Curriculum Vitaes
Profile Information
- Affiliation
- Professor, Research Promotion Headquarters, Center for Society-Academia Collaboration , Fujita Health UniversityProfessor, Premium Research Institute for Human Metaverse Medicine, Osaka University
- Degree
- MD(Mar, 1984)Ph.D.(Mar, 1988)
- Researcher number
- 60204533
- J-GLOBAL ID
- 200901003262194571
- researchmap Member ID
- 1000305140
- External link
Research Interests
6Research Areas
4Research History
10-
Oct, 2007 - Mar, 2024
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Apr, 2004 - Sep, 2007
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Apr, 2001 - Mar, 2004
Education
2-
Mar, 1984 - Apr, 1988
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Apr, 1978 - Mar, 1984
Awards
12-
Jan, 2020
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2014
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2013
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2013
Papers
470-
International Immunopharmacology, 172 116138-116138, Mar, 2026
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Cancer & Metabolism, 13(1), Dec 2, 2025
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Scientific Reports, 15(1), Sep 26, 2025 Peer-reviewed
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FEBS Open Bio, Sep 15, 2025 Peer-reviewedIn Thermus thermophilus, an aerobic Gram‐negative eubacterium used as a model organism, more than half of the phosphorylation sites identified by proteomic analysis are located near the ligand‐binding site, including the active site, of the enzyme in the three‐dimensional structure. We investigated the effect of these phosphorylation events on the activity of six enzymes (three nucleoside monophosphate kinases, isocitrate kinase, malate dehydrogenase and inorganic pyrophosphatase) by introducing phosphomimetic mutations, Glu, into the phosphorylation sites. All phosphomimetic mutants showed severely reduced activity compared with the wild‐type, particularly in the turnover number. The proteins analyzed in this study belong to different families and have various functions. This suggests that there is a widespread mechanism by which phosphorylation of amino acid residues near the active site reduces enzyme activity independent of the protein family and function.
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The Journal of Biochemistry, May 29, 2025Abstract Zinc finger domains are important interaction modules for binding to nucleic acids, proteins, lipids and small molecules. Many small-sized zinc finger proteins are encoded in bacterial genomes, but most of them have not been functionally annotated. We focused on TTHA0897, ZifS, as a small zinc finger protein from the extremely thermophilic eubacterium Thermus thermophilus HB8. In vivo experiments suggested that the cellular function of ZifS is related to the growth transition of T. thermophilus from the lag to the exponential phase under nutritionally limited conditions. In vitro biochemical experiments, including electrophoretic mobility shift assay and pull-down assay, yielded no clues about molecular functions of ZifS. X-ray crystallographic analysis revealed that the dimeric ZifS globally forms a cylinder-like structure, although ZifS dimer has no overall structural similarity to other known zinc finger proteins. The zinc ion-binding manner of ZifS fitted the characteristics of the zinc ribbon fold, which are mostly found in domains from proteins involved in the transcriptional and translational machinery. The crystal structure of ZifS is the first experimental insight into the molecular structure of this protein family, revealing several conserved features that may be functionally relevant.
Misc.
434-
臨床薬理, 40(Suppl.) S231-S231, Nov, 2009
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CANCER RESEARCH, 69, May, 2009
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JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 59 137-137, 2009
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JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 59 493-493, 2009
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JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 59 495-495, 2009
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JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 59 213-213, 2009
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JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 59 493-493, 2009
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JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 109 68P-68P, 2009
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JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 59 493-493, 2009
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JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 109 34P-34P, 2009
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JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 59 347-347, 2009
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JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 59 213-213, 2009
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JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 59 493-493, 2009
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AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 83(6) 795-795, Dec, 2008
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MEMBRANE, 33(3) 108-117, May, 2008 InvitedAmino acid transporters are integrated membrane proteins that provide cells with nutrient amino acids. It is well established that subsets of amino acid transporters are highly expressed in cancers. A system L transporter LAT1 exhibits prominent expression in many cancers and its expression is inversely correlated with prognosis in some cancers. LAT1 is responsible for the uptake of large neutral amino acids including several essential amino acids. Functional coupling with ASCT2 which is also upregulated in cancers seems beneficial for LAT1 to be driven by intracellular glutamine accumulated by ASCT2 via an exchange mechanism. Now it has been demonstrated that a LAT1- selective ligand, L-[3-18F]-α-methyltyrosine (18F-FMT), is accumulated selectively in cancers in humans in a positron emission tomography (PET) in LAT1-depndent manner. [18F]FMT-PET can be a realistic diagnostic tool in the future. As expected from the roles of LAT1 in cancers, the inhibition of LAT1 results in the suppression of cancers. The newly developed high-affinity inhibitors of LAT1 are expected with therapeutic usefulness.
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JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, 179(4) 105-105, Apr, 2008
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日本臨床, 66(4) 659-666, Apr, 2008 Invited
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JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 106 257P-257P, 2008
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JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 106 109P-109P, 2008
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JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 106 152P-152P, 2008
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Journal of Toxicologic Pathology, 20(3) 133-140, Oct 9, 2007
Books and Other Publications
41Presentations
38Professional Memberships
16Research Projects
51-
科学研究費助成事業, 日本学術振興会, Apr, 2022 - Mar, 2025
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科学研究費助成事業, 日本学術振興会, Apr, 2022 - Mar, 2025
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Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Apr, 2019 - Mar, 2022
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Study on the effects of amino acid availability on life span and the underlying molecular mechanismsGrants-in-Aid for Scientific Research, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Jun, 2018 - Mar, 2020
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Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Apr, 2015 - Mar, 2018