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Institution

Hokuriku University

EducationKanazawa, Japan
About: Hokuriku University is a education organization based out in Kanazawa, Japan. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Endothelial stem cell & Glycation. The organization has 1118 authors who have published 1951 publications receiving 43906 citations. The organization is also known as: Hokuriku Daigaku.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The structural basis for the specificity of inhibition of alkaloidal sugar mimics and their current and potential application to biomedical problems will be reviewed.
Abstract: Alkaloids mimicking the structures of monosaccharides are now believed to be widespread in plants and microorganisms, and these sugar mimics inhibit glycosidases because of a structural resemblance to the sugar moiety of the natural substrate. Naturally occurring sugar mimics with a nitrogen in the ring are classified into five structural classes: polyhydroxylated piperidines, pyrrolidines, indolizidines, pyrrolizidines and nortropanes. Glycosidases are involved in a wide range of important biological processes, such as intestinal digestion, post-translational processing of glycoproteins and the lysosomal catabolism of glycoconjugates. The realization that alkaloidal sugar mimics might have enormous therapeutic potential in many diseases such as viral infection, cancer and diabetes has led to increasing interest and demand for these compounds. Most of these effects can be shown to result from the direct or indirect inhibition of glycosidases. The glycosphingolipid (GSL) storage diseases are relatively rare hereditary disorders that are severe in nature and frequently fatal. Possible strategies for the treatment of these lysosomal storage diseases include enzyme replacement therapy, gene therapy and substrate deprivation. Recently, quite a new therapy for lysosomal storage diseases has been reported, namely a ‘chemical chaperone therapy’ for Fabry disease. In this report, the structural basis for the specificity of inhibition of alkaloidal sugar mimics and their current and potential application to biomedical problems will be reviewed.

881 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The AGE induction of extracellular-signal-related kinase phosphorylation and vascular endothelial growth factor in EC and of the growth and cord-like structure formation of EC was abolished completely by C-truncated RAGE, indicating that this endogenous secretory receptor (endogenous secretory RAGE) is cytoprotective against AGE.
Abstract: The binding of advanced glycation end-products (AGE) to the receptor for AGE (RAGE) is known to deteriorate various cell functions and is implicated in the pathogenesis of diabetic vascular complications. In the present study, we show that the cellular constituents of small vessels, endothelial cells (EC) and pericytes express novel splice variants of RAGE mRNA coding for the isoforms that lack the N-terminal V-type immunoglobulin-like domain (N-truncated) or the C-terminal transmembrane domain (C-truncated), as well as the known full-length mRNA. The ratio of the expression of the three variants was different between EC and pericytes; the content of the C-truncated form was highest in EC, whereas the full-length form was the most abundant in pericytes. Transfection experiments with COS-7 cells demonstrated that those variant mRNAs were translated into proteins as deduced; C-truncated RAGE was efficiently secreted into the culture media, and N-truncated RAGE was located mainly on the plasma membrane. The three isoforms were also detected in primary cultured human EC and pericytes. Further, full-length and C-truncated forms of RAGE bound to an AGE-conjugated column, whereas N-truncated RAGE did not. The AGE induction of extracellular-signal-related kinase phosphorylation and vascular endothelial growth factor in EC and of the growth and cord-like structure formation of EC was abolished completely by C-truncated RAGE, indicating that this endogenous secretory receptor (endogenous secretory RAGE) is cytoprotective against AGE. The results may contribute to our understanding of the molecular basis for the diversity of cellular responses to AGE and for individual variations in the susceptibility to diabetic vascular complications.

688 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Naoki Asano1
TL;DR: The past and current applications of glycosidase inhibitors to agricultural and medical fields and the prospect for new therapeutic applications are reconsidered.
Abstract: About 40 years have passed since the classical glycosidase inhibitor nojirimycin was discovered from the cultured broth of the Streptomyces species. Since then, over 100 glycosidase inhibitors have been isolated from plants and microorganisms. Modifying or blocking biological processes by specific glycosidase inhibitors has revealed the vital functions of glycosidases in living systems. Because enzyme-catalyzed carbohydrate hydrolysis is a biologically widespread process, glycosidase inhibitors have many potential applications as agrochemicals and therapeutic agents. Glycosidases are involved in the biosynthesis of the oligosaccharide chains and quality control mechanisms in the endoplasmic reticulum of the N-linked glycoproteins. Inhibition of these glycosidases can have profound effects on quality control, maturation, transport, and secretion of glycoproteins and can alter cell-cell or cell-virus recognition processes. This principle is the basis for the potential use of glycosidase inhibitors in viral infection, cancer, and genetic disorders. In this review, the past and current applications of glycosidase inhibitors to agricultural and medical fields and the prospect for new therapeutic applications are reconsidered.

671 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Over one hundred polyhydroxylated alkaloids have been isolated from plants and micro-organisms, and only three of the natural products so far have been widely studied for therapeutic potential due largely to the limited commercial availability of the other compounds.

643 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: 1–deoxy–galactonojirimycin (DGJ), a potent competitive inhibitor of α–Gal A, effectively enhanced α-Gal A activity in Fabry lymphoblasts, when administrated at concentrations lower than that usually required for intracellular inhibition of the enzyme.
Abstract: Fabry disease is a disorder of glycosphingolipid metabolism caused by deficiency of lysosomal alpha-galactosidase A (alpha-Gal A), resulting in renal failure along with premature myocardial infarction and strokes. No effective treatment of this disorder is available at present. Studies of residual activities of mutant enzymes in many Fabry patients showed that some of them had kinetic properties similar to those for normal alpha-Gal A, but were significantly less stable, especially in conditions of neutral pH (refs. 3-5). The biosynthetic processing was delayed in cultured fibroblasts of a Fabry patient, and the mutant protein formed an aggregate in endoplasmic reticulum, indicating that the enzyme deficiency in some mutants was mainly caused by abortive exit from the endoplasmic reticulum, leading to excessive degradation of the enzyme. We report here that 1-deoxy-galactonojirimycin (DGJ), a potent competitive inhibitor of alpha-Gal A, effectively enhanced alpha-Gal A activity in Fabry lymphoblasts, when administrated at concentrations lower than that usually required for intracellular inhibition of the enzyme. DGJ seemed to accelerate transport and maturation of the mutant enzyme. Oral administration of DGJ to transgenic mice overexpressing a mutant alpha-Gal A substantially elevated the enzyme activity in some organs. We propose a new molecular therapeutic strategy for genetic metabolic diseases of administering competitive inhibitors as 'chemical chaperons' at sub-inhibitory intracellular concentrations.

600 citations


Authors

Showing all 1119 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Toshitaka Nabeshima8285628181
Kentaro Yamaguchi7479422177
Hiroshi Sato6827518775
Horace H. Loh6534215536
Masayoshi Takeuchi6427913651
Mark R. Wormald6417914686
Takashi Yoshida6332813680
Tsutomu Hatano6129913668
George W. J. Fleet6061515358
Yasuhiro Tezuka5831411862
Russell J. Molyneux5522411039
Haruki Yamada533108925
Naoki Asano521459298
Yukihiro Shoyama523629933
Masanobu Uchiyama513869251
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20222
202121
202018
201923
201831
201730