研究者業績

梅園 良彦

ウメソノ ヨシヒコ  (Yoshihiko Umesono)

基本情報

所属
兵庫県立大学 大学院理学研究科 教授
学位
博士(理学)(神戸大学)

J-GLOBAL ID
202001002757742836
researchmap会員ID
R000001117

研究キーワード

 3

論文

 41
  • Makoto Mochii, Kai Akizuki, Hero Ossaka, Norie Kagawa, Yoshihiko Umesono, Ken-Ichi T Suzuki
    Developmental biology 506 42-51 2023年12月3日  
    Xenopus laevis is a widely used model organism in developmental and regeneration studies. Despite several reports regarding targeted integration techniques in Xenopus, there is still room for improvement of them, especially in creating reporter lines that rely on endogenous regulatory enhancers/promoters. We developed a CRISPR-Cas9-based simple method to efficiently introduce a fluorescent protein gene into 5' untranslated regions (5'UTRs) of target genes in Xenopus laevis. A donor plasmid DNA encoding an enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) flanked by a genomic fragment ranging from 66 bp to 878 bp including target 5'UTR was co-injected into fertilized eggs with a single guide RNA and Cas9 protein. Injections for krt12.2.L, myod1.S, sox2.L or brevican.S resulted in embryos expressing eGFP fluorescence in a tissue-specific manner, recapitulating endogenous expression of target genes. Integrations of the donor DNA into the target regions were examined by genotyping PCR for the eGFP-expressing embryos. The rate of embryos expressing the specific eGFP varied from 2.1% to 13.2% depending on the target locus and length of the genomic fragment in the donor plasmids. Germline transmission of an integrated DNA was observed. This simple method provides a powerful tool for exploring gene expression and function in developmental and regeneration research in X. laevis.
  • Yuki Shibata, Miyuki Suzuki, Nao Hirose, Ayuko Takayama, Chiaki Sanbo, Takeshi Inoue, Yoshihiko Umesono, Kiyokazu Agata, Naoto Ueno, Ken-ichi T. Suzuki, Makoto Mochii
    Developmental Biology 489 76-83 2022年6月  査読有り
    Transgenic techniques have greatly increased our understanding of the transcriptional regulation of target genes through live reporter imaging, as well as the spatiotemporal function of a gene using loss- and gain-of-function constructs. In Xenopus species, two well-established transgenic methods, restriction enzyme-mediated integration and I-SceI meganuclease-mediated transgenesis, have been used to generate transgenic animals. However, donor plasmids are randomly integrated into the Xenopus genome in both methods. Here, we established a new and simple targeted transgenesis technique based on CRISPR/Cas9 in Xenopus laevis. In this method, Cas9 ribonucleoprotein (RNP) targeting a putative harbor site (the transforming growth factor beta receptor 2-like (tgfbr2l) locus) and a preset donor plasmid DNA were co-injected into the one-cell stage embryos of X. laevis. Approximately 10% of faithful reporter expression was detected in F0 crispants in a promoter/enhancer-specific manner. Importantly, efficient germline transmission and stable transgene expression were observed in the F1 offspring. The simplicity of this method only required preparation of a donor vector containing the tgfbr2l genome fragment and Cas9 RNP targeting this site, which are common experimental procedures used in Xenopus laboratories. Our improved technique allows the simple generation of transgenic X. laevis, so is expected to become a powerful tool for reporter assay and gene function analysis.
  • Yuki Sato, Yoshihiko Umesono, Yoshihito Kuroki, Kiyokazu Agata, Chikara Hashimoto
    Developmental Biology 482 55-66 2022年2月  査読有り
    The coincidence of cell cycle exit and differentiation has been described in a wide variety of stem cells and organisms for decades, but the causal relationship is still unclear due to the complicated regulation of the cell cycle. Here, we used the planarian Dugesia japonica since they may possess a simple cell cycle regulation in which Cdh1 is one of the factors responsible for exiting the cell cycle. When cdh1 was functionally inhibited, the planarians could not maintain their tissue homeostasis and could not regenerate their missing body parts. While the knockdown of cdh1 caused pronounced accumulation of the stem cells, the progenitor and differentiated cells were decreased. Further analyses indicated that the stem cells with cdh1 knockdown did not undergo differentiation even though they received ERK signaling activation as an induction signal. These results suggested that stem cells could not acquire differentiation competence without cell cycle exit. Thus, we propose that cell cycle regulation determines the differentiation competence and that cell cycle exit to G0 enables stem cells to undergo differentiation.
  • Hayoung Lee, Kanon Hikasa, Yoshihiko Umesono, Tetsutaro Hayashi, Kiyokazu Agata, Norito Shibata
    Development (Cambridge, England) 149(3) 2022年2月1日  査読有り
    The regenerative ability of planarians relies on their adult pluripotent stem cell population. Although all stem cells express a piwi homolog, recently it has become possible to classify the piwi+ stem cell population into specialized subpopulations according to the expression of genes related to differentiation. However, piwi+ stem cells behave practically as a homogeneous population after amputation, during which stem cells show accelerated proliferation, named 'induced hyperproliferation'. Here, we show that plac8-A was expressed in almost all of the stem cells, and that a decrease of the plac8-A expression level led to induced hyperproliferation uniformly in a broad stem cell subpopulation after amputation. This reduction of plac8-A expression was caused by activated JNK signaling after amputation. Pharmacological inhibition of JNK signaling caused failure to induce hyperproliferation and resulted in regenerative defects. Such defects were abrogated by simultaneous knockdown of plac8-A expression. Thus, JNK-dependent suppression of plac8-A expression is indispensable for stem cell dynamics involved in regeneration. These findings suggest that plac8-A acts as a molecular switch of piwi+ stem cells for entry into the regenerative state after amputation.
  • Mohammad Abdul Auwal, Makoto Kashima, Osamu Nishimura, Kazutaka Hosoda, Minako Motoishi, Akifumi Kamimura, Akinori Okumura, Kiyokazu Agata, Yoshihiko Umesono
    Development, growth & differentiation 62(9) 527-539 2020年12月  査読有り
    Planarians belong to the phylum Platyhelminthes and can regenerate their missing body parts after injury via activation of somatic pluripotent stem cells called neoblasts. Previous studies suggested that fibroblast growth factor (FGF) signaling plays a crucial role in the regulation of head tissue differentiation during planarian regeneration. To date, however, no FGF homologues in the Platyhelminthes have been reported. Here, we used a planarian Dugesia japonica model and identified an fgf gene termed Djfgf, which encodes a putative secreted protein with a core FGF domain characteristic of the FGF8/17/18 subfamily in bilaterians. Using Xenopus embryos, we found that DjFGF has FGF activity as assayed by Xbra induction. We next examined Djfgf expression in non-regenerating intact and regenerating planarians. In intact planarians, Djfgf was expressed in the auricles in the head and the pharynx. In the early process of regeneration, Djfgf was transiently expressed in a subset of differentiated cells around wounds. Notably, Djfgf expression was highly induced in the process of head regeneration when compared to that in the tail regeneration. Furthermore, assays of head regeneration from tail fragments revealed that combinatorial actions of the anterior extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and posterior Wnt/ß-catenin signaling restricted Djfgf expression to a certain anterior body part. This is the region where neoblasts undergo active proliferation to give rise to their differentiating progeny in response to wounding. The data suggest the possibility that DjFGF may act as an anterior counterpart of posteriorly localized Wnt molecules and trigger neoblast responses involved in planarian head regeneration.
  • Mai Miyamoto, Miki Hattori, Kazutaka Hosoda, Mika Sawamoto, Minako Motoishi, Tetsutaro Hayashi, Takeshi Inoue, Yoshihiko Umesono
    Science Advances 6(15) eaaz0882 2020年4月  査読有り
    Planarians exhibit traits of cephalization but are unique among bilaterians in that they ingest food by means of goal-directed movements of a trunk-positioned pharynx, following protrusion of the pharynx out of the body, raising the question of how planarians control such a complex set of body movements for achieving robust feeding. Here, we use the freshwater planarian Dugesia japonica to show that an isolated pharynx amputated from the planarian body self-directedly executes its entire sequence of feeding functions: food sensing, approach, decisions about ingestion, and intake. Gene-specific silencing experiments by RNA interference demonstrated that the pharyngeal nervous system (PhNS) is required not only for feeding functions of the pharynx itself but also for food-localization movements of individual animals, presumably via communication with the brain. These findings reveal an unexpected central role of the PhNS in the linkage between unique morphological phenotypes and feeding behavior in planarians.
  • Okumura A, Hayashi T, Ebisawa M, Yoshimura M, Sasagawa Y, Nikaido I, Umesono Y, Mochii M
    Development, growth & differentiation 61(9) 447-456 2019年12月  査読有り
  • Kazutaka Hosoda, Minako Motoishi, Takuya Kunimoto, Osamu Nishimura, Byulnim Hwang, Sumire Kobayashi, Shigenobu Yazawa, Makoto Mochii, Kiyokazu Agata, Yoshihiko Umesono
    Development, growth & differentiation 60(6) 341-353 2018年8月  査読有り
    Planarians have established a unique body pattern along the anterior-posterior (AP) axis, which consists of at least four distinct body regions arranged in an anterior to posterior sequence: head, prepharyngeal, pharyngeal (containing a pharynx), and tail regions, and possess high regenerative ability. How they reconstruct the regional continuity in a head-to-tail sequence after amputation still remains unknown. We use as a model planarian Dugesia japonica head regeneration from tail fragments, which involves dynamic rearrangement of the body regionality of preexisting tail tissues along the AP axis, and show here that RNA interference of the gene D. japonica mek kinase 1 (Djmekk1) caused a significant anterior shift in the position of pharynx regeneration at the expense of the prepharyngeal region, while keeping the head region relatively constant in size, and accordingly led to development of a relatively longer tail region. Our data suggest that DjMEKK1 regulates anterior extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and posterior β-catenin signaling pathways in a positive and negative manner, respectively, to establish a proper balance resulting in the regeneration of planarian's scale-invariant trunk-to-tail patterns across individuals. Furthermore, we demonstrated that DjMEKK1 negatively modulates planarian β-catenin activity via its serine/threonine kinase domain, but not its PHD/RING finger domain, by testing secondary axis formation in Xenopus embryos. The data suggest that Djmekk1 plays an instructive role in the coordination between the establishment of the prepharyngeal region and posteriorizing of pharynx formation by balancing the two opposing morphogenetic signals along the AP axis during planarian regeneration.
  • Kentaro Sato, Yoshihiko Umesono, Makoto Mochii
    Developmental Biology 433(2) 404-415 2018年1月15日  査読有り
    Rapid wound healing and subsequent formation of the apical epithelial cap (AEC) are believed to be required for successful appendage regeneration in amphibians. Despite the significant role of AEC in limb regeneration, its role in tail regeneration and the mechanisms that regulate the wound healing and AEC formation are not well understood. We previously identified Xenopus laevis es1, which is preferentially expressed in wounded regions, including the AEC after tail regeneration. In this study we established and characterized transgenic Xenopus laevis lines harboring the enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) gene under control of an es1 gene regulatory sequence (es1:egfp). The EGFP reporter expression was clearly seen in several regions of the embryo and then declined to an undetectable level in larvae, recapitulating the endogenous es1 expression. After amputation of the tadpole tail, EGFP expression was re-activated at the edge of the stump epidermis and then increased in the wound epidermis (WE) covering the amputation surface. As the stump started to regenerate, the EGFP expression became restricted to the most distal epidermal region, including the AEC. EGFP was preferentially expressed in the basal or deep cells but not in the superficial cells of the WE and AEC. We performed a small-scale pharmacological screening for chemicals that affected the expression of EGFP in the stump epidermis after tail amputation. The EGFP expression was attenuated by treatment with an inhibitor for ERK, TGF-β or reactive oxygen species (ROS) signaling. These treatments also impaired wound closure of the amputation surface, suggesting that the three signaling activities are required for es1 expression in the WE and successful wound healing after tail amputation. These findings showed that es1:egfp Xenopus laevis should be a useful tool to analyze molecular mechanisms regulating wound healing and appendage regeneration.
  • Miki Hattori, Mai Miyamoto, Kazutaka Hosoda, Yoshihiko Umesono
    Development, growth & differentiation 60(1) 76-81 2018年1月  査読有り
    Planarians have become widely recognized as one of the major animal models for regeneration studies in invertebrates. To induce RNA interference (RNAi) by feeding in planarians, the widely accepted protocol is one in which animals undergo two or three feedings of food containing double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) plus visible food coloring (e.g., blood) for confirmation of feeding by individual animals. However, one possible problem is that incorporated food coloring is often retained within the gut for several days, which makes it difficult to confirm the success of each round of dsRNA feeding based on the difference of the color density within the gut before and after feeding. As a consequence, the difference of appetite levels among individuals undergoing dsRNA feeding leads to phenotypic variability among them due to insufficient knockdown. In our attempts to overcome this problem, we have developed a novel method for achieving robust confirmation of the success of dsRNA feeding in individuals fed multiple times by means of including a combination of three different colored chalks (pink, yellow and blue) as food coloring. Notably, we found that this method is superior to the conventional method for positively marking individuals that actively consumed the dsRNA-containing food during four times of once-daily feeding. Using these selected animals, we obtained stable and sufficiently strong RNAi-induced phenotypes. We termed this improved multi-colored chalk-spiked method of feeding RNAi "Candi" and propose its benefits for gene function analysis in planarians.
  • Kazutaka Hosoda, Mizuki Morimoto, Minako Motoishi, Osamu Nishimura, Kiyokazu Agata, Yoshihiko Umesono
    Development, growth & differentiation 58(3) 260-9 2016年4月  査読有り
    Live cell imaging is a powerful technique to study cellular dynamics in vivo during animal development and regeneration. However, few live imaging methods have been reported for studying planarian regeneration. Here, we developed a simple method for steady visualization of gut tube remodeling during regeneration of a living freshwater planarian, Dugesia japonica. When planarians were fed blood several times, gut branches were well-visualized in living intact animals under normal bright-field illumination. Interestingly, tail fragments derived from these colored planarians enabled successive observation of the processes of the formation of a single anterior gut branch in the prepharyngeal region from the preexisting two posterior gut branches in the same living animals during head regeneration. Furthermore, we combined this method and RNA interference (RNAi) and thereby showed that a D. japonica raf-related gene (DjrafA) and mek-related gene (DjmekA) we identified both play a major role in the activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) signaling during planarian regeneration, as indicated by their RNAi-induced defects on gut tube remodeling in a time-saving initial screening using blood-feeding without immunohistochemical detection of the gut. Thus, this blood-feeding method is useful for live imaging of gut tube remodeling, and provides an advance for the field of regeneration study in planarians.
  • Nishimura O, Hosoda K, Kawaguchi E, Yazawa S, Hayashi T, Inoue T, Umesono Y, Agata K
    PloS one 10(11) e0143525 2015年11月  査読有り
  • Byulnim Hwang, Yang An, Kiyokazu Agata, Yoshihiko Umesono
    Development, growth & differentiation 57(3) 209-17 2015年4月  査読有り
    Adult planarians possess somatic pluripotent stem cells called neoblasts that give rise to all missing cell types during regeneration and homeostasis. Recent studies revealed that the Yorkie (Yki)/Yes-associated protein (YAP) transcriptional coactivator family plays an important role in the regulation of tissue growth during development and regeneration, and therefore we investigated the role of a planarian yki-related gene (termed Djyki) during regeneration and homeostasis of the freshwater planarian Dugesia japonica. We found that knockdown of the function of Djyki by RNA interference (RNAi) downregulated neoblast proliferation and caused regeneration defects after amputation. In addition, Djyki RNAi caused edema during homeostasis. These seemingly distinct defects induced by Djyki RNAi were rescued by simultaneous RNAi of a planarian mats-related gene (termed Djmats), suggesting an important role of Djmats in the negative regulation of Djyki, in accordance with the conservation of the functional relationship of these two genes during the course of evolution. Interestingly, Djyki RNAi did not prevent normal protonephridial structure, suggesting that Djyki RNAi induced the edema phenotype without affecting the excretory system. Further analyses revealed that increased expression of the D. japonica gene DjaquaporinA (DjaqpA), which belongs to a large gene family that encodes a water channel protein for the regulation of transcellular water flow, promoted the induction of edema, but not defects in neoblast dynamics, in Djyki(RNAi) animals. Thus, we conclude that Djyki plays two distinct roles in the regulation of active proliferation of stem cells and in osmotic water transport across the body surface in D. japonica.
  • Yoshihiko Umesono
    New Principles in Developmental Processes 9784431546344 71-83 2014年11月1日  査読有り
    Planarians have a long history of attracting many biologists for their amazing regenerative ability, which absolutely depends on a unique population of somatic pluripotent stem cells called neoblasts that are distributed throughout the body. After amputation, neoblasts proliferate to form a head blastema at an anterior-facing wound and a tail blastema at a posterior-facing wound, and finally regenerate a whole-body anterior-posterior (A-P) pattern, even from tiny tissue fragments. More than a century ago, Thomas Hunt Morgan, one of the great early investigators of planarian regeneration, proposed that axial patterning is determined by two opposing morphogenetic gradients of formative substances, head stuff and tail stuff, along the A-P axis. However, to date few attempts have been made to assess Morgan's hypothesis. Recent molecular studies using RNA interference (RNAi) have revisited planarian regeneration and revealed key signaling pathways involved in the regulation of neoblast dynamics, including Wnt/β-catenin signaling acting as a posterior tissue determinant (which accordingly fits with the instructive role of the tail stuff), during planarian regeneration. One of our recent great advances was identification of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) signaling that acts as a cell differentiator in the planarian Dugesia japonica. Furthermore, we found that interplay between anterior ERK signaling and posterior β-catenin signaling can account for the reconstruction of a complete head-to-tail axis, in which the absence of β-catenin signaling allows neoblasts to achieve the ERK activation necessary for head regeneration. These findings suggest that ERK signaling plays a crucial role in the circuitry of the head stuff in Morgan's hypothesis.
  • Kiyokazu Agata, Junichi Tasaki, Elizabeth Nakajima, Yoshihiko Umesono
    ZOOLOGY 117(3) 161-162 2014年6月  査読有り
    Planarians have strong regenerative abilities derived from their adult pluripotent stem cell (neoblast) system. However, the molecular mechanisms involved in planarian regeneration have long remained a mystery. In particular, no anterior-specifying factor(s) could be found, although Wnt family proteins had been successfully identified as posterior-specifying factors during planarian regeneration (Gurley et al., 2008; Petersen and Reddien, 2008). A recent textbook of developmental biology therefore proposes a Wnt antagonist as a putative anterior factor (Gilbert, 2013). That is, planarian regeneration was supposed to be explained by a single decreasing gradient of the p-catenin signal from tail to head. However, recently we succeeded in demonstrating that in fact the extracellular-signal regulated kinases (ERK) form a decreasing gradient from head to tail to direct the reorganization of planarian body regionality after amputation (Umesono et al., 2013). (C) 2014 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.
  • Yoshihiko Umesono, Junichi Tasaki, Yui Nishimura, Martina Hrouda, Eri Kawaguchi, Shigenobu Yazawa, Osamu Nishimura, Kazutaka Hosoda, Takeshi Inoue, Kiyokazu Agata
    Nature 500(7460) 73-6 2013年8月1日  査読有り
    The planarian Dugesia japonica can regenerate a complete individual from a head, trunk or tail fragment via activation of somatic pluripotent stem cells. About a century ago, Thomas Hunt Morgan attempted to explain the extraordinary regenerative ability of planarians by positing two opposing morphogenetic gradients of formative "head stuff" and "tail stuff" along the anterior-posterior axis. However, Morgan's hypothesis remains open to debate. Here we show that extracellular signal-related kinase (ERK) and Wnt/β-catenin signalling pathways establish a solid framework for planarian regeneration. Our data suggest that ERK signalling forms a spatial gradient in the anterior region during regeneration. The fibroblast growth factor receptor-like gene nou-darake (which serves as an output of ERK signalling in the differentiating head) and posteriorly biased β-catenin activity negatively regulate ERK signalling along the anterior-posterior axis in distinct manners, and thereby posteriorize regenerating tissues outside the head region to reconstruct a complete head-to-tail axis. On the basis of this knowledge about D. japonica, we proposed that β-catenin signalling is responsible for the lack of head-regenerative ability of tail fragments in the planarian Phagocata kawakatsui, and our confirmation thereof supports the notion that posterior β-catenin signalling negatively modulates the ERK signalling involved in anteriorization across planarian species. These findings suggest that ERK signalling has a pivotal role in triggering globally dynamic differentiation of stem cells in a head-to-tail sequence through a default program that promotes head tissue specification in the absence of posteriorizing signals. Thus, we have confirmed the broad outline of Morgan's hypothesis, and refined it on the basis of our proposed default property of planarian stem cells.
  • Yoshihiko Umesono, Junichi Tasaki, Kaneyasu Nishimura, Takeshi Inoue, Kiyokazu Agata
    The European journal of neuroscience 34(6) 863-9 2011年9月  査読有り
    A unique aspect of planarians is that they can regenerate a brain from somatic pluripotent stem cells called neoblasts, which have the ability to produce themselves (self-renew) and to give rise to all missing cell types during regeneration. Recent molecular studies have revealed that the planarian brain is composed of many distinct neuronal populations, which are evolutionarily and functionally conserved ones, and acts as an information-processing center to elicit distinct behavioral traits depending on a variety of signals arising from the external environment. How can planarians regenerate such a brain? On the basis of our recent findings, here we review the cellular and molecular mechanisms that regulate the stem cell dynamics involved in the brain regeneration of the planarian Dugesia japonica. Our findings suggest the possible value of in vivo planarian studies for guiding regenerative medicine to treat neurodegenerative diseases via interlinking stem cell biology and regeneration biology.
  • Junichi Tasaki, Norito Shibata, Osamu Nishimura, Kazu Itomi, Yoshimichi Tabata, Fuyan Son, Nobuko Suzuki, Ryoko Araki, Masumi Abe, Kiyokazu Agata, Yoshihiko Umesono
    Development (Cambridge, England) 138(12) 2417-27 2011年6月  査読有り
    The robust regenerative ability of planarians depends on a population of somatic stem cells called neoblasts, which are the only mitotic cells in adults and are responsible for blastema formation after amputation. The molecular mechanism underlying neoblast differentiation associated with blastema formation remains unknown. Here, using the planarian Dugesia japonica we found that DjmkpA, a planarian mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) phosphatase-related gene, was specifically expressed in blastema cells in response to increased extracellular signal-related kinase (ERK) activity. Pharmacological and genetic [RNA interference (RNAi)] approaches provided evidence that ERK activity was required for blastema cells to exit the proliferative state and undergo differentiation. By contrast, DjmkpA RNAi induced an increased level of ERK activity and rescued the differentiation defect of blastema cells caused by pharmacological reduction of ERK activity. These observations suggest that ERK signaling plays an instructive role in the cell fate decisions of blastema cells regarding whether to differentiate or not, by inducing DjmkpA as a negative regulator of ERK signaling during planarian regeneration.
  • Junichi Tasaki, Norito Shibata, Toshihide Sakurai, Kiyokazu Agata, Yoshihiko Umesono
    Development, growth & differentiation 53(3) 389-400 2011年4月  査読有り
    The robust regenerative abilities of planarians absolutely depend on a unique population of pluripotent stem cells called neoblasts, which are the only mitotic somatic cells in adult planarians and are responsible for blastema formation after amputation. Little is known about the molecular mechanisms that drive blastema formation during planarian regeneration. Here we found that treatment with the c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) inhibitor SP600125 blocked the entry of neoblasts into the M-phase of the cell cycle, while allowing neoblasts to successfully enter S-phase in the planarian Dugesia japonica. The rapid and efficient blockage of neoblast mitosis by treatment with the JNK inhibitor provided a method to assess whether temporally regulated cell cycle activation drives blastema formation during planarian regeneration. In the early phase of blastema formation, activated JNK was detected prominently in a mitotic region (the "postblastema") proximal to the blastema region. Furthermore, we demonstrated that undifferentiated mitotic neoblasts in the postblastema showed highly activated JNK at the single cell level. JNK inhibition by treatment with SP600125 during this period caused a severe defect of blastema formation, which accorded with a drastic decrease of mitotic neoblasts in regenerating animals. By contrast, these animals still retained many undifferentiated neoblasts near the amputation stump. These findings suggest that JNK signaling plays a crucial role in feeding into the blastema neoblasts for differentiation by regulating the G2/M transition in the cell cycle during planarian regeneration.
  • Takeshi Inoue, Tomomi Takano, Yoshihiko Umesono, Kiyokazu Agata
    NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH 71 E338-E338 2011年  査読有り
  • Shigenobu Yazawa, Yoshihiko Umesono, Tetsutaro Hayashi, Hiroshi Tarui, Kiyokazu Agata
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 106(52) 22329-22334 2009年12月  査読有り
    Despite long-standing interest, the molecular mechanisms underlying the establishment of anterior- posterior (AP) polarity remain among the unsolved mysteries in metazoans. In the planarians (a family of flatworms), canonical Wnt/beta-catenin signaling is required for posterior specification, as it is in many animals. However, the molecular mechanisms regulating the posterior-specific induction of Wnt genes according to the AP polarity have remained unclear. Here, we demonstrate that Hedgehog (Hh) signaling is responsible for the establishment of AP polarity via its regulation of the transcription of Wnt family genes during planarian regeneration. We found that RNAi gene knockdown of Dugesia japonica patched (Djptc) caused ectopic tail formation in the anterior blastema of body fragments, resulting in bipolar-tails regeneration. In contrast, RNAi of hedgehog (Djhh) and gli (Djgli) caused bipolar-heads regeneration. We show that Patched-mediated Hh signaling was crucial for posterior specification, which is established by regulating the transcription of Wnt genes via downstream Gli activity. Moreover, differentiated cells were responsible for the posterior specification of undifferentiated stem cells through Wnt/beta-catenin signaling. Surprisingly, Djhh was expressed in neural cells all along the ventral nerve cords (along the AP axis), but not in the posterior blastema of body fragments, where the expression of Wnt genes was induced for posteriorization. We therefore propose that Hh signals direct head or tail regeneration according to the AP polarity, which is established by Hh signaling activity along the body's preexisting nervous system.
  • Yoshihiko Umesono, Kiyokazu Agata
    Development, growth & differentiation 51(3) 185-95 2009年4月  査読有り
    More than 100 years ago, early workers realized that planarians offer an excellent system for regeneration studies. Another unique aspect of planarians is that they occupy an interesting phylogenetic position with respect to the nervous system in that they possess an evolutionarily primitive brain structure and can regenerate a functional brain from almost any tiny body fragment. Recent molecular studies have revisited planarian regeneration and revealed key information about the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying brain regeneration in planarians. One of our great advances was identification of a gene, nou-darake, which directs the formation of a proper extrinsic environment for pluripotent stem cells to differentiate into brain cells in the planarian Dugesia japonica. Our recent findings have provided mechanistic insights into stem cell biology and also evolutionary biology.
  • Nishimura, K, Kitamura, Y, Inoue, T, Umesono, Y, Yoshimoto, K, Taniguchi, T, Agata, K
    Neurochem Int 53(6-8) 184-192 2008年12月  査読有り
    The planarian Dugesia japonica has a relatively well-organized central nervous system (CNS) consisting of a brain and ventral nerve cords (VNCs), and can completely regenerate it CNS utilizing pluripotent stem cells present in the mesenchymal space. This remarkable capacity has begun to be exploited for research on neural regeneration. Recently, several kinds of molecular markers for labeling of neural subtypes have been reported in planarians. These molecular markers are useful for visualizing the distinct neural populations in planarians. In this study, we isolated a cDNA encoding tyramine beta-hydroxylase (TBH), an octopamine (OA) biosynthetic enzyme, by degenerate PCR in the planarian D. japonica, and named it DjTBH (D. japonica tyramine beta-hydroxylase). In order to examine whether DjTBH contributes to OA biosynthesis, we measured the OA content in DjTBH-knockdown planarians created by RNA interference. In addition, to examine the specificity of DjTBH for OA biosynthesis, we measured not only OA content but also noradrenaline (NA) content, because NA is synthesized by a pathway similar to that for OA. According to high-performance liquid chromatography analysis, the amount of OA, but not NA, was significantly decreased in DjTBH-knockdown planarians. In addition, we produced anti-DjTBH antibody to visualize the octopaminergic neural network. As shown by immunofluorescence analysis using anti-DjTBH antibody, DjTBH-immunopositive neurons were mainly distributed in the head region, and elongated their dendrites and/or axons along the VNCs. In order to visualize octopaminergic and dopaminergic nervous systems (phenolamine/catecholamine nervous system) in the planarian CNS, double-immunofluorescence analysis was carried out using both anti-DjTBH antibody and anti-DjTH (a planarian tyrosine hydroxylase) antibody. DjTBH-immunopositive neurons and DjTH-immunopositive neurons mainly formed distinct neural networks in the head region. Here, we demonstrated that DjTBH clearly contributes to OA biosynthesis, and DjTBH antibody is a useful tool for detecting octopaminergic neurons in planarians.
  • K. Nishimura, Y. Kitamura, Y. Umesono, K. Takeuchi, K. Takata, T. Taniguchi, K. Agata
    Neuroscience 153(4) 1103-1114 2008年6月2日  査読有り
  • Kiyokazu Agata, Yoshihiko Umesono
    PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES 363(1500) 2071-2078 2008年6月  査読有り
    How can planarians regenerate their brain? Recently we have identified many genes critical for this process. Brain regeneration can be divided into five steps: (1) anterior blastema formation, (2) brain rudiment formation, (3) pattern formation, (4) neural network formation, and (5) functional recovery. Here we will describe the structure and process of regeneration of the planarian brain in the first part, and then introduce genes involved in brain regeneration in the second part. Especially, we will speculate about molecular events during the early steps of brain regeneration in this review. The finding providing the greatest insight thus far is the discovery of the nou-darake (ndk; 'brains everywhere' in Japanese) gene, since brain neurons are formed throughout the entire body as a result of loss of function of the ndk gene. This finding provides a clue for elucidating the molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying brain regeneration. Here we describe the molecular action of the nou-darake gene and propose a new model to explain brain regeneration and restriction in the head region of the planarians.
  • Kaneyasu Nishimura, Yoshihisa Kitamura, Takeshi Inoue, Yoshihiko Umesono, Kanji Yoshimoto, Kosei Takeuchi, Takashi Taniguchi, Kiyokazu Agata
    NEUROSCIENCE RESEARCH 59(1) 101-106 2007年9月  査読有り
    We identified a full-length tryptophan hydroxylase (TPH) gene of planarian Dugesia japonica from a head EST database, and named it DjTPH. Based on whole-mount in situ hybridization and immunofluorescence analyses, DjTPH mRNA and protein were mainly expressed in the nervous system, especially ventral nerve cords and eye pigment cells. Furthermore, DjTPH immunoreactivity was clearly detected at commissure axonal connections in the ventral nerve cords. 5-HT was significantly decreased in DjTPH-knockdown planarians compared with control animals. These results suggest that DjTPH is required for 5-HT biosynthesis, and DjTPH antibody is a useful marker for serotonergic neurons in planarians. (C) 2007 Elsevier Ireland Ltd and the Japan Neuroscience Society. All rights reserved.
  • Kaneyasu Nishimura, Yoshihisa Kitamura, Takeshi Inoue, Yoshihiko Umesono, Shozo Sano, Kanji Yoshimoto, Masatoshi Inden, Kazuyuki Takata, Takashi Taniguchi, Shun Shimohama, Kiyokazu Agata
    DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROBIOLOGY 67(8) 1059-1078 2007年7月  査読有り
    Planarian, an invertebrate flatworm, has a high capacity for regeneration when compared with other worms and animals. We show here for the first time that the reconstructed dopamine (DA) neural network regulates locomotion and behavior in planarian regenerates. The gene encoding tyrosine hydroxylase in the planarian Dugesia japonica (DjTH) was identified. DjTH protein was coexpressed with aromatic amino acid decarboxylase-like A (DjAADCA) in the planarian central nervous system (CNS). In addition, DjTH-knockdown planarians lost the ability to synthesize DA, but showed no change in 5-hydroxytryptamine synthesis. When the planarian body was amputated, DjTH-positive neurons were regenerated in the brain newly rebuilt from the tail piece at Day 3, and the DjTH-positive axonal and dendritic neural network in the CNS (dopaminergic tiara) was reconstructed at Days 5-7. At that time, autonomic locomotion and methamphetamine-induced hyperkinesia were also suppressed in DjTH-knockdown planarians. Planarian locomotion and behavior seem to be regulated in both cilia- and muscle-dependent manners. In DjTH-knockdown planarians, muscle-mediated locomotion and behavior were significantly attenuated. These results suggest that DA neurons play a key role in the muscle-mediated movement in planarians. (c) 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
  • Tomomi Takano, Jeremy N Pulvers, Takeshi Inoue, Hiroshi Tarui, Hiroshi Sakamoto, Kiyokazu Agata, Yoshihiko Umesono
    Development, growth & differentiation 49(5) 383-94 2007年6月  査読有り
    Freshwater planarians have a simple and evolutionarily primitive brain structure. Here, we identified the Djsnap-25 gene encoding a homolog of the evolutionarily conserved synaptic protein SNAP-25 from the planarian Dugesia japonica and assessed its role in brain function. Djsnap-25 was expressed widely in the nervous system. To investigate the specific role of Djsnap-25 in the brain, we developed a unique technique of RNA interference (RNAi), regeneration-dependent conditional gene knockdown (Readyknock), exploiting the high regenerative capacity of planarians, and succeeded in selectively eliminating the DjSNAP-25 activity in the head region while leaving the DjSNAP-25 activity in the trunk region intact. These knockdown animals showed no effect on brain morphology or on undirected movement of the trunk itself. Light-avoidance behavior or negative phototaxis was used to quantitatively analyze brain function in the knockdown animals. The results suggested that the DjSNAP-25 activity within the head region is required for two independent sensory-processing pathways that regulate locomotive activity and directional movement downstream of distinct primary sensory outputs coming from the head margin and the eyes, respectively, during negative phototaxis. Our approach demonstrates that planarians are a powerful model organism to study the molecular basis of the brain as an information-processing center.
  • Kiyokazu Agata, Elizabeth Nakajima, Noriko Funayama, Norito Shibata, Yumi Saito, Yoshihiko Umesono
    SEMINARS IN CELL & DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY 17(4) 503-509 2006年8月  査読有り
    We propose two major evolutionary origins of stem cell systems in the animal kingdom. Adult pluripotent stem cell systems are found in many invertebrates and probably evolved as components of asexual reproduction. Lineage-specific stem cell systems probably evolved later and include neural and hematopoietic stem cell types. We propose that these two types of stem cell systems evolved independently. The vasa-like genes regulate reproductive stem cells, but not lineage-specific stem cells, which may be regulated by gcm genes. Here, we review the evidence for the molecular basis for the evolutionary origin of these two different stem cell systems. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
  • Jun Aruga, Akiko Kamiya, Hirokazu Takahashi, Takahiko J. Fujimi, Yuri Shimizu, Keiko Ohkawa, Shigenobu Yazawa, Yoshihiko Umesono, Hideki Noguchi, Takashi ShirniZu, Naruya Saitou, Katsuhiko Mikoshiba, Yoshiyuki Sakaki, Kiyokazu Agata, Atsushi Toyoda
    GENOMICS 87(6) 783-792 2006年6月  査読有り
    We compared Zic homologues from a wide range of animals. Striking conservation was found in the zinc finger domains, in which an exon-intron boundary has been kept in all bilateralians but not enidarians, suggesting that all of the bilateralian Zic genes are derived from a single gene in a bilateralian ancestor. There were additional conserved amino acid sequences, ZOC and ZF-NC. Combined analysis of the zinc finger, ZOC, and ZF-NC revealed the presence of two classes of Zic, based on the degree of protein structure conservation. The "conserved" class includes Zic proteins from the Arthropoda, Mollusca, Annelida, Echinodermata, and Chordata (vertebrates and cephalochordates), whereas the "diverged" class contains those from the Platyhelminthes, Cnidaria, Nematoda, and Chordata (urochordates). The result indicates that the ancestral bilateralian Zic protein had already acquired an entire set of conserved domains, but that this was lost and diverged in the platyhelminthes, nematodes, and urochordates. (c) 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
  • 西村 周泰, 北村 佳久, 井上 武, 梅園 良彦, 位田 雅俊, 吉本 寛司, 阿形 清和, 谷口 隆之
    日本薬理学雑誌 125(2) 27P-27P 2005年2月  
  • Kaneyasu Nishimura, Yoshihisa Kitamura, Takeshi Inoue, Yoshihiko Umesono, Shozo Sano, Masatoshi Inden, Kanji Yoshimoto, Kiyokazu Agata, Takashi Taniguchi
    YAKUGAKU ZASSHI-JOURNAL OF THE PHARMACEUTICAL SOCIETY OF JAPAN 125 133-135 2005年  査読有り
    Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) catalyzes the biosynthesis of catecholamines such as dopamine (DA) and norepinephrine in both vertebrates and invertebrates. To investigate the function of dopaminergic neurons in planarians, we identified the TH gene and analyzed its function by the RNA interference method. When intact planarians were treated with methamphetamine (DA releaser), they performed screw-like and C-like hyperkinesia. Conversely, when TH knockdown planarians were treated with methamphetamine, this behavioral change was suppressed. According to HPLC analysis, DA concentration in TH knockdown planarians decreased significantly compared to that of control animals. These results suggest that DA is synthesized by TH and modulates behavioral movement in planarians. We also observed the regeneration processes of dopaminergic neurons in planarians. From these results, we elucidated both evolution of dopaminergic systems in the animal kingdom and the mechanisms of dopaminergic neuronal regeneration.
  • Kaneyasu Nishimura, Yoshihisa Kitamura, Takeshi Inoue, Yoshihiko Umesono, Masatoshi Inden, Kanji Yoshimoto, Kiyokazu Agata, Takashi Taniguchi
    ZOOLOGICAL SCIENCE 21(12) 1314-1314 2004年12月  査読有り
  • T Inoue, H Kumamoto, K Okamoto, Y Umesono, M Sakai, AS Alvarado, K Agata
    ZOOLOGICAL SCIENCE 21(3) 275-283 2004年3月  査読有り
    When exposed to light, planarians display a distinctive light avoidance behavior known as negative phototaxis. Such behavior is temporarily suppressed when animals are decapitated, and it is restored once the animals regenerate their heads. Head regeneration and the simple but reproducible phototactic response of planarians provides an opportunity to study the association between neuronal differentiation and the establishment of behavior in a simple, experimentally tractable metazoan. We have devised a phototaxis assay system to analyze light response recovery during head regeneration and determined that light evasion is markedly re-established 5 days after amputation. Immunohistological and in situ hybridization studies indicate that the photoreceptors and optic nerve connections to the brain begin by the fourth day of cephalic regeneration. To experimentally manipulate the light response recovery, we performed gene knockdown analysis using RNA interference (RNAi) on two genes (1020HH and eye53) previously reported to be expressed at 5 days after amputation and in the dorso-medial region of the brain (where the optic nerves project). Although RNAi failed to produce morphological defects in either the brain or the visual neurons, the recovery of the phototactic response normally observed in 5-day regenerates was significantly suppressed. The data suggest that 1020HH and eye53 may be involved in the functional recovery and maintenance of the visual system, and that the phototaxis assay presented here can be used to reliably quantify the negative phototactic behavior of planarians.
  • 梅園 良彦, 小林 千余子, 井上 武, 武智 克彰, 石澤 和也, 阿形 清和
    日本発生生物学会大会講演要旨集 36回 45-45 2003年6月  
  • Yoshihiko Umesono, Yasushi Hiromi, Yoshiki Hotta
    Development 129(10) 2391-2399 2002年  査読有り
    During Drosophila neurogenesis, glial differentiation depends on the expression of glial cells missing (gcm). Understanding how glial fate is achieved thus requires knowledge of the temporal and spatial control mechanisms directing gcm expression. A recent report showed that in the adult bristle lineage, gcm expression is negatively regulated by Notch signaling (Van De Bor, V. and Giangrande, A. (2001). Development 128, 1381-1390). Here we show that the effect of Notch activation on gliogenesis is context-dependent. In the dorsal bipolar dendritic (dbd) sensory lineage in the embryonic peripheral nervous system (PNS), asymmetric cell division of the dbd precursor produces a neuron and a glial cell, where gcm expression is activated in the glial daughter. Within the dbd lineage, Notch is specifically activated in one of the daughter cells and is required for gcm expression and a glial fate. Thus Notch activity has opposite consequences on gcm expression in two PNS lineages. Ectopic Notch activation can direct gliogenesis in a subset of embryonic PNS lineages, suggesting that Notch-dependent gliogenesis is supported in certain developmental contexts. We present evidence that POU-domain protein Nubbin/PDM-1 is one of the factors that provide such context.
  • M Kobayashi, S Takezawa, K Hara, RT Yu, Y Umesono, K Agata, M Taniwaki, K Yasuda, K Umesono
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 96(9) 4814-4819 1999年4月  査読有り
    Nuclear receptors comprise a large and expanding family of transcription factors involved in diverse aspects of animal physiology and development, the functions of which can be modulated in a spatial and temporal manner by access to small lipophilic ligands and/or the specificity of their own localized expression. Here we report the identification of a human nuclear receptor that reveals a unique proximal box (CNGCSG) in the DNA-binding domain. The conservation of this feature in its nematode counterpart suggests the requirement for this type of P box in the genetic cascades mediated by nuclear receptors in a wide variety of animal species. The expression of this receptor, PNR (photoreceptor-specific nuclear receptor), appears strongly restricted in the retina, exclusively in photoreceptor cells. In human cell lines, PNR expression was observed in Y79 retinoblastoma along with other photoreceptor marker genes such as CRX, Among vertebrate receptors, PNR shares structural kinship with an orphan receptor TLX, and despite distinct differences in the DNA binding domain, PNR is able to recognize a subset of TLX target sequences in vitro, Analyses of the human PNR gene revealed its chromosomal position as 15q24, a site that has recently been reported as a susceptible region for retinal degeneration. These data support a role for PNR in the regulation of signalling pathways intrinsic to the photoreceptor cell function.
  • N Shibata, Y Umesono, H Orii, T Sakurai, K Watanabe, K Agata
    DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY 206(1) 73-87 1999年2月  査読有り
    Planarians are known for their strong regenerative ability. This ability has been considered to reside in the totipotent somatic stem cell called the "neoblast." Neoblasts contain a unique cytoplasmic structure called the "chromatoid body," which has similar characteristics to the germline granules of germline cells of other animals. The chromatoid bodies decrease in number and size during cytodifferentiation and disappear in completely differentiated cells during regeneration. However, germ cells maintain the chromatoid body during their differentiation from neoblasts. These observations suggest that the chromatoid body is concerned with the totipotency of cells. To understand the molecular nature of the chromatoid body in the neoblast, we focused on vasa (vas)-related genes, since VAS and VAS-related proteins are known to be components of the germline granules in Drosophila and Caenorhabditis elegans. By PCR, two vas-related genes (Dugesia japonica vasa-like gene, DjvlgA and DjvlgB) were isolated, and they were shown to be expressed in germ cells. Interestingly, DjvlgA was also expressed in a number of somatic cells in the mesenchymal space. In regenerating planarians, accumulation of DivlgA-expressing cells was observed in both the blastema and the blastema-proximal region. In X-ray-irradiated planarians, which had lost regenerative capacity, the number of DjvlgA-expressing cells decreased drastically. These results suggest that the product of DivlgA may be a component of the chromatoid body and may be involved in the totipotency of the neoblast. (C) 1999 Academic Press.
  • K Agata, Y Soejima, K Kato, C Kobayashi, Y Umesono, K Watanabe
    ZOOLOGICAL SCIENCE 15(3) 433-440 1998年6月  査読有り
    Planarians are considered to be among the most primitive animals which developed the central nervous system (CNS). To understand the origin and evolution of the CNS, we have isolated a neural marker gene from a planarian, Dugesia japonica, and analyzed the structure of the planarian CNS by in situ hybridization. The planarian CNS is located on the ventral side of the body, and composed of a mass of cephalic ganglions in the head region and a pair of ventral nerve cords (VNC). Cephalic ganglions cluster independently from VNC, are more dorsal than VNC, and form an inverted U-shaped brain-like structure with nine branches on each outer side. Two eyes are located on the dorsal side of the 3(rd) branch and visual axons form optic chiasma on the dorsal-inside region of the inverted U-shaped brain. The 6(th)-9(th) branches cluster more closely and form auricles on the surface which may function as the sensory organ of taste. We found that the gross structure of the planarian CNS along the anterior-posterior (A-P) axis is strikingly similar to the distribution pattern of the "primary" neurons of vertebrate embryos which differentiate at the neural plate stage to provide a fundamental nervous system, although the vertebrate CNS is located on the dorsal side. These data suggest that the basic plan for the CNS development along the A-P axis might have been acquired at an early stage of evolution before conversion of the location of the CNS from the ventral to the dorsal side.
  • Y Umesono, K Watanabe, K Agata
    DEVELOPMENT GROWTH & DIFFERENTIATION 39(6) 723-727 1997年12月  査読有り
    To analyze the organization of planarian brain, a homolog of the homeobox-containing gene Orthopedia (Otp) from planarian, Djotp, was isolated. The homeodomain of Djotp differs from mouse Otp by only two amino acids. This conservation extends to include a 12 amino acid motif downstream of the homeodomain. Whole mount in situ hybridization studies indicated that Djotp is specifically expressed in the branch structures of the normal planarian adult brain. During regeneration, Djotp is expressed in the presumptive branch region prior to branch formation. These observations implicate a role for Djotp in establishing and maintaining the identity of the planarian brain branch region. The results suggest that recruitment of OtP for its role in brain pattern formation occurred very early in evolution.
  • Yuji Kageyama, Tetsu Kinoshita, Yoshihiko Umesono, Masatsugu Hatakeyama, Kugao Oishi
    Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 24(6) 599-605 1994年6月  査読有り
    Athalia rosae (Hymenoptera) was previously shown to have two vitellins (L-Vn and S-Vn) and the two corresponding vitellogenins (L-Vg and S-Vg). A cDNA expression library was constructed from poly(A)+ RNA prepared from adult female fat body cells, and was screened for the vitellogenins by using antisera against the L- and S-Vn, respectively. Examinations of cloned cDNAs show that the vitellogenin gene is transcribed as a single unit, with the 5′-terminal site coding for the S-Vg and the 3′-terminal site for the L-Vg. Nucleotide sequence at the 5′-end suggests the presence of a 16 amino acid-long signal peptide. Deduced amino acid sequence following the signal peptide shows a complete match with up to the 28 N-terminal amino acid sequence determined on S-Vn. The S-L Vg boundary with deduced amino acid sequence matching with 6 N-terminal amino acid sequence determined on L-Vn is also detected. Northern blot hybridization analysis shows that the vitellogenin gene is expressed in the female fat body as a single 6.5 kb mRNA but not in the ovary, and not in the male fat body. Western blot analysis detects a large precursor polypeptide, reacting with the anti-L-Vn and S-Vn antisera, in the adult female fat body. © 1994.

MISC

 62
  • Susanna Fraguas, Yoshihiko Umesono, Kiyokazu Agata, Francesc Cebrià
    Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.) 1487 303-315 2017年  
    Planarians are an ideal model in which to study stem cell-based regeneration. After amputation, planarian pluripotent stem cells surrounding the wound proliferate to produce the regenerative blastema, in which they differentiate into the missing tissues and structures. Recent independent studies in planarians have shown that Smed-egfr-3, a gene encoding a homologue of epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptors, and DjerkA, which encodes an extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), may control cell differentiation and blastema growth. However, because these studies were carried in two different planarian species, the relationship between these two genes remains unclear. We have optimized anti-pERK immunostaining in Schmidtea mediterranea using the original protocol developed in Dugesia japonica. Both protocols are reported here as most laboratories worldwide work with one of these two species. Using this protocol we have determined that Smed-egfr-3 appears to be necessary for pERK activation during planarian regeneration.
  • 柳原由実, 中川晴香, 前澤孝信, 梅園良彦, 阿形清和, 小林一也
    日本動物学会大会予稿集 85th 2014年  
  • 細田和孝, 阿形清和, 梅園良彦
    日本動物学会大会予稿集 85th 2014年  
  • 西村理, 細田和孝, 川口恵里, 矢澤重信, 矢澤重信, 林哲太郎, 林哲太郎, 井上武, 梅園良彦, 梅園良彦, 阿形清和
    日本分子生物学会年会プログラム・要旨集(Web) 37th 2014年  
  • 西村唯, 川口恵里, 矢澤重信, 西村理, 井上武, 阿形清和, 梅園良彦
    日本動物学会大会予稿集 84th 115 2013年8月12日  

書籍等出版物

 1

共同研究・競争的資金等の研究課題

 4