12 results on '"Mariko Miki"'
Search Results
2. Glycinergic transmission and postsynaptic activation of CaMKII are required for glycine receptor clusteringin vivo
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Koichi Kawakami, Mariko Miki, Hiromi Hirata, Iori Yamanaka, Yoichi Oda, and Kazuhide Asakawa
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Calcium Channels, L-Type ,Glycine ,Biology ,Neurotransmission ,Synaptic Transmission ,Postsynapse ,Receptors, Glycine ,Mauthner cell ,Neurotransmitter receptor ,Postsynaptic potential ,Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Glycine receptor ,Zebrafish ,Neurons ,Glycine receptor clustering ,Strychnine ,Cell Biology ,Calcium Channel Blockers ,Rhombencephalon ,Endocrinology ,Synapses ,Calcium-Calmodulin-Dependent Protein Kinase Type 2 ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Synaptic transmission-dependent regulation of neurotransmitter receptor accumulation at postsynaptic sites underlies the formation, maintenance and maturation of synaptic function. Previous in vitro studies showed that glycine receptor (GlyR) clustering requires synaptic inputs. However, in vivo GlyR regulation by synaptic transmission is not fully understood. Here, we established a model system using developing zebrafish, in which GlyRs are expressed in Mauthner cells (M-cells), a pair of giant, reticulospinal, hindbrain neurons, thereby enabling analysis of GlyR clusters over time in identifiable cells. Bath application of a glycinergic blocker, strychnine, to developing zebrafish prevented postsynaptic GlyR cluster formation in the M-cells. After strychnine removal, the GlyR clusters appeared in the M-cells. At a later stage, glycinergic transmission blockade impaired maintenance of GlyR clusters. We also found that pharmacological blockade of either L-type Ca(2+) channels or calcium-/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) disturbed GlyR clustering. In addition, the M-cell-specific CaMKII inactivation using the Gal4-UAS system significantly impaired GlyR clustering in the M-cells. Thus, the formation and maintenance of GlyR clusters in the M-cells in the developing animals are regulated in a synaptic transmission-dependent manner, and CaMKII activation at the postsynapse is essential for GlyR clustering. This is the first demonstration of synaptic transmission-dependent modulation of synaptic GlyRs in vivo.
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- 2013
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3. Interleukin-19 contributes as a protective factor in experimental Th2-mediated colitis
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Takeshi Izawa, Naoki Azuma, Midori Teramoto, Yasu-Taka Azuma, Mitsuru Kuwamura, Yukiko Matsuo, Hidemitsu Nakajima, Nobuyuki Kuramoto, Mariko Miki, Tadayoshi Takeuchi, Yasuyuki Fujimoto, and Kazuhiro Nishiyama
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0301 basic medicine ,anti-inflammatory cytokine ,Time Factors ,Colon ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Inflammation ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Immune system ,Th2 Cells ,inflammatory bowel disease ,medicine ,Animals ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Colitis ,Cells, Cultured ,Pharmacology ,Mice, Knockout ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,business.industry ,Interleukins ,Oxazolone ,General Medicine ,Eosinophil ,Protective Factors ,medicine.disease ,Interleukin-10 ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Disease Models, Animal ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cytokine ,Phenotype ,Knockout mouse ,Immunology ,Interleukin 19 ,Lymph Nodes ,medicine.symptom ,Inflammation Mediators ,business ,IL-19 - Abstract
application/pdf, Article, Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's Archives of Pharmacology. 2017, 390 (3), p.261-268
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- 2016
4. Wave Pattern in Cloaking Phenomenon Around a Body Surrounded by Multiple Vertical Circular Cylinders
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Takahito Iida, Mariko Miki, and Masashi Kashiwagi
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Physics ,Mechanical Engineering ,Hydrodynamic forces ,Cloaking ,020101 civil engineering ,Ocean Engineering ,Geometry ,02 engineering and technology ,Mechanics ,01 natural sciences ,010305 fluids & plasmas ,0201 civil engineering ,Surface wave ,Hull ,0103 physical sciences ,Finite set ,Central cylinder ,Energy (signal processing) ,Civil and Structural Engineering - Abstract
For a special arrangement of multiple floating bodies, it is known that the wave drift force acting on a body surrounded by a finite number of bodies becomes zero at a certain frequency due to hydrodynamic interactions; which is related to ‘cloaking’ phenomenon. In order to study this phenomenon in more detail and its application to engineering problems, we have developed an accurate computer code and an optimization scheme using a genetic algorithm and presented some preliminary results. In the present paper, study is made on the wave pattern in the cloaking phenomenon and its relationship with the wave drift force. Specifically, we conducted the measurement of not only hydrodynamic forces but also the wave pattern around vertical circular cylinders of finite draft arranged in a cloaking configuration. Comparison is made between numerical and measured results, and it is shown that when the geometrical parameters of surrounding circular cylinders are optimized such that the total scattered-wave energy becomes minimal, the wave drift force reduces to nearly equal to zero not only on the central cylinder but also outer surrounding cylinders individually.
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- 2016
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5. Rhythmic arm swing enhances long latency facilitatory effect of transcranial magnetic stimulation on soleus motoneuron pool excitability
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Kyohei Takeno, Mikako Yasuoka, Koji Akizaki, Ai Ashida, Tomomi Okada, Koichi Hiraoka, Mariko Miki, and Suyong Shin
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Male ,Physiology ,Movement ,medicine.medical_treatment ,H-Reflex ,Young Adult ,Rhythm ,medicine ,Humans ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Motor Neurons ,Soleus muscle ,Stance phase ,business.industry ,musculoskeletal, neural, and ocular physiology ,Motor Cortex ,musculoskeletal system ,Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation ,Electric Stimulation ,Sensory Systems ,Long latency ,body regions ,Transcranial magnetic stimulation ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Arm swing ,Arm ,Female ,H-reflex ,business ,tissues ,human activities ,Neuroscience ,Motor cortex - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to investigate whether rhythmic arm swing modulates the long latency effect of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) on soleus motoneuron pool excitability. Ten healthy humans rhythmically swung the left arm back and forth in a sitting position. The soleus H-reflex was evoked when the arm was in the backward swing phase. Conditioning TMS was delivered over the motor cortex 8 ms before the soleus H-reflex was evoked. The soleus H-reflex amplitude in both legs was depressed by the rhythmic arm swing. In contrast, rhythmic arm swing enhanced the facilitatory effect of conditioning TMS over the motor cortex contralateral to the arm swing side on the soleus H-reflex ipsilateral to the arm swing side. This finding indicates that rhythmic arm swing enhances some polysynaptic facilitatory pathways from the motor cortex contralateral to the arm swing side to the soleus motoneuron pool ipsilateral to the arm swing side.
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- 2011
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6. Optically hiding of tabletop information with polarized complementary image projection
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Kosuke Sato, Daisuke Iwai, and Mariko Miki
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Computer science ,business.industry ,ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION ,Complementary colors ,GeneralLiterature_MISCELLANEOUS ,law.invention ,Optical phenomena ,Projector ,law ,Information hiding ,Computer graphics (images) ,Computer vision ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,ComputingMethodologies_COMPUTERGRAPHICS - Abstract
We propose the concept and implementation of a graphical information hiding technique for interactive tabletops where users can view the information by simply casting real shadows. We placed three projectors (one in the rear and two in the front) in such a way that the rear one projects graphical information onto a tabletop surface, and the front ones project a complementary image, so that the combined image displayed on the surface becomes uniformly gray, thus hiding the information from the viewer. Users can view the hidden information by blocking the light from the front projector, revealing the complementary image that is being projected onto the occluder. We use the other front projector and polarization filters to make the complementary image projected onto the occluder also uniformly gray. Because the technique completely relies on optical phenomena, users can interact with the system without suffering from any false recognitions or delays.
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- 2011
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7. Malignant cell-specific gelatinase activity in human endometrial carcinoma
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Yoshihiro Tokugawa, M. Ono, Masahiko Takemura, Mariko Miki, Tadashi Kimura, Fumifaka Saji, O. Tanizawa, and Chihiro Azuma
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Adult ,Cancer Research ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adenocarcinoma ,Biology ,Endometrium ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,Humans ,Gelatinase ,Zymography ,Aged ,Neoplasm Staging ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Endometrial cancer ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Molecular biology ,Pepsin A ,In vitro ,Enzyme assay ,Culture Media ,Endometrial Neoplasms ,Molecular Weight ,Microbial Collagenase ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Enzyme ,Oncology ,chemistry ,Gelatinases ,biology.protein ,Female - Abstract
BACKGROUND The protease activity leading to degradation of the extracellular matrix was compared between human endometrial cancer and normal uterine endometrium. METHODS Conditioned medium from tumor cells and normal endometrial cells was subjected to electrophoresis on sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel containing gelatin as a substrate. After electrophoresis, the gel was stained with Coomassie blue, and then the enzyme activity, expressed as the zone of dye clearing, was analyzed by densitometry. RESULTS Densitometric analysis showed that all the endometrial cancers expressed a very high molecular weight enzyme activity (Mr 220,000), which was not detected in medium from normal endometrial cells. The analysis also showed that in endometrial cancer the activity of a Mr 92,000 enzyme was always superior to that of a Mr 64,000 enzyme, which was in contrast to the situation for normal endometrium. CONCLUSIONS These results indicate that the expression of Mr 220,000 enzyme activity and the higher activity of the Mr 92,000 enzyme than the Mr 64,000 enzyme are involved in the malignant phenotype of native endometrial cancer.
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- 1992
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8. Estimation by an electrophysiological method of the expression of oxytocin receptor mRNA in human myometrium during pregnancy
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Tadashi Kimura, Osamu Tanizawa, M. Ono, Masahiko Takemura, Yoshihiro Tokugawa, Chihiro Azuma, Fumitaka Saji, Kensaku Mori, and Mariko Miki
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endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Vasopressin ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Receptor expression ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Uterus ,Gene Expression ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Oxytocin Antagonist ,Xenopus laevis ,Endocrinology ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,RNA, Messenger ,Molecular Biology ,Microinjection ,Receptors, Angiotensin ,Electric Conductivity ,Myometrium ,Cell Biology ,Oxytocin receptor ,Electrophysiology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oxytocin ,Receptors, Oxytocin ,Oocytes ,Molecular Medicine ,Biological Assay ,Female ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,medicine.drug - Abstract
In order to evaluate the changes in uterine oxytocin receptor-specific mRNA during pregnancy, receptor expression in Xenopus oocytes are examined electrophysiologically following microinjection of mRNA from human uterus. In voltage-clamped oocytes injected with term myometrial mRNA, oxytocin elicited an inward current response. The amplitude of the oxytocin-induced current increased with increasing dose of oxytocin, but no current was elicited following stimulation with vasopressin. The oxytocin-induced current was completely eliminated as a result of pretreatment with a specific oxytocin antagonist. 21 of 27 oocytes injected with term myometrial mRNA showed a large amplitude (77.0 +/- 16.1 nA) reaction to oxytocin. In comparison, only 3 of 13 oocytes injected with early gestational myometrial mRNA exhibited a small amplitude (4.6 +/- 1.4 nA) reaction to oxytocin. No oxytocin response was observed in oocytes injected with non-pregnant myometrial mRNA. These results indicate that the striking increment in oxytocin sensitivity in term uterus depends on the increase in mRNA encoding oxytocin receptors.
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- 1992
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9. The gene expressions of macrophage colony-stimulating factor (MCSF) and MCSF receptor in the human myometrium during pregnancy: Regulation by sex steroid hormones
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Masahiko Takemura, Tadashi Kimura, Chihiro Azuma, Mariko Miki, Osamu Tanizawa, Yoshihiro Tokugawa, Fumitaka Saji, and M. Ono
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Macrophage colony-stimulating factor ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Placenta ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Uterus ,Receptor, Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor ,Pregnancy Proteins ,Biology ,Proto-Oncogene Mas ,Biochemistry ,Endocrinology ,Corpus Luteum ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Northern blot ,Gonadal Steroid Hormones ,Molecular Biology ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Messenger RNA ,urogenital system ,Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor ,Myometrium ,Cell Biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Sex steroid ,embryonic structures ,Molecular Medicine ,Female ,Corpus luteum ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists - Abstract
We investigated the biological effect of sex-steroid hormones, secreted from the corpus luteum and placenta, on the induction of mRNA encoding macrophage colony-stimulating factor (MCSF) and c-fms proto-oncogene (MCSF receptor) in the human uterine myometrium. Poly(A)+RNA was extracted from the myometrium of pregnant and non-pregnant uterine myometrium and then Northern blot analysis was performed on poly(A)+RNA. The myometrium of non-pregnant women expressed neither mRNA of macrophage colony-stimulating factor (MCSF) nor any transcript related to the c-fms proto-oncogene. On the other hand the myometrium of pregnant women expressed MCSF mRNA (4.7 kb) and two kinds of transcript related to the c-fms proto-oncogene (3.9 and 1.3 kb). The mRNAs of both MCSF and c-fms proto-oncogene were induced in the uterine myometrium of non-pregnant women under pseudopregnant therapy of mestranol and norethindrone. These results indicate that sex steroid hormone secreted from the corpus luteum of pregnancy and/or placenta may be deeply involved in the hypertrophic change of uterus during pregnancy by inducing MCSF and MCSF receptor (c-fms proto-oncogene protein product) in the myometrium.
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- 1991
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10. 中原中也研究 : 愛児文也をめぐって
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Mariko, Miki
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- 1990
11. The biological effects of macrophage-colony-stimulating factor induced by progestin on growth and differentiation of endometrial adenocarcinoma cells
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Masahiko Takemura, O. Tanizawa, Chihiro Azuma, Mariko Miki, Tadashi Kimura, Yoshihio Tokugawa, Fumitaka Saji, and M. Ono
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Macrophage colony-stimulating factor ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,animal structures ,Cellular differentiation ,Receptor, Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor ,Biology ,Adenocarcinoma ,Paracrine signalling ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,Humans ,Northern blot ,RNA, Messenger ,Autocrine signalling ,Cell growth ,Endometrial cancer ,Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor ,Cell Differentiation ,Genes, fms ,medicine.disease ,Molecular biology ,Mifepristone ,Endocrinology ,Oncology ,Cell culture ,Uterine Neoplasms ,Female ,Progestins ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists - Abstract
Progestins have biological effects of regression and differentiation on human endometrial adenocarcinoma. We investigated the effects of progestin on the induction of macrophage-colony-stimulating factor (M-CSF) and its receptor messenger RNAs in the human endometrial adenocarcinoma cell line Ishikawa which has receptors for both estrogen and progesterone. Poly(A)+RNA extracted from Ishikawa cells cultured with or without synthetic progestin R5020 was subjected to Northern blot hybridization using M-CSF and c-fms cDNA probes. The expression of M-CSF mRNA in Ishikawa cells increased about 2.3 times following treatment with R5020 at 10(-7) M. Induction of M-CSF mRNA by R5020 was antagonized by anti-progestin RU486 in a dose-dependent manner. However, c-fms mRNA, coding the M-CSF receptor, was expressed constitutively in Ishikawa cells and its expression was not affected by hormonal treatment. We further examined the biological effects of M-CSF on endometrial cancer cells. Colony formation of Ishikawa cells in soft agar, which represents anchorage-independent cell growth, was inhibited by M-CSF treatment. On the other hand, accumulation of glycogen granules in cytoplasm detected by periodicacid-Schiff staining was observed in Ishikawa cells treated with M-CSF. These results indicate that M-CSF, whose gene expression was enhanced by progestin, suppressed growth and induced differentiation of endometrial adenocarcinoma cells. These effects of M-CSF on endometrial cancer cells are similar to those of progestins, so the effects of progestins on these cells are, at least in part, probably mediated by M-CSF in an autocrine or paracrine manner.
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- 1991
12. Functional expression of human myometrial endothelin receptors in Xenopus laevis oocytes
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Yoshihiro Tokugawa, Masahiko Takemura, Tadashi Kimura, Osamu Tanizawa, Fumitaka Saji, Chihiro Azuma, Mariko Miki, Kensaku Mori, and M. Ono
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Microinjections ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Xenopus ,Gene Expression ,Receptors, Cell Surface ,Membrane Potentials ,Xenopus laevis ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,RNA, Messenger ,Receptor ,Membrane potential ,Messenger RNA ,biology ,Receptors, Endothelin ,Electric Conductivity ,Myometrium ,RNA ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Oocyte ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oocytes ,Female ,Poly A ,Endothelin receptor - Abstract
We demonstrate the existence of functional endothelin receptors in human uterine myometrium using the Xenopus oocyte expression system. Fifty nanograms of poly(A) +RNA from myometrium was injected into Xenopus laevis oocytes and incubated for 70–80 h. The membrane potential of the oocyte was clamped at −60 mV and membrane current was measured during and after endothelin stimulation. Endothelin-1 elicited a large inward membrane current in the oocytes injected with poly(A) +RNA; endothelin-2 elicited a small current; while endothelin-3 did not induce any membrane current. These results indicate the existence of messenger RNA encoding functional endothelin-1 receptors in human uterine myometrium.
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