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Yoshitaka Nagahama

National Institute for Basic Biology

Publishes on Reproductive biology and impacts on aquatic species, Genetic and Clinical Aspects of Sex Determination and Chromosomal Abnormalities, Aquaculture Nutrition and Growth. 601 papers and 33.5k citations.

601Publications
33.5kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Regulation of oocyte maturation in fish
Yoshitaka Nagahama, Masakane Yamashita|Development Growth & Differentiation|2008
Cited by 874

A period of oocyte growth is followed by a process called oocyte maturation (the resumption of meiosis) which occurs prior to ovulation and is a prerequisite for successful fertilization. Our studies using fish models have revealed that oocyte maturation is a three-step induction process involving gonadotropin (LH), maturation-inducing hormone (MIH), and maturation-promoting factor (MPF). LH acts on the ovarian follicle layer to produce MIH (17alpha, 20beta-dihydroxy-4-pregnen-3-one, 17alpha, 20beta-DP, in most fishes). The interaction of ovarian thecal and granulosa cell layers (two-cell type model), is required for the synthesis of 17alpha,20beta-DP. The dramatic increase in the capacity of postvitellogenic follicles to produce 17alpha,20beta-DP in response to LH is correlated with decreases in P450c17 (P450c17-I) and P450 aromatase (oP450arom) mRNA and increases in the novel form of P450c17 (P450c17-II) and 20beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (20beta-HSD) mRNA. Transcription factors such as Ad4BP/SF-1, Foxl2, and CREB may be involved in the regulation of expression of these steroidogenic enzymes. A distinct family of G-protein-coupled membrane-bound MIH receptors has been shown to mediate non-genomic actions of 17alpha, 20beta-DP. The MIH signal induces the de novo synthesis of cyclin B from the stored mRNA, which activates a preexisting 35 kDa cdc2 kinase via phosphorylation of its threonine 161 by cyclin-dependent kinase activating kinase, thus producing the 34 kDa active cdc2 (active MPF). Upon egg activation, MPF is inactivated by degradation of cyclin B. This process is initiated by the 26S proteasome through the first cut in its NH(2) terminus at lysine 57.

Endocrine regulation of gametogenesis in fish
Yoshitaka Nagahama|The International Journal of Developmental Biology|1994
Cited by 750Open Access

The pituitary-gonadal axis plays an important role in regulating gametogenesis in vertebrates. In most cases, gonadotropins act through the biosynthesis of gonadal steroid hormones which in turn mediate various stages of gametogenesis. A series of studies in our laboratory using several species of teleost fishes as experimental animals has provided new information about the endocrine regulation of gametogenesis, including oocyte growth, oocyte maturation, spermatogenesis and sperm maturation. This article briefly reviews our findings on the identification of steroidal mediators involved in each process of gametogenesis, and the sites and mechanisms of action of the mediators. These observations collectively demonstrate the appropriateness of using teleost fishes as valid models for examining hormonal influences on gametogenesis. Such models could also have applications and validity for vertebrates in general.