12 results on '"Takeshi Kanda"'
Search Results
2. Proximal-tubule molecular relay from early Protein diaphanous homolog 1 to late Rho-associated protein kinase 1 regulates kidney function in obesity-induced kidney damage
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Makiko, Ida-Naitoh, Hirobumi, Tokuyama, Koji, Futatsugi, Marie, Yasuda, Keika, Adachi, Takeshi, Kanda, Yoshiyuki, Tanabe, Shu, Wakino, and Hiroshi, Itoh
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Inflammation ,Kidney Tubules, Proximal ,Mice ,rho-Associated Kinases ,Nephrology ,Albuminuria ,Animals ,Humans ,Hypertrophy ,Obesity ,Cyclin-Dependent Kinases - Abstract
The small GTPase protein RhoA has two effectors, ROCK (Rho-associated protein kinase 1) and mDIA1 (protein diaphanous homolog 1), which cooperate reciprocally. However, temporal regulation of RhoA and its effectors in obesity-induced kidney damage remains unclear. Here, we investigated the role of RhoA activation in the proximal tubules at the early and late stages of obesity-induced kidney damage. In mice, a three-week high-fat-diet induced proximal tubule hypertrophy and damage without increased albuminuria, and RhoA/mDIA1 activation without ROCK activation. Conversely, a 12-week high-fat diet induced proximal tubule hypertrophy, proximal tubule damage, increased albuminuria, and RhoA/ROCK activation without mDIA1 elevation. Proximal tubule hypertrophy resulting from cell cycle arrest accompanied by downregulation of the multifunctional cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27Kip1 was elicited by RhoA activation. Mice overexpressing proximal tubule-specific and dominant-negative RHOA display amelioration of high-fat diet-induced kidney hypertrophy, cell cycle abnormalities, inflammation, and renal impairment. In human proximal tubule cells, mechanical stretch mimicking hypertrophy activated ROCK, which triggered inflammation. In human kidney samples from normal individuals with a body mass index of about 25, proximal tubule cell size correlated with body mass index, proximal tubule cell damages, and mDIA1 expression. Thus, RhoA activation in proximal tubules is critical for the initiation and progression of obesity-induced kidney damage. Hence, the switch in the downstream RhoA effector in proximal tubule represents a transition from normal to pathogenic kidney adaptation and to body weight gain, leading to obesity-induced kidney damage.
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- 2022
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3. Single pulse combustion test of high-frequency instability of rocket engine
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Ryoya Umeoka, Takeshi Kanda, and Yuuki Mishina
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Propellant ,020301 aerospace & aeronautics ,Jet (fluid) ,animal structures ,business.product_category ,Materials science ,integumentary system ,business.industry ,Aerospace Engineering ,Injection port ,02 engineering and technology ,Injector ,Mechanics ,Combustion ,01 natural sciences ,Instability ,law.invention ,0203 mechanical engineering ,Rocket ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,Rocket engine ,business ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics - Abstract
Combustion tests were conducted to investigate the high-frequency combustion instability of liquid-propellant rocket engines. An experimental apparatus was designed to examine the rapid and large pressure increase that occurs near the propellant injector, based on the mechanism of the off-design combustion model. The propellants were 2-propanol and gaseous oxygen. The propanol jet created a semi-enclosed base space near the injection port. Pressure in the semi-enclosed space due to combustion was 1.5–3 times higher than the pressure prior to combustion. The duration of the pressure increase ranged from 0.03 to 2 ms. The pressure increase and its duration agreed with the features of the high-frequency combustion instability of liquid-propellant rocket engines. The model temperatures affected the pressure increase and the duration of pressure change.
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- 2021
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4. β-hydroxybutyrate attenuates renal ischemia-reperfusion injury through its anti-pyroptotic effects
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Shu Wakino, Tomoaki Itoh, Ayumi Yoshifuji, Ayumi Matsui, Kiyotaka Uchiyama, Hiroshi Itoh, Takeshi Kanda, Takaya Tajima, and Hirobumi Tokuyama
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,030232 urology & nephrology ,Inflammation ,Epigenesis, Genetic ,Proinflammatory cytokine ,Histones ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Pyroptosis ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Infusions, Intravenous ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,TUNEL assay ,3-Hydroxybutyric Acid ,Renal ischemia ,Chemistry ,Forkhead Box Protein O3 ,Acetylation ,Hypoxia (medical) ,medicine.disease ,Disease Models, Animal ,Kidney Tubules ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Nephrology ,Apoptosis ,Reperfusion Injury ,medicine.symptom ,Reperfusion injury - Abstract
Ketone bodies including β-hydroxybutyrate (β-OHB) have been shown to protect against ischemic tissue injury when present at low concentrations. We evaluated the impact of β-OHB on renal ischemia/reperfusion injury (IRI). Mice were treated with a continuous infusion of β-OHB using an osmotic mini-pump before and after IRI. We also tested the effects of increasing endogenous serum β-OHB levels by fasting. Renal IRI was attenuated by β-OHB treatment compared to saline control, with similar results in the fasting condition. β-OHB treatment reduced the number of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end-labeling (TUNEL)-positive cells and increased expression of forkhead transcription factor O3 (FOXO3), an upstream regulator of pyroptosis. Although β-OHB treatment did not impact markers of apoptosis, it decreased the expression of caspase-1 and proinflammatory cytokines, indicating that β-OHB blocked pyroptosis. In a human proximal tubular cell line exposed to hypoxia and reoxygenation, β-OHB reduced cell death in a FOXO3-dependent fashion. Histone acetylation was decreased in kidneys exposed to IRI and in proximal tubular cells exposed to hypoxia and reoxygenation, and this effect was ameliorated by β-OHB through the inactivation of histone deacetylases. In vitro, β-OHB treatment restored histone acetylation at the FOXO3 promoter. Consistent with epigenetic molecular effects, the renoprotective effects of β-OHB were still observed when the continuous infusion was stopped at the time of IRI. Thus, β-OHB attenuates renal IRI through anti-pyroptotic effects, likely mediated by an epigenetic effect on FOXO3 expression.
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- 2019
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5. Promising techniques to illuminate neuromodulatory control of the cerebral cortex in sleeping and waking states
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Hiroki Muramoto, Kaoru Ohyama, Hiroshi Sekiya, Takeshi Kanda, and Nami Kitajima
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0301 basic medicine ,Neuroimaging ,Electroencephalography ,Non-rapid eye movement sleep ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cortex (anatomy) ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Wakefulness ,Neuroscience of sleep ,Cerebral Cortex ,Neurotransmitter Agents ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,General Neuroscience ,General Medicine ,Chemogenetics ,Sleep in non-human animals ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cerebral cortex ,Sleep ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Sleep, a common event in daily life, has clear benefits for brain function, but what goes on in the brain when we sleep remains unclear. Sleep was long regarded as a silent state of the brain because the brain seemingly lacks interaction with the surroundings during sleep. Since the discovery of electrical activities in the brain at rest, electrophysiological methods have revealed novel concepts in sleep research. During sleep, the brain generates oscillatory activities that represent characteristic states of sleep. In addition to electrophysiology, opto/chemogenetics and two-photon Ca2+ imaging methods have clarified that the sleep/wake states organized by neuronal and glial ensembles in the cerebral cortex are transitioned by neuromodulators. Even with these methods, however, it is extremely difficult to elucidate how and when neuromodulators spread, accumulate, and disappear in the extracellular space of the cortex. Thus, real-time monitoring of neuromodulator dynamics at high spatiotemporal resolution is required for further understanding of sleep. Toward direct detection of neuromodulator behavior during sleep and wakefulness, in this review, we discuss developing imaging techniques based on the activation of G-protein-coupled receptors that allow for visualization of neuromodulator dynamics.
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- 2017
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6. Neonatal Intensive Care Unit-Level Patent Ductus Arteriosus Treatment Rates and Outcomes in Infants Born Extremely Preterm
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Mikael Norman, Anne Synnes, Toshihiko Mori, Mitsuhiro Ito, David Kohelet, Hiroshi Matsumoto, Luis Monterrosa, Philipp Meyer, Akhil Deshpandey, Pernilla Thurn, Hiroaki Imamura, Edith Masse, Yuko Maruyama, Toru Ishioka, Satoshi Hattori, Ola Hafström, Wendy Yee, Koravangattu Sankaran, Rachel Kusche, Jehier Afifi, Zipora Strauss, Shmuel Zangen, Takeshi Kanda, Mie Toru Yamakawa, Takashi Yamagami, Sven M. Schulzke, Daniel Lubin, Gil Klinger, Mark Raymond Adams, Maria Katarina Söderberg, Fredrik Ingemarsson, Jennifer Toye, Yukihiro Takahashi, Junichi Shimizu, Michael Feldman, Vera Bernet, Marc Beltempo, Adele Harrison, Joseph Ting, Takeshi Morisawa, Kimberly Dow, Atsuko Taki, Meir Weisbrod, Prakesh S. Shah, Keith J. Barrington, Brian Reichman, Ulla Sankilampi, Benjamin Bar-Oz, Mary Seshia, John P. Micallef, Lev Bakhrakh, Hussam Omari, Liisa Lehtonen, Amit Mukerji, Kozue Shiomi, Bernhard Laubscher, Mikio Aoki, Hiroshi Wada, Cecil Ojah, Dror Mandel, Martin Stocker, Ingela Heimdahl, Toshio Oshima, Bo Selander, Rebecca Sherlock, Yousif Nijim, Ita Litmanovitz, Yoshihiro Sakemi, Yoshio Kusumoto, Henrik Petersson, Alona Bin-Nun, Christine Drolet, Shoko Kobayashi, Shinichiro Miyagawa, Kyong-Soon Lee, Urban Rosenqvist, Takasuke Amizuka, Jean-François Tolsa, Hiroshi Yoshida, Martine Claveau, Andreas Malzacher, Akihiro Takatera, Hiroshi Sumida, Agneta Golan, Jens Bäckström, Thomas Riedel, Rein Florell, Masahiko Kawai, Thomas Brune, Osamu Numata, Lars Åhman, Stellan Håkansson, Outi Tammela, Thomas Abrahamsson, Brigitte Lemyre, Michael Dunn, Clari Felszer, Shuko Tokuriki, Valerie Bertelle, Cecilia Hagman, Takahiko Saijo, Eli Heymann, Akira Shimazaki, Andreas Odlind, Sibasis Daspal, Kosuke Koyano, Roderick Canning, Kjell Helenius, Machiko Nakagawa, Yasushi Uchida, Tamaki Ohashi, Kanemasa Maki, Carlos Fajardo, Orlando da Silva, Matthias Roth, Romaine Arlettaz, Yasuyuki Tokunaga, Toshihiko Nakamura, Azusa Uozumi, Azusa Kobayashi, Avi Rothschild, Karin Nederman, Chuks Nwaesei, Anna Hedlund, Setsuko Nakata, Andreas Ohlin, Katarina Strand Brodd, Erik Normann, Amir Kugelman, Bengt Walde, Dirk Bassler, Tatyana Smolkin, Bruno Piedboeuf, Ermelinda Pelausa, Shoo K. Lee, Noriko Fujii, Orna Flidel-Rimon, Hala Makary, Jiri Kofron, Aijaz Farooqi, Taho Kim, Lars Navér, Khalid Aziz, Toru Huchimukai, Vered Fleisher-Sheffer, Tatsuya Yoda, Agneta Smedsaas Löfvenberg, Tetsuya Isayama, Noriaki Ono, Eva Albinsson, Ruben Alvaro, Kristbjorg Sveinsdottir, Anna Kasemo, Grégoire Kaczala, Junmin Yang, Kyone Ko, Zenon Cieslak, Timo Saarela, Sofia Arwehed, Bendicht Peter Wagner, Mami Maruyama, Eric S. Shinwell, Lars Alberg, Mitsushi Goshi, Zarin Kalapesi, Amish Jain, Moriharu Sugimoto, Mathias Nelle, Koji Nozaki, Kuniko Ieda, Shinichi Hosokawa, Smadar Even Tov-Friedman, Masashi Hayashi, Magnus Fredriksson, Lukas Hegi, Nizar Saad, Seiji Yoshimoto, Francis B. Mimouni, David Bader, Yae Michinomae, Johan Robinson, Erik Wejryd, Toshiyuki Ono, Sture Andersson, Satoshi Kusuda, Ayako Sasaki, Takahiro Arai, Koichi Iida, Masaru Shirai, Andrzej Kajetanowicz, Riccardo Pfister, Anders Palm, and Pfister, Riccardo
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Male ,Pediatrics ,Neonatal intensive care unit ,health care facilities, manpower, and services ,Indomethacin ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents ,Ibuprofen ,Ibuprofen/therapeutic use ,Cohort Studies ,0302 clinical medicine ,Japan ,Periventricular/epidemiology ,Neonatal ,Ductus arteriosus ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Israel ,Ductus Arteriosus, Patent ,ddc:618 ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal ,Composite outcomes ,3. Good health ,Japan/epidemiology ,Europe ,Intensive Care Units ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Echocardiography ,Infant, Extremely Premature ,Cohort ,cardiovascular system ,Necrotizing/epidemiology ,Gestation ,Female ,Cohort study ,Adult ,Non-Steroidal/therapeutic use ,Canada ,congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Leukomalacia, Periventricular ,Birth weight ,education ,Canada/epidemiology ,Extremely Premature ,Europe/epidemiology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Indomethacin/therapeutic use ,Enterocolitis, Necrotizing ,Intensive Care Units, Neonatal ,030225 pediatrics ,medicine ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,Israel/epidemiology ,Cerebral Intraventricular Hemorrhage ,Retrospective Studies ,Cerebral Intraventricular Hemorrhage/epidemiology ,Cardiovascular Surgical Procedures/statistics & numerical data ,Enterocolitis ,business.industry ,Cardiovascular Surgical Procedures ,Extremely preterm ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Ductus Arteriosus ,Newborn ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Linear Models ,Patent/diagnostic imaging/epidemiology/therapy ,business ,Leukomalacia - Abstract
To assess associations between neonatal intensive care unit (NICU)-level patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) treatment rates (pharmacologic or surgical) and neonatal outcomes.This cohort study included infants born at 24-28 weeks of gestation and birth weight1500 g in 2007-2015 in NICUs caring for ≥100 eligible infants in 6 countries. The ratio of observed/expected (O/E) PDA treatment rates was derived for each NICU by estimating the expected rate using a logistic regression model adjusted for potential confounders and network. The primary composite outcome was death or severe neurologic injury (grades III-IV intraventricular hemorrhage or periventricular leukomalacia). The associations between the NICU-level O/E PDA treatment ratio and neonatal outcomes were assessed using linear regression analyses including a quadratic effect (a square term) of the O/E PDA treatment ratio.From 139 NICUs, 39 096 infants were included. The overall PDA treatment rate was 45% in the cohort (13%-77% by NICU) and the O/E PDA treatment ratio ranged from 0.30 to 2.14. The relationship between the O/E PDA treatment ratio and primary composite outcome was U-shaped, with the nadir at a ratio of 1.13 and a significant quadratic effect (P.001). U-shaped relationships were also identified with death, severe neurologic injury, and necrotizing enterocolitis.Both low and high PDA treatment rates were associated with death or severe neurologic injury, whereas a moderate approach was associated with optimal outcomes.
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- 2020
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7. Insulin resistance in chronic kidney disease is ameliorated by spironolactone in rats and humans
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Koji Futatsugi, Kazuhiro Hasegawa, Keisuke Shinozuka, Ayumi Yoshifuji, Takeshi Kanda, Naoki Washida, Hiroshi Itoh, Kozi Hosoya, Koichi Hayashi, Keiko Fujimura, Hirobumi Tokuyama, Motoaki Komatsu, Hitoshi Minakuchi, and Shu Wakino
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adipose tissue ,Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases ,Spironolactone ,Arginine ,Nephrectomy ,Amidohydrolases ,Immediate-Early Proteins ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Impaired glucose tolerance ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mineralocorticoid receptor ,Insulin resistance ,Internal medicine ,Renin ,Animals ,Cytochrome P-450 CYP11B2 ,Homeostasis ,Humans ,Medicine ,Renal Insufficiency, Chronic ,Aldosterone ,Aged ,Mineralocorticoid Receptor Antagonists ,Cell Nucleus ,Glucose tolerance test ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Glucose Tolerance Test ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Rats ,Oxidative Stress ,Receptors, Mineralocorticoid ,Endocrinology ,Adipose Tissue ,chemistry ,Nephrology ,Female ,Insulin Resistance ,business ,Asymmetric dimethylarginine ,Glomerular Filtration Rate ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
In this study, we examined the association between chronic kidney disease (CKD) and insulin resistance. In a patient cohort with nondiabetic stages 2-5 CKD, estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) was negatively correlated and the plasma aldosterone concentration was independently associated with the homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance. Treatment with the mineralocorticoid receptor blocker spironolactone ameliorated insulin resistance in patients, and impaired glucose tolerance was partially reversed in fifth/sixth nephrectomized rats. In these rats, insulin-induced signal transduction was attenuated, especially in the adipose tissue. In the adipose tissue of nephrectomized rats, nuclear mineralocorticoid receptor expression, expression of the mineralocorticoid receptor target molecule SGK-1, tissue aldosterone content, and expression of the aldosterone-producing enzyme CYP11B2 increased. Mineralocorticoid receptor activation in the adipose tissue was reversed by spironolactone. In the adipose tissue of nephrectomized rats, asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA; an uremic substance linking uremia and insulin resistance) increased, the expression of the ADMA-degrading enzymes DDAH1 and DDAH2 decreased, and the oxidative stress increased. All of these changes were reversed by spironolactone. In mature adipocytes, aldosterone downregulated both DDAH1 and DDAH2 expression, and ADMA inhibited the insulin-induced cellular signaling. Thus, activation of mineralocorticoid receptor and resultant ADMA accumulation in adipose tissue has, in part, a relevant role in the development of insulin resistance in CKD.
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- 2015
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8. Decreased KAT5 Expression Impairs DNA Repair and Induces Altered DNA Methylation in Kidney Podocytes
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Hideki Yokoi, Kaori Hayashi, Yusuke Sakamaki, Tatsuhiko Azegami, Mari Kaneko, Hiroshi Itoh, Mari Nakamura, Norifumi Yoshimoto, Takaya Abe, Akihito Hishikawa, and Takeshi Kanda
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0301 basic medicine ,DNA Repair ,DNA repair ,Kidney Glomerulus ,Kruppel-Like Transcription Factors ,Kidney ,Lysine Acetyltransferase 5 ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental ,Podocyte ,Diabetic nephropathy ,Nephrin ,Kruppel-Like Factor 4 ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Albuminuria ,Animals ,Humans ,DNA Breaks, Double-Stranded ,Diabetic Nephropathies ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,KAT5 ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,Cells, Cultured ,Mice, Knockout ,biology ,Glomerulosclerosis, Focal Segmental ,Podocytes ,urogenital system ,Membrane Proteins ,Promoter ,DNA Methylation ,medicine.disease ,Cell biology ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Tamoxifen ,Glucose ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,chemistry ,DNA methylation ,Trans-Activators ,biology.protein ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,DNA ,DNA Damage - Abstract
Summary: Altered DNA methylation plays an important role in the onset and progression of kidney disease. However, little is known about how the changes arise in disease states. Here, we report that KAT5-mediated DNA damage repair is essential for the maintenance of kidney podocytes and is associated with DNA methylation status. Podocyte-specific KAT5-knockout mice develop severe albuminuria with increased DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs), increased DNA methylation of the nephrin promoter region, and decreased nephrin expression. Podocyte KAT5 expression is decreased, whereas DNA DSBs and DNA methylation are increased in diabetic nephropathy; moreover, KAT5 restoration by gene transfer attenuates albuminuria. Furthermore, KAT5 decreases DNA DSBs and DNA methylation at the same nephrin promoter region, which indicates that KAT5-mediated DNA repair may be related to DNA methylation status. These results suggest a concept in which an environment of DNA damage repair, which occurs with decreased KAT5, may affect DNA methylation status. : Hishikawa et al. reveal that KAT5-mediated DNA repair is essential for podocyte maintenance and is related to changes in DNA methylation status. Decreased podocyte KAT5 expression may contribute to the pathophysiology of diabetic nephropathy, suggesting a therapeutic target. Keywords: podocyte, DNA damage repair, DNA methylation, diabetic nephropathy
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- 2019
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9. Glycinergic inputs cause the pause of pontine omnipause neurons during saccades
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Takeshi Kanda, Hiroshi Shimazu, Kaoru Yoshida, and Yoshiki Iwamoto
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Glycine ,Action Potentials ,Biology ,Inhibitory postsynaptic potential ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,stomatognathic system ,Pons ,Reaction Time ,Saccades ,medicine ,Animals ,Glycine receptor ,Neurons ,General Neuroscience ,Glycine Agents ,Strychnine ,Bicuculline ,Saccadic masking ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Saccade ,Cats ,GABAergic ,Neuron ,Neuroscience ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Pontine omnipause neurons (OPNs) are inhibitory neurons projecting to saccade-related premotor burst neurons. OPNs exhibit sustained discharge during fixations and cease firing before and during saccades. The pause in OPN discharge releases the burst neurons from tonic inhibition, resulting in generation of saccadic eye movements. OPNs are thought to receive two major inhibitory inputs during saccades: an early component that determines the pause onset and a late component that controls the pause duration. Although there is evidence that numerous glycinergic and GABAergic terminals contact OPNs, their physiological roles remain unclear. To reveal functions of glycinergic and GABAergic inputs, we investigated effects of iontophoretic application of strychnine, a glycine receptor antagonist, and bicuculline, a GABAA receptor antagonist, on discharge patterns of OPNs in alert cats. Application of strychnine reduced the ratio of pause duration to saccade duration. Analysis of the timing of pause relative to saccades showed that pause onset was delayed and pause end was advanced. These effects were observed for saccades in all directions. Application of bicuculline, in contrast, had no effect on the OPN pause duration or timing. Both strychnine and bicuculline increased tonic firing rate during intersaccadic intervals. These results suggest that glycinergic, but not GABAergic, afferents convey inhibitory signals that determine the onset as well as duration of pause in OPN activity during saccades.
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- 2007
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10. Comparison of various trees for nearest-point search with/without the Voronoi diagram
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Kokichi Sugihara and Takeshi Kanda
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Computational geometry ,Tree (graph theory) ,Weighted Voronoi diagram ,Search tree ,Computer Science Applications ,Theoretical Computer Science ,Combinatorics ,Tree structure ,Signal Processing ,Point location ,Voronoi diagram ,Centroidal Voronoi tessellation ,Information Systems ,Mathematics - Published
- 2002
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11. Unimolecular isomerization from (CH3)3CNC to (CH3)3CCN induced by infrared free electron laser
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Yoshiyasu Kato, Koichi Tsukiyama, Takayuki Imai, and Takeshi Kanda
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Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Chemistry ,Infrared ,Free-electron laser ,Irradiation ,Kinetic energy ,Photochemistry ,Instrumentation ,Isomerization ,Excitation ,Gas phase - Abstract
Irradiation of IR Free Electron Laser at Tokyo University of Science (FEL-TUS) to t-butyl isonitrile ((CH3)3CNC) in the gas phase induced the isomerization reaction to trimethylacetonitrile ((CH3)3CCN). From the kinetic analyses, the isomerization reaction was attributed to the IR multiphoton activated unimolecular process. The wide frequency tunability of FEL-TUS enabled us to reveal that the excitation of the NC as well as the CN stretching motion efficiently drove the isomerization.
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- 2011
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12. Elektronenmikroskopische Untersuchung des Acinuszelltumors der Glandula Parotis
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Atushi Kessoku, Takayuki Kato, Toshiroh Kaneko, Yugi Yaku, Takeshi Kanda, and Takeshi Kitamura
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Left parotid gland ,Endoplasmic reticulum ,Tumor cells ,General Medicine ,Golgi apparatus ,law.invention ,symbols.namesake ,Acinic Cell Tumor ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Cytoplasm ,law ,symbols ,Medicine ,Surgery ,Electron microscope ,business - Abstract
Summary Under the electron microscope we observed a case of an acinic cell tumor of the left parotid gland. The patient was a 63-year-old woman who has suffered three times from local recurrences. The cytoplasma of the tumor cells showed the well-organized mitochondria, rouch endoplasmic reticula, Golgi's complexes and other organellas. Especially the cytoplasmas of the tumor cells, which formed acinus-like lumens, contained various-shaped secretory granules in great numbers. In addition, pycnotic-nucleated oncocytes with secretory granules could be observed.
- Published
- 1979
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