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Latest Paper:
Blood. 2012 Jan 5;:
22223826
Sonia D'Souza,
Noriyoshi Kurihara,
Yusuke Shiozawa,
Jeena Joseph,
Russell Taichman,
Deborah L Galson,
G David Roodman
Department of Medicine, Division of Hematology/Oncology and Bone Biology Center of UPMC, University of Pittsburgh and VA Healthcare System, Pittsburgh, PA, United States;
Multiple myeloma (MM) is an incurable B-cell malignancy in which the marrow microenvironment plays a critical role in our inability to cure MM. Marrow stromal cells in the microenvironment support homing, lodging, and growth of MM cells through activation of multiple signaling pathways in both MM and stromal cells. Recently, we identified annexin II (AXII) as a previously unknown factor produced by stromal cells and osteoclasts (OCL) that is involved in OCL formation, hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) and prostate cancer (PCa) homing to the bone marrow as well as mobilization of HSC and PCa cells. AXII expressed on stromal cells supports PCa cell lodgment via the AXII receptor (AXIIR) on PCa cells, but the role of AXII and AXIIR in MM is unknown. In this study, we show that MM cells express AXIIR, that stromal/osteoblast-derived AXII facilitates adhesion of MM cells to stromal cells via AXIIR, and OCL-derived AXII enhances MM cell growth. Finally, we demonstrate that AXII activates the ERK1/2 and AKT pathways in MM cells to enhance MM cell growth. These results demonstrate that AXII and AXIIR play important roles in MM and that targeting the AXII/AXIIR axis may be a novel therapeutic approach for MM.
Takahiro Toyofuku,
Yoshinori Inoue,
Nobuhisa Kurihara,
Toshifumi Kudo,
Masatoshi Jibiki,
Norihide Sugano,
Makoto Umeda,
Yuichi Izumi
Department of Vascular and Applied Surgery, Tokyo Medical and Dental University Graduate School, 1-5-45 Yushima, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, 113-8519, Japan.
PURPOSE Periodontitis has been associated with atherosclerotic cardiovascular lesions. There may be a link between periodontopathic bacterial infection and atherosclerosis. METHODS In 53 patients with atherosclerosis, periodontal disease was classified according to the probing depth of the periodontal pocket. To compare the detection rate in different arterial lesion, specimens of diseased arteries (10 primary atherosclerotic lesions, 43 anastomotic lesions) and 21 control arteries without atherosclerotic findings macroscopically and microscopically in the arterial wall, obtained during the surgical procedures were examined for the presence of five species of putative periodontal bacteria using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis. RESULTS Fifty-one of the 53 patients (96%) had periodontitis, and 34 (64%) of those patients had severe periodontitis or were edentulous. In total, PCR analysis detected DNA specific for periodontal bacteria in 28 of the 53 specimens (52%) of atherosclerotic arterial wall. Only 5 of 21 (23%) were detected in control specimens. CONCLUSIONS A high percentage of periodontopathic bacteria were detected in atherosclerotic arterial wall specimens from patients with atherosclerosis, especially with primary atherosclerotic lesions, and most cases had severe periodontitis.
Pediatr Int. 2011 Aug ;53 (4):608
21851502
Nobuyoshi Kurihara,
Masayuki Miwa,
Yohei Matsuzaki,
Isamu Hokuto,
Haruto Kikuchi,
Shinji Katano,
Kazushige Ikeda
Endoscopy. 2011 ;43 Suppl 2 :E225-6
21614756
Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Okayama, Japan.
Int J Clin Oncol. 2011 Apr 26;:
21519814
Ken Hirao,
Hirofumi Kawamoto,
Ichiro Sakakihara,
Yasuhiro Noma,
Naoki Yamamoto,
Ryo Harada,
Koichiro Tsutsumi,
Masakuni Fujii,
Hironari Kato,
Naoko Kurihara,
Osamu Mizuno,
Tsuneyoshi Ogawa,
Etsuji Ishida,
Kazuhide Yamamoto
Departments of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, Okayama University Graduate School of Medicine, Dentistry, and Pharmaceutical Sciences, 2-5-1 Shikata-cho, Okayama, 700-8558, Japan.
BACKGROUND: This randomized phase II study compared the efficacy and toxicity between 4-week and 3-week schedules of gemcitabine monotherapy in advanced pancreatic cancer. METHODS: Patients with advanced pancreatic cancer were randomly assigned to either a 4-week schedule (gemcitabine at 1000 mg/m² as a 30-min infusion weekly for 3 consecutive weeks every 4 weeks) or a 3-week schedule (gemcitabine at 1000 mg/m² as a 30-min infusion weekly for 2 consecutive weeks every 3 weeks). The primary endpoint was the compliance rate during the first 8 weeks between the two groups. RESULTS: A total of 90 patients were enrolled. The compliance rate during the first 8 weeks was the same (53.3%). For the 4- and 3-week schedules, the tumor response rates were 14.2 and 17.1%(p = 0.92), median progression free survival was 112 and 114 days (p = 0.82), and median overall survival was 206 and 250 days (p = 0.84), respectively. Grade 3-4 neutropenia was the major adverse event in both schedules: 37.7 and 35.5%(p = 0.82). In contrast, thrombocytopenia (platelet count <70000/mm³) was significantly higher for the 4-week schedule: 26.6 and 4.4%(p = 0.008). The mean received dose intensity was equal: 588 and 550 mg/m²/week (p = 0.14). CONCLUSIONS: The 3-week schedule of gemcitabine did not improve the compliance rate during 8 weeks compared with the 4-week schedule, but it attained a comparable efficacy with lower toxicity. Further investigation will be needed to introduce it into daily practice. Clinical trial registration number: UMIN ID 974.
Cell Metab. 2011 Jan 5;13 (1):23-34
21195346
Noriyoshi Kurihara,
Yuko Hiruma,
Kei Yamana,
Laëtitia Michou,
Côme Rousseau,
Jean Morissette,
Deborah L Galson,
Jumpei Teramachi,
Hua Zhou,
David W Dempster,
Jolene J Windle,
Jacques P Brown,
G David Roodman
University of Pittsburgh, Medicine/Hem-Onc, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA.
Paget's disease (PD) is characterized by abnormal osteoclasts (OCL) that secrete high IL-6 levels and induce exuberant bone formation. Because measles virus nucleocapsid gene (MVNP) and the p62(P392L) mutation are implicated in PD, marrows from 12 PD patients harboring p62(P392L) and eight normals were tested for MVNP expression and pagetic OCL formation. Eight out of twelve patients expressed MVNP and formed pagetic OCL in vitro, which were inhibited by antisense-MVNP. Four out of twelve patients lacked MVNP and formed normal OCL that were hyperresponsive to RANKL but unaffected by antisense-MVNP. Similarly, mice expressing only p62(P394L) formed normal OCL, while mice expressing MVNP in OCL, with or without p62(P394L), developed pagetic OCL and expressed high IL-6 levels dependent on p38MAPK activation. IL-6 deficiency in MVNP mice abrogated pagetic OCL development in vitro. Mice coexpressing MVNP and p62(P394L) developed dramatic Paget's-like bone lesions. These results suggest that p62(P394L) and IL-6 induction by MVNP play key roles in PD.
Division of Enzyme Chemistry, Institute for Enzyme Research, The University of Tokushima, Tokushima, Japan.
HASH(0x5664700)
Hisako Ishizuka,
Verónica García-Palacios,
Ganwei Lu,
Mark A Subler,
Heju Zhang,
Christina S Boykin,
Sun Jin Choi,
Liena Zhao,
Kenneth Patrene,
Deborah L Galson,
Harry C Blair,
Tamer M Hadi,
Jolene J Windle,
Noriyoshi Kurihara,
G David Roodman
Department of Medicine/Hematology-Oncology and the Center for Bone Biology, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
ADAM8 expression is increased in the interface tissue around a loosened hip prosthesis and in the pannus and synovium of patients with rheumatoid arthritis, but its potential role in these processes is unclear. ADAM8 stimulates osteoclast (OCL) formation, but the effects of overexpression or loss of expression of ADAM8 in vivo and the mechanisms responsible for the effects of ADAM8 on osteoclastogenesis are unknown. Therefore, to determine the effects of modulating ADAM expression, we generated tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP)-ADAM8 transgenic mice that overexpress ADAM8 in the OCL lineage and ADAM8 knockout (ADAM8 KO) mice. TRAP-ADAM8 mice developed osteopenia and had increased numbers of OCL precursors that formed hypermultinucleated OCLs with an increased bone-resorbing capacity per OCL. They also had an enhanced differentiation capacity, increased TRAF6 expression, and increased NF-κB, Erk, and Akt signaling compared with wild-type (WT) littermates. This increased bone-resorbing capacity per OCL was associated with increased levels of p-Pyk2 and p-Src activation. In contrast, ADAM8 KO mice did not display a bone phenotype in vivo, but unlike WT littermates, they did not increase RANKL production, OCL formation, or calvarial fibrosis in response to tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α) in vivo. Since loss of ADAM8 does not inhibit basal bone remodeling but only blocks the enhanced OCL formation in response to TNF-α, these results suggest that ADAM8 may be an attractive therapeutic target for preventing bone destruction associated with inflammatory disease.
Appl Opt. 2010 Aug 1;49 (22):4270-7
20676182
Tokyo Institute of Technology 2-12-1-W8-74 O-okayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo, 152-8552, Japan. kurihara@sg.cs.titech.ac.jp
The local model fitting (LMF) method is one of the useful single-shot surface profiling algorithms. The measurement principle of the LMF method relies on the assumption that the target surface is locally flat. Based on this assumption, the height of the surface at each pixel is estimated from pixel values in its vicinity. Therefore, we can estimate flat areas of the target surface precisely, whereas the measurement accuracy could be degraded in areas where the assumption is violated, because of a curved surface or sharp steps. In this paper, we propose to overcome this problem by weighting the contribution of the pixels according to the degree of satisfaction of the locally flat assumption. However, since we have no information on the surface profile beforehand, we iteratively estimate it and use this estimation result to determine the weights. This algorithm is named the iteratively-reweighted LMF (IRLMF) method. Experimental results show that the proposed algorithm works excellently.
Huiling Cao,
Shibing Yu,
Zhi Yao,
Deborah L Galson,
Yu Jiang,
Xiaoyan Zhang,
Jie Fan,
Binfeng Lu,
Youfei Guan,
Min Luo,
Yumei Lai,
Yibei Zhu,
Noriyoshi Kurihara,
Kenneth Patrene,
G David Roodman,
Guozhi Xiao
Department of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Activating transcription factor 4 (ATF4) is a critical transcription factor for osteoblast (OBL) function and bone formation; however, a direct role in osteoclasts (OCLs) has not been established. Here, we targeted expression of ATF4 to the OCL lineage using the Trap promoter or through deletion of Atf4 in mice. OCL differentiation was drastically decreased in Atf4-/- bone marrow monocyte (BMM) cultures and bones. Coculture of Atf4-/- BMMs with WT OBLs or a high concentration of RANKL failed to restore the OCL differentiation defect. Conversely, Trap-Atf4-tg mice displayed severe osteopenia with dramatically increased osteoclastogenesis and bone resorption. We further showed that ATF4 was an upstream activator of the critical transcription factor Nfatc1 and was critical for RANKL activation of multiple MAPK pathways in OCL progenitors. Furthermore, ATF4 was crucial for M-CSF induction of RANK expression on BMMs, and lack of ATF4 caused a shift in OCL precursors to macrophages. Finally, ATF4 was largely modulated by M-CSF signaling and the PI3K/AKT pathways in BMMs. These results demonstrate that ATF4 plays a direct role in regulating OCL differentiation and suggest that it may be a therapeutic target for treating bone diseases associated with increased OCL activity.
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