研究者業績

Kanae Sasaki

  (佐々木 桂奈江)

Profile Information

Affiliation
Graduate School of Science, University of Hyogo
Degree
Doctor of Agriculture(Mar, 2014, Nagoya University)

Researcher number
80752427
J-GLOBAL ID
201801008998752000
researchmap Member ID
B000323369

Papers

 15
  • Kanae Sasaki, Reishi Tanaka, Iona Miyake, Miyu Sakamoto, Ryuya Tanaka, Azusa Tanaka, Misaki Terami, Ryota Komori, Mai Taniguchi, Sadao Wakabayashi, Hajime Tajima Sakurai, Hiderou Yoshida
    Cell structure and function, Jan 28, 2026  
    Abstract The Golgi stress response is a homeostatic mechanism that augments Golgi function when Golgi function becomes insufficient (Golgi stress). Glycosylation of the core proteins of proteoglycans is one of the important functions of the Golgi. If the production of core proteins is increased and the amount of glycosylation enzymes for proteoglycans becomes insufficient (PG-type Golgi stress), the proteoglycan pathway of the Golgi stress response is activated, resulting in the transcriptional induction of glycosylation enzymes, including NDST2, HS6ST1 and GLCE. The transcriptional induction of these glycosylation enzymes is regulated by the enhancer element, PGSE-A; however, transcription factors that induce transcription from PGSE-A have not yet been identified. We herein proposed KLF2 and KLF4 as candidate transcription factors for transcriptional induction from PGSE-A, and revealed that their expression was up-regulated in response to PG-type Golgi stress. These results suggest that KLF2 and KLF4 are important regulators of the proteoglycan pathways of the mammalian Golgi stress response.
  • Kanae Sasaki, Marika Toide, Takuya Adachi, Fumi Morishita, Yuto Watanabe, Hajime Tajima Sakurai, Sadao Wakabayashi, Satoshi Kusumi, Toshiyuki Yamaji, Kaori Sakurai, Daisuke Koga, Kentaro Hanada, Masafumi Yohda, Hiderou Yoshida
    The Journal of biological chemistry, 301(1) 108075-108075, Jan, 2025  
    The Golgi stress response is an important cytoprotective system that enhances Golgi function in response to cellular demand, while cells damaged by prolonged Golgi stress undergo cell death. OSW-1, a natural compound with anticancer activity, potently inhibits OSBP that transports cholesterol and phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate (PI4P) at contact sites between the endoplasmic reticulum and the Golgi apparatus. Previously, we reported that OSW-1 induces the Golgi stress response, resulting in Golgi stress-induced transcription and cell death. However, the underlying molecular mechanism has been unknown. To reveal the mechanism of a novel pathway of the Golgi stress response regulating transcriptional induction and cell death (the PI4P pathway), we performed a genome-wide knockout screen and found that transcriptional induction as well as cell death induced by OSW-1 was repressed by the loss of regulators of PI4P synthesis, such as PITPNB and PI4KB. Our data indicate that OSW-1 induces Golgi stress-dependent transcriptional induction and cell death through dysregulation of the PI4P metabolism in the Golgi.
  • Kanae Sasaki, Takuya Adachi, Fumi Morishita, Marika Toide, Yuto Watanabe, Hajime Tajima Sakurai, Sadao Wakabayashi, Satoshi Kusumi, Toshiyuki Yamaji, Kaori Sakurai, Daisuke Koga, Kentaro Hanada, Masafumi Yohda, Hiderou Yoshida
    BioRxiv (Journal of Biological Chemistryでin press, 2025), May 18, 2023  
    Abstract The Golgi stress response is an important cytoprotective system that enhances Golgi function in response to cellular demand, while cells damaged by prolonged Golgi stress undergo cell death to ensure the survival of organisms. OSW-1, a natural compound with anticancer activity, acts as a potent inhibitor of OSBP that transports cholesterol and phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate (PI4P) at contact sites between the endoplasmic reticulum and the Golgi apparatus. Previously, we reported that OSW-1 induces the Golgi stress response, resulting in Golgi stress-induced transcription and cell death. However, the underlying molecular mechanism has been unknown. To reveal the mechanism of a novel pathway of the Golgi stress response regulating transcriptional induction and cell death (the cholesterol pathway), we performed a genome-wide knockout screen and found that transcriptional induction as well as cell death induced by OSW-1 was repressed in HeLa cells deficient in factors involved in the PI4P metabolism, such as PITPNB and PI4KB genes. Our data indicate that OSW-1 induces Golgi stress-dependent transcriptional induction and cell death through dysregulation of the PI4P metabolism in the Golgi apparatus.
  • Mohamad Ikhwan Jamaludin, Sadao Wakabayashi, Mai Taniguchi, Kanae Sasaki, Ryota Komori, Hirotada Kawamura, Hayataka Takase, Miyu Sakamoto, Hiderou Yoshida
    Cell structure and function, 44(2) 137-151, Oct 31, 2019  Peer-reviewed
    The Golgi apparatus is an organelle where membrane or secretory proteins receive post-translational modifications such as glycosylation and sulfation, after which the proteins are selectively transported to their final destinations through vesicular transport. When the synthesis of secretory or membrane proteins is increased and overwhelms the capacity of the Golgi (Golgi stress), eukaryotic cells activate a homeostatic mechanism called the Golgi stress response to augment the capacity of the Golgi. Four response pathways of the Golgi stress response have been identified, namely the TFE3, CREB3, HSP47, and proteoglycan pathways, which regulate the general function of the Golgi, apoptosis, cell survival, and proteoglycan glycosylation, respectively. Here, we identified a novel response pathway that augments the expression of glycosylation enzymes for mucins in response to insufficiency in mucin-type glycosylation in the Golgi (mucin-type Golgi stress), and we found that expression of glycosylation enzymes for mucins such as GALNT5, GALNT8, and GALNT18 was increased upon mucin-type-Golgi stress. We named this pathway the mucin pathway. Unexpectedly, mucin-type Golgi stress induced the expression and activation of TFE3, a key transcription factor regulating the TFE3 pathway, suggesting that the activated mucin pathway sends a crosstalk signal to the TFE3 pathway. We identified an enhancer element regulating transcriptional induction of TFE3 upon mucin-type Golgi stress, and named it the mucin-type Golgi stress response element, of which consensus was ACTTCC(N9)TCCCCA. These results suggested that crosstalk from the mucin pathway to the TFE3 pathway has an important role in the regulation of the mammalian Golgi stress response.Key words: Golgi stress, mucin, TFE3, organelle autoregulation, organelle zone.
  • Kanae Sasaki, Hiderou Yoshida
    FEBS letters, 593(17) 2330-2340, Sep, 2019  Peer-reviewed
    Organelles have been studied traditionally as single units, but a novel concept is now emerging: each organelle has distinct functional zones that regulate specific functions. The Golgi apparatus seems to have various zones, including zones for: glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored proteins; proteoglycan, mucin and lipid glycosylation; transport of cholesterol and ceramides; protein degradation (Golgi membrane-associated degradation); and signalling for apoptosis. The capacity for these specific functions and the size of the corresponding zones appear to be tightly regulated by the Golgi stress response to accommodate cellular demands. For instance, the proteoglycan and mucin zones seem to be separately augmented during the differentiation of chondrocytes and goblet cells, respectively. The mammalian Golgi stress response consists of several response pathways. The TFE3 pathway regulates the general function of the Golgi, such as structural maintenance, N-glycosylation and vesicular transport, whereas the proteoglycan pathway increases the expression of glycosylation enzymes for proteoglycans. The CREB3 and HSP47 pathways regulate pro- and anti-apoptotic functions, respectively. These observations indicate that the Golgi is a dynamic organelle, the capacity of which is upregulated according to cellular needs.

Misc.

 7

Research Projects

 6