Publications by authors named "Tomomi Hirosaki"

Background: Eosinophils are multifunctional granulocytes capable of releasing various cytokines, chemokines, and lipid mediators. We previously reported dysregulated fatty acid metabolism in peripheral blood-derived eosinophils from patients with severe asthma. However, functional characteristics of eosinophils present in allergic inflammatory tissues remain largely uncharacterized.

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Matriptase/MT-SP1, a type II membrane serine protease widely expressed in normal epithelial cells and human carcinoma cells, is thought to be involved in cancer progression. To clarify this possibility, we overexpressed exogenous matriptase in the human stomach cancer cell line AZ521. In vitro, the matriptase transfectant (Mat-AZ521) and the control transfectant (Mock-AZ521) showed a similar growth rate, although the saturation cell density was significantly higher with the Mat-AZ521.

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The membrane-bound serine proteinase matriptase, which is often released from the plasma membrane of epithelial and carcinoma cells, has been implicated to play important roles in both physiological and pathological conditions. However, the regulatory mechanism of its activity is poorly understood. In the present study, we examined expression and activation state of soluble matriptase in 24 human cancer cell lines.

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The basement membrane protein laminin-5 (LN5; alpha3beta3gamma2) undergoes specific proteolytic processing of the 190-kDa alpha3 chain to the 160-kDa form after the secretion, releasing its COOH-terminal, LG4-5 domain. To clarify the biological significance of this processing, we tried to express a recombinant precursor LN5 with a 190-kDa alpha3 chain (pre-LN5), in which the cleavage sequence Gln-Asp was changed to Ala-Ala by point mutation. When the wild-type and mutated LN5 heterotrimers were expressed in HEK293 cells, the wild-type alpha3 chain was completely cleaved, whereas the mutated alpha3 chain was partially cleaved at the same cleavage site (Ala-Ala).

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The basement membrane protein laminin-5 promotes cell adhesion and migration. The carboxyl-terminal G3 domain in the alpha3 chain is essential for the unique activity of laminin-5. To investigate the function of the G3 domain, we prepared various recombinant laminin-5 forms with a partially deleted or mutated G3 domain.

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Laminin-6 (LN6) and laminin-5 (LN5), which share the common integrin-binding domain in the laminin alpha3 chain, are thought to cooperatively regulate cellular functions, but the former has poorly been characterized. Human fibrosarcoma HT1080 cells expressing an exogenous alpha3 chain were found to secrete LN6 with the full-length alpha3 chain and a smaller amount of its processed form lacking the carboxyl-terminal G4-5 domain, besides mature LN5 without G4-5 (mat-LN5). We prepared the unprocessed LN6 and mat-LN5, as well as LN6 mutants without G4-5 (LN6DeltaG4-5) or G5 (LN6DeltaG5).

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Laminin-5, a heterotrimer of laminin alpha3, beta3, and gamma2 chains, is an essential component of various epithelial basement membranes, and it strongly promotes cellular adhesion and motility in vitro. In this study, we established an efficient expression system of human recombinant laminin-5 (rLN5), in which full-length cDNAs encoding the human laminin alpha3, beta3, and gamma2 chains were introduced into the human embryonic kidney cell line HEK293. rLN5 was purified from the conditioned medium of the HEK293 transfectant (LN5-HEK) by immuno-affinity chromatography in a yield of 1 mg protein/liter, about 10 times higher than that of a natural LN5 from human gastric cancer cells.

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Laminin-5 (LN5), which consists of laminin alpha3, beta3 and gamma2 chains, is a laminin isoform produced by various kinds of normal epithelial cells and tumor cells. Strong activity of LN5 in adhesion, migration and scattering of cells in vitro and its frequent detection in human tumor tissues have suggested a possible role of LN5 in the malignant growth of tumor cells. To examine whether LN5 affects the malignant potential of tumor cells, we prepared human fibrosarcoma HT1080 cell lines producing LN5 by transfecting a cDNA of laminin alpha3 chain into the parent cell line, which constitutively expressed the laminin beta3 and gamma2 chains.

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