Masatoshi Takeichi
Dr. Masatoshi Takeichi is director of the RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology
in Kobe, Japan as well as director of the Cell Adhesion and Tissue Patterning
research group at the same institute. He completed the B. Sc. and M. S. programs
in biology at Nagoya University before receiving a doctorate in biophysics from
Kyoto University in 1973. After attaining his Ph.D., Dr. Takeichi took a research
fellowship at the Carnegie Institute Department of Embryology under Dr. Richard
Pagano. He then returned to Kyoto University, attaining a full professorship in
the Department of Biophysics (1986-1999), before becoming professor in the Department
of Cell and Developmental Biology in the Graduate School of Biostudies at the
same university. He assumed his current positions at the CDB in 2000. Dr. Takeichi
is best known for his discovery of cadherins, which are fundamental in the mechanisms
of cell-cell adhesion. He was the first to recognize that intercellular adhesion
involves two distinct mechanisms – calcium-dependent and calcium-independent –
and to identify the molecular bases for each. He named the molecule responsible
for calcium-dependent adhesion 'cadherin,' and went on to identify a group of
related molecules, now known as the cadherin family. These molecules are differentially
expressed according to tissue type and developmental stage, and function by allowing
cells with compatible cadherins to recognize and bind to each other. His recent
work focuses on the role of cadherins in synapse and neural network formation,
as well as cadherin-mediated controls of morphogenetic cell behavior.
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