endometriosis with ARID1A loss-of-function mutations: implication for the two-hit hypothesis. .  Scientific reports10 ( 1 ) 14260 - 14260   2020.8International journal

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    ARID1A loss-of-function mutation accompanied by a loss of ARID1A protein expression is considered one of the most important driver events in endometriosis-associated ovarian cancer. Although our recent genomic study clarified that ARID1A loss-of-function mutations were detected in 13% of ovarian endometriosis, an association between the ARID1A mutation status and ARID1A protein expression in ovarian endometriosis remains unclear. We performed immunohistochemical staining for ARID1A in 78 ovarian endometriosis samples and 99 clear cell carcinoma samples. We revealed that not only 70 endometriosis samples without ARID1A mutations but also eight endometriosis samples with ARID1A loss-of-function mutations retained ARID1A protein expression. On the other hand, most of clear cell carcinomas with ARID1A loss-of-function mutations showed a loss of ARID1A protein expression. In particular, clear cell carcinoma samples which harbor multiple ARID1A loss-of-function mutations or both a single ARID1A loss-of-function mutation and ARID1A allelic imbalance lost ARID1A protein expression. However, ARID1A protein expression was retained in seven clear cell carcinomas with ARID1A loss-of-function mutations. These results suggest that a single ARID1A loss-of-function mutation is insufficient for ARID1A loss in ovarian endometriosis and some clear cell carcinoma. Further driver events may be needed for the malignant transformation of ovarian endometriosis with ARID1A loss-of-function mutations.

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  • Kazuaki Suda, Luis Antonio Cruz Diaz, Kosuke Yoshihara, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Nozomi Yachida, Teiichi Motoyama, Ituro Inoue, Takayuki Enomoto .  Clonal lineage from normal endometrium to ovarian clear cell carcinoma through ovarian endometriosis. .  Cancer science111 ( 8 ) 3000 - 3009   2020.8International journal

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    Clear cell carcinoma of the ovary is thought to arise from endometriosis. In addition, retrograde menstruation of shed endometrium is considered the origin of endometriosis. However, little evidence supports cellular continuity from uterine endometrium to clear cell carcinoma through endometriosis at the genomic level. Here, we performed multiregional whole-exome sequencing to clarify clonal relationships among uterine endometrium, ovarian endometriosis and ovarian clear cell carcinoma in a 56-year-old patient. Many somatic mutations including cancer-associated gene mutations in ARID1A, ATM, CDH4, NRAS and PIK3CA were shared among epithelium samples from uterine endometrium, endometriotic lesions distant from and adjacent to the carcinoma, and the carcinoma. The mutant allele frequencies of shared mutations increased from uterine endometrium to distant endometriosis, adjacent endometriosis, and carcinoma. Although a splice site mutation of ARID1A was shared among the four epithelium samples, a frameshift insertion in ARID1A was shared by adjacent endometriosis and carcinoma samples, suggesting that the biallelic mutations triggered malignant transformation. Somatic copy number alterations, including loss of heterozygosity events at PIK3CA and ATM, were identified only in adjacent endometriosis and carcinoma, suggesting that mutant allele-specific imbalance is another key factor driving malignant transformation. By reconstructing a clonal evolution tree based on the somatic mutations, we showed that the epithelium samples were derived from a single ancestral clone. Although the study was limited to a single patient, the results from this illustrative case could suggest the possibility that epithelial cells of ovarian endometriosis and clear cell carcinoma were descendants of uterine endometrial epithelium.

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  • Masato Kantake, Naho Ikeda, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Natsuki Ohkawa, Toshitaka Tanaka, Kazuki Miyabayashi, Hiromichi Shoji, Toshiaki Shimizu .  IGF1 gene is epigenetically activated in preterm infants with intrauterine growth restriction. .  Clinical epigenetics12 ( 1 ) 108 - 108   2020.7International journal

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    BACKGROUND: IGF1 is a key molecule in the regulation of growth and metabolism. Low IGF1 secretion is known to cause growth restriction in childhood, as well as deregulated lipid metabolism, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes in adulthood. The IGF1 gene P2 promoter is highly methylated, resulting in low secretion of IGF1 in small infants and children. However, it is unknown when this methylation occurs. The aim of study was to clarify the point when this epigenetic program occurs during intrauterine development. We analyzed 56 preterm infants born before 32 weeks of gestation, including 19 intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) infants whose birth weights were lower than - 2SD calculated by the Japanese datasets. We extracted genomic DNA from whole blood at birth; methylation of the six CpG sites in the IGF1 P2 promoter was analyzed by the bisulfite amplicon method using the MiSeq platform. RESULTS: In contrast to term infants and children, the methylation of all six CpG sites positively correlated with body weight and body length at birth. IGF1 P2 promoter methylation levels were significantly reduced in all six CpG sites in infants with IUGR. CONCLUSIONS: These findings indicated that the IGF1 gene is epigenetically activated before 32 weeks of gestation in infants with IUGR and that the activated gene may become suppressed after this time point. This study may provide new insights to prevent the onset of adult diseases and to aid in nutritional management for preterm birth infants in neonatal intensive care units.

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  • Chihiro Hata, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Yu Xiang, Dong Wang, Anping Yang, Dahai Liu, Fang Liu, Qingfeng Zou, Li Wei, Ke Zheng, Ituro Inoue, Hua You .  Germline mutations of multiple breast cancer-related genes are differentially associated with triple-negative breast cancers and prognostic factors. .  Journal of human genetics65 ( 7 ) 577 - 587   2020.7Reviewed International journal

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    Genetic testing for BRCA1/2 mutations has become the standard clinical practice. Recent findings suggest the clinical significance of multigene panel testing of BRCA1/2 and other cancer-related genes. However, the clinical features of patients with breast cancer with germline mutations identified using multigene panels remain unclear. In this study, DNA samples from 583 Chinese women with breast cancer were subjected to target sequencing for 54 cancer-related genes using a pre-capture pooling method followed by next-generation sequencing. We identified 79 pathogenic germline mutations in 21 cancer-related genes. Forty-five patients (7.7%) harbored BRCA1/2 mutations, and 38 patients (6.5%) carried pathogenic mutations in the remaining 19 genes. PALB2 was the most commonly (1.2%) mutated gene other than BRCA1/2. Most of the identified pathogenic mutations were novel, suggesting mutation screening by using multigene panel testing is important particularly for non-European populations. Mutations in BRCA1/2 and the other cancer-related genes were differentially associated with clinical features. BRCA1 mutation carriers were strongly associated with triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC), whereas BRCA2 mutation carriers were not. Tumors in BRCA1-mutation carriers had a high histological grade. Patients with BRCA2-mutated breast cancers were likely to develop E-cadherin-negative tumors with bone metastases. Furthermore, mutations in PALB2 were strongly associated with TNBC. We demonstrated the usefulness of multigene panel testing and observed that a substantial proportion of patients with breast cancer had hereditary risk factors. Identifying differential associations between mutation status and clinical features will advance our understanding regarding the pathologies of this heterogeneous disease.

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  • Akiyoshi Nakayama, Masahiro Nakatochi, Yusuke Kawamura, Ken Yamamoto, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Seiko Shimizu, Toshihide Higashino, Teruhide Koyama, Asahi Hishida, Kiyonori Kuriki, Miki Watanabe, Toru Shimizu, Keiko Ooyama, Hiroshi Ooyama, Mitsuo Nagase, Yuji Hidaka, Daisuke Matsui, Takashi Tamura, Takeshi Nishiyama, Chisato Shimanoe, Sakurako Katsuura-Kamano, Naoyuki Takashima, Yuya Shirai, Makoto Kawaguchi, Mikiya Takao, Ryo Sugiyama, Yuzo Takada, Takahiro Nakamura, Hiroshi Nakashima, Masashi Tsunoda, Inaho Danjoh, Atsushi Hozawa, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Yu Toyoda, Yu Kubota, Tappei Takada, Hiroshi Suzuki, Blanka Stiburkova, Tanya J Major, Tony R Merriman, Nagato Kuriyama, Haruo Mikami, Toshiro Takezaki, Keitaro Matsuo, Sadao Suzuki, Tatsuo Hosoya, Yoichiro Kamatani, Michiaki Kubo, Kimiyoshi Ichida, Kenji Wakai, Ituro Inoue, Yukinori Okada, Nariyoshi Shinomiya, Hirotaka Matsuo .  Subtype-specific gout susceptibility loci and enrichment of selection pressure on ABCG2 and ALDH2 identified by subtype genome-wide meta-analyses of clinically defined gout patients. .  Annals of the rheumatic diseases79 ( 5 ) 657 - 665   2020.5Reviewed International journal

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    OBJECTIVES: Genome-wide meta-analyses of clinically defined gout were performed to identify subtype-specific susceptibility loci. Evaluation using selection pressure analysis with these loci was also conducted to investigate genetic risks characteristic of the Japanese population over the last 2000-3000 years. METHODS: Two genome-wide association studies (GWASs) of 3053 clinically defined gout cases and 4554 controls from Japanese males were performed using the Japonica Array and Illumina Array platforms. About 7.2 million single-nucleotide polymorphisms were meta-analysed after imputation. Patients were then divided into four clinical subtypes (the renal underexcretion type, renal overload type, combined type and normal type), and meta-analyses were conducted in the same manner. Selection pressure analyses using singleton density score were also performed on each subtype. RESULTS: In addition to the eight loci we reported previously, two novel loci, PIBF1 and ACSM2B, were identified at a genome-wide significance level (p<5.0×10-8) from a GWAS meta-analysis of all gout patients, and other two novel intergenic loci, CD2-PTGFRN and SLC28A3-NTRK2, from normal type gout patients. Subtype-dependent patterns of Manhattan plots were observed with subtype GWASs of gout patients, indicating that these subtype-specific loci suggest differences in pathophysiology along patients' gout subtypes. Selection pressure analysis revealed significant enrichment of selection pressure on ABCG2 in addition to ALDH2 loci for all subtypes except for normal type gout. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings on subtype GWAS meta-analyses and selection pressure analysis of gout will assist elucidation of the subtype-dependent molecular targets and evolutionary involvement among genotype, phenotype and subtype-specific tailor-made medicine/prevention of gout and hyperuricaemia.

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  • Ryo Tamura, Kosuke Yoshihara, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Nozomi Yachida, Manako Yamaguchi, Kazuaki Suda, Tatsuya Ishiguro, Koji Nishino, Hiroshi Ichikawa, Keiichi Homma, Akira Kikuchi, Yutaka Ueda, Yuji Takei, Hiroyuki Fujiwara, Teiichi Motoyama, Shujiro Okuda, Toshifumi Wakai, Ituro Inoue, Takayuki Enomoto .  XCL1 expression correlates with CD8-positive T cells infiltration and PD-L1 expression in squamous cell carcinoma arising from mature cystic teratoma of the ovary. .  Oncogene39 ( 17 ) 3541 - 3554   2020.4Reviewed International journal

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    Molecular characteristics of carcinoma arising from mature cystic teratoma of the ovary (MCT) remain unclear due to its rarity. We analyzed RNA-sequencing data of 2322 pan-cancer [1378 squamous cell carcinomas (SCC), 6 adenosquamous carcinomas (ASC), and 938 adenocarcinomas (AC)] including six carcinomas arising from MCT (four SCCs, one ASC, and one AC). Hierarchical clustering and principal component analysis showed that gene expression profiles of carcinomas arising from MCT were different between each histological type and that gene expression profiles of SCCs arising MCT (MCT-SCCs) was apparently similar to those of lung SCCs. By epidermis-associated pathways activity based on gene set enrichment analysis, 1030 SCCs were divided into two groups: epidermis-signature high (head and neck, esophagus, and skin) and low (cervix, lung, and MCT). In addition to pan-SCC transcriptome analysis, cytokeratin profiling based on immunohistochemistry in the independent samples of 21 MCT-SCCs clarified that MCT-SCC dominantly expressed CK18, suggesting the origin of MCT-SCC was columnar epithelium. Subsequently, we investigated differentially expressed genes in MCT-SCCs compared with different SCCs and identified XCL1 was specifically overexpressed in MCT-SCCs. Through immunohistochemistry analysis, we identified XCL1 expression on tumor cells in 13/24 (54%) of MCT-SCCs but not in MCTs. XCL1 expression was also significantly associated with the number of tumor-infiltrating CD8-positive T cells and PD-L1 expression on tumor cells. XCL1 produced by tumor cells may induce PD1/PD-L1 interaction and dysfunction of CD8-positive T cells in tumor microenvironment. XCL1 expression may be a novel biomarker for malignant transformation of MCT into SCC and a biomarker candidate for therapeutic response to an anti-PD1/PD-L1 therapy.

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  • Toshihide Higashino, Keito Morimoto, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Yu Toyoda, Yusuke Kawamura, Seiko Shimizu, Takahiro Nakamura, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Akiyoshi Nakayama, Keiko Ooyama, Hiroshi Ooyama, Toru Shimizu, Miki Ueno, Toshimitsu Ito, Takashi Tamura, Mariko Naito, Hiroshi Nakashima, Makoto Kawaguchi, Mikiya Takao, Yosuke Kawai, Naoki Osada, Kimiyoshi Ichida, Ken Yamamoto, Hiroshi Suzuki, Nariyoshi Shinomiya, Ituro Inoue, Tappei Takada, Hirotaka Matsuo .  Dysfunctional missense variant of OAT10/SLC22A13 decreases gout risk and serum uric acid levels. .  Annals of the rheumatic diseases79 ( 1 ) 164 - 166   2020.1Reviewed International journal

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    DOI: 10.1136/annrheumdis-2019-216044

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  • Kentaro Sugino, Ryo Tamura, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Nozomi Yachida, Manako Yamaguchi, Yutaro Mori, Kaoru Yamawaki, Kazuaki Suda, Tatsuya Ishiguro, Sosuke Adachi, Masanori Isobe, Masayuki Yamaguchi, Katsunori Kashima, Teiichi Motoyama, Ituro Inoue, Kosuke Yoshihara, Takayuki Enomoto .  Germline and somatic mutations of homologous recombination-associated genes in Japanese ovarian cancer patients. .  Scientific reports9 ( 1 ) 17808 - 17808   2019.11Reviewed International journal

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    We explored the frequency of germline and somatic mutations in homologous recombination (HR)-associated genes in major histological types of ovarian cancer. We performed targeted sequencing to assess germline and somatic mutations of 16 HR-associated genes and 4 mismatch repair (MMR) genes among 207 ovarian cancer patients (50 high-grade serous carcinomas (HGSC), 99 clear cell carcinomas (CCC), 39 endometrioid carcinomas (EC), 13 mucinous carcinomas (MC), and 6 low-grade serous carcinomas (LGSC)). Germline or somatic mutations of HR-associated genes were detected in 44% of HGSC, 28% of CCC, 23% of EC, 16% of MC, and 17% of LGSC patients. The profile of HR-associated gene mutations was remarkably different among each histological type. Germline BRCA1/2 mutations were frequently detected in HGSC and were rarely observed in CCC, EC, and MC patients. ATM somatic mutation was more frequently detected in CCC (9%) and EC patients (18%) than in HGSC patients (4%). There was a positive correlation between MMR gene mutations and HR-associated gene mutations (p = 0.0072). Our findings might be useful in selection of ovarian cancer patients that should be treated with PARP inhibitors.

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  • Kazuaki Suda, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Kosuke Yoshihara, Tatsuya Ishiguro, Sosuke Adachi, Hiroaki Kase, Teiichi Motoyama, Ituro Inoue, Takayuki Enomoto .  Different mutation profiles between epithelium and stroma in endometriosis and normal endometrium. .  Human reproduction (Oxford, England)34 ( 10 ) 1899 - 1905   2019.10Reviewed International journal

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    STUDY QUESTION: Are there common mutation profiles between epithelial and stromal cells in ovarian endometriotic tissue and the normal endometrium? SUMMARY ANSWER: Our study revealed no common mutations between epithelial and stromal cells in ovarian endometriotic tissue and the normal endometrium. WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY: Epithelial cells in both ovarian endometriotic tissue and the normal endometrium harbor somatic mutations in cancer-associated genes such as phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase catalytic subunit alpha (PIK3CA) and KRAS proto-oncogene, GTPase (KRAS). STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION: We performed a retrospective study to identify the mutation profiles of stromal cells in endometriotic tissue and the normal endometrium. We collected 11 endometriotic stroma samples and 10 normal endometrial stroma samples between 2013 and 2017 at a tertiary care center. PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS: The laser microdissection method was used to obtain stromal cells in ovarian endometriotic and normal endometrial tissues from patients with ovarian endometriosis and/or other non-invasive gynecological diseases. Target gene sequencing was performed to assess and compare the mutation profiles of stromal cells with those of epithelial cells obtained in our previous study. For target gene sequencing, 76 genes were selected based on previous genomic analyses for ovarian endometriosis, normal endometrium, endometriosis-related ovarian cancer and endometrial cancer. MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE: Stromal samples in ovarian endometrioma and normal endometrium harbor somatic mutations (18 mutations in 11 endometriosis samples and 16 mutations in 10 normal endometrial samples) but did not share any mutations with paired epithelial samples. The mutant allele frequency of stromal samples was significantly lower than that of epithelial samples in ovarian endometrioma (P = 6.0 × 10-11) and normal endometrium (P = 1.4 × 10-7). LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION: The number of genes evaluated in the mutational analysis was limited. Additionally, the functional roles of somatic mutations in stromal cells remain unclear. WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS: Different mutation profiles between paired epithelial and stromal cells in both ovarian endometrioma and normal endometrium suggest that origins of epithelial and stromal cells would be independent of each other in both normal endometrium and ovarian endometrioma; however, the theory of epithelial-mesenchymal transition is proposed in ovarian endometrioma. STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S): This work was supported in part by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science KAKENHI grant number JP15H02373 (Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research A for I.I.), JP16H06267 (Grant-in-Aid for Young Scientists A for K.Y.), JP17K08688 (Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research C for H.N.) and JP16H06279 (Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Innovative Areas-Platforms for Advanced Technologies and Research Resources for H.N. and K.Y). There are no conflicts of interest to declare. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: Not applicable.

    DOI: 10.1093/humrep/dez155

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  • Yusuke Kawamura, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Akiyoshi Nakayama, Yukinori Okada, Ken Yamamoto, Toshihide Higashino, Masayuki Sakiyama, Toru Shimizu, Hiroshi Ooyama, Keiko Ooyama, Mitsuo Nagase, Yuji Hidaka, Yuko Shirahama, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Yuichiro Nishida, Ippei Shimoshikiryo, Asahi Hishida, Sakurako Katsuura-Kamano, Seiko Shimizu, Makoto Kawaguchi, Hirokazu Uemura, Rie Ibusuki, Megumi Hara, Mariko Naito, Mikiya Takao, Mayuko Nakajima, Satoko Iwasawa, Hiroshi Nakashima, Keizo Ohnaka, Takahiro Nakamura, Blanka Stiburkova, Tony R Merriman, Masahiro Nakatochi, Sahoko Ichihara, Mitsuhiro Yokota, Tappei Takada, Tatsuya Saitoh, Yoichiro Kamatani, Atsushi Takahashi, Kokichi Arisawa, Toshiro Takezaki, Keitaro Tanaka, Kenji Wakai, Michiaki Kubo, Tatsuo Hosoya, Kimiyoshi Ichida, Ituro Inoue, Nariyoshi Shinomiya, Hirotaka Matsuo .  Genome-wide association study revealed novel loci which aggravate asymptomatic hyperuricaemia into gout. .  Annals of the rheumatic diseases78 ( 10 ) 1430 - 1437   2019.10Reviewed International journal

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    OBJECTIVE: The first ever genome-wide association study (GWAS) of clinically defined gout cases and asymptomatic hyperuricaemia (AHUA) controls was performed to identify novel gout loci that aggravate AHUA into gout. METHODS: We carried out a GWAS of 945 clinically defined gout cases and 1003 AHUA controls followed by 2 replication studies. In total, 2860 gout cases and 3149 AHUA controls (all Japanese men) were analysed. We also compared the ORs for each locus in the present GWAS (gout vs AHUA) with those in the previous GWAS (gout vs normouricaemia). RESULTS: This new approach enabled us to identify two novel gout loci (rs7927466 of CNTN5 and rs9952962 of MIR302F) and one suggestive locus (rs12980365 of ZNF724) at the genome-wide significance level (p<5.0×10-8). The present study also identified the loci of ABCG2, ALDH2 and SLC2A9. One of them, rs671 of ALDH2, was identified as a gout locus by GWAS for the first time. Comparing ORs for each locus in the present versus the previous GWAS revealed three 'gout vs AHUA GWAS'-specific loci (CNTN5, MIR302F and ZNF724) to be clearly associated with mechanisms of gout development which distinctly differ from the known gout risk loci that basically elevate serum uric acid level. CONCLUSIONS: This meta-analysis is the first to reveal the loci associated with crystal-induced inflammation, the last step in gout development that aggravates AHUA into gout. Our findings should help to elucidate the molecular mechanisms of gout development and assist the prevention of gout attacks in high-risk AHUA individuals.

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  • Naruya Saitou, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Ituro Inoue, Nilmini Hettiarachchi, Takashi Hayakawa, Naoki Osada .  Exome sequences of toque macaques (<i>Macaca sinica</i>) of Sri Lanka reveal many amino acid changes .      2019.9

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    <jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>Macaques are one of the most widely used model organisms in biomedical research. <jats:italic>Macaca mulatta</jats:italic> and <jats:italic>M. fascicularis</jats:italic> are currently being used for toxicology, HIV, diabetes, neuroscience and psychiatric and psychological disorder researches. Many studies have been conducted on <jats:italic>M. mulatta</jats:italic> and <jats:italic>M. fascicularis</jats:italic> genomes for this purpose in order to understand the genomic properties of these species. Several <jats:italic>M. fascicularis</jats:italic> individuals from different geographical locations and also <jats:italic>M. mulatta</jats:italic> genomes have been sequenced and studied in depth for the purpose of understanding the phylogenetic and evolutionary relationships between various macaque populations. But still a gap in knowledge remains for other macaque populations such as the <jats:italic>Sinica</jats:italic> group. In this study for the very first time, we sequenced the exome of toque macaques (<jats:italic>M. sinica</jats:italic>), an endemic island population of Sri Lanka. Here we confirmed that <jats:italic>M. sinica</jats:italic> and <jats:italic>M. thibetana</jats:italic> cluster together and are closely related, also the three distinct phylogenetic groupings of <jats:italic>fascicularis</jats:italic> and <jats:italic>sinica</jats:italic>. We also found that <jats:italic>M. sinica</jats:italic> has less number of polymorphisms with respect to the reference genome <jats:italic>M. mulatta</jats:italic> signifying the smaller and restricted population size of this species.</jats:p>

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  • Jun Hirata, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Saori Sakaue, Masahiro Kanai, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Kazuyoshi Ishigaki, Ken Suzuki, Masato Akiyama, Toshihiro Kishikawa, Kotaro Ogawa, Tatsuo Masuda, Kenichi Yamamoto, Makoto Hirata, Koichi Matsuda, Yukihide Momozawa, Ituro Inoue, Michiaki Kubo, Yoichiro Kamatani, Yukinori Okada .  Genetic and phenotypic landscape of the major histocompatibilty complex region in the Japanese population. .  Nature genetics51 ( 3 ) 470 - 480   2019.3Reviewed International journal

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    To perform detailed fine-mapping of the major-histocompatibility-complex region, we conducted next-generation sequencing (NGS)-based typing of the 33 human leukocyte antigen (HLA) genes in 1,120 individuals of Japanese ancestry, providing a high-resolution allele catalog and linkage-disequilibrium structure of both classical and nonclassical HLA genes. Together with population-specific deep-whole-genome-sequencing data (n = 1,276), we conducted NGS-based HLA, single-nucleotide-variant and indel imputation of large-scale genome-wide-association-study data from 166,190 Japanese individuals. A phenome-wide association study assessing 106 clinical phenotypes identified abundant, significant genotype-phenotype associations across 52 phenotypes. Fine-mapping highlighted multiple association patterns conferring independent risks from classical HLA genes. Region-wide heritability estimates and genetic-correlation network analysis elucidated the polygenic architecture shared across the phenotypes.

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  • Kazuaki Suda, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Chihiro Hata, Natsumi Yahata, Masanori Isobe, Hitoshi Kameyama, Toshifumi Wakai, Teiichi Motoyama, Ituro Inoue, Kosuke Yoshihara, Takayuki Enomoto .  Concurrent isolated retroperitoneal HGSC and STIC defined by somatic mutation analysis: a case report. .  Diagnostic pathology14 ( 1 ) 17 - 17   2019.2Reviewed International journal

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    BACKGROUND: Retroperitoneal high-grade serous carcinoma (HGSC) is extremely rare and the origin remains unclear. We present a case of retroperitoneal HGSC and coexisting serous tubal intraepithelial carcinoma (STIC), which is considered as the main origin of ovarian HGSC. We reviewed the available literature and discussed about the origin of this rare disease. CASE PRESENTATION: A 58-year-old female with a 93 × 65 × 62 mm-solid tumor with a cystic part was located immediately dorsal to the rectum underwent bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy, total abdominal hysterectomy, and en bloc resection of the retroperitoneal tumor together with lower anterior resection of the rectum. Histological diagnosis was retroperitoneal HGSC and STIC at the right fallopian tube. Two deleterious somatic mutations in TP53 and BRCA2 genes were shared between retroperitoneal HGSC and STIC. CONCLUSIONS: In addition to clinical features in the previous reports, our genetic findings suggest the origin of retroperitoneal HGSC might be STIC.

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  • Chihiro Hata, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Yu Xiang, Dong Wang, Anping Yang, Dahai Liu, Fang Liu, Qingfeng Zou, Ke Zheng, Ituro Inoue, Hua You .  Exploration of intermediate-sized INDELs by next-generation multigene panel testing in Han Chinese patients with breast cancer. .  Human genome variation6 ( 1 ) 51 - 51   2019Reviewed International journal

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    Multigene panel testing via next-generation sequencing focuses on the detection of small-sized mutations, such as single nucleotide variants and short insertions and deletions (INDELs). However, intermediate-sized INDELs have not been fully explored due to technical difficulties. Here, we performed bioinformatics analyses to identify intermediate-sized INDELs in 54 cancer-related genes from 583 Han Chinese patients with breast cancer. We detected a novel deletion-insertion in a translational variant of PTEN (also known as PTENα) in one patient.

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  • Zhang S, Kohira Y, Orita H, Ishimine M, Kobayashi T, Chua SMB, Nakaoka H, Inoue I, Hino O, Yokomizo T, Fukunaga T, Lee-Okada HC .  Sensitization of gastric cancer cells to irinotecan by p53 activation .  BPB Reports2 ( 6 ) 130 - 133   2019Reviewed

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    <p>Irinotecan (camptothecin-11 [CPT-11]) is a topoisomerase I inhibitor that has been used in the treatment of a wide spectrum of cancers including gastric cancer. Recent reports suggest that the expression of CES2, a serine hydrolase that converts irinotecan to its active compound SN-38, is regulated by the tumor-suppressor p53. In this study, we investigated whether irinotecan acted synergistically with a p53 activator nutlin-3a in human gastric cancer cells. Nutlin-3a treatment enhanced the expression of CES2 in gastric cancer cell lines with wild-type p53. However, this effect was not observed in cells with non-functional p53. Irinotecan showed synergistic antitumor effects in combination with nutlin-3a in gastric cancer cells with wild-type p53, whereas the survival of cells with non-functional p53 was not significantly affected by the presence of nutlin-3a. These results provide evidence that p53 activation can enhance the antitumor effect of irinotecan or other anticancer prodrugs activated by CES2 in gastric cancer cells through upregulation of CES2 expression.</p>

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  • Vanessa Romero, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Ituro Inoue .  High Order Formation and Evolution of Hornerin in Primates. .  Genome biology and evolution10 ( 12 ) 3167 - 3175   2018.12Reviewed International journal

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    Genomic duplication or loss can accelerate evolution because the number of repeats could affect molecular pathways and phenotypes. We have previously reported that the repeated region of filaggrin (FLG), a crucial component of the outer layers of mammalian skin, had high levels of nucleotide diversity with species-specific divergence and expansion and that it evolved under the birth-and-death model. We focused on hornerin (HRNR), a member of the same gene family that harbor similar tandem repeats as FLG, and examined the formation process of repeated regions and the evolutional model that best fit the HRNR repeated region in the crab-eating macaque (Macaca fascicularis), orangutan (Pongo abelii), gorilla (Gorilla gorilla), and chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) and compared them with the human (Homo sapiens) sequence. Paar et al. (2011) and Takaishi et al. (2005) have different theories as to the formation of the repeated region of HRNR; both groups share the longest repeat length of 1,404 bp (quartic or longest unit), but they differed in the process. We identified the formation described by Paar et al. {[("39 bp (primary) × 9" × 2 (secondary)) × 2 (tertiary)] × 5 (quartic)} to be conserved in all species except the crab-eating macaque. We detected high nucleotide diversities between the longest repeats, which fits the birth-and-death model. We concluded that the high order repeat formation of HRNR was conserved in primates except the crab-eating macaque. As previously identified in FLG, the longest repeats have high levels of nucleotide diversity, which could contribute to phenotypic differences between closely related species.

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  • Ryo Tamura, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Kosuke Yoshihara, Yutaro Mori, Nozomi Yachida, Nobumichi Nishikawa, Teiichi Motoyama, Shujiro Okuda, Ituro Inoue, Takayuki Enomoto .  Novel MXD4-NUTM1 fusion transcript identified in primary ovarian undifferentiated small round cell sarcoma. .  Genes, chromosomes & cancer57 ( 11 ) 557 - 563   2018.11Reviewed International journal

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    Primary ovarian sarcomas are extremely rare tumors, and their genomic and transcriptomic alterations remain to be elucidated. We performed whole exome sequencing of primary tumor and matched normal blood samples derived from one patient with ovarian undifferentiated small round cell sarcoma. We identified 8 nonsynonymous somatic mutations, and all mutations were missense or nonsense changes. Next, we performed RNA sequencing of the tumor sample and identified two in-frame fusion transcripts: MXD4-NUTM1 and ARL6-POT1. Most NUTM1 exons were retained in the MXD4-NUTM1 fusion transcript, and we confirmed an increase in NUTM1 mRNA and protein expression in tumor tissue. Further genomic and transcriptomic analyses might lead to the development of new therapeutic strategies based on the molecular characteristics of ovarian undifferentiated small round cell sarcoma.

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  • Kazuaki Suda, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Kosuke Yoshihara, Tatsuya Ishiguro, Ryo Tamura, Yutaro Mori, Kaoru Yamawaki, Sosuke Adachi, Tomoko Takahashi, Hiroaki Kase, Kenichi Tanaka, Tadashi Yamamoto, Teiichi Motoyama, Ituro Inoue, Takayuki Enomoto .  Clonal Expansion and Diversification of Cancer-Associated Mutations in Endometriosis and Normal Endometrium. .  Cell reports24 ( 7 ) 1777 - 1789   2018.8Reviewed International journal

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    Endometriosis is characterized by ectopic endometrial-like epithelium and stroma, of which molecular characteristics remain to be fully elucidated. We sequenced 107 ovarian endometriotic and 82 normal uterine endometrial epithelium samples isolated by laser microdissection. In both endometriotic and normal epithelium samples, numerous somatic mutations were identified within genes frequently mutated in endometriosis-associated ovarian cancers. KRAS is frequently mutated in endometriotic epithelium, with a higher mutant allele frequency (MAF) accompanied by arm-level allelic imbalances. Analyses of MAF, combined with multiregional sequencing, illuminated spatiotemporal evolution of the endometriosis and uterine endometrium genomes. We sequenced 109 single endometrial glands and found that each gland carried distinct cancer-associated mutations, demonstrating the heterogeneity of the genomic architecture of endometrial epithelium. Remarkable increases in MAF of mutations in cancer-associated genes in endometriotic epithelium suggest retrograde flow of endometrial cells already harboring cancer-associated mutations, with selective advantages at ectopic sites, leading to the development of endometriosis.

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  • Yu-Xia Yang, Li Wei, Yan-Ju Zhang, Takahide Hayano, María Del Pilar Piñeiro Pereda, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Qiang Li, Isabel Barragán Mallofret, Yuan-Zhi Lu, Luca Tamagnone, Ituro Inoue, Xiangdong Li, Jian-Yuan Luo, Ke Zheng, Hua You .  Long non-coding RNA p10247, high expressed in breast cancer (lncRNA-BCHE), is correlated with metastasis .  Clinical and Experimental Metastasis35 ( 3 ) 1 - 13   2018.6Reviewed

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    Recent studies have shown that long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) have key functions during breast cancer development. Considering the complexity of IncRNAs regulatory network, the identification of novel and functional lncRNAs associated with breast cancer is thus very important. By using Agilent LncRNA Human Gene Expression Microarray, we identified a number of lncRNAs that were differentially expressed in breast cancer compared to their corresponding adjacent tissues. According to the microarray, the expression of p10247, henceforth named as lncRNA-BCHE (standing for lncRNA high expressed in breast cancer), was found to be uniformly higher in all the five breast cancer tissues tested, and this was further confirmed in 56 breast cancer tissues by real-time RT-PCR. The function of lncRNA-BCHE in breast cancer cells was tested by knockdown and over-expression experiments in vitro. We also analyzed the public cohorts of breast cancer patients on the Kaplan Meier plotter platform. Clinical analysis revealed that the expression of lncRNA-BCHE was significantly correlated with advanced clinical stage and lymph node metastasis. Our data indicate that lncRNA-BCHE regulates the growth, migration and invasion of breast cancer cells. In addition, we found that these functions are mediated, at least in part, by the regulation of integrin subunit beta 1 (ITGB1) levels. The expression of ITGB1 serves as a negative prognostic factor and metastasis risk predictor in breast cancer, irrespective of subtype and therapeutic regimen. In summary, our results suggest that lncRNA-BCHE is an oncogenic lncRNA enhancing the growth and metastatic potential of breast cancer cells, and a potential predictor of breast cancer metastatic progression.

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  • Masayuki Sakiyama, Hirotaka Matsuo, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Yusuke Kawamura, Makoto Kawaguchi, Toshihide Higashino, Akiyoshi Nakayama, Airi Akashi, Jun Ueyama, Takaaki Kondo, Kenji Wakai, Yutaka Sakurai, Ken Yamamoto, Hiroshi Ooyama, Nariyoshi Shinomiya .  Common variant of BCAS3 is associated with gout risk in Japanese population: The first replication study after gout GWAS in Han Chinese .  BMC Medical Genetics19 ( 1 ) 96   2018.6Reviewed

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    Background: Gout is a common disease resulting from hyperuricemia which causes acute arthritis. A recent genome-wide association study (GWAS) of gout identified three new loci for gout in Han Chinese: regulatory factor X3 (RFX3), potassium voltage-gated channel subfamily Q member 1 (KCNQ1), and breast carcinoma amplified sequence 3 (BCAS3). The lack of any replication studies of these three loci using other population groups prompted us to perform a replication study with Japanese clinically defined gout cases and controls. Methods: We genotyped the variants of RFX3 (rs12236871), KCNQ1 (rs179785) and BCAS3 (rs11653176) in 723 Japanese clinically defined gout cases and 913 controls by TaqMan method. rs179785 of KCNQ1 is also evaluated by direct sequencing because of difficulties of its genotyping by TaqMan method. Results: Although the variants of RFX3 and BCAS3 were clearly genotyped by TaqMan method, rs179785 of KCNQ1 was not, because rs179785 (A/G) of KCNQ1 is located at the last nucleotide ("A") of the 12-bp deletion variant (rs200562977) of KCNQ1. Therefore, rs179785 and rs200562977 of KCNQ1 were genotyped by direct sequencing in all samples. Moreover, by direct sequencing with the same primers, we were able to evaluate the genotypes of rs179784 of KCNQ1 which shows strong linkage disequilibrium with rs179785 (D'=1.0 and r 2 =0.99). rs11653176, a common variant of BCAS3, showed a significant association with gout (P=1.66×10-3
    odds ratio [OR]=0.80)
    the direction of effect was the same as that seen in the previous Han Chinese GWAS. Two variants of KCNQ1 (rs179785 and rs179784) had a nominally significant association (P=0.043 and 0.044
    OR=0.85 and 0.86, respectively), but did not pass the significance threshold for multiple hypothesis testing using the Bonferroni correction. On the other hand, rs200562977 of KCNQ1 and rs12236871 of RFX3 did not show any significant association with gout. Conclusion: BCAS3 is a coactivator of estrogen receptor alpha, and the influence of estrogen to serum uric acid level is well known. Our present replication study, as did the previous gout GWAS, demonstrated the common variant of BCAS3 to be associated with gout susceptibility.

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  • Ryo Tamura, Kosuke Yoshihara, Tetsuya Saito, Ryosuke Ishimura, Juan Emmanuel Martínez-Ledesma, Hu Xin, Tatsuya Ishiguro, Yutaro Mori, Kaoru Yamawaki, Kazuaki Suda, Seiya Sato, Hiroaki Itamochi, Teiichi Motoyama, Yoichi Aoki, Shujiro Okuda, Cristine R Casingal, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Ituro Inoue, Roel G W Verhaak, Masaaki Komatsu, Takayuki Enomoto .  Novel therapeutic strategy for cervical cancer harboring FGFR3-TACC3 fusions. .  Oncogenesis7 ( 1 ) 4 - 4   2018.1Reviewed International journal

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    We previously found that therapeutic targetable fusions are detected across various cancers. To identify therapeutic targetable fusion in uterine cervical cancer, for which no effective gene targeted therapy has yet been clinically applied, we analyzed RNA sequencing data from 306 cervical cancer samples. We detected 445 high confidence fusion transcripts and identified four samples that harbored FGFR3-TACC3 fusion as an attractive therapeutic target. The frequency of FGFR3-TACC3-fusion-positive cervical cancer is also 1.9% (2/103) in an independent cohort. Continuous expression of the FGFR3-TACC3 fusion transcript and protein induced anchorage-independent growth in the cervical epithelial cell line established from the ectocervix (Ect1/E6E7) but not in that from endocervix (End1/E6E7). Injection of FGFR3-TACC3 fusion-transfected-Ect1/E6E7 cells subcutaneously into NOG mice generated squamous cell carcinoma xenograft tumors, suggesting the association between FGFR3-TACC3 fusion and squamous cell carcinogenesis. Transfection of a FGFR3-TACC3 fusion transcript into four cervical cancer cell lines (SiHa, ME180, HeLa, and Ca Ski) induced activation of the MAPK pathway and enhancement of cell proliferation. Transcriptome analysis of the FGFR3-TACC3 fusion-transfected cell lines revealed that an IL8-triggered inflammatory response was increased, via activation of FGFR3-MAPK signaling. Continuous expression of FGFR3-TACC3 fusion led to activation of the PI3K-AKT pathway only in the two cell lines that harbored PIK3CA mutations. Sensitivity to the FGFR inhibitor, BGJ398, was found to depend on PIK3CA mutation status. Dual inhibition of both FGFR and AKT showed an obvious synergistic effect in cell lines that harbor mutant PIK3CA. Additionally, TACC3 inhibitor, KHS101, suppressed FGFR3-TACC3 fusion protein expression and showed antitumor effect against FGFR3-TACC3 fusion-transfected cell lines. FGFR3-TACC3 fusion-positive cancer has frequent genetic alterations of the PI3K/AKT pathway and selection of appropriate treatment based on PI3K/AKT pathway status should be required.

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  • Kazumi Takahashi, Takahide Hayano, Ryota Sugimoto, Hirofumi Kashiwagi, Mari Shinoda, Yoshihiro Nishijima, Takahiro Suzuki, Shingo Suzuki, Yuko Ohnuki, Akane Kondo, Takashi Shiina, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Ituro Inoue, Shun-Ichiro Izumi .  Exome and copy number variation analyses of Mayer-Rokitansky-Küster- Hauser syndrome. .  Human genome variation5 ( 1 ) 27 - 27   2018Reviewed International journal

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    Mayer-Rokitansky-Küster-Hauser (MRKH) syndrome is characterized by congenital absence of the vagina and uterus. We conducted genome-wide SNP analyses and exome sequencing to detect the causes of MRKH syndrome. We identified de novo variants of MYCBP2, NAV3, and PTPN3 in three families and a variant of MYCBP2 in a sporadic case. Here, we demonstrated the partial genetic makeup of Japanese MRKH syndrome.

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  • Momoko Ishimine, Hyeon-Cheol Lee, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Hajime Orita, Toshiyuki Kobayashi, Konomi Mizuguchi, Mikumi Endo, Ituro Inoue, Koichi Sato, Takehiko Yokomizo .  The relationship between TP53 gene status and carboxylesterase 2 expression in human colorectal cancer .  Disease Markers2018   5280736 - 7   2018Reviewed

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    Irinotecan (CPT-11) is an anticancer prodrug that is activated by the carboxylesterase CES2 and has been approved for the treatment of many types of solid tumors, including colorectal cancer. Recent studies with cell lines show that CES2 expression is regulated by the tumor suppressor protein p53. However, clinical evidence for this regulatory mechanism in cancer is lacking. In this study, we examined the relationship between TP53 gene status and CES2 expression in human colorectal cancer. Most colorectal cancer specimens (70%
    26 of 37) showed lower CES2 mRNA levels (≥1.5-fold lower) than the adjacent normal tissue, and only 30% (12 of 37) showed similar (&lt
    1.5-fold lower) or higher CES2 mRNA levels. However, TP53 gene sequencing revealed no relationship between CES2 downregulation and TP53 mutational status. Moreover, while colorectal cancer cells expressing wild-type p53 exhibited p53-dependent upregulation of CES2, PRIMA-1MET, a drug that restores the transcriptional activity of mutant p53, failed to upregulate CES2 expression in cells with TP53 missense mutations. These results, taken together, suggest that CES2 mRNA expression is decreased in human colorectal cancer independently of p53.

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  • Jumpei Ito, Ryota Sugimoto, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Shiro Yamada, Tetsuaki Kimura, Takahide Hayano, Ituro Inoue .  Systematic identification and characterization of regulatory elements derived from human endogenous retroviruses .  PLOS GENETICS13 ( 7 ) e1006883   2017.7Reviewed

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    Human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs) and other long terminal repeat (LTR)-type retrotransposons (HERV/LTRs) have regulatory elements that possibly influence the transcription of host genes. We systematically identified and characterized these regulatory elements based on publicly available datasets of ChIP-Seq of 97 transcription factors (TFs) provided by ENCODE and Roadmap Epigenomics projects. We determined transcription factor-binding sites (TFBSs) using the ChIP-Seq datasets and identified TFBSs observed on HERV/LTR sequences (HERV-TFBSs). Overall, 794,972 HERV-TFBSs were identified. Subsequently, we identified "HERV/LTR-shared regulatory element (HSRE)," defined as a TF-binding motif in HERV-TFBSs, shared within a substantial fraction of a HERV/LTR type. HSREs could be an indication that the regulatory elements of HERV/LTRs are present before their insertions. We identified 2,201 HSREs, comprising specific associations of 354 HERV/LTRs and 84 TFs. Clustering analysis showed that HERV/LTRs can be grouped according to the TF binding patterns; HERV/LTR groups bounded to pluripotent TFs (e.g., SOX2, POU5F1, and NANOG), embryonic endoderm/mesendoderm TFs (e.g., GATA4/6, SOX17, and FOXA1/2), hematopoietic TFs (e.g., SPI1 (PU1), GATA1/2, and TAL1), and CTCF were identified. Regulatory elements of HERV/LTRs tended to locate nearby and/ or interact three-dimensionally with the genes involved in immune responses, indicating that the regulatory elements play an important role in controlling the immune regulatory network. Further, we demonstrated subgroup-specific TF binding within LTR7, LTR5B, and LTR5_ Hs, indicating that gains or losses of the regulatory elements occurred during genomic invasions of the HERV/LTRs. Finally, we constructed dbHERV-REs, an interactive database of HERV/LTR regulatory elements (http://herv-tfbs. com/). This study provides fundamental information in understanding the impact of HERV/LTRs on host transcription, and offers insights into the transcriptional modulation systems of HERV/LTRs and ancestral HERVs.

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  • Yuki Matsumoto, Tatsuhiko Goto, Jo Nishino, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Akira Tanave, Toshiyuki Takano-Shimizu, Richard F. Mott, Tsuyoshi Koide .  Selective breeding and selection mapping using a novel wild-derived heterogeneous stock of mice revealed two closely-linked loci for tameness .  SCIENTIFIC REPORTS7 ( 1 ) 4607   2017.7Reviewed

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    Tameness is a major behavioral factor for domestication, and can be divided into two potential components: motivation to approach humans (active tameness) and reluctance to avoid humans (passive tameness). We identified genetic loci for active tameness through selective breeding, selection mapping, and association analysis. In previous work using laboratory and wild mouse strains, we found that laboratory strains were predominantly selected for passive tameness but not active tameness during their domestication. To identify genetic regions associated with active tameness, we applied selective breeding over 9 generations for contacting, a behavioural parameter strongly associated with active tameness. The prerequisite for successful selective breeding is high genetic variation in the target population, so we established and used a novel resource, wild-derived heterogeneous stock (WHS) mice from eight wild strains. The mice had genetic variations not present in other outbred mouse populations. Selective breeding of the WHS mice increased the contacting level through the generations. Selection mapping was applied to the selected population using a simulation based on a non-selection model and inferred haplotype data derived from single-nucleotide polymorphisms. We found a genomic signature for selection on chromosome 11 containing two closely linked loci.

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  • Akiyoshi Nakayama, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Ken Yamamoto, Masayuki Sakiyama, Amara Shaukat, Yu Toyoda, Yukinori Okada, Yoichiro Kamatani, Takahiro Nakamura, Tappei Takada, Katsuhisa Inoue, Tomoya Yasujima, Hiroaki Yuasa, Yuko Shirahama, Hiroshi Nakashima, Seiko Shimizu, Toshihide Higashino, Yusuke Kawamura, Hiraku Ogata, Makoto Kawaguchi, Yasuyuki Ohkawa, Inaho Danjoh, Atsumi Tokumasu, Keiko Ooyama, Toshimitsu Ito, Takaaki Kondo, Kenji Wakai, Blanka Stiburkova, Karel Pavelka, Lisa K. Stamp, Nicola Dalbeth, Eurogout Consortium, Yutaka Sakurai, Hiroshi Suzuki, Makoto Hosoyamada, Shin Fujimori, Takashi Yokoo, Tatsuo Hosoya, Ituro Inoue, Atsushi Takahashi, Michiaki Kubo, Hiroshi Ooyama, Toru Shimizu, Kimiyoshi Ichida, Nariyoshi Shinomiya, Tony R. Merriman, Hirotaka Matsuo .  GWAS of clinically defined gout and subtypes identifies multiple susceptibility loci that include urate transporter genes .  ANNALS OF THE RHEUMATIC DISEASES76 ( 5 ) 869 - 877   2017.5Reviewed

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    Objective A genome-wide association study (GWAS) of gout and its subtypes was performed to identify novel gout loci, including those that are subtypespecific.
    Methods Putative causal association signals from a GWAS of 945 clinically defined gout cases and 1213 controls from Japanese males were replicated with 1396 cases and 1268 controls using a custom chip of 1961 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). We also first conducted GWASs of gout subtypes. Replication with Caucasian and New Zealand Polynesian samples was done to further validate the loci identified in this study.
    Results In addition to the five loci we reported previously, further susceptibility loci were identified at a genome-wide significance level (p&lt; 5.0x10-8): urate transporter genes (SLC22A12 and SLC17A1) and HIST1H2BF-HIST1H4E for all gout cases, and NIPAL1 and FAM35A for the renal underexcretion gout subtype. While NIPAL1 encodes a magnesium transporter, functional analysis did not detect urate transport via NIPAL1, suggesting an indirect association with urate handling. Localisation analysis in the human kidney revealed expression of NIPAL1 and FAM35A mainly in the distal tubules, which suggests the involvement of the distal nephron in urate handling in humans. Clinically ascertained male patients with gout and controls of Caucasian and Polynesian ancestries were also genotyped, and FAM35A was associated with gout in all cases. A meta-analysis of the three populations revealed FAM35A to be associated with gout at a genome-wide level of significance (pmeta= 3.58x10-8).
    Conclusions Our findings including novel gout risk loci provide further understanding of the molecular pathogenesis of gout and lead to a novel concept for the therapeutic target of gout/ hyperuricaemia.

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  • Somayeh Ahmadloo, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Takahide Hayano, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Hua You, Emi Utsuno, Takafumi Sangai, Motoi Nishimura, Kazuyuki Matsushita, Akira Hata, Fumio Nomura, Ituro Inoue .  Rapid and cost-effective high-throughput sequencing for identification of germline mutations of BRCA1 and BRCA2. .  Journal of human genetics62 ( 5 ) 561 - 567   2017.4Reviewed International journal

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    Genetic testing for breast cancer predisposing genes, BRCA1 and BRCA2, can take advantage for early identification of carriers with pathogenic germline mutations. However, conventional approaches based on Sanger sequencing are laborious and expensive. Next-generation sequencing technology has a great impact on investigation of medical genomics and now applied clinical genetics. We provide a protocol based on a pool and capture method followed by high-throughput sequencing, which realizes a rapid, high-quality, high-accuracy and low-cost testing for mutations in BRCA1 and BRCA2 by using small amounts of input DNA. Custom capture probes were designed for 195 kb regions encompassing the entire BRCA1 and BRCA2. DNA libraries of 96 samples with distinct indices were pooled before hybridizing to the capture probes, which largely reduced labor and cost. The captured library was run on the Illumina MiSeq sequencer. We applied the method to 384 Japanese individuals including 11 patients with breast cancer whose mutation statuses had been determined by standard clinical testing and 373 individuals from a general population. 99.99% of coding exons and their 20 bp flanking regions were covered with a minimum of 20 reads and the average depth was 179.5, supporting confident variant detection. The sequencing method rendered concordant results for 11 patients with breast cancer compared with the standard clinical testing including nine mutations in eight patients. Among 373 individuals from the general population, novel stop gain and frameshift deletion in BRCA2 were identified, which led to truncated protein and were most likely to be pathogenic. The result suggests the importance of a large-scale population-wide screening for carriers of mutations in these genes.

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  • Takayasu Mori, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Motoko Chiga, Shintaro Mandai, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Eisei Sohara, Tomokazu Okado, Tatemitsu Rai, Sei Sasaki, Ituro Inoue, Shinichi Uchida .  Comprehensive genetic testing approach for major inherited kidney diseases, using next-generation sequencing with a custom panel. .  Clinical and experimental nephrology21 ( 1 ) 63 - 75   2017.2Reviewed

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    BACKGROUND: Gene identification of hereditary kidney diseases by DNA sequencing is important for precise diagnosis, treatment, and genetic consultations. However, the conventional Sanger sequencing is now practically powerless in the face of ever increasing numbers of reported causative genes of various hereditary diseases. The advent of next-generation sequencing technology has enabled large-scale, genome-wide, simultaneous sequence analyses of multiple candidate genes. METHODS: We designed and verified a comprehensive diagnosis panel for approximately 100 major inherited kidney diseases, including 127 known genes. The panel was named Simple, sPEedy and Efficient Diagnosis of Inherited KIdney Diseases (SPEEDI-KID). We applied the panel to 73 individuals, clinically diagnosed with an inherited kidney disease, from 56 families. RESULTS: The panel efficiently covered the candidate genes and allowed a prompt and accurate genetic diagnosis. Moreover, 18 unreported mutations suspected as the disease causes were detected. All these mutations were validated by Sanger sequencing, with 100 % concordance. CONCLUSION: In conclusion, we developed a powerful diagnostic method, focusing on inherited kidney diseases, using a custom panel, SPEEDI-KID, allowing a fast, easy, and comprehensive diagnosis regardless of the disease type.

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  • Vanessa Romero, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Hiroki Shibata, Ituro Inoue .  Structure and evolution of the filaggrin gene repeated region in primates. .  BMC evolutionary biology17 ( 1 ) 10 - 10   2017.1Reviewed International journal

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    BACKGROUND: The evolutionary dynamics of repeat sequences is quite complex, with some duplicates never having differentiated from each other. Two models can explain the complex evolutionary process for repeated genes-concerted and birth-and-death, of which the latter is driven by duplications maintained by selection. Copy number variations caused by random duplications and losses in repeat regions may modulate molecular pathways and therefore affect phenotypic characteristics in a population, resulting in individuals that are able to adapt to new environments. In this study, we investigated the filaggrin gene (FLG), which codes for filaggrin-an important component of the outer layers of mammalian skin-and contains tandem repeats that exhibit copy number variation between and within species. To examine which model best fits the evolutionary pathway for the complete tandem repeats within a single exon of FLG, we determined the repeat sequences in crab-eating macaque (Macaca fascicularis), orangutan (Pongo abelii), gorilla (Gorilla gorilla), and chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) and compared these with the sequence in human (Homo sapiens). RESULTS: In this study we compared concerted and birth-and-death evolution models, commonly used for gene copies. We found that there is high nucleotide diversity between filaggrin repeat regions, which fits the birth-and-death model. Phylogenetic analyses also suggested that independent duplication events created the repeat sequences in crab-eating macaques and orangutans, while different duplication and loss events created the repeats in gorillas, chimpanzees, and humans. Comparison of the repeat sequences detected purifying selection within species and lineage-specific duplications across species. We also found variation in the length of the repeated region within species such as chimpanzee and crab-eating macaque. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that the copy number variation in the repeat sequences of FLG between primates may be a consequence of species-specific divergence and expansion.

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  • Tetsutaro Yamaguchi, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Keisuke Yano, Yong-Il Kim, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Ryosuke Kimura, Hirotada Otsuka, Naoko Nonaka, Shugo Haga, Masahiro Takahashi, Tatsuo Shirota, Yoshiaki Kikkawa, Atsushi Yamada, Ryutaro Kamijo, Soo-Byung Park, Masanori Nakamura, Koutaro Maki, Ituro Inoue .  Comprehensive genetic exploration of selective tooth agenesis of mandibular incisors by exome sequencing. .  Human genome variation4   17005 - 17005   2017Reviewed International journal

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    Tooth agenesis is described as the absence of one or more teeth. It is caused by a failure in tooth development and is one of the most common human developmental anomalies. We herein report genomic analyses of selective mandibular incisor agenesis (SMIA) using exome sequencing. Two Japanese families with SMIA were subjected to exome sequencing, and family with sequence similarity 65 member A (FAM65), nuclear factor of activated T-cells 3 (NFATC3) and cadherin-related 23 gene (CDH23) were detected. In the follow-up study, 51 Japanese and 32 Korean sporadic patients with SMIA were subjected to exome analyses, and 18 reported variants in PAX9, AXIN2, EDA, EDAR, WNT10A, BMP2 and GREM2 and 27 variants of FAM65, NFATC3 and CDH23 were found in 38 patients. Our comprehensive genetic study of SMIA will pave the way for a full understanding of the genetic etiology of SMIA and provide targets for treatment.

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  • Toshihide Higashino, Tappei Takada, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Yu Toyoda, Blanka Stiburkova, Hiroshi Miyata, Yuki Ikebuchi, Hiroshi Nakashima, Seiko Shimizu, Makoto Kawaguchi, Masayuki Sakiyama, Akiyoshi Nakayama, Airi Akashi, Yuki Tanahashi, Yusuke Kawamura, Takahiro Nakamura, Kenji Wakai, Rieko Okada, Ken Yamamoto, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Tatsuo Hosoya, Kimiyoshi Ichida, Hiroshi Ooyama, Hiroshi Suzuki, Ituro Inoue, Tony R Merriman, Nariyoshi Shinomiya, Hirotaka Matsuo .  Multiple common and rare variants of ABCG2 cause gout. .  RMD open3 ( 2 ) e000464   2017Reviewed International journal

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    Objective: Previous studies have suggested an association between gout susceptibility and common dysfunctional variants in ATP-binding cassette transporter subfamily G member 2/breast cancer resistance protein (ABCG2/BCRP), including rs72552713 (Q126X) and rs2231142 (Q141K). However, the association of rare ABCG2 variants with gout is unknown. Therefore, we investigated the effects of rare ABCG2 variants on gout susceptibility in this study. Methods: We sequenced the exons of ABCG2 in 480 patients with gout and 480 healthy controls (Japanese males). We also performed functional analyses of non-synonymous variants of ABCG2 and analysed the correlation between urate transport function and scores from the protein prediction algorithms (Sorting Intolerant from Tolerant (SIFT) and Polymorphism Phenotyping v2 (PolyPhen-2)). Stratified association analyses and multivariate logistic regression analysis were performed to evaluate the effects of rare and common ABCG2 variants on gout susceptibility. Results: We identified 3 common and 19 rare non-synonymous variants of ABCG2. SIFT scores were significantly correlated with the urate transport function, although some ABCG2 variants showed inconsistent scores. When the effects of common variants were removed by stratified association analysis, the rare variants of ABCG2 were associated with a significantly increased risk of gout (OR=3.2, p=6.4×10-3). Multivariate logistic regression analysis revealed that the size effect of these rare ABCG2 variants (OR=2.7, p=3.0×10-3) was similar to that of the common variants, Q126X (OR=3.4, p=3.2×10-6) and Q141K (OR=2.3, p=2.7×10-16). Conclusions: This study revealed that multiple common and rare variants of ABCG2 are independently associated with gout. These results could support both the 'Common Disease, Common Variant' and 'Common Disease, Multiple Rare Variant' hypotheses for the association between ABCG2 and gout susceptibility.

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  • Femke N G van 't Hof, Ynte M Ruigrok, Cue Hyunkyu Lee, Stephan Ripke, Graig Anderson, Mariza de Andrade, Annette F Baas, Jan D Blankensteijn, Erwin P Böttinger, Matthew J Bown, Joseph Broderick, Philippe Bijlenga, David S Carrell, Dana C Crawford, David R Crosslin, Christian Ebeling, Johan G Eriksson, Myriam Fornage, Tatiana Foroud, Mikael von Und Zu Fraunberg, Christoph M Friedrich, Emília I Gaál, Omri Gottesman, Dong-Chuan Guo, Seamus C Harrison, Juha Hernesniemi, Albert Hofman, Ituro Inoue, Juha E Jääskeläinen, Gregory T Jones, Lambertus A L M Kiemeney, Riku Kivisaari, Nerissa Ko, Seppo Koskinen, Michiaki Kubo, Iftikhar J Kullo, Helena Kuivaniemi, Mitja I Kurki, Aki Laakso, Dongbing Lai, Suzanne M Leal, Hanna Lehto, Scott A LeMaire, Siew-Kee Low, Jennifer Malinowski, Catherine A McCarty, Dianna M Milewicz, Thomas H Mosley, Yusuke Nakamura, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Mika Niemelä, Jennifer Pacheco, Peggy L Peissig, Joanna Pera, Laura Rasmussen-Torvik, Marylyn D Ritchie, Fernando Rivadeneira, Andre M van Rij, Regie Lyn P Santos-Cortez, Athanasios Saratzis, Agnieszka Slowik, Atsushi Takahashi, Gerard Tromp, André G Uitterlinden, Shefali S Verma, Sita H Vermeulen, Gao T Wang, Buhm Han, Gabriël J E Rinkel, Paul I W de Bakker .  Shared Genetic Risk Factors of Intracranial, Abdominal, and Thoracic Aneurysms. .  Journal of the American Heart Association5 ( 7 ) e002603   2016.7Reviewed International journal

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    BACKGROUND: Intracranial aneurysms (IAs), abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs), and thoracic aortic aneurysms (TAAs) all have a familial predisposition. Given that aneurysm types are known to co-occur, we hypothesized that there may be shared genetic risk factors for IAs, AAAs, and TAAs. METHODS AND RESULTS: We performed a mega-analysis of 1000 Genomes Project-imputed genome-wide association study (GWAS) data of 4 previously published aneurysm cohorts: 2 IA cohorts (in total 1516 cases, 4305 controls), 1 AAA cohort (818 cases, 3004 controls), and 1 TAA cohort (760 cases, 2212 controls), and observed associations of 4 known IA, AAA, and/or TAA risk loci (9p21, 18q11, 15q21, and 2q33) with consistent effect directions in all 4 cohorts. We calculated polygenic scores based on IA-, AAA-, and TAA-associated SNPs and tested these scores for association to case-control status in the other aneurysm cohorts; this revealed no shared polygenic effects. Similarly, linkage disequilibrium-score regression analyses did not show significant correlations between any pair of aneurysm subtypes. Last, we evaluated the evidence for 14 previously published aneurysm risk single-nucleotide polymorphisms through collaboration in extended aneurysm cohorts, with a total of 6548 cases and 16 843 controls (IA) and 4391 cases and 37 904 controls (AAA), and found nominally significant associations for IA risk locus 18q11 near RBBP8 to AAA (odds ratio [OR]=1.11; P=4.1×10(-5)) and for TAA risk locus 15q21 near FBN1 to AAA (OR=1.07; P=1.1×10(-3)). CONCLUSIONS: Although there was no evidence for polygenic overlap between IAs, AAAs, and TAAs, we found nominally significant effects of two established risk loci for IAs and TAAs in AAAs. These two loci will require further replication.

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  • Masayuki Sakiyama, Hirotaka Matsuo, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Ken Yamamoto, Akiyoshi Nakayama, Takahiro Nakamura, Sayo Kawai, Rieko Okada, Hiroshi Ooyama, Toru Shimizu, Nariyoshi Shinomiya .  Identification of rs671, a common variant of ALDH2, as a gout susceptibility locus .  SCIENTIFIC REPORTS6 ( 1 ) 25360   2016.5Reviewed

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    Gout is a common disease resulting from hyperuricemia. Recently, a genome-wide association study identified an association between gout and a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs2188380, located on an intergenic region between MYL2 and CUX2 on chromosome 12. However, other genes around rs2188380 could possibly be gout susceptibility genes. Therefore, we performed a fine-mapping study of the MYL2-CUX2 region. From 8,595 SNPs in the MYL2-CUX2 region, 9 tag SNPs were selected, and genotyping of 1,048 male gout patients and 1,334 male controls was performed by TaqMan method. Eight SNPs showed significant associations with gout after Bonferroni correction. rs671 (Glu504Lys) of ALDH2 had the most significant association with gout (P = 1.7 x 10(-18), odds ratio = 0.53). After adjustment for rs671, the other 8 SNPs no longer showed a significant association with gout, while the significant association of rs671 remained. rs671 has been reportedly associated with alcohol drinking behavior, and it is well-known that alcohol drinking elevates serum uric acid levels. These data suggest that rs671, a common functional SNP of ALDH2, is a genuine gout-associated SNP in the MYL2-CUX2 locus and that "A" allele (Lys) of rs671 plays a protective role in the development of gout.

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  • Hirotaka Matsuo, Ken Yamamoto, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Akiyoshi Nakayama, Masayuki Sakiyama, Toshinori Chiba, Atsushi Takahashi, Takahiro Nakamura, Hiroshi Nakashima, Yuzo Takada, Inaho Danjoh, Seiko Shimizu, Junko Abe, Yusuke Kawamura, Sho Terashige, Hiraku Ogata, Seishiro Tatsukawa, Guang Yin, Rieko Okada, Emi Morita, Mariko Naito, Atsumi Tokumasu, Hiroyuki Onoue, Keiichi Iwaya, Toshimitsu Ito, Tappei Takada, Katsuhisa Inoue, Yukio Kato, Yukio Nakamura, Yutaka Sakurai, Hiroshi Suzuki, Yoshikatsu Kanai, Tatsuo Hosoya, Nobuyuki Hamajima, Ituro Inoue, Michiaki Kubo, Kimiyoshi Ichida, Hiroshi Ooyama, Toru Shimizu, Nariyoshi Shinomiya .  Genome-wide association study of clinically defined gout identifies multiple risk loci and its association with clinical subtypes .  ANNALS OF THE RHEUMATIC DISEASES75 ( 4 ) 652 - 659   2016.4Reviewed

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    Objective Gout, caused by hyperuricaemia, is a multifactorial disease. Although genome-wide association studies (GWASs) of gout have been reported, they included self-reported gout cases in which clinical information was insufficient. Therefore, the relationship between genetic variation and clinical subtypes of gout remains unclear. Here, we first performed a GWAS of clinically defined gout cases only.
    Methods A GWAS was conducted with 945 patients with clinically defined gout and 1213 controls in a Japanese male population, followed by replication study of 1048 clinically defined cases and 1334 controls.
    Results Five gout susceptibility loci were identified at the genome-wide significance level (p &lt; 5.0x10(-8)), which contained well-known urate transporter genes (ABCG2 and SLC2A9) and additional genes: rs1260326 (p = 1.9x10(-12); OR = 1.36) of GCKR (a gene for glucose and lipid metabolism), rs2188380 (p = 1.6x10(-23); OR = 1.75) of MYL2-CUX2 (genes associated with cholesterol and diabetes mellitus) and rs4073582 (p = 6.4x10(-9); OR = 1.66) of CNIH-2 (a gene for regulation of glutamate signalling). The latter two are identified as novel gout loci. Furthermore, among the identified single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), we demonstrated that the SNPs of ABCG2 and SLC2A9 were differentially associated with types of gout and clinical parameters underlying specific subtypes (renal underexcretion type and renal overload type). The effect of the risk allele of each SNP on clinical parameters showed significant linear relationships with the ratio of the case-control ORs for two distinct types of gout (r = 0.96 [p = 4.8x10(-4)] for urate clearance and r = 0.96 [p = 5.0x10(-4)] for urinary urate excretion).
    Conclusions Our findings provide clues to better understand the pathogenesis of gout and will be useful for development of companion diagnostics.

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  • Hirofumi Nakaoka, Aishwarya Gurumurthy, Takahide Hayano, Somayeh Ahmadloo, Waleed H Omer, Kosuke Yoshihara, Akihito Yamamoto, Keisuke Kurose, Takayuki Enomoto, Shigeo Akira, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Ituro Inoue .  Allelic Imbalance in Regulation of ANRIL through Chromatin Interaction at 9p21 Endometriosis Risk Locus. .  PLoS genetics12 ( 4 ) e1005893   2016.4Reviewed International journal

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    Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have discovered numerous single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with human complex disorders. However, functional characterization of the disease-associated SNPs remains a formidable challenge. Here we explored regulatory mechanism of a SNP on chromosome 9p21 associated with endometriosis by leveraging "allele-specific" functional genomic approaches. By re-sequencing 1.29 Mb of 9p21 region and scrutinizing DNase-seq data from the ENCODE project, we prioritized rs17761446 as a candidate functional variant that was in perfect linkage disequilibrium with the original GWAS SNP (rs10965235) and located on DNase I hypersensitive site. Chromosome conformation capture followed by high-throughput sequencing revealed that the protective G allele of rs17761446 exerted stronger chromatin interaction with ANRIL promoter. We demonstrated that the protective allele exhibited preferential binding affinities to TCF7L2 and EP300 by bioinformatics and chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) analyses. ChIP assays for histone H3 lysine 27 acetylation and RNA polymerase II reinforced the enhancer activity of the SNP site. The allele specific expression analysis for eutopic endometrial tissues and endometrial carcinoma cell lines showed that rs17761446 was a cis-regulatory variant where G allele was associated with increased ANRIL expression. Our work illuminates the allelic imbalances in a series of transcriptional regulation from factor binding to gene expression mediated by chromatin interaction underlie the molecular mechanism of 9p21 endometriosis risk locus. Functional genomics on common disease will unlock functional aspect of genotype-phenotype correlations in the post-GWAS stage.

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  • Bahareh Rabbani, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Shahin Akhondzadeh, Mustafa Tekin, Nejat Mahdieh .  Next generation sequencing: implications in personalized medicine and pharmacogenomics .  MOLECULAR BIOSYSTEMS12 ( 6 ) 1818 - 1830   2016Reviewed

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    A breakthrough in next generation sequencing (NGS) in the last decade provided an unprecedented opportunity to investigate genetic variations in humans and their roles in health and disease. NGS offers regional genomic sequencing such as whole exome sequencing of coding regions of all genes, as well as whole genome sequencing. RNA-seq offers sequencing of the entire transcriptome and ChIP-seq allows for sequencing the epigenetic architecture of the genome. Identifying genetic variations in individuals can be used to predict disease risk, with the potential to halt or retard disease progression. NGS can also be used to predict the response to or adverse effects of drugs or to calculate appropriate drug dosage. Such a personalized medicine also provides the possibility to treat diseases based on the genetic makeup of the patient. Here, we review the basics of NGS technologies and their application in human diseases to foster human healthcare and personalized medicine.

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  • Takahide Hayano, Hiroshi Matsui, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Nobuaki Ohtake, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Kazuhiro Suzuki, Ituro Inoue .  Germline Variants of Prostate Cancer in Japanese Families. .  PloS one11 ( 10 ) e0164233   2016Reviewed International journal

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    Prostate cancer (PC) is the second most common cancer in men. Family history is the major risk factor for PC. Only two susceptibility genes were identified in PC, BRCA2 and HOXB13. A comprehensive search of germline variants for patients with PC has not been reported in Japanese families. In this study, we conducted exome sequencing followed by Sanger sequencing to explore responsible germline variants in 140 Japanese patients with PC from 66 families. In addition to known susceptibility genes, BRCA2 and HOXB13, we identified TRRAP variants in a mutually exclusive manner in seven large PC families (three or four patients per family). We also found shared variants of BRCA2, HOXB13, and TRRAP from 59 additional small PC families (two patients per family). We identified two deleterious HOXB13 variants (F127C and G132E). Further exploration of the shared variants in rest of the families revealed deleterious variants of the so-called cancer genes (ATP1A1, BRIP1, FANCA, FGFR3, FLT3, HOXD11, MUTYH, PDGFRA, SMARCA4, and TCF3). The germline variant profile provides a new insight to clarify the genetic etiology and heterogeneity of PC among Japanese men.

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  • Hirofumi Nakaoka, Ituro Inoue .  Distribution of HLA haplotypes across Japanese Archipelago: similarity, difference and admixture .  JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS60 ( 11 ) 683 - 690   2015.11Invited Reviewed

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    The human leukocyte antigen (HLA) region is the most polymorphic region in the human genome. The polymorphic nature of the HLA region is thought to have been shaped from balancing selection. The complex migration events during the Out-of-Africa expansion have influenced geographic patterns of HLA allele frequencies and diversities across present-day human populations. Differences in the HLA allele frequency may contribute geographic differences in the susceptibility to many diseases, such as infectious, autoimmune and metabolic diseases. Here we briefly reviewed characteristics of frequency distribution of HLA alleles and haplotypes in Japanese population. A large part of HLA alleles and haplotypes that are common in Japanese are shared with neighboring Asian populations. The differentiations in HLA alleles and haplotypes across Japanese regional populations may provide clues to model for peopling of Japanese Archipelago and for design of genetic association studies. Finally, we introduce recent topics that new HLA alleles derived from ancient admixtures with Neanderthals and Denisovans are thought to have played an important role in the adaptation of modern humans to local pathogens during Out-of-Africa expansion.

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  • Shigeki Mitsunaga, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Yuko Okudaira, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Yasuo Suzuki, Masataka Kuwana, Shinji Sato, Yuko Kaneko, Yasuhiko Homma, Akira Oka, Takashi Shiina, Hidetoshi Inoko, Ituro Inoue .  Aggregation of rare/low-frequency variants of the mitochondria respiratory chain-related proteins in rheumatoid arthritis patients. .  Journal of human genetics60 ( 8 ) 449 - 54   2015.8Reviewed International journal

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    Exome sequencings were conducted using 59 patients having rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and 93 controls. After stepwise filtering, 107 genes showed less than 0.05 of P-values by gene-burden tests. Among 107 genes, NDUFA7 which is a subunit of the complex I in the mitochondrial respiratory chain was selected for further analysis based on previous reports. A case-control study was performed on the three single-nucleotide variants (SNVs) of NDUFA7 with 432 cases and 432 controls. An association was observed between NDUFA7 and RA with severe erosive arthritis. These results together with previous reports suggested the involvement of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the pathogenesis of RA. In the next step, four SNVs from three genes related to the mitochondrial respiratory chain were selected, which is a major source of ROS, and conducted a case-control study. An association was observed based on a pathway-burden test comprising NDUFA7, SDHAF2, SCO1 and ATP5O: P=1.56E-04, odds ratio=2.16, 95% confidence interval=1.43-3.28. Previous reports suggested the involvement of ROS in the pathogenesis of RA. The aggregation of SNVs in the mitochondria respiratory chain suggests the pivotal role of those SNVs in the pathogenesis of RA with severe erosive arthritis.

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  • Hiromi Miura, Hidetoshi Inoko, Masafumi Tanaka, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Minoru Kimura, Channabasavaiah B. Gurumurthy, Masahiro Sato, Masato Ohtsuka .  Assessment of Artificial MiRNA Architectures for Higher Knockdown Efficiencies without the Undesired Effects in Mice .  PLOS ONE10 ( 8 ) e0135919   2015.8Reviewed

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    RNAi-based strategies have been used for hypomorphic analyses. However, there are technical challenges to achieve robust, reproducible knockdown effect. Here we examined the artificial microRNA (amiRNA) architectures that could provide higher knockdown efficiencies. Using transient and stable transfection assays in cells, we found that simple amiRNA-expression cassettes, that did not contain a marker gene (-MG), displayed higher amiRNA expression and more efficient knockdown than those that contained a marker gene (+MG). Further, we tested this phenomenon in vivo, by analyzing amiRNA-expressing mice that were produced by the pronuclear injection-based targeted transgenesis (PITT) method. While we observed significant silencing of the target gene (eGFP) in + MG hemizygous mice, obtaining -MG amiRNA expression mice, even hemizygotes, was difficult and the animals died perinatally. We obtained only mosaic mice having both "-MG amiRNA" cells and "amiRNA low-expression" cells but they exhibited growth retardation and cataracts, and they could not transmit the -MG amiRNA allele to the next generation. Furthermore, +MG amiRNA homozygotes could not be obtained. These results suggested that excessive amiRNAs transcribed by -MG expression cassettes cause deleterious effects in mice, and the amiRNA expression level in hemizygous +MG amiRNA mice is near the upper limit, where mice can develop normally. In conclusion, the PITT-(+MG amiRNA) system demonstrated here can generate knockdown mouse models that reliably express highest and tolerable levels of amiRNAs.

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  • Takahide Hayano, Shiro Yamada, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Kosuke Yoshihara, Sosuke Adachi, Katsunori Kashima, Kenichi Tanaka, Takayuki Enomoto, Ituro Inoue .  Identification of novel exonic mobile element insertions in epithelial ovarian cancers. .  Human genome variation2 ( 1 ) 15030 - 15030   2015Reviewed International journal

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    Mobile elements comprise about half of the human genome. Three active mobile element families (L1, Alu, and SVA) possibly cause diseases such as cancer. We conducted mobile element insertion (MEI) profiling of 44 epithelial ovarian cancers using exome-sequencing data. We identified a total of 106 MEIs using the Mobster program, 8 of which were novel exonic MEIs.

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  • Hirofumi Nakaoka, Atsushi Tajima, Taku Yoneyama, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Hidetoshi Kasuya, Tohru Mizutani, Ituro Inoue .  Gene expression profiling reveals distinct molecular signatures associated with the rupture of intracranial aneurysm. .  Stroke45 ( 8 ) 2239 - 45   2014.8Reviewed International journal

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    BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The rupture of intracranial aneurysm (IA) causes subarachnoid hemorrhage associated with high morbidity and mortality. We compared gene expression profiles in aneurysmal domes between unruptured IAs and ruptured IAs (RIAs) to elucidate biological mechanisms predisposing to the rupture of IA. METHODS: We determined gene expression levels of 8 RIAs, 5 unruptured IAs, and 10 superficial temporal arteries with the Agilent microarrays. To explore biological heterogeneity of IAs, we classified the samples into subgroups showing similar gene expression patterns, using clustering methods. RESULTS: The clustering analysis identified 4 groups: superficial temporal arteries and unruptured IAs were aggregated into their own clusters, whereas RIAs segregated into 2 distinct subgroups (early and late RIAs). Comparing gene expression levels between early RIAs and unruptured IAs, we identified 430 upregulated and 617 downregulated genes in early RIAs. The upregulated genes were associated with inflammatory and immune responses and phagocytosis including S100/calgranulin genes (S100A8, S100A9, and S100A12). The downregulated genes suggest mechanical weakness of aneurysm walls. The expressions of Krüppel-like family of transcription factors (KLF2, KLF12, and KLF15), which were anti-inflammatory regulators, and CDKN2A, which was located on chromosome 9p21 that was the most consistently replicated locus in genome-wide association studies of IA, were also downregulated. CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrate that gene expression patterns of RIAs were different according to the age of patients. The results suggest that macrophage-mediated inflammation is a key biological pathway for IA rupture. The identified genes can be good candidates for molecular markers of rupture-prone IAs and therapeutic targets.

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  • Akiyoshi Nakayama, Hirotaka Matsuo, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Takahiro Nakamura, Hiroshi Nakashima, Yuzo Takada, Yuji Oikawa, Tappei Takada, Masayuki Sakiyama, Seiko Shimizu, Yusuke Kawamura, Toshinori Chiba, Junko Abe, Kenji Wakai, Sayo Kawai, Rieko Okada, Takashi Tamura, Yuka Shichijo, Airi Akashi, Hiroshi Suzuki, Tatsuo Hosoya, Yutaka Sakurai, Kimiyoshi Ichida, Nariyoshi Shinomiya .  Common dysfunctional variants of ABCG2 have stronger impact on hyperuricemia progression than typical environmental risk factors .  SCIENTIFIC REPORTS4 ( 1 ) 5227   2014.6Reviewed

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    Gout/hyperuricemia is a common multifactorial disease having typical environmental risks. Recently, common dysfunctional variants of ABCG2, a urate exporter gene also known as BCRP, are revealed to be a major cause of gout/hyperuricemia. Here, we compared the influence of ABCG2 dysfunction on serum uric acid (SUA) levels with other typical risk factors in a cohort of 5,005 Japanese participants. ABCG2 dysfunction was observed in 53.3% of the population investigated, and its population-attributable risk percent (PAR%) for hyperuricemia was 29.2%, much higher than those of the other typical environmental risks, i.e. overweight/obesity (BMI &gt;= 25.0; PAR% = 18.7%), heavy drinking (&gt;196 g/week (male) or &gt;98 g/week (female) of pure alcohol; PAR% = 15.4%), and aging (&gt;= 60 years old; PAR% = 5.74%). SUA significantly increased as the ABCG2 function decreased (P = 5.99 x 10(-19)). A regression analysis revealed that ABCG2 dysfunction had a stronger effect than other factors; a 25% decrease in ABCG2 function was equivalent to "an increase of BMI by 1.97-point" or "552.1 g/week alcohol intake as pure ethanol" in terms of ability to increase SUA. Therefore, ABCG2 dysfunction originating from common genetic variants has a much stronger impact on the progression of hyperuricemia than other familiar risks. Our study provides a better understanding of common genetic factors for common diseases.

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  • T. Yamaguchi, H. Nakaoka, K. Yamamoto, T. Fujikawa, Y-I Kim, K. Yano, S. Haga, K. Katayama, T. Shibusawa, S. B. Park, K. Maki, R. Kimura, I. Inoue .  Genome-wide association study of degenerative bony changes of the temporomandibular joint .  ORAL DISEASES20 ( 4 ) 409 - 415   2014.5Reviewed

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    Objectives
    To identify susceptibility genes underlying degenerative bony changes of the temporomandibular joint (TMJ).
    Materials and Methods
    Bony changes of the TMJ condylar head were diagnosed by examination of panoramic radiographs and/or magnetic resonance images and/or computed tomography images. We conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) of 146 cases with TMJ degeneration and 374 controls from East Asian populations using an Illumina HumanOmniExpress BeadChip. After rigorous quality-control filtering, approximately 550000 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were used for tests of associations with disease status.
    Results
    Forty-one SNPs at 22 independent loci showed association signals at P&lt;1x10(-4). The SNP rs878962, which maps on an intron of TSPAN9 on chromosome 12, showed the strongest association (combined OR=1.89, 95% confidence interval=1.43-2.50, P=8.1x10(-6)). According to in silico predictions of the 41 SNPs, two intronic SNPs of APOL3 (rs80575) and MRC2 (rs2460300) may fall within regulatory elements and affect DNA-protein interactions. We could not replicate SNPs located on genes that have been reported to be associated with temporomandibular disorder or temporomandibular osteoarthritis in previous studies at P&lt;1x10(-4).
    Conclusions
    Our GWAS identified 22 independent loci showing suggestive association signals with degenerative bony changes of the TMJ. These loci provide good candidates for future follow-up studies.

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  • Nakaoka H, Hosomichi K, Mitsunaga S, Inoko H, Inoue I .  The admixed origin of Japanese population from HLA alleles. .  Major Histocompatibility Complex21 ( 1 ) 37 - 44   2014.4Invited Reviewed

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    The polymorphisms in the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) region are powerful tool for studying human evolutionary processes such as migration, admixture, natural selection and genetic adaptation. The origin of modern Japanese has long been debated. It is thought that there are at least two waves of migrations to the Japanese Archipelago. The ancestors of the Jomon people migrated to the Japanese Archipelago in the Upper Paleolithic age (approximately 30,000 years ago). The new migrants, the Yayoi people, came through the Korean Peninsula in the Aeneolithic period (1,000 BC to 300 AD). The prevailing model for peopling of Japan is the admixture model or “dual structure model” in which modern Japanese was formed by admixture between the Jomon and Yayoi people. We briefly review findings that support the admixture model for peopling of Japanese Archipelago, and introduce recent studies for exploring genetic footprints of the migration route of prehistoric ancient populations.

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  • Hirotaka Matsuo, Akiyoshi Nakayama, Masayuki Sakiyama, Toshinori Chiba, Seiko Shimizu, Yusuke Kawamura, Hiroshi Nakashima, Takahiro Nakamura, Yuzo Takada, Yuji Oikawa, Tappei Takada, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Junko Abe, Hiroki Inoue, Kenji Wakai, Sayo Kawai, Yin Guang, Hiroko Nakagawa, Toshimitsu Ito, Kazuki Niwa, Ken Yamamoto, Yutaka Sakurai, Hiroshi Suzuki, Tatsuo Hosoya, Kimiyoshi Ichida, Toru Shimizu, Nariyoshi Shinomiya .  ABCG2 dysfunction causes hyperuricemia due to both renal urate underexcretion and renal urate overload .  SCIENTIFIC REPORTS4 ( 1 ) 3755   2014.1Reviewed

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    Gout is a common disease which results from hyperuricemia. We have reported that the dysfunction of urate exporter ABCG2 is the major cause of renal overload (ROL) hyperuricemia, but its involvement in renal underexcretion (RUE) hyperuricemia, the most prevalent subtype, is not clearly explained so far. In this study, the association analysis with 644 hyperuricemia patients and 1,623 controls in male Japanese revealed that ABCG2 dysfunction significantly increased the risk of RUE hyperuricemia as well as overall and ROL hyperuricemia, according to the severity of impairment. ABCG2 dysfunction caused renal urate underexcretion and induced hyperuricemia even if the renal urate overload was not remarkable. These results show that ABCG2 plays physiologically important roles in both renal and extra-renal urate excretion mechanisms. Our findings indicate the importance of ABCG2 as a promising therapeutic and screening target of hyperuricemia and gout.

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  • Takahide Hayano, Yuki Yokota, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Kosuke Yoshihara, Sosuke Adachi, Katsunori Kashima, Hitoshi Tsuda, Takuya Moriya, Kenichi Tanaka, Takayuki Enomoto, Ituro Inoue .  Molecular characterization of an intact p53 pathway subtype in high-grade serous ovarian cancer. .  PloS one9 ( 12 ) e114491   2014Reviewed International journal

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    High-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC) is the most aggressive histological type of epithelial ovarian cancer, which is characterized by a high frequency of somatic TP53 mutations. We performed exome analyses of tumors and matched normal tissues of 34 Japanese patients with HGSOC and observed a substantial number of patients without TP53 mutation (24%, 8/34). Combined with the results of copy number variation analyses, we subdivided the 34 patients with HGSOC into subtypes designated ST1 and ST2. ST1 showed intact p53 pathway and was characterized by fewer somatic mutations and copy number alterations. In contrast, the p53 pathway was impaired in ST2, which is characterized by abundant somatic mutations and copy number alterations. Gene expression profiles combined with analyses using the Gene Ontology resource indicate the involvement of specific biological processes (mitosis and DNA helicase) that are relevant to genomic stability and cancer etiology. In particular we demonstrate the presence of a novel subtype of patients with HGSOC that is characterized by an intact p53 pathway, with limited genomic alterations and specific gene expression profiles.

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  • Tomo Yonezawa, Riho Kurata, Atsushi Tajima, Xiaofeng Cui, Hiroki Maruta, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Keiichi Nakajima, Hidetoshi Inoko .  Comparative Proteomics and Network Analysis Identify PKC Epsilon Underlying Long-Chain Fatty Acid Signaling .  Journal of Proteomics & Bioinformatics7 ( 11 ) 340 - 346   2014Reviewed

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  • Timothy A Jinam, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Shigeki Mitsunaga, Hiroyuki Okada, Atsushi Tanaka, Kenichi Tanaka, Ituro Inoue .  HLA-DPB1*04:01 allele is associated with non-obstructive azoospermia in Japanese patients. .  Human genetics132 ( 12 ) 1405 - 11   2013.12Reviewed International journal

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    Azoospermia is defined by absence of sperm in the semen and can either be caused by obstruction of the seminal tract (obstructive azoospermia) or by defects in spermatogenesis (non-obstructive azoospermia, NOA). Previous studies reported that specific alleles and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) region were associated with NOA in East Asians. We attempt to expand upon previous findings by genotyping more HLA genes and to replicate SNP associations by focusing on Japanese NOA patients. HLA typing of six genes (HLA-A, -B, -C, -DRB1, -DQB1, and -DPB1) was done on 355 NOA patients using SSO-Luminex assay while genotyping of two previously reported SNPs (rs498422 and rs3129878) was done on 443 patients and 544 fertile males using TaqMan assay. Association between the HLA alleles and SNP with NOA was assessed with Chi squared and logistic regression tests. We found that HLA-DPB1*04:01 [corrected p value, P(c) 7.13 × 10(-6); odds ratio (OR) 2.52], DRB1*13:02 (P(c) 4.93 × 10(-4), OR 1.97), DQB1*06:04 (P(c) 8.94 × 10(-4), OR 1.91) and rs3129878 (p value 3.98 × 10(-4); OR 1.32) showed significant association with NOA, however, these loci are in linkage disequilibrium with each other. The conditional logistic regression tests showed that DPB1*04:01 is independently associated with NOA, confirming the involvement of the HLA region in the etiology of NOA in Japanese patients.

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  • Shugo Haga, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Tetsutaro Yamaguchi, Ken Yamamoto, Yong-Il Kim, Hiroshi Samoto, Toshihide Ohno, Koshu Katayama, Hajime Ishida, Soo-Byung Park, Ryosuke Kimura, Koutaro Maki, Ituro Inoue .  A genome-wide association study of third molar agenesis in Japanese and Korean populations. .  Journal of human genetics58 ( 12 ) 799 - 803   2013.12Reviewed International journal

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    Tooth agenesis is the most common developmental anomaly of human dentition, occurring most often in the third molar (wisdom tooth). It is affected by genetic variation, so this study aimed to identify susceptibility genes associated with third molar agenesis. Examination of panoramic radiographs and medical history about third molar extraction were used to diagnose third molar agenesis. We then conducted a genome-wide association study of 149 cases with at least one-third molar agenesis and 338 controls from Japan and Korea using the Illumina HumanOmniExpress BeadChip. After rigorous quality-control filtering, approximately 550 000 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were analyzed in association tests with the status. We identified three SNPs showing evidence of association at P<1 × 10(-5) and 69 SNPs showing evidence of association at P<1 × 10(-4). SNP rs1469622, which maps to an intron of THSD7B (thrombospondin, type I, domain containing 7B) on chromosome 2, showed the strongest association (combined odds ratio=1.88, 95% confidence interval=1.43-2.47, P=7.5 × 10(-6)). The identified SNPs may be considered candidates for future replication studies in independent samples.

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  • Masato Ohtsuka, Hiromi Miura, Hideki Hayashi, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Minoru Kimura, Masahiro Sato, Channabasavaiah B. Gurumurthy, Hidetoshi Inoko .  Improvement of pronuclear injection-based targeted transgenesis (PITT) by iCre mRNA-mediated site-specific recombination .  Transgenic Research22 ( 4 ) 873 - 875   2013.8Reviewed

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  • Yuki Hata, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Kosuke Yoshihara, Sosuke Adachi, Kazufumi Haino, Masayuki Yamaguchi, Nobumichi Nishikawa, Katsunori Kashima, Tetsuro Yahata, Atsushi Tajima, Atsushi Watanabe, Shigeo Akira, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Ituro Inoue, Kenichi Tanaka .  A nonsynonymous variant of IL1A is associated with endometriosis in Japanese population. .  Journal of human genetics58 ( 8 ) 517 - 20   2013.8Reviewed International journal

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    Our previous genome-wide association study has demonstrated that single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) located in intronic and downstream regions of IL1A (interleukin 1α) were associated with the risk of endometriosis. These SNPs on the genome-wide association study platform could be only surrogates for the true causal variant. Thus, we resequenced all the exons of IL1A in 377 patients with endometriosis and 457 healthy controls. We detected seven rare variants (minor allele frequency <0.01) and four common variants. All the rare variants were not associated with endometriosis. The four common variants (rs17561, rs1304037, rs2856836 and rs3783553) in IL1A were significantly associated with endometriosis (P=0.0024, 0.0024, 0.0014 and 0.0061, respectively). All the four SNPs were within a linkage disequilibrium block. Among them, only rs17561 was nonsynonymous (p.A114S), which has been reported to be associated with susceptibility to ovarian cancer. Taken together, we examined association between rs17561 and endometriosis in an independent validation data set (524 patients and 533 healthy controls) replicating significant association (P=4.0 × 10(-5); odds ratio (OR), 1.91; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.41-2.61). Meta-analysis by combining results from the two stages strengthened the evidence of association (P=2.5 × 10(-7); OR, 1.90; 95% CI, 1.49-2.43). Our findings demonstrated that the nonsynonymous variant of IL1A might confer genetic susceptibility to endometriosis in Japanese population.

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  • Christian Harkensee, Akira Oka, Makoto Onizuka, Peter G. Middleton, Hidetoshi Inoko, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Andrew R. Gennery, Kiyoshi Ando, Yasuo Morishima .  Microsatellite scanning of the immunogenome associates MAPK14 and ELTD1 with graft-versus-host disease in hematopoietic stem cell transplantation .  IMMUNOGENETICS65 ( 6 ) 417 - 427   2013.6Reviewed

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    Graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) is the main complication after hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Evidence for non-HLA gene polymorphisms as a cause of GVHD lacks consistency, which is, in part, due to methodological issues of previous candidate gene association studies and small effect size of their results, demanding for larger scale and more robust approaches. Here, non-HLA gene polymorphisms were studied on a large population (922 HSCT pairs) from a homogeneous ethnic background with selection/correction for important clinical confounders. A methodology was applied exploiting the strength of confirmatory typing in an independent study cohort. Targeting an immunogenome of 2,909 genes, an approach of pooled DNA typing of 4,321 microsatellite (MS) markers in two independent screening steps and confirmation of associated markers by further individual genotyping on combined screening cohorts was used to identify genetic susceptibility loci for moderate to severe GVHD (grades 2-4). Ten MS loci (D5S424, D6S0035i, D1S0818i, DXS0151i, D17S0219i, DXS0629i, DXS0324i, D17S0271i, D6S0330i, and D1S1335i) passed the two pooled DNA typing steps and confirmation by individual sample genotyping; two of these (D1S0818i-ELTD1 and D6S0035i-MAPK14) remain associated following application of Bonferroni's correction and multivariate analysis. The MAPK14 locus was exemplarily explored by typing of haplotype single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) confirming this association. This study identified several new MS susceptibility loci for GVHD that warrant further investigation. Immunogenome scanning using MS markers is a useful method for the identification of non-HLA gene loci associating with HSCT outcomes.

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  • Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Timothy A Jinam, Shigeki Mitsunaga, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Ituro Inoue .  Phase-defined complete sequencing of the HLA genes by next-generation sequencing. .  BMC genomics14   355 - 355   2013.5Reviewed International journal

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    BACKGROUND: The human leukocyte antigen (HLA) region, the 3.8-Mb segment of the human genome at 6p21, has been associated with more than 100 different diseases, mostly autoimmune diseases. Due to the complex nature of HLA genes, there are difficulties in elucidating complete HLA gene sequences especially HLA gene haplotype structures by the conventional sequencing method. We propose a novel, accurate, and cost-effective method for generating phase-defined complete sequencing of HLA genes by using indexed multiplex next generation sequencing. RESULTS: A total of 33 HLA homozygous samples, 11 HLA heterozygous samples, and 3 parents-child families were subjected to phase-defined HLA gene sequencing. We applied long-range PCR to amplify six HLA genes (HLA-A, -C, -B, DRB1, -DQB1, and -DPB1) followed by transposase-based library construction and multiplex sequencing with the MiSeq sequencer. Paired-end reads (2 × 250 bp) derived from the sequencer were aligned to the six HLA gene segments of UCSC hg19 allowing at most 80 bases mismatch. For HLA homozygous samples, the six amplicons of an individual were pooled and simultaneously sequenced and mapped as an individual-tagging method. The paired-end reads were aligned to corresponding genes of UCSC hg19 and unambiguous, continuous sequences were obtained. For HLA heterozygous samples, each amplicon was separately sequenced and mapped as a gene-tagging method. After alignments, we detected informative paired-end reads harboring SNVs on both forward and reverse reads that are used to separate two chromosomes and to generate two phase-defined sequences in an individual. Consequently, we were able to determine the phase-defined HLA gene sequences from promoter to 3'-UTR and assign up to 8-digit HLA allele numbers, regardless of whether the alleles are rare or novel. Parent-child trio-based sequencing validated our sequencing and phasing methods. CONCLUSIONS: Our protocol generated phased-defined sequences of the entire HLA genes, resulting in high resolution HLA typing and new allele detection.

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  • Shigeki Mitsunaga, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Yuko Okudaira, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Nanae Kunii, Yasuo Suzuki, Masataka Kuwana, Shinji Sato, Yuko Kaneko, Yasuhiko Homma, Koichi Kashiwase, Fumihiro Azuma, Jerzy K Kulski, Ituro Inoue, Hidetoshi Inoko .  Exome sequencing identifies novel rheumatoid arthritis-susceptible variants in the BTNL2 .  Journal of Human Genetics58 ( 4 ) 210 - 215   2013.1

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    Other Link: http://www.nature.com/articles/jhg20132

  • Hirofumi Nakaoka, Shigeki Mitsunaga, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Liou Shyh-Yuh, Taiji Sawamoto, Tsutomu Fujiwara, Naohisa Tsutsui, Koji Suematsu, Akira Shinagawa, Hidetoshi Inoko, Ituro Inoue .  Detection of ancestry informative HLA alleles confirms the admixed origins of Japanese population. .  PloS one8 ( 4 ) e60793   2013Reviewed International journal

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    The polymorphisms in the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) region are powerful tool for studying human evolutionary processes. We investigated genetic structure of Japanese by using five-locus HLA genotypes (HLA-A, -B, -C, -DRB1, and -DPB1) of 2,005 individuals from 10 regions of Japan. We found a significant level of population substructure in Japanese; particularly the differentiation between Okinawa Island and mainland Japanese. By using a plot of the principal component scores, we identified ancestry informative alleles associated with the underlying population substructure. We examined extent of linkage disequilibrium (LD) between pairs of HLA alleles on the haplotypes that were differentiated among regions. The LDs were strong and weak for pairs of HLA alleles characterized by low and high frequencies in Okinawa Island, respectively. The five-locus haplotypes whose alleles exhibit strong LD were unique to Japanese and South Korean, suggesting that these haplotypes had been recently derived from the Korean Peninsula. The alleles characterized by high frequency in Japanese compared to South Korean formed segmented three-locus haplotype that was commonly found in Aleuts, Eskimos, and North- and Meso-Americans but not observed in Korean and Chinese. The serologically equivalent haplotype was found in Orchid Island in Taiwan, Mongol, Siberia, and Arctic regions. It suggests that early Japanese who existed prior to the migration wave from the Korean Peninsula shared ancestry with northern Asian who moved to the New World via the Bering Strait land bridge. These results may support the admixture model for peopling of Japanese Archipelago.

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  • Bahareh Rabbani, Nejat Mahdieh, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Ituro Inoue .  Next-generation sequencing: impact of exome sequencing in characterizing Mendelian disorders. .  Journal of human genetics57 ( 10 ) 621 - 32   2012.10Reviewed International journal

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    Traditional approaches for gene mapping from candidate gene studies to positional cloning strategies have been applied for Mendelian disorders. Since 2005, next-generation sequencing (NGS) technologies are improving as rapid, high-throughput and cost-effective approaches to fulfill medical sciences and research demands. Using NGS, the underlying causative genes are directly distinguished via a systematic filtering, in which the identified gene variants are checked for novelty and functionality. During the past 2 years, the role of more than 100 genes has been distinguished in rare Mendelian disorders by means of whole-exome sequencing (WES). Combination of WES with traditional approaches, consistent with linkage analysis, has had the greatest impact on those disorders following autosomal mode of inheritance; in more than 60 identified genes, the causal variants have been transmitted at homozygous or compound heterozygous state. Recent literatures focusing on identified new causal genes in Mendelian disorders using WES are reviewed in the present survey.

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  • Christian Harkensee, Akira Oka, Makoto Onizuka, Peter G. Middleton, Hidetoshi Inoko, Kouyuki Hirayasu, Koichi Kashiwase, Toshio Yabe, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Andrew R. Gennery, Kiyoshi Ando, Yasuo Morishima .  Single nucleotide polymorphisms and outcome risk in unrelated mismatched hematopoietic stem cell transplantation: an exploration study .  BLOOD119 ( 26 ) 6365 - 6372   2012.6Reviewed

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    Genetic risk factors contribute to adverse outcome of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT). Mismatching of the HLA complex most strongly determines outcomes, whereas non-HLA genetic polymorphisms are also having an impact. Although the majority of HSCTs are mismatched, only few studies have investigated the effects of non-HLA polymorphisms in the unrelated HSCT and HLA-mismatched setting. To understand these effects, we genotyped 41 previously studied single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 2 independent, large cohorts of HSCT donor-recipient pairs (n = 460 and 462 pairs) from a homogeneous genetic background. The study population was chosen to pragmatically represent a large clinically homogeneous group (acute leukemia), allowing all degrees of HLA matching. The TNF-1031 donor-recipient genotype mismatch association with acute GVHD grade 4 was the only consistent association identified. Analysis of a sub-group of higher HLA matching showed consistent associations of the recipient IL2-330 GT genotype with risk of chronic GVHD, and the donor CTLA4-CT60 GG genotype with protection from acute GVHD. These associations are strong candidates for prediction of risk in a clinical setting. This study shows that non-HLA gene polymorphisms are of relevance for predicting HSCT outcome, even for HLA mismatched transplants. (Blood. 2012;119(26):6365-6372)

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  • Masato Ohtsuka, Hiromi Miura, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Minoru Kimura, Masahiro Sato, Hidetoshi Inoko .  Targeted transgenesis through pronuclear injection of improved vectors into in vitro fertilized eggs .  TRANSGENIC RESEARCH21 ( 1 ) 225 - 226   2012.2Reviewed

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  • Kazuhiko Nakabayashi, Atsushi Tajima, Ken Yamamoto, Atsushi Takahashi, Kenichiro Hata, Yasuo Takashima, Midori Koyanagi, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Takashi Akamizu, Naofumi Ishikawa, Sumihisa Kubota, Shiro Maeda, Tatsuhiko Tsunoda, Michiaki Kubo, Naoyuki Kamatani, Yusuke Nakamura, Takehiko Sasazuki, Senji Shirasawa .  Identification of independent risk loci for Graves' disease within the MHC in the Japanese population .  JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS56 ( 11 ) 772 - 778   2011.11Reviewed

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    To identify genetic variants that confer the risk of Graves' disease (GD) in the Japanese population, we conducted a two-stage genome-wide association study (GWAS) using 1119 Japanese individuals with GD and 2718 unrelated controls, and a subsequent replication study using independent 432 GD cases and 1157 controls. We identified 34 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) to be significantly associated with GD in the GWAS phase. Twenty-two out of 34 SNPs remained positive in the replication study. All 22 SNPs were located within the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) locus on chromosome 6p21. No strong long-range linkage disequilibrium (LD) was observed among the 22 SNPs, indicating independent involvement of multiple loci within the MHC with the risk of GD. Multivariate stepwise logistic regression analysis selected rs3893464, rs4313034, rs3132613, rs4248154, rs2273017, rs9394159 and rs4713693, as markers for independent risk loci for GD. The analysis of LD between these seven SNPs and tagging SNPs for GD-associated human leukocyte antigen (HLA) alleles in the Japanese population (HLA-DPB1*0501 and HLA-A*0206) demonstrated that all of and five of seven SNPs were not in strong LD with HLA-DPB1*0501 and HLA-A*0206, respectively. Although causal variants remain to be identified, our results demonstrate the existence of multiple GD susceptibility loci within the MHC region. Journal of Human Genetics (2011) 56, 772-778; doi: 10.1038/jhg.2011.99; published online 8 September 2011

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  • Hirofumi Nakaoka, Tailin Cui, Atsushi Tajima, Akira Oka, Shigeki Mitsunaga, Koichi Kashiwase, Yasuhiko Homma, Shinji Sato, Yasuo Suzuki, Hidetoshi Inoko, Ituro Inoue .  A Systems Genetics Approach Provides a Bridge from Discovered Genetic Variants to Biological Pathways in Rheumatoid Arthritis .  PLOS ONE6 ( 9 ) e25389   2011.9Reviewed

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    Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have yielded novel genetic loci underlying common diseases. We propose a systems genetics approach to utilize these discoveries for better understanding of the genetic architecture of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Current evidence of genetic associations with RA was sought through PubMed and the NHGRI GWAS catalog. The associations of 15 single nucleotide polymorphisms and HLA-DRB1 alleles were confirmed in 1,287 cases and 1,500 controls of Japanese subjects. Among these, HLA-DRB1 alleles and eight SNPs showed significant associations and all but one of the variants had the same direction of effect as identified in the previous studies, indicating that the genetic risk factors underlying RA are shared across populations. By receiver operating characteristic curve analysis, the area under the curve (AUC) for the genetic risk score based on the selected variants was 68.4%. For seropositive RA patients only, the AUC improved to 70.9%, indicating good but suboptimal predictive ability. A simulation study shows that more than 200 additional loci with similar effect size as recent GWAS findings or 20 rare variants with intermediate effects are needed to achieve AUC = 80.0%. We performed the random walk with restart (RWR) algorithm to prioritize genes for future mapping studies. The performance of the algorithm was confirmed by leave-one-out cross-validation. The RWR algorithm pointed to ZAP70 in the first rank, in which mutation causes RA-like autoimmune arthritis in mice. By applying the hierarchical clustering method to a subnetwork comprising RA-associated genes and top-ranked genes by the RWR, we found three functional modules relevant to RA etiology: "leukocyte activation and differentiation", "pattern-recognition receptor signaling pathway", and "chemokines and their receptors". These results suggest that the systems genetics approach is useful to find directions of future mapping strategies to illuminate biological pathways.

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  • Riho Kurata, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Atsushi Tajima, Kazuyoshi Hosomichi, Takashi Shiina, Akira Meguro, Nobuhisa Mizuki, Shigeaki Ohono, Ituro Inoue, Hidetoshi Inoko .  TRIM39 and RNF39 are associated with Behçet's disease independently of HLA-B∗51 and -A∗26. .  Biochemical and biophysical research communications401 ( 4 ) 533 - 7   2010.10Reviewed International journal

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    Behcet's disease (BD) is a chronic inflammatory autoimmune disease and strongly associated with human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-B∗51 and -A∗26. We examined whether other genetic factors may exist in HLA region by 135 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 384 pairs of Japanese BD patients and controls. Multiple logistic regression analysis identified two novel susceptibility SNPs: rs9261365 near a ring finger protein (RNF) 39 and rs2074474 on exon 9 of tripartite motif-containing (TRIM) 39 independently of HLA-B∗51 and -A∗26 alleles. Our findings suggest that RNF39 and TRIM39 are involved in the etiology of BD.

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  • Koichi Akiyama, Akira Narita, Hirofumi Nakaoka, Tailin Cui, Tomoko Takahashi, Katsuhito Yasuno, Atsushi Tajima, Boris Krischek, Ken Yamamoto, Hidetoshi Kasuya, Akira Hata, Ituro Inoue .  Genome-wide association study to identify genetic variants present in Japanese patients harboring intracranial aneurysms .  JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS55 ( 10 ) 656 - 661   2010.10Reviewed

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    An intracranial aneurysm (IA), which results in a subarachnoid hemorrhage with a high mortality on rupture, is a major public health concern. To identify genetic susceptibility loci for IA, we carried out a multistage association study using genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in Japanese case-control subjects. In this study, we assessed evidence for association in standard approaches, and additional tests with adjusting sex effects that act between genetic effect and disease. Consequently, five SNPs (P=1.31 x 10(-5) for rs1930095 of intergenic region; P=1.32 x 10(-5) for rs4628172 of TMEM195; P-2.78 x 10(-5) for rs7781293 of TMEM195; P-4.93 x 10(-5) for rs7550260 of ARHGEF11; and P-3.63 x 10(-5) for rs9864101 of IQSEC1) with probabilities of being false positives &lt;0.5 were associated with IA in Japanese population, and the susceptibility genes could have a role in actin remodeling in the ELN/LIMK pathway. This study indicates the presence of several susceptibility loci that deserve further investigation in the Japanese population. Journal of Human Genetics (2010) 55, 656-661; doi:10.1038/jhg.2010.82; published online 8 July 2010

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  • Hirofumi Nakaoka, Tomoko Takahashi, Koichi Akiyama, Tailin Cui, Atsushi Tajima, Boris Krischek, Hidetoshi Kasuya, Akira Hata, Ituro Inoue .  Differential Effects of Chromosome 9p21 Variation on Subphenotypes of Intracranial Aneurysm Site Distribution .  STROKE41 ( 8 ) 1593 - 1598   2010.8Reviewed

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    Background and Purpose-Recently, a genome-wide association study identified associations between single nucleotide polymorphisms on chromosome 9p21 and risk of harboring intracranial aneurysm (IA). Aneurysm characteristics or subphenotypes of IAs, such as history of subarachnoid hemorrhage, presence of multiple IAs and location of IAs, are clinically important. We investigated whether the association between 9p21 variation and risk of IA varied among these subphenotypes.
    Methods-We conducted a case-control study of 981 cases and 699 controls in Japanese. Four single nucleotide polymorphisms tagging the 9p21 risk locus were genotyped. The OR and 95% CI were estimated using logistic regression analyses.
    Results-Among the 4 single nucleotide polymorphisms, rs1333040 showed the strongest evidence of association with IA (P = 1.5 x 10(-6); per allele OR, 1.43; 95% CI, 1.24-1.66). None of the patient characteristics (gender, age, smoking, and hypertension) was a significant confounder or effect modifier of the association. Subgroup analyses of IA subphenotypes showed that among the most common sites of IAs, the association was strongest for IAs of the posterior communicating artery (OR, 1.69; 95% CI, 1.26-2.26) and not significant for IAs in the anterior communicating artery (OR, 1.22; 95% CI, 0.96-1.57). When dichotomizing IA sites, the association was stronger for IAs of the posterior circulation-posterior communicating artery group (OR, 1.73; 95% CI, 1.32-2.26) vs the anterior circulation group (OR, 1.28; 95% CI, 1.07-1.53). Heterogeneity in these ORs was significant (P=0.032). The associations did not vary when stratifying by history of subarachnoid hemorrhage (OR, 1.42; 95% CI, 1.18-1.71 for ruptured IA; OR, 1.27; 95% CI, 1.00-1.62 for unruptured IA) or by multiplicity of IA (OR, 1.57; 95% CI, 1.21-2.03 for multiple IAs; OR, 1.36; 95% CI, 1.15-1.61 for single IA).
    Conclusions-Our results suggest that genetic influence on formation may vary between IA subphenotypes. (Stroke. 2010; 41: 1593-1598.)

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  • Nakaoka H, Inoue I .  The Winner's Curse. .  Encyclopedia of Life Sciences   2010Invited Reviewed

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  • T. L. Cui, H. Nakaoka, K. Akiyama, H. Kamura, K. Hosomichi, J. Bae, H. Cheong, H. Shin, T. Yada, I. Inoue .  Positional effects of polymorphisms in probe-target sequences on genoplot images of oligonucleotide microarrays .  GENETICS AND MOLECULAR RESEARCH9 ( 1 ) 524 - 531   2010Reviewed

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    Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) present in probe-target sequences (SPTS) have been shown to be associated with abnormal genoplot images. We explored the effects of SPTS positions on genoplot images using a data set from a genome-wide association study typed on an Illumina Human Hap300 platform. We screened the physical genomic positions of 308,330 autosomal probes to identify SPTS candidates deposited in dbSNP. The genoplot images across 293 individuals were inspected further in SNPs bearing an SPTS candidate. We identified 35,185 SNPs bearing a single SPTS candidate, including 264 SNPs showing abnormal genoplot images. The frequencies of SPTS at distances within 10 bases from the target SNP were significantly higher in the 264 SNPs showing abnormal genoplot images, than in the remaining 34,921 SNPs (49.62 vs 12.87%; Fisher exact test; P = 2.2 x 10(-16)). Of these 264 SNPs, we randomly selected 20 SNPs and resequenced them in 97 individuals. An SPTS within 10 bases of the target SNP was confirmed in all 20 SNPs, except for one SNP with a small deletion (7 bases) in the probe-target sequence. Taken together, these results suggest an association of a proximal SPTS with an abnormal genoplot image, which could result in spurious genotype detections, highlighting the importance of minimizing systematic errors in microarray experiments.

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  • Hirofumi Nakaoka, Ituro Inoue .  Meta-analysis of genetic association studies: methodologies, between-study heterogeneity and winner&apos;s curse .  JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS54 ( 11 ) 615 - 623   2009.11Reviewed

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    Meta-analysis is a useful tool to increase the statistical power to detect gene-disease associations by combining results from the original and subsequent replication studies. Recently, consortium-based meta-analyses of several genome-wide association (GWA) data sets have discovered new susceptibility genes of common diseases. We reviewed the process and the methods of meta-analysis of genetic association studies. To conduct and report a transparent meta-analysis, the search strategy, the inclusion or exclusion criteria of studies and the statistical procedures should be fully described. Assessing consistency or heterogeneity of the associations across studies is an important aim of meta-analysis. Random effects model (REM) meta-analysis can incorporate between-study heterogeneity. We illustrated properties of test for and measures of between-study heterogeneity and the effect of between-study heterogeneity on conclusions of meta-analyses through simulations. Our simulation shows that the power of REM meta-analysis of GWA data sets (total case-control sample size: 5000-20000) to detect a small genetic effect (odds ratio (OR)=1.4 under dominant model) decreases as between-study heterogeneity increases and then the mean of OR of the simulated meta-analyses passing the genome-wide significance threshold would be upwardly biased (winner&apos;s curse phenomenon). Addressing observed between-study heterogeneity may be challenging but give a new insight into the gene-disease association. Journal of Human Genetics (2009) 54, 615-623; doi:10.1038/jhg.2009.95; published online 23 October 2009

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  • H. Nakaoka, C. Gaillard, K. Fujinaka, N. Watanabe, M. Ito, K. Kawada, T. Ibi, Y. Sasae, Y. Sasaki .  The use of link provider data to improve national genetic evaluation across weakly connected subpopulations .  JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCE87 ( 1 ) 62 - 71   2009.1Reviewed

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    Data from 3 prefectures and a nationwide farming corporation were used to assess the usefulness of the "link provider data" in providing indirect genetic links for the national genetic evaluation for carcass weight across weakly connected subpopulations of the Japanese Black cattle. The data from the farming corporation provided genetic links to those of all prefectures and was therefore used as the link provider data. Two national genetic evaluation strategies under an animal model were compared, based on the generalized coefficient of determination (CD) of contrasts between mean EBV of sires or maternal grandsires (MGS) from different prefectures: strategy PA-1 was a pooled analysis of the data sets of the 3 prefectures, and strategy PA-2 was a pooled analysis of the data sets of the 3 prefectures and the farming corporation. The CD of the contrasts were greater for PA-2 than for PA-1. Under PA-2, the CD of the contrasts between mean EBV of sires or MGS ranged from 0.67 to 0.78 or from 0.61 to 0.70, respectively. Pooling the data from the 3 prefectures and the farming corporation increased the degree of connectedness through the link provider data rather than the amount of information by adding more data, thus improving the accuracy of prediction. The differences between mean EBV of sires or MGS from different prefectures were smaller for PA-1 than for PA-2. This finding suggests that genetic differences in carcass weight among prefectures are present, but that they would be confused with the environmental differences under PA-1 because of the lack of genetic connectedness among the prefectures. On the other hand, the genetic differences among the prefectures would be predicted precisely under PA-2 because the genetic connectedness among the prefectures was improved by using the link provider data. The results demonstrate that the link provider data could be used to unify within-prefecture evaluation to form a Japanese national genetic evaluation across weakly connected subpopulations.

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  • NAKAOKA Hirofumi, GAILLARD Claude, IBI Takayuki, SASAE Yotaro, SASAKI Yoshiyuki .  Adjusting for heterogeneity of variance for carcass traits affects single and multiple trait selections in genetic evaluation of Japanese Black cattle .    79 ( 6 ) 645 - 654   2008.12

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  • Hirofumi Nakaoka, Claude Gaillard, Takayuki Ibi, Yotaro Sasae, Yoshiyuki Sasaki .  Adjusting for heterogeneity of variance for carcass traits affects single and multiple trait selections in genetic evaluation of Japanese Black cattle .  ANIMAL SCIENCE JOURNAL79 ( 6 ) 645 - 654   2008.12Reviewed

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    Heterogeneity of variance among subclasses of an effect is a potential source of bias in genetic evaluation. Degrees of the heterogeneity of variance among farm-market-year-sex (FMYS) subclasses for carcass weight, beef marbling standard number, rib-eye area, rib thickness and subcutaneous fat thickness were investigated in Japanese Black cattle. Consequences of adjusting for the heterogeneity on the predicted breeding values (PBVs) or on the genetic indexes derived from the PBVs of the five carcass traits were assessed. A total of 57 461 records were collected between 1997 and 2002 from steers and heifers fattened at farms across Japan. These records were grouped into 1591 FMYS subclasses. Bartlett's test showed that the degree of the heterogeneity of variance among the FMYS subclasses was sizeable in all traits (P &lt; 0.0001). By applying a two-step adjustment procedure it was possible to reduce the standard deviation, the coefficient of variation and the Gini coefficient of the phenotypic variances by 67.5% to 75.0% in the different traits. The applied adjustment caused a substantial re-ranking of elite dams in the PBV for each trait as well as in the genetic index. This study provided evidence that the applied adjustment reduces the bias in the PBVs due to heterogeneous variances and increases the accuracy of bull-dam selection.

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  • H. Nakaoka, A. Narita, T. Ibi, Y. Sasae, T. Miyake, T. Yamada, Y. Sasaki .  Effectiveness of adjusting for heterogeneity of variance in genetic evaluation of Japanese Black cattle .  JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCE85 ( 10 ) 2429 - 2436   2007.10Reviewed

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    Heterogeneity of variance among subclasses of an effect is a potential source of bias in genetic evaluation. The objectives of this study were to quantify the heterogeneity of variance in carcass weight in Japanese Black cattle, to develop an adjustment method to account for the heterogeneity, and to evaluate the effectiveness of the method. A total of 96,950 records were collected from steers and heifers slaughtered from 1997 to 2005. These records were grouped into 2,767 farm- market- year- sex subclasses. Fourteen log- linear models for the variances were set up to estimate the heterogeneous phenotypic variances within subclasses. Schwarz's Bayesian information criterion was used for model selection. The preadjustment of records to a baseline variance was based on maximum likelihood estimates obtained from the selected model. As a result of adjustment, the SD, the CV, and the Gini coefficient for the phenotypic variance decreased by 68.6, 69.8, and 70.1%, respectively. When the top 5% of sires and top 1% of dams were selected, Spearman's rank correlation coefficients between the adjusted and unadjusted data were 0.95 for the selected sires and 0.78 for the selected dams. The effectiveness of the adjustment was evaluated in terms of the ability to predict breeding values, using the results of the successive genetic evaluations. Mean squared error between the parent averages and actual predicted values of the genetic merit for the sires whose progeny had a carcass record only from 2003 to 2005 was significantly reduced by the adjustment ( P &lt; 0.05). The results suggest that the genetic evaluation becomes more accurate by adjusting the data using the procedure developed in this study.

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  • H. Oki, R. Kusunose, H. Nakaoka, A. Nishiura, T. Miyake, Y. Sasaki .  Estimation of heritability and genetic correlation for behavioural responses by Gibbs sampling in the Thoroughbred racehorse .  JOURNAL OF ANIMAL BREEDING AND GENETICS124 ( 4 ) 185 - 191   2007.8Reviewed

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    Genetic variation of the behaviour of racehorses is one of the major concerns for racehorse breeders. In this study, the heritabilities of behavioural responses to the inspections of conjunctiva, auscultation and blood sampling and the genetic correlations among them were estimated in the Thoroughbred racehorse. The estimation was done with Bayesian analysis with Gibbs sampling based on the univariate or bivariate threshold animal models. The behavioural responses were scored with four categories at the first entrance quarantine in Miho Training Center of Japan Racing Association from 1993 to 1995. The behavioural responses were treated as categorical or binary traits, with both showing similar results. The estimated heritabilities were in the range of 0.23-0.28, suggesting a genetic component in the variation on these traits. The estimated genetic correlations among the traits were very high (approximately 0.9), suggesting that these behavioural responses may be measures of the same trait. Because of the high genetic correlations, repeatability threshold model was applied assuming the responses to be a genetically identical trait measured with three different tests. The estimated heritabilities (approximately 0.23) were at the lower bound of the former estimates. The revealed high repeatabilities (0.97-0.98) suggest a strong contribution of the individual temperament on the behaviour of racehorses.

    DOI: 10.1111/j.1439-0388.2007.00659.x

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  • Miyake T, Yamada T, Nakaoka H, Narita A, Sasaki Y .  Useful properties of Bayesian multiple QTL mapping with MCMC. .  The Journal of Animal Genetics34 ( 1 ) 17 - 29   2006Reviewed

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    Language:Japanese   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)   Publisher:Japanese Society of Animal Breeding and Genetics  

    DOI: 10.5924/abgri2000.34.17

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  • Odani M, Nakaoka H, Narita A, Ibi T, Sasae Y, Sasaki Y .  A national genetic evaluation of carcass traits for the Japanese Black cattle is possible. .  Nihon Chikusan Gakkaiho75 ( 3 ) 353 - 361   2004Reviewed

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    Language:Japanese   Publishing type:Research paper (scientific journal)  

    DOI: 10.2508/chikusan.75.353

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Books

  • ヤポネシアの現代人ゲノム ヤポネシア人の起源と成立 1

    三嶋博之, 中岡博史, 河村優輔, 細道一善, 井ノ上逸朗, 吉浦孝一郎( Role: Contributor ,  九州ヤマト人のゲノム)

    朝倉書店  2025.3 

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    Total pages:192   Responsible for pages:85-93   Language:Japanese

  • ヒトゲノム事典

    中岡博史( Role: Contributor ,  クロマチン接近可能性)

    一色出版  2021.11 

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    Total pages:448   Responsible for pages:148-150   Language:Japanese

  • ヒトゲノム事典

    中岡博史( Role: Contributor ,  プロモーター)

    一色出版  2021.11 

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    Total pages:448   Responsible for pages:86-87   Language:Japanese

  • ヒトゲノム事典

    中岡博史( Role: Contributor ,  エンハンサー)

    一色出版  2021.11 

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    Total pages:448   Responsible for pages:87-89   Language:Japanese

  • ヒトゲノム事典

    中岡博史( Role: Contributor ,  RNA Poll関連遺伝子)

    一色出版  2021.11 

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    Total pages:448   Responsible for pages:93-94   Language:Japanese

  • ヒトゲノム事典

    中岡博史( Role: Contributor ,  転写因子)

    一色出版  2021.11 

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    Total pages:448   Responsible for pages:94-96   Language:Japanese

  • Evolution of the Human Genome I. Evolutionary Studies

    Ituro Inoue;Hirofumi Nakaoka( Role: Contributor ,  Genetics of Diabetes: Are They Thrifty Genotype?)

    Springer, Tokyo  2017 

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    Total pages:305   Responsible for pages:265–272   Language:English

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-56603-8_13

  • Evolution of the Human Genome I. Evolutionary Studies

    Ituro Inoue;Hirofumi Nakaoka( Role: Contributor ,  Disease-Related Genes from Population Genetic Aspect and Their Functional Significance)

    Springer, Tokyo  2017 

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    Total pages:305   Responsible for pages:273–283   Language:English

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-56603-8_14

  • SNP解析入門

    中岡博史( Role: Contributor ,  メタ解析)

    ダイナコム  2017 

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    Total pages:208   Responsible for pages:157-176   Language:Japanese

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MISC

  • ヒト遺伝子研究最新動向 子宮内膜における体細胞変異のクローン性増殖

    中岡 博史

    遺伝子医学   13 ( 4 )   105 - 111   2023.10

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    "がん"はDNAに変異が蓄積することで発生する疾患である。発がんメカニズムを理解するためには,正常細胞においてDNAが変化して腫瘍形成に至るプロセスを明らかにする必要がある。近年,次世代シーケンサーを用いたゲノム解析によって,様々な正常組織において,がん関連遺伝子の体細胞変異が加齢の過程で生じ,変異クローン由来の細胞が蓄積していることが明らかになってきた。がん関速遺伝子変異を有する細胞クローンが組織という三次元空間において蓄積・増殖するメカニズムには,組織の形態学的特牲が関与していると思われる。本稿では筆者らが取り組んでいる止常子宮内膜におけるゲノム解析について紹介したい。(著者抄録)

  • 子宮内膜症のポストGWAS解析

    中岡 博史

    別冊Bio Clinica: 慢性炎症と疾患   6 ( 4 )   105 - 111   2017.11

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    ゲノムワイド関連解析(GWAS)によって疾患感受性領域が多数同定されているが、疾患発症に関わる遺伝子機能変化への理解から臨床応用に向けた『ポストGWAS解析』は進んでいない。GWASで同定された疾患関連SNP(一塩基置換)の大部分は遺伝子間領域およびイントロンに存在することから、近傍に存在する遺伝子の転写制御を通じて疾患リスクに関連している可能性を示唆している。しかし、疾患感受性SNPがどのような分子メカニズムに影響を及ぼしているのか、ほとんど解明されていない。GWASで同定された疾患関連SNPはクロマチン3次元構造を介した転写制御機構に変化を及ぼすことによって疾患発症リスクに繋がると考えられる。本研究では、生殖年齢にある女性の10%を苦しめる子宮内膜症を対象としてポストGWAS解析について紹介する。(著者抄録)

  • HLAアレルからみた東アジア集団 旧人類との遺伝的混合

    中岡 博史, 井ノ上 逸朗

    医学のあゆみ   258 ( 2 )   172 - 174   2016.7

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    Language:Japanese   Publisher:医歯薬出版(株)  

  • 体質からみた糖尿病 ジェネティクス・エピジェネティクス 糖尿病オーダーメイド医療の現状と展望

    中岡 博史, 井ノ上 逸朗

    Diabetes Frontier   24 ( 6 )   721 - 728   2013.12

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    Language:Japanese   Publisher:(株)メディカルレビュー社  

  • 【脳・脊髄の血管-発生の科学と臨床】脳血管疾患の成因と遺伝子異常 脳動脈瘤と遺伝子

    中岡 博史, 井ノ上 逸朗

    Clinical Neuroscience   29 ( 10 )   1134 - 1137   2011.10

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    Language:Japanese   Publisher:(株)中外医学社  

  • 【次世代シークエンサーで変わる臨床ゲノム学】変化を支える情報処理 ゲノム情報を含む医学情報処理の将来

    中岡 博史, 井ノ上 逸朗

    医学のあゆみ   236 ( 6 )   667 - 674   2011.2

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    近年、ゲノム全域関連解析により多因子疾患の感受性遺伝子の同定が行われているが、臨床応用をめざすうえで重要となるのは疾患の特性である生体システムの異常を特徴づける複合的な表現型の詳細な情報取得であり、デジタル化である。大規模な臨床情報のデジタル化に伴う情報蓄積を行い、個々人のゲノム情報というデジタル信号と結合する、医学・医療におけるデータ集約型サイエンス/ヘルスケアの実現が求められる。このことにより疾患バイオマーカーの発見、標的治療法の開発、個の医療の実現、ゲノム情報による創薬といった、当初ヒトゲノム計画が設定したゴールに近づくこととなろう。本稿では、今後の医学における情報解析の方向性および疾患メカニズムのシステム解析における新しい展開について論じる。(著者抄録)

  • 【遺伝子診療学(第2版) 遺伝子診断の進歩とゲノム治療の展望】遺伝子診断(Genetic Diagnosis) 遺伝子診療学研究の進歩 ゲノムインフォマティクス システム医学に向けて

    中岡 博史, 井ノ上 逸朗

    日本臨床   68 ( 増刊8 遺伝子診療学 )   93 - 99   2010.8

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Presentations

  • 山田 思郎, 伊東 潤平, 早野 崇英, 中岡 博史, 杉本 竜太, 細道 一善, 井ノ上 逸郎   細胞株におけるトランスポゾンの解析 遺伝子発現ネットワークのインフラストラクチャ解析(The analyses of Transposon in cell line with NGS data: implication of the infrastructure of gene network)  

    日本小児血液・がん学会雑誌  2016.11  (一社)日本小児血液・がん学会

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  • 松尾 洋孝, 中山 昌喜, 高田 龍平, 中杤 昌弘, 清水 聖子, 河村 優輔, 豊田 優, 中岡 博史, 四ノ宮 成祥, 市田 公美, 岡田 随象, Major Tanya, Takei Riku, 白井 雄也, 山本 健, 松尾 恵太郎, Li Changgui, Merriman Tony   約262万人を対象とした377個の痛風関連遺伝子座の同定 国際共同研究によるゲノムワイドメタ解析  

    日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会総会プログラム・抄録集  2025.1  (一社)日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会

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  • 折田 創, 李 賢哲, 小林 敏之, 中岡 博史, 吉本 雄太郎, 山内 卓, 加治 早苗, 岡 伸一, 綿田 裕孝, 福永 哲   糖尿病症例における内臓脂肪と皮下脂肪の組成の違いについて  

    日本消化器外科学会総会  2021.7  (一社)日本消化器外科学会

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  • 芳賀 秀郷, 山口 徹太郎, 中岡 博史, 佐本 博, 井ノ上 逸朗, 槇 宏太郎   第三大臼歯欠如をもたらす遺伝因子の探索  

    東京矯正歯科学会雑誌  2013.12  東京矯正歯科学会

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  • 西郷 健一, 中岡 博史, Nguyen Phuong Thanh, 早野 崇秀, 北村 博司, 井ノ上 逸朗   移植医療におけるリキッドバイオプシー Liquid biopsyによる移植臓器障害および免疫抑制モニタリング  

    移植  2021.9  (一社)日本移植学会

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  • 松尾 洋孝, 高田 龍平, 中杤 昌弘, 中山 昌喜, 大山 博司, 長瀬 満夫, 日高 雄二, 清水 徹, 岡田 随象, 市田 公美, 四ノ宮 成祥, 白井 雄也, 豊田 優, 山本 健, 中岡 博史, 中村 好宏   痛風・高尿酸血症の病態 痛風・高尿酸血症の分子病態の解明に向けて ゲノムワイド関連解析(GWAS)等を通じた遺伝統計学的解析  

    日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会総会プログラム・抄録集  2021.1  (一社)日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会

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  • 中山 昌喜, 松尾 洋孝, 崎山 真幸, 高田 龍平, 細山田 真, 藤森 新, 横尾 隆, 細谷 龍男, 大山 博司, 清水 徹, 市田 公美, 四ノ宮 成祥, 中岡 博史, 山本 健, 久保 充明, 鎌谷 洋一郎, 中村 好宏, Merriman Tony R., 豊田 優, 鈴木 洋史, 岡田 随象, 若井 建志   痛風のゲノムワイド関連解析 新規遺伝座を含めた10個の痛風関連遺伝子座の同定  

    日本痛風・核酸代謝学会総会プログラム抄録集  2017.2  (一社)日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会

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  • 中山 昌喜, 松尾 洋孝, 崎山 真幸, 高田 龍平, 清水 聖子, 東野 俊英, 河村 優輔, 川口 真, 徳増 淳美, 大山 恵子, 細山田 真, 藤森 新, 横尾 隆, 細谷 龍男, 大山 博司, 清水 徹, 市田 公美, 四ノ宮 成祥, 中岡 博史, 山本 健, 久保 充明, 鎌谷 洋一郎, 中村 好宏, Merriman Tony R., 豊田 優, 鈴木 洋史, 岡田 随象, 若井 建志   痛風のゲノムワイド関連解析 新規遺伝子座を含めた10個の痛風関連遺伝子座の同定  

    痛風と核酸代謝  2017.7  (一社)日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会

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  • 赤司 藍理, 松尾 洋孝, 山本 健, 中岡 博史, 中山 昌喜, 崎山 真幸, 河村 優輔, 小縣 開, 立川 誠四郎, 浜島 信之, 井ノ上 逸郎, 久保 充明, 大山 博司, 清水 徹, 四ノ宮 成祥   痛風のゲノムワイド関連解析 コンパニオン診断へ応用の可能性  

    防衛衛生  2015.12  (一社)日本防衛衛生学会

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  • 中嶌 真由子, 松尾 洋孝, 中山 昌喜, 中岡 博史, 山本 健, 崎山 真幸, 豊田 優, 中村 好弘, 高田 龍平, 金井 優佳, 若井 建志, 櫻井 裕, 久保 充明, 大山 博司, 清水 徹, 四ノ宮 成祥   痛風のゲノムワイド関連解析 10個の痛風関連遺伝子座の同定  

    防衛衛生  2017.12  (一社)日本防衛衛生学会

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  • 中山 昌喜, 中杤 昌弘, 河村 優輔, 山本 健, 中岡 博史, 清水 聖子, 小山 晃英, 栗木 清典, 大山 博司, 島ノ江 千里, 釜野 桜子, 前原 一輝, 桐原 真奈, 嶽崎 俊郎, 松尾 恵太郎, 鈴木 貞夫, 若井 建志, 岡田 随象, 四ノ宮 成祥, 松尾 洋孝   病型特異的な痛風関連遺伝子と適応進化の評価 臨床診断された痛風症例のゲノムワイド関連解析から  

    Journal of Epidemiology  2021.1  (一社)日本疫学会

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  • 中岡 博史   疫学者が抱えるジレンマ-エビデンスに関わる様々なギャップを考える 正常子宮内膜における体細胞変異と発がんリスク(Somatic mutations in normal endometrium and carcinogenic risk)  

    日本癌学会総会記事  2022.9  (一社)日本癌学会

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  • 河村 優輔, 松尾 洋孝, 中山 昌喜, 東野 俊英, 清水 徹, 大山 博司, 大山 恵子, 長瀬 満夫, 清水 聖子, 川口 真, 高尾 幹也, 高田 龍平, 細谷 龍男, 市田 公美, 四ノ宮 成祥, 中岡 博史, 岡田 随象, 山本 健, 崎山 真幸, 中村 好宏, 鎌谷 洋一郎, 久保 充明, 井ノ上 逸朗   無症候性高尿酸血症群と痛風症例群のゲノムワイド関連解析により痛風発症に関連する新規遺伝子座を同定した  

    痛風と尿酸・核酸  2019.7  (一社)日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会

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  • 河村 優輔, 松尾 洋孝, 中山 昌喜, 東野 俊英, 清水 徹, 大山 博司, 大山 恵子, 長瀬 満夫, 清水 聖子, 川口 真, 高尾 幹也, 高田 龍平, 細谷 龍男, 市田 公美, 四ノ宮 成祥, 中岡 博史, 岡田 随象, 山本 健, 崎山 真幸, 中村 好宏, 鎌谷 洋一郎, 久保 充明, 井ノ上 逸朗   無症候性高尿酸血症群と痛風症例群のゲノムワイド関連解析により痛風発症に関連する新規遺伝子座を同定した  

    日本痛風・核酸代謝学会総会プログラム抄録集  2019.1  (一社)日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会

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  • 青木 優佳, 河村 優輔, 中岡 博史, 中山 昌喜, 岡田 随象, 山本 健, 東野 俊英, 崎山 真幸, 清水 聖子, 川口 真, 高尾 幹也, 前原 一輝, 中蔦 真由子, 四ノ宮 成祥, 松尾 洋孝   無症候性高尿酸血症から痛風発作を引き起こす新規遺伝子座を同定した  

    防衛衛生  2019.12  (一社)日本防衛衛生学会

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  • 山田 思郎, 伊東 潤平, 早野 崇英, 中岡 博史, 杉本 竜太, 井ノ上 逸郎   正常者iPS細胞由来内皮細胞におけるトランスポゾンの発現(The expression profile of transposon RNA in the endothelial cells derived from healthy human iPS cells)  

    日本小児血液・がん学会雑誌  2016.11  (一社)日本小児血液・がん学会

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  • Omer Waleed H., 中岡 博史, 細道 一善, 井ノ上 逸郎   標的化次世代シークエンス分析(NGS)データからのHLAタイピングのための情報処理法(A pipeline for HLA typing from targeted Next Generation's Sequencing(NGS) data)  

    MHC: Major Histocompatibility Complex  2016.10  (一社)日本組織適合性学会

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  • 松井 博, 早野 崇英, 大竹 伸明, 栗原 聰太, 関根 芳岳, 野村 昌史, 小池 秀和, 柴田 康博, 伊藤 一人, 中岡 博史, 細道 一善, 井ノ上 逸朗, 鈴木 和浩   日本人前立腺癌家系の生殖細胞系列変異  

    日本泌尿器科学会総会  2017.4  (一社)日本泌尿器科学会総会事務局

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  • 松尾 洋孝, 東野 俊英, 高田 龍平, 清水 聖子, 川口 真, 崎山 真幸, 中山 昌喜, 河村 優輔, 細谷 龍男, 市田 公美, 大山 博司, 鈴木 洋史, 四ノ宮 成祥, 中岡 博史, 細道 一善, 井ノ上 逸朗, 豊田 優, 若井 建志, 岡田 理恵子, 山本 健, 中村 好宏, 中島 宏   尿酸トランスポーター遺伝子ABCG2のレアバリアントはコモンバリアントと同様に痛風のリスクを著しく上昇させる  

    日本痛風・核酸代謝学会総会プログラム抄録集  2018.1  (一社)日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会

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  • Yamada Shiro, Ito Jumpei, Kimura Tetsuaki, Nakaoka Hirofumi, Sugimoto Ryota, Hayano Takahide, Mochizuki Hiroyuki, Inoue Ituro   固形腫瘍における基礎医学の新展開 トランスポソン発現によるがんの分類 神経芽細胞腫ステージ4と4S(New classification of cancers by transposon expression patterns: A trial in neuroblastoma stage4 and 4S)  

    日本小児血液・がん学会雑誌  2018.10  (一社)日本小児血液・がん学会

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  • 中岡 博史, 揖斐 隆之, 佐々江 洋太郎, 佐々木 義之   全国的な黒毛和種集団の種牛評価における不均一分散の補正  

    日本畜産学会大会講演要旨集  2005.8  (公社)日本畜産学会

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  • 高橋 理彦, 細道 一善, 中岡 博史, 阿久津 泰典, 星野 敢, 上里 昌也, 村上 健太郎, 碓井 彰大, 加野 将之, 水藤 広, 松本 泰典, 大塚 亮太, 井ノ上 逸郎, 松原 久裕   全エキソーム解析およびmRNA解析を利用した食道扁平上皮癌の遺伝子変異におけるアレル特異的発現の解析  

    日本外科学会定期学術集会抄録集  2016.4  (一社)日本外科学会

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  • 秦 千比呂, 中岡 博史, Wei Li, Zheng Ke, You Hua, 井ノ上 逸朗   中国人乳がん患者を対象とした乳がん関連遺伝子解析(Division of Human Genetics, National Institute of Genetics)  

    日本染色体遺伝子検査学会雑誌  2018.10  日本染色体遺伝子検査学会

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  • Matsumoto Yuki, Nakaoka Hirofumi, Nishino Jo, Goto Tatsuhiko, Koide Tsuyoshi   マウスの選択交配およびゲノムワイド分析を用いた、従順性行動に関わる遺伝子座の同定(Identification of genetic loci associated with tame behavior using selective breeding and genome-wide analysis in mice)  

    Genes & Genetic Systems  2015.12  日本遺伝学会

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  • Ishida Junichi, Takeuchi Hidenori, Ito Keiichi, Odani Motoi, Nakaoka Hirofumi, Tanaka Kazuhito, Miyake Takeshi, Taniguchi Yukio, Yamada Tahahisa, Sasaki Yoshiyuki   マイクロチップ埋め込みによる実験動物の個体識別に関する検討(Studies on the microchip-implanting identification for laboratory animals)  

    Experimental Animals  2004.4  (公社)日本実験動物学会

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  • 大垣 光太郎, 中岡 博史, 代田 健祐, 林田 有紗, 池田 彩, 李 元哲, 吉野 浩代, 舩山 学, 西岡 健弥, 井ノ上 逸朗, 服部 信孝   ヘテロ接合性PRKN遺伝子変異のPDにおけるPRKNのイントロン領域の分析(Analysis of intronic region of PRKN in PD with heterozygous PRKN mutation)  

    パーキンソン病・運動障害疾患コングレスプログラム・抄録集  2019.7  Movement Disorder Society of Japan (MDSJ)

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  • 伊東 潤平, 山田 思郎, 杉本 竜太, 中岡 博史, 井ノ上 逸朗   ヒト内在性レトロウイルス由来転写調節配列の網羅的解析  

    日本生化学会大会・日本分子生物学会年会合同大会講演要旨集  2015.12  (公社)日本生化学会

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  • 西郷 健一, 中岡 博史, 北村 博司, 圷 尚武, 丸山 通広, 青山 博道, 井ノ上 逸郎   ドナー由来cell free DNAを用いた移植臓器障害の非侵襲的診断法の検討  

    移植  2018.9  (一社)日本移植学会

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  • 西郷 健一, 早野 崇英, 中岡 博史, 北村 博司, 圷 尚武, 丸山 通広, 長谷川 正行, 大月 和宣, 青山 博道, 井ノ上 逸朗   ドナー由来cell free DNAを用いた移植腎機能評価法の確立を目指して  

    移植  2017.8  (一社)日本移植学会

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  • 西郷 健一, 中岡 博史, 北村 博司, 青山 博道, 圷 尚武, 井ノ上 逸郎   ゲノム解析によるリキッドバイオプシー Cell-free DNAを用いた移植臓器モニタリング  

    日本外科学会定期学術集会抄録集  2019.4  (一社)日本外科学会

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  • 中山 昌喜, 中杤 昌弘, 河村 優輔, 清水 聖子, 東野 俊英, 清水 徹, 大山 恵子, 大山 博司, 長瀬 満夫, 日高 雄二, 川口 真, 高田 雄三, 高田 龍平, 細谷 龍男, 市田 公美, 四ノ宮 成祥, 松尾 洋孝, 山本 健, 中岡 博史, 菱田 朝陽, 中村 好宏, 中島 宏, 豊田 優, 鎌谷 洋一郎, 久保 充明, 若井 建志, 岡田 随象   ゲノムワイド関連解析による病型特異的な痛風関連遺伝子の同定と日本人の適応進化  

    痛風と尿酸・核酸  2021.12  (一社)日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会

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  • 中山 昌喜, 中杤 昌弘, 河村 優輔, 清水 聖子, 東野 俊英, 清水 徹, 大山 恵子, 大山 博司, 長瀬 満夫, 日高 雄二, 川口 真, 高田 雄三, 高田 龍平, 細谷 龍男, 市田 公美, 四ノ宮 成祥, 松尾 洋孝, 山本 健, 中岡 博史, 菱田 朝陽, 中村 好宏, 中島 宏, 豊田 優, 鎌谷 洋一郎, 久保 充明, 若井 建志, 岡田 随象   ゲノムワイド関連解析による病型特異的な痛風関連遺伝子の同定と日本人の適応進化  

    日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会総会プログラム・抄録集  2021.1  (一社)日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会

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  • 山口 徹太郎, 中岡 博史, 山本 健, 藤川 泰成, 澁澤 龍之, 芳賀 秀郷, 方山 光朱, 木村 亮介, 井ノ上 逸朗, 槇 宏太郎   ゲノムワイド関連解析から同定される顎関節変形性関節症の新規感受性遺伝子座位  

    日本矯正歯科学会大会プログラム・抄録集  2012.9  (公社)日本矯正歯科学会

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  • 芳賀 秀郷, 山口 徹太郎, 中岡 博史, 佐本 博, 大野 粛英, 井ノ上 逸朗, 槇 宏太郎   ゲノムワイド関連解析から同定される第三大臼歯欠如をもたらす遺伝要因の探索  

    日本矯正歯科学会大会プログラム・抄録集  2013.10  (公社)日本矯正歯科学会

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  • 中岡 博史, 須田 一暁, 吉原 弘佑, 榎本 隆之, 井ノ上 逸朗   ゲノムから診た子宮内膜症の原因解明  

    日本染色体遺伝子検査学会雑誌  2018.10  日本染色体遺伝子検査学会

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  • 中岡 博史, 井ノ上 逸朗, 山本 晃人, 黒瀬 圭輔, 明樂 重夫   アレル特異的クロマチン相互作用を介した子宮内膜症感受性領域の転写制御メカニズム解明  

    日本エンドメトリオーシス学会会誌  2017.7  日本エンドメトリオーシス学会

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  • 崎山 真幸, 松尾 洋孝, 中山 昌喜, 大山 博司, 清水 徹, 四ノ宮 成祥, 中岡 博史, 山本 健, 中村 好宏, 川合 紗世, 岡田 理恵子   アルデヒド脱水素酵素ALDH2遺伝子のミスセンス変異rs671は痛風発症リスクを低下させる  

    日本痛風・核酸代謝学会総会プログラム抄録集  2017.2  (一社)日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会

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  • 崎山 真幸, 松尾 洋孝, 中山 昌喜, 大山 博司, 清水 徹, 四ノ宮 成祥, 中岡 博史, 山本 健, 中村 好宏, 川合 紗世, 岡田 理恵子   アルデヒド脱水素酵素ALDH2遺伝子のミスセンス変異rs671は痛風発症リスクを低下させる  

    痛風と核酸代謝  2017.7  (一社)日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会

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  • 小松 眞子, 松尾 洋孝, 崎山 真幸, 中岡 博史, 山本 健, 中山 昌喜, 中村 好宏, 川合 紗世, 岡田 理恵子, 大山 博司, 清水 徹, 四ノ宮 成祥   アルコール代謝に関与するALDH2の遺伝子多型rs671は痛風の発症を防ぐ  

    防衛衛生  2016.12  (一社)日本防衛衛生学会

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  • 河村 優輔, 東野 俊英, 清水 聖子, 中山 昌喜, 大山 恵子, 大山 博司, 清水 徹, 川口 真, 高尾 幹也, 市田 公美, 四ノ宮 成祥, 高田 龍平, 松尾 洋孝, 森本 渓音, 豊田 優, 中岡 博史, 井ノ上 逸朗, 田村 高志, 内藤 真理子, 中村 好宏   URAT2/OAT10遺伝子の機能低下型ミスセンスSNPは血清尿酸値と痛風のリスクを共に低下させる  

    日本痛風・核酸代謝学会総会プログラム抄録集  2020.1  (一社)日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会

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  • 河村 優輔, 東野 俊英, 清水 聖子, 中山 昌喜, 大山 恵子, 大山 博司, 清水 徹, 川口 真, 高尾 幹也, 市田 公美, 四ノ宮 成祥, 高田 龍平, 松尾 洋孝, 森本 渓音, 豊田 優, 中岡 博史, 井ノ上 逸朗, 田村 高志, 内藤 真理子, 中村 好宏   URAT2/OAT10遺伝子の機能低下型ミスセンスSNPは血清尿酸値と痛風のリスクを共に低下させる  

    痛風と尿酸・核酸  2020.7  (一社)日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会

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  • 桐原 真奈, 東野 俊英, 森本 渓音, 中岡 博史, 豊田 優, 河村 優輔, 清水 聖子, 藤原 慎, 堀江 美音, 中山 昌喜, 大山 博司, 清水 徹, 田村 高志, 鈴木 洋史, 井ノ上 逸朗, 四ノ宮 成祥, 高田 龍平, 松尾 洋孝   URAT2/OAT10の機能低下型変異は血清尿酸値と痛風リスクの低下に寄与する  

    防衛衛生  2020.12  (一社)日本防衛衛生学会

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  • 豊田 優, 河村 優輔, 中山 昌喜, 東野 俊英, 清水 聖子, 大山 博司, 市田 公美, 四ノ宮 成祥, 高田 龍平, 松尾 洋孝, 中岡 博史, 竹内 研時, 井ノ上 逸郎, 鈴木 洋史   URAT1遺伝子の機能低下型変異による痛風の保護効果は、ABCG2遺伝子の機能低下型変異による痛風のリスク亢進効果を上回る  

    痛風と尿酸・核酸  2022.12  (一社)日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会

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  • 豊田 優, 河村 優輔, 中山 昌喜, 東野 俊英, 清水 聖子, 大山 博司, 市田 公美, 四ノ宮 成祥, 高田 龍平, 松尾 洋孝, 中岡 博史, 竹内 研時, 井ノ上 逸郎, 鈴木 洋史   URAT1遺伝子の機能低下型変異による痛風の保護効果は、ABCG2遺伝子の機能低下型変異による痛風のリスク亢進効果を上回る  

    日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会総会プログラム・抄録集  2022.1  (一社)日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会

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  • 鳥羽 美帆, 豊田 優, 河村 優輔, 中山 昌喜, 中岡 博史, 東野 俊英, 清水 聖子, 堀江 美音, 田中 里沙, 大山 博司, 若井 建志, 鈴木 洋史, 四ノ宮 成祥, 高田 龍平, 松尾 洋孝   URAT1/SLC22A12遺伝子の機能低下型変異は痛風発作を強力に抑制する  

    防衛衛生  2022.1  (一社)日本防衛衛生学会

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  • 倉田 里穂, 中岡 博史, 田嶋 敦, 斉藤 卓磨, 細道 一善, 椎名 隆, 目黒 明, 水木 信久, 井ノ上 逸朗, 猪子 英俊   TRIM39およびRNF39はHLA-B*51およびHLA-A*26とは無関係にベーチェット病と関連する(TRIM39 and RNF39 are associated with Behcet's Disease independently of HLA-B*51 and -A*26)  

    日本生化学会大会・日本分子生物学会年会合同大会講演要旨集  2010.12  (公社)日本生化学会

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  • 細道 一善, 井ノ上 逸朗, 田嶋 敦, 中岡 博史, 椎名 隆, 東 史啓, 猪子 英俊, 屋部 登志雄, 森島 泰雄   Sequence Capture法によるKIRハプロタイプ構造決定と日本人におけるその多様性  

    MHC: Major Histocompatibility Complex  2017.10  (一社)日本組織適合性学会

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  • Matsumoto Yuki, Nakaoka Hirofumi, Nagayama Hiromichi, Koide Tsuyoshi   RNA-seq解析によるマウス従順性の遺伝学的基盤の解明(RNA-seq analysis to reveal genetic basses of tameness in mice)  

    Experimental Animals  2017.6  (公社)日本実験動物学会

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  • Ogaki Kotaro, Nakaoka Hirofumi, Kensuke Daida, Hayashida Arisa, Ikeda Aya, Li Yuanzhe, Yoshino Hiroyo, Manabu Funayama, Nishioka Kenya, Inoue Ituro, Hattori Nobutaka   PRKN遺伝子の遺伝的修飾因子の探索(Searching for genetic modifiers in PRKN)  

    臨床神経学  2020.11  (一社)日本神経学会

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  • Ogaki Kotaro, Nakaoka Hirofumi, Mio Muneyo, Daida Kensuke, Hayashida Arisa, Ikeda Aya, Li Yuanzhe, Yoshino Hiroyo, Funayama Manabu, Imai Yuzuru, Nishioka Kenya, Inoue Ituro, Hattori Nobutaka   PRKNの遺伝的修飾因子の探索(Searching for genetic modifiers of PRKN)  

    臨床神経学  2021.9  (一社)日本神経学会

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  • 大垣 光太郎, 中岡 博史, 代田 健祐, 林田 有紗, 池田 彩, 李 元哲, 吉野 浩代, 舩山 学, 西岡 健弥, 井ノ上 逸朗, 服部 信孝   PRKNにおける遺伝的修飾因子の検出(Detection of genetic modifiers in PRKN)  

    パーキンソン病・運動障害疾患コングレスプログラム・抄録集  2021.2  Movement Disorder Society of Japan (MDSJ)

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  • Ogaki Kotaro, Nakaoka Hirofumi, Daida Kensuke, Hayashida Arisa, Ikeda Aya, Li Yuanzhe, Yoshino Hiroyo, Funayama Manabu, Nishioka Kenya, Inoue Ituro, Hattori Nobutaka   Parkinの遺伝的修飾因子の検出(Detection of genetic modifiers in parkin)  

    臨床神経学  2019.11  (一社)日本神経学会

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  • 早野 崇英, 山田 思郎, 中岡 博史, 井ノ上 逸朗   NGSデータを用いたトランスポゾン挿入解析  

    日本生化学会大会・日本分子生物学会年会合同大会講演要旨集  2015.12  (公社)日本生化学会

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  • 倉田 里穂, 中岡 博史, 田嶋 敦, 斉藤 卓磨, 細道 一善, 椎名 隆, 目黒 明, 水木 信久, 井ノ上 逸朗, 猪子 英俊   HLA領域に位置する新規ベーチェット病感受性遺伝子  

    MHC: Major Histocompatibility Complex  2010.8  (一社)日本組織適合性学会

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  • 折田 創, 李 賢哲, 張 順, 伊志嶺 百々子, 小林 敏之, 中岡 博史, 井ノ上 逸郎, 櫛田 知志, 櫻田 睦, 前川 博, 和田 了, 福永 哲, 佐藤 浩一   FOLFIRI治療における効果予測因子としてのp21発現の有用性  

    日本癌治療学会学術集会抄録集  2019.10  (一社)日本癌治療学会

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  • Yoshioka Ai, Nakaoka Hirofumi, Fukumoto Takeshi, Inoue Ituro, Nishigori Chikako, Kubo Akiharu, Kunisada Makoto   DNA修復欠損マウスにおけるUVB誘発皮膚腫瘍の遺伝子変化の特徴(The landscape of genetic alterations of UVB-induced skin tumors in DNA repair-deficient mice)  

    日本研究皮膚科学会年次学術大会・総会プログラム  2022.10  (一社)日本研究皮膚科学会

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  • 西郷 健一, 中岡 博史, 北村 博司, 青山 博道, 圷 尚武, 井ノ上 逸朗   Cell-free DNAを用いた非侵襲的移植臓器モニタリング  

    移植  2019.9  (一社)日本移植学会

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  • 杉山 諒, 東野 俊英, 高田 龍平, 中岡 博史, 豊田 優, 清水 聖子, 川口 真, 青木 優佳, 若井 建志, 市田 公美, 大山 博司, 井ノ上 逸朗, 四ノ宮 成祥, 松尾 洋孝   ABCG2のレアバリアントはコモンバリアントと同様に痛風リスクを上げる  

    防衛衛生  2018.12  (一社)日本防衛衛生学会

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  • 西郷 健一, 中岡 博史, 青山 博道, 鈴木 一史, 北村 博司, 井ノ上 逸朗   腎移植領域におけるリキッドバイオプシー cell free DNAを用いた移植腎障害及び抗免疫療法モニタリング  

    日本臨床腎移植学会プログラム・抄録集  2022.2  (一社)日本臨床腎移植学会

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  • 中岡 博史, 藤中 邦則, 渡邉 直人, 川田 啓介, 揖斐 隆之, 佐々江 洋太郎, 佐々木 義之   黒毛和種における広域種牛評価の精度に関する研究  

    動物遺伝育種研究  2007.12  日本動物遺伝育種学会

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  • 中山 昌喜, 松尾 洋孝, 中岡 博史, 中村 好宏, 高田 雄三, 及川 雄二, 高田 龍平, 崎山 真幸, 清水 聖子, 千葉 俊周, 若井 建志, 市田 公美, 四ノ宮 成祥   高尿酸血症の発症には生活習慣より遺伝子が強く影響する  

    日本生化学会大会プログラム・講演要旨集  2014.10  (公社)日本生化学会

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  • Matsumoto Yuki, Goto Tatsuhiko, Nakaoka Hirofumi, Nishino Jo, Tanave Akira, Mott Richard F., Koide Tsuyoshi   野生由来ヘテロジニアス・ストックマウスを用いた従順性行動に関連する遺伝子座の探索(Wild-derived heterogeneous stock mice to find the loci associated with tame behavior)  

    Genes & Genetic Systems  2014.12  日本遺伝学会

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  • Matsumoto Yuki, Goto Tatsuhiko, Nakaoka Hirofumi, Tanave Akira, Inoue Ituro, Mott Richard F., Koide Tsuyoshi   野生由来heterogeneous stockマウスを用いた服従行動に関連する遺伝子座の発見(Finding the loci associated with tame behavior using wild-derived heterogeneous stock mice)  

    Experimental Animals  2014.12  (公社)日本実験動物学会

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  • Matsumoto Yuki, Nishino Jo, Nakaoka Hirofumi, Goto Tatsuhiko, Koide Tsuyoshi   選択マッピングと関連マッピングを用いたマウスの従順性と関連する遺伝子領域の同定(Identification of genetic loci associated with tameness using selection and association mapping in mice)  

    Genes & Genetic Systems  2016.12  日本遺伝学会

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  • 中岡 博史, 崔 泰林, 田嶋 敦, 光永 滋樹, 井ノ上 逸朗   通常疾患のゲノムリスク予測モデルの構築およびその臨床的妥当性の評価のための体系的アプローチ 関節リウマチの事例研究(A systematic approach to constructing genomic risk prediction model of common disease and assessing its clinical validity: A case study of rheumatoid arthritis)  

    日本生化学会大会・日本分子生物学会年会合同大会講演要旨集  2010.12  (公社)日本生化学会

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  • 折田 創, 李 賢哲, 伊志嶺 百々子, 中岡 博史, 井ノ上 逸郎, 前川 博, 和田 了, 横溝 岳彦, 佐藤 浩一   薬物代謝酵素カルボキシルエステラーゼの消化器癌における発現調節機構の解明  

    日本癌治療学会学術集会抄録集  2018.10  (一社)日本癌治療学会

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  • 伊志嶺 百々子, 李 賢哲, 折田 創, 遠藤 未来美, 水口 このみ, 佐藤 浩一, 中岡 博史, 井ノ上 逸朗, 横溝 岳彦   薬物代謝酵素カルボキシルエステラーゼのヒト大腸癌における発現調節機構の解明  

    生命科学系学会合同年次大会  2017.12  生命科学系学会合同年次大会運営事務局

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  • 松尾 洋孝, 豊田 優, 中杤 昌弘, 中山 昌喜, 河村 優輔, 清水 聖子, 中岡 博史, 若井 建志, 松尾 恵太郎   臨床診断された痛風患者のみによる病型分類別のゲノムワイド関連解析と遺伝率  

    Journal of Epidemiology  2024.1  (一社)日本疫学会

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  • 中山 昌喜, 豊田 優, 中杤 昌弘, 河村 優輔, 中岡 博史, 市田 公美, 高田 龍平, 清水 聖子, 清水 徹, 大山 博司, 大山 恵子, 長瀬 満夫, 日高 雄二, 高田 雄三, 四ノ宮 成祥, 松尾 洋孝, 若井 建志, 松尾 恵太郎   臨床診断された痛風患者のみによる病型分類別のゲノムワイド関連解析および遺伝率  

    痛風と尿酸・核酸  2024.12  (一社)日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会

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  • 中山 昌喜, 豊田 優, 中杤 昌弘, 河村 優輔, 中岡 博史, 市田 公美, 高田 龍平, 清水 聖子, 清水 徹, 大山 博司, 大山 恵子, 長瀬 満夫, 日高 雄二, 高田 雄三, 四ノ宮 成祥, 松尾 洋孝, 若井 建志, 松尾 恵太郎   臨床診断された痛風患者のみによる病型分類別のゲノムワイド関連解析および遺伝率  

    日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会総会プログラム・抄録集  2024.1  (一社)日本痛風・尿酸核酸学会

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  • 山田 思郎, 早野 崇英, 中岡 博史, 細道 一善, 井ノ上 逸郎   腫瘍細胞ゲノムにおけるトランスポゾンの検出 エクソームデータを用いて(Detection of transposon insertion in the cancer genome: Exome data analyses)  

    日本小児血液・がん学会雑誌  2015.10  (一社)日本小児血液・がん学会

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Awards

  • Incentive Award

    2013.9   Japanese Society for Histocompatibility and Immunogenetics  

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    Award type:Award from Japanese society, conference, symposium, etc.  Country:Japan

  • Incentive Award

    2005.9   Society of Beef Cattle Science  

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    Award type:Award from Japanese society, conference, symposium, etc.  Country:Japan

Research Projects

  • 稀な血液型における生活習慣病リスクの証明:判定方法の正確性向上と予防医学への挑戦

    Grant number:24K22217  2024.6 - 2026.3

    日本学術振興会  科学研究費助成事業  挑戦的研究(萌芽)

    松尾 洋孝, 中岡 博史, 豊田 優, 田中 光信

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    Grant amount:\6500000 ( Direct Cost: \5000000 、 Indirect Cost:\1500000 )

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  • Molecular epidemiological research of uric acid levels and their determinants as markers of chronic kidney disease and neurodegenerative diseases

    Grant number:24K02695  2024.4 - 2028.3

    Japan Society for the Promotion of Science  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B)

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    Grant amount:\18460000 ( Direct Cost: \14200000 、 Indirect Cost:\4260000 )

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  • 肺腺癌の発生進展に対する全ゲノム重複(WGD: Whole Genome Doubling)の関与

    Grant number:24K10104  2024.4 - 2027.3

    日本学術振興会  科学研究費助成事業  基盤研究(C)

    後藤 明輝, 中岡 博史

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    Grant amount:\4680000 ( Direct Cost: \3600000 、 Indirect Cost:\1080000 )

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  • Exploration of tumor markers using a novel highly sensitive expression analysis method: Toward early detection of pancreatic and renal cancers

    Grant number:24K13426  2024.4 - 2027.3

    Japan Society for the Promotion of Science  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C)

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    Grant amount:\4680000 ( Direct Cost: \3600000 、 Indirect Cost:\1080000 )

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  • Construction of gene expression atlas of normal endometrium and elucidation of regeneration mechanism by spatial omics analysis

    Grant number:24K12597  2024.4 - 2027.3

    Japan Society for the Promotion of Science  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C)

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    Grant amount:\4550000 ( Direct Cost: \3500000 、 Indirect Cost:\1050000 )

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  • Gene-environment interactions inducing spatial expansion of mutant clones in human normal tissues

    Grant number:23K27447  2023.4 - 2027.3

    Japan Society for the Promotion of Science  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B)

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    Grant amount:\18590000 ( Direct Cost: \14300000 、 Indirect Cost:\4290000 )

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  • Gene-environment interactions inducing spatial expansion of mutant clones in human normal tissues

    Grant number:23H02756  2023.4 - 2027.3

    Japan Society for the Promotion of Science  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B)

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    Grant amount:\18590000 ( Direct Cost: \14300000 、 Indirect Cost:\4290000 )

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  • Development of a diagnostic technique using novel high-sensitivity expression analyses for secondary prevention against pancreatic and renal tumors

    Grant number:22K19679  2022.6 - 2024.3

    Japan Society for the Promotion of Science  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Challenging Research (Exploratory)

    Nakayama Akiyoshi

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    Grant amount:\6500000 ( Direct Cost: \5000000 、 Indirect Cost:\1500000 )

    It is unfortunate that there are many carcinomas for which there are currently no effective diagnostic methods for early detection or early detection of recurrence. Pancreatic and renal cancers are typical examples. We sought to identify molecules specific to pancreatic and renal cancers by creating a database using a novel high-sensitivity analysis method combining the High Coverage Gene Expression Profiling (HiCEP) method and next-generation sequencing (NGS) method in surgical tissues and peripheral blood samples from approximately 90 and 100 cases of pancreatic and renal cancer, respectively. As results, we have identified several novel genes whose expression levels were significantly increased in cancer tissues compared to non-cancerous areas. We have also replicated these results in other case specimens. In addition, we have performed a spatial transcriptome analysis, which was recently developed, and are now in the process of matching the results with the above database.

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  • Identification of the significance of cancer-associated gene mutations in normal endometrium

    Grant number:22K09635  2022.4 - 2025.3

    Japan Society for the Promotion of Science  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C)

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    Grant amount:\4160000 ( Direct Cost: \3200000 、 Indirect Cost:\960000 )

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  • Longitudinal analysis of IGF1 gene methylation in preterm infants

    Grant number:21K07871  2021.4 - 2025.3

    Japan Society for the Promotion of Science  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C)

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    Grant amount:\4160000 ( Direct Cost: \3200000 、 Indirect Cost:\960000 )

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  • Molecular characterization of normal endometrial epithelial cells with cancer-associated gene mutations

    Grant number:20K07318  2020.4 - 2023.3

    Japan Society for the Promotion of Science  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C)

    Nakaoka Hirofumi

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    Grant amount:\4290000 ( Direct Cost: \3300000 、 Indirect Cost:\990000 )

    We showed that somatic mutations in cancer-associated genes accumulated in the human normal endometrial epithelium. Endometrial glands with cancer-associated gene mutations spatially expanded in the substantial areas of the endometrium. By using three-dimensional imaging analysis, we discovered the plexus network-like glandular structure at the bottom of the endometrium ran horizontally along the muscular layer, and several branches rose from the structure toward the luminal epithelium. Moreover, mutant clones detected in the vertical glands diversify by acquiring additional mutations. These results suggest that clonal expansions through the network-like structures are involved in the mechanism by which mutant clones extend their territories. By extracting both DNA and RNA, we conducted transcriptome analysis for the single endometrial glands whose mutation profiles and spatial information were available.

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  • Approach to regulatory mechanism of copy number variation the gene amplified.

    Grant number:19K22566  2019.6 - 2022.3

    Japan Society for the Promotion of Science  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Challenging Research (Exploratory)

    Tatsuhiko Furukawa

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    Grant amount:\6500000 ( Direct Cost: \5000000 、 Indirect Cost:\1500000 )

    Gene amplification is an abnormality in which the copy numbers of genomic genes highly increase in cancer cells. We found that expression of BHLHE41 suppresses gene amplification of the causative molecule of three drug-resistant cell lines. We analyzed genome changes in the copy number reduction of RRM1 gene by BHLHE41 using state-of-the-art NGS for whole genome sequence and genomic 3D structural changes. From the study on surgical resected lung cancer samples, BHLHE41 protein was expressed only in non-invasive lung cancer cells and was associated with a better prognosis of lung adenocarcinoma patients. BHLHE41 suppressed expression of the apoptosis-inducing molecule BAX, induced autophagic cell death, and also inhibited MYC oncogene-induced expression of several genes.

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  • Post-GWAS analysis of endometriosis: exploration of transcriptional regulation through chromatin interaction

    Grant number:17K08688  2017.4 - 2020.3

    Japan Society for the Promotion of Science  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (C)

    Nakaoka Hirofumi

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    Grant amount:\4810000 ( Direct Cost: \3700000 、 Indirect Cost:\1110000 )

    We developed a novel 3C-based approach to detect allele-specific chromatin interactions. Our work illuminates the allelic imbalances in a series of transcriptional regulation from factor binding to gene expression mediated by chromatin interaction underlie the molecular mechanism of 9p21 endometriosis risk locus. Furthermore, we investigated regulatory mechanisms underlying the other endometriosis associated loci.
    We demonstrated that somatic mutations on cancer-associated genes such as PIK3CA and KRAS were prevalent in epithelial cells in ovarian endometriosis and normal uterine endometrium. Finally, we conducted single endometrial gland RNA-sequencing to evaluate gene expression difference according to somatic mutation status.

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  • Platform for Advanced Genome Science

    Grant number:16H06279  2016 - 2021

    Japan Society for the Promotion of Science  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Innovative Areas ― Platforms for Advanced Technologies and Research Resources

    KOHARA Yuji, Kato Kazuto, Kawashima Minae, TOYODA Atsushi, Suzuki Yutaka, MITSUI Jun, Hayashi Tetsuya, TOKINO Takashi, Kurokawa Ken, Nakamura Yasukazu, Noguchi Hideki, IWASAKI WATARU, Morishita Shinichi, Asai Kiyoshi, Kasahara Masahiro, Ito Takehiko, Yamada Takuji, KUHARA Satoshi, Takahashi Hiroki, Sakakibara Yasubumi, HAMADA MICHIAKI, Takagi Toshihisa, SESE JUN, Ogura Yoshitoshi, Ida Ryuichi, YAMAGATA Zentaro, Masui Toru, Muto Kaori, Kodama Satoshi, Setoyama Koichi, Kokado Minori, Ohashi Noriko, FUJIYAMA Asao, INOUE Ituro, Nakaoka Hirofumi, Sugano Sumio, Tsuji Shoji, Gotoh Yasuhiro, Nakamura Keiji, Ogura Yoshitoshi, Okuno Miki, Nakase Hiroshi, SASAKI Yasushi, IDOGAWA Masashi, Tange Shoichiro, Mori Hiroshi, OGASAWARA Osamu, Tanizawa Yasuhiro, Kondo Shinji, kiryu hisanori, Kajitani Rei, TASHIRO Kosuke, Frith Martin, HIRAKAWA Hideki, Suzuki Hiromu, NOSHO KATSUHIKO, KAI Masahiro

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    Grant amount:\7698340000 ( Direct Cost: \5921800000 、 Indirect Cost:\1776540000 )

    Our group has provided the state of art genome technologies, named PAGS Support, including de novo genome sequencing, variation analysis, epigenomics, RNA analysis, metagenome analysis and single cell analysis, to the projects that were selected from proposals based on KAKENHI projects. Thus far, we have provided PAGS Support to altogether 912 proposals that were selected from 1988 proposals. The proposals cover the most fields of life sciences, expanding to the fields of physical sciences, environmental studies and so on. Thus far 556 papers have been published as the outcome, which covers from biology to agriculture, medicine and pharmacy, from basic to applied sciences. Our group has also developed new technologies and algorithms to overcome the problems emerged in the PAGS Support, which are used in the other PAGS Support projects. This is a positive cycle and therefore our system becomes a very effective way for the promotion of biological sciences.

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  • Exceptional longevity and stress resistance: an integrated research between iPS cell biology and epidemiology

    Grant number:15KT0009  2015.7 - 2018.3

    Japan Society for the Promotion of Science  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B)

    ARAI YASUMICHI, IKEBE Kazunori, INOUE Itsurou

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    Grant amount:\18070000 ( Direct Cost: \13900000 、 Indirect Cost:\4170000 )

    In this project, we aimed to identify key molecules of stress resistance in supercentenarians by means of induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, and replicate the findings in a cohort study of older adults, the SONIC study. First, we established iPS cells-derived endothelial cells from supercentenarians, and examined key molecules of oxidative stress and hypoxic stress responses. However, transcriptional study failed to identify key molecules because of small sample size.
    Alternatively, we performed QTL analysis for extracellular-superoxide dismutase (EC-SOD), a circulating antioxidative stress molecule, and identified SNP in rs1799895 as significant determinant for circulating EC-SOD. We genotyped this SNP in 1,890 subjects in the SONIC study, and found significant associations between the SNP and carotid atherosclerosis, and geriatric phenotype.

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  • Allelic Imbalance in Regulation of ANRIL through Chromatin Interaction at 9p21 Endometriosis Risk Locus

    Grant number:15H02373  2015.4 - 2018.3

    Japan Society for the Promotion of Science  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (A)

    Inoue Ituro, ENOMOTO Takayuki, AKIRA Shigeo, NAKAOKA Hirofumi

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    Grant amount:\43680000 ( Direct Cost: \33600000 、 Indirect Cost:\10080000 )

    We explored regulatory mechanism of a SNP on chromosome 9p21 associated with endometriosis by leveraging“allele-specific”functional genomic approaches. By re-sequencing 1.29 Mb of 9p21 region and scrutinizing DNase-seq data from the ENCODE project, we prioritized rs17761446 as a candidate functional variant that was in perfect linkage disequilibrium with the GWAS SNP (rs10965235) and located on DNase I hypersensitive site. Chromosome conformation capture followed by high-throughput sequencing revealed that the protective G allele of rs17761446 exerted stronger chromatin interaction with ANRIL promoter. The protective allele exhibited preferential binding affinities to TCF7L2 and EP300 by chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) analyses. The allele specific expression analysis for eutopic endometrial tissues and endometrial carcinoma cell lines showed that rs17761446 was a cis-regulatory variant where G allele was associated with increased ANRIL.

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  • Epigenetic regulation of inflammatory genes associated with the rupture of intracranial aneurysms

    Grant number:15K19043  2015.4 - 2017.3

    Japan Society for the Promotion of Science  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Young Scientists (B)

    Nakaoka Hirofumi

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    Grant amount:\4030000 ( Direct Cost: \3100000 、 Indirect Cost:\930000 )

    In our previous study, we demonstrated that macrophage-mediated inflammation is a key biological pathway for the rupture of intracranial aneurysms. We focused on the inflammatory transcription factors associated with the rupture of intracranial aneurysms. We explored the expression profiles of genes with binding motifs of these transcription factors, and constructed a hierarchical transcriptional regulatory networks associated with the rupture of intracranial aneurysms. We performed epigenetic analysis of these genes.

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  • Gene Expression Profiling Reveals Distinct Molecular Signatures Associated With the Rupture of Intracranial Aneurysm

    Grant number:25860257  2013.4 - 2015.3

    Japan Society for the Promotion of Science  Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research  Grant-in-Aid for Young Scientists (B)

    HIROFUMI Nakaoka

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    Grant amount:\4160000 ( Direct Cost: \3200000 、 Indirect Cost:\960000 )

    We compared gene expression profiles in aneurysmal domes between unruptured and ruptured intracranial aneurysms (UIAs and RIAs, respectively) to elucidate biological mechanisms predisposing to the rupture. By classifying the samples into subgroups showing similar gene expression patterns, we demonstrated RIAs segregated into 2 distinct subgroups (early and late RIAs). Comparing gene expression levels between early RIAs and UIAs, we identified 430 upregulated and 617 downregulated genes in early RIAs. The results suggest that macrophage-mediated inflammation is a key biological pathway for IA rupture. The identified genes can be good candidates for molecular markers of rupture-prone IAs and therapeutic targets.

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