15 results on '"Hontani, Kazutoshi"'
Search Results
2. CCL21/CCR7 axis regulating juvenile cartilage repair can enhance cartilage healing in adults
- Author
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Joutoku, Zenta, Onodera, Tomohiro, Matsuoka, Masatake, Homan, Kentaro, Momma, Daisuke, Baba, Rikiya, Hontani, Kazutoshi, Hamasaki, Masanari, Matsubara, Shinji, Hishimura, Ryosuke, and Iwasaki, Norimasa
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Noncanonical Pyroptosis Triggered by Macrophage‐Derived Extracellular Vesicles in Chondrocytes Leading to Cartilage Catabolism in Osteoarthritis.
- Author
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Ebata, Taku, Terkawi, Mohamad Alaa, Kitahara, Keita, Yokota, Shunichi, Shiota, Junki, Nishida, Yoshio, Matsumae, Gen, Alhasan, Hend, Hamasaki, Masanari, Hontani, Kazutoshi, Shimizu, Tomohiro, Takahashi, Daisuke, Endo, Tsutomu, Onodera, Tomohiro, Kadoya, Ken, and Iwasaki, Norimasa
- Subjects
CARTILAGE cells ,CARTILAGE ,IN vitro studies ,KRUSKAL-Wallis Test ,LIPOPOLYSACCHARIDES ,SEQUENCE analysis ,ANIMAL experimentation ,ONE-way analysis of variance ,MACROPHAGES ,APOPTOSIS ,RNA ,CELLULAR signal transduction ,OSTEOARTHRITIS ,TUMOR necrosis factors ,DATA analysis software ,EXTRACELLULAR vesicles ,MICE ,CASPASES - Abstract
Objective: The severity of osteoarthritis (OA) and cartilage degeneration is highly correlated with the development of synovitis, which is mediated by the activity of inflammatory macrophages. A better understanding of intercellular communication between inflammatory macrophages and chondrocytes should aid in the discovery of novel therapeutic targets. We undertook this study to explore the pathologic role of inflammatory macrophage extracellular vesicles (EVs) in cartilage degeneration. Methods: Macrophages were stimulated by treatment with bacterial lipopolysaccharides to mimic the state of inflammatory macrophages, and the resulting EVs were harvested for chondrocyte stimulation in vitro and for intraarticular injection in a mouse model. The stimulated chondrocytes were further subjected to RNA‐sequencing analysis and other functional assays. The action of caspase 11 was disrupted in vitro using a specific small interfering RNA or wedelolactone, and in experimental murine OA models by intraarticular injection of wedelolactone. Results: Stimulated chondrocytes exhibited a significant elevation in the expression of chondrocyte catabolic factors. Consistent with these results, RNA‐sequencing analyses of stimulated chondrocytes indicated that up‐regulated genes were mainly categorized into apoptotic process and tumor necrosis factor signaling pathways, which suggests the induction of apoptotic process. Moreover, these chondrocytes exhibited a significant elevation in the expression of pyroptosis‐related molecules that were correlated with the expression of chondrocyte catabolic factors. The disruption of caspase 11 significantly alleviated pyroptotic and catabolic processes in stimulated chondrocytes and pathologic changes in collagenase‐induced and joint instability–induced OA models. Conclusion: Our results provide new insight into the pathologic mechanisms of OA and suggest that noncanonical pyroptosis in chondrocytes represents an attractive therapeutic target for treatment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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- View/download PDF
4. Stress distribution pattern in the distal radioulnar joint before and after ulnar shortening osteotomy in patients with ulnar impaction syndrome
- Author
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Hontani, Kazutoshi, primary, Matsui, Yuichiro, additional, Kawamura, Daisuke, additional, Urita, Atsushi, additional, Momma, Daisuke, additional, Hamano, Hiroki, additional, and Iwasaki, Norimasa, additional
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Chondrogenic differentiation of mouse induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) using the 3 three-dimensional culture with ultra-purified alginate gel (UPAL gel)
- Author
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Hontani, Kazutoshi, Onodera, Tomohiro, Terashima, Michiyo, Momma, Daisuke, Matsuoka, Masatake, Baba, Rikiya, Joutoku, Zenta, Matsubara, Shinji, Homan, Kentaro, Hishimura, Ryosuke, Xu, Liang, and Iwasaki, Norimasa
- Subjects
iPS cells ,Cartilage repair ,Chondrogenic differentiation ,Mesenchymal stem cells ,Alginate gel - Abstract
As articular cartilages have rarely healed by themselves because of their characteristics of avascularity and low cell density, surgical intervention is ideal for patients with cartilaginous injuries. Because of structural characteristics of the cartilage tissue, a three-dimensional culture of stem cells in biomaterials is a favorable system on cartilage tissue engineering. Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) are a new cell source in cartilage tissue engineering for its characteristics of self-renewal capability and pluripotency. However, the optimal cultivation condition for chondrogenesis of iPSCs is still unknown. Here we show that a novel chondrogenic differentiation method of iPSCs using the combination of three-dimensional cultivation in ultra-purified alginate gel (UPAL gel) and multi-step differentiation via mesenchymal stem cell-like cells (iPS-MSCs) could efficiently and specifically differentiate iPSCs into chondrocytes. The iPS-MSCs in UPAL gel culture sequentially enhanced the expression of chondrogenic marker without the upregulation of that of osteogenic and adipogenic marker and histologically showed homogeneous chondrogenic extracellular matrix formation. Our results suggest that the pluripotency of iPSCs can be controlled when iPSCs are differentiated into iPS-MSCs before embedding in UPAL gel. These results lead to the establishment of an efficient three-dimensional system to engineer artificial cartilage tissue from iPSCs for cartilage regeneration. (c) 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part A: 107A: 1086-1093, 2019.
- Published
- 2019
6. Stress distribution pattern in the distal radioulnar joint before and after ulnar shortening osteotomy in patients with ulnar impaction syndrome
- Author
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1000010805279, Hontani, Kazutoshi, 1000020374374, Matsui, Yuichiro, 1000000374372, Kawamura, Daisuke, Urita, Atsushi, 1000050779866, Momma, Daisuke, Hamano, Hiroki, 1000030322803, Iwasaki, Norimasa, 1000010805279, Hontani, Kazutoshi, 1000020374374, Matsui, Yuichiro, 1000000374372, Kawamura, Daisuke, Urita, Atsushi, 1000050779866, Momma, Daisuke, Hamano, Hiroki, 1000030322803, and Iwasaki, Norimasa
- Abstract
Ulnar shortening osteotomy (USO) for ulnar impaction syndrome potentially leads to degenerative changes of the distal radioulnar joint (DRUJ). This study was performed to evaluate the effect of the sigmoid notch morphology on the stress distribution pattern of the DRUJ using computed tomography (CT) osteoabsorptiometry (CT-OAM). We reviewed the pre- and postoperative transverse CT images of 15 wrists that had undergone USO. The examined wrists were classified into two groups based on the sigmoid notch morphology: the linear-type notch (type L) and the curved-type notch (type C). We calculated and statistically compared the percentage of the high-density area (%HDA) in each divided region of the sigmoid notch. In type L, %HDA was significantly larger in the distal-dorsal region of the sigmoid notch before USO. Postoperatively, in type L, no specific regions showed a significantly different %HDA. In type C, %HDA was significantly larger in the distal-volar region of the sigmoid notch before USO. Postoperatively, %HDA of type C was significantly larger in the proximal-volar region. Our results suggest that in patients with ulnar impaction syndrome, morphological evaluation of the sigmoid notch can serve as a predictor of osteoarthritis in the DRUJ with or without USO.
- Published
- 2021
7. Stress distribution pattern in the distal radioulnar joint before and after ulnar shortening osteotomy in patients with ulnar impaction syndrome
- Author
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Hontani, Kazutoshi, Matsui, Yuichiro, Kawamura, Daisuke, Urita, Atsushi, Momma, Daisuke, Hamano, Hiroki, Iwasaki, Norimasa, Hontani, Kazutoshi, Matsui, Yuichiro, Kawamura, Daisuke, Urita, Atsushi, Momma, Daisuke, Hamano, Hiroki, and Iwasaki, Norimasa
- Abstract
Ulnar shortening osteotomy (USO) for ulnar impaction syndrome potentially leads to degenerative changes of the distal radioulnar joint (DRUJ). This study was performed to evaluate the effect of the sigmoid notch morphology on the stress distribution pattern of the DRUJ using computed tomography (CT) osteoabsorptiometry (CT-OAM). We reviewed the pre- and postoperative transverse CT images of 15 wrists that had undergone USO. The examined wrists were classified into two groups based on the sigmoid notch morphology: the linear-type notch (type L) and the curved-type notch (type C). We calculated and statistically compared the percentage of the high-density area (%HDA) in each divided region of the sigmoid notch. In type L, %HDA was significantly larger in the distal-dorsal region of the sigmoid notch before USO. Postoperatively, in type L, no specific regions showed a significantly different %HDA. In type C, %HDA was significantly larger in the distal-volar region of the sigmoid notch before USO. Postoperatively, %HDA of type C was significantly larger in the proximal-volar region. Our results suggest that in patients with ulnar impaction syndrome, morphological evaluation of the sigmoid notch can serve as a predictor of osteoarthritis in the DRUJ with or without USO.
- Published
- 2021
8. Conservatively Treated Femoral Intertrochanteric Fracture With Early Asymptomatic Novel Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) : A Case Report
- Author
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Suzuki, Yuki, Kasashima, Toshihiko, 1000010805279, Hontani, Kazutoshi, Yamamoto, Yasuhiro, Ito, Kanako, Xu, Liang, 1000070816066, Matsuoka, Masatake, 1000040771895, Iwasaki, Koji, 1000070547174, Onodera, Tomohiro, 1000060374724, Kondo, Eiji, 1000030322803, Iwasaki, Norimasa, Suzuki, Yuki, Kasashima, Toshihiko, 1000010805279, Hontani, Kazutoshi, Yamamoto, Yasuhiro, Ito, Kanako, Xu, Liang, 1000070816066, Matsuoka, Masatake, 1000040771895, Iwasaki, Koji, 1000070547174, Onodera, Tomohiro, 1000060374724, Kondo, Eiji, 1000030322803, and Iwasaki, Norimasa
- Abstract
Introduction: The ongoing outbreak of novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a worldwide problem. Although diagnosing COVID-19 in fracture patients is important for selecting treatment, diagnosing early asymptomatic COVID-19 is difficult. We describe herein a rare case of femoral intertrochanteric fracture concomitant with early asymptomatic novel COVID-19. Case presentation: An 87-year-old Japanese woman was transferred to our emergency room with a right hip pain after she fell. She had no fever, fatigue, or respiratory symptoms on admission and within the 14 days before presenting to our hospital, and no specific shadow was detected in chest X-ray. However, chest computed tomography (CT) was performed considering COVID-19 pandemic, and showed ground-glass opacities with consolidation in the dorsal segment of the right lower lung field. Then, qualitative real-time reverse-transcriptase-polymerase-chain-reaction (RT-PCR) was carried out and turned out to be positive. She was diagnosed right femoral intertrochanteric fracture with concomitant COVID-19 infection. Conservative treatment was applied to the fracture due to infection. After admission, fever and oxygen demand occurred but she recovered from COVID-19. Throughout the treatment period, no cross-infection from the patient was identified in our hospital. Conclusion: This case highlights the importance of considering chest CT as an effective screening method for infection on hospital admission in COVID-19-affected areas, especially in trauma patients with early asymptomatic novel COVID-19.
- Published
- 2020
9. Alterations of Glycosphingolipid Glycans and Chondrogenic Markers during Differentiation of Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells into Chondrocytes
- Author
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Xu, Liang, 1000070734185, Hanamatsu, Hisatoshi, 1000040823331, Homan, Kentaro, 1000070547174, Onodera, Tomohiro, Miyazaki, Takuji, 1000030374193, Furukawa, Jun-ichi, 1000010805279, Hontani, Kazutoshi, Tian, Yuan, 1000040815742, Baba, Rikiya, 1000030322803, Iwasaki, Norimasa, Xu, Liang, 1000070734185, Hanamatsu, Hisatoshi, 1000040823331, Homan, Kentaro, 1000070547174, Onodera, Tomohiro, Miyazaki, Takuji, 1000030374193, Furukawa, Jun-ichi, 1000010805279, Hontani, Kazutoshi, Tian, Yuan, 1000040815742, Baba, Rikiya, 1000030322803, and Iwasaki, Norimasa
- Abstract
Due to the limited intrinsic healing potential of cartilage, injury to this tissue may lead to osteoarthritis. Human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), which can be differentiated into chondrocytes, are a promising source of cells for cartilage regenerative therapy. Currently, however, the methods for evaluating chondrogenic differentiation of iPSCs are very limited; the main techniques are based on the detection of chondrogenic genes and histological analysis of the extracellular matrix. The cell surface is coated with glycocalyx, a layer of glycoconjugates including glycosphingolipids (GSLs) and glycoproteins. The glycans in glycoconjugates play important roles in biological events, and their expression and structure vary widely depending on cell types and conditions. In this study, we performed a quantitative GSL-glycan analysis of human iPSCs, iPSC-derived mesenchymal stem cell like cells (iPS-MSC like cells), iPS-MSC-derived chondrocytes (iPS-MSC-CDs), bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (BMSCs), and BMSC-derived chondrocytes (BMSC-CDs) using glycoblotting technology. We found that GSL-glycan profiles differed among cell types, and that the GSL-glycome underwent a characteristic alteration during the process of chondrogenic differentiation. Furthermore, we analyzed the GSL-glycome of normal human cartilage and found that it was quite similar to that of iPS-MSC-CDs. This is the first study to evaluate GSL-glycan structures on human iPS-derived cartilaginous particles under micromass culture conditions and those of normal human cartilage. Our results indicate that GSL-glycome analysis is useful for evaluating target cell differentiation and can thus support safe regenerative medicine.
- Published
- 2020
10. Alterations of Glycosphingolipid Glycans and Chondrogenic Markers during Differentiation of Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells into Chondrocytes
- Author
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Xu, Liang, primary, Hanamatsu, Hisatoshi, additional, Homan, Kentaro, additional, Onodera, Tomohiro, additional, Miyazaki, Takuji, additional, Furukawa, Jun-ichi, additional, Hontani, Kazutoshi, additional, Tian, Yuan, additional, Baba, Rikiya, additional, and Iwasaki, Norimasa, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Conservatively Treated Femoral Intertrochanteric Fracture With Early Asymptomatic Novel Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19): A Case Report
- Author
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Suzuki, Yuki, primary, Kasashima, Toshihiko, additional, Hontani, Kazutoshi, additional, Yamamoto, Yasuhiro, additional, Ito, Kanako, additional, Xu, Liang, additional, Matsuoka, Masatake, additional, Iwasaki, Koji, additional, Onodera, Tomohiro, additional, Kondo, Eiji, additional, and Iwasaki, Norimasa, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Chondrogenic differentiation of mouse induced pluripotent stem cells using the three-dimensional culture with ultra-purified alginate gel
- Author
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Hontani, Kazutoshi, Onodera, Tomohiro, Terashima, Michiyo, Momma, Daisuke, Matsuoka, Masatake, Baba, Rikiya, Joutoku, Zenta, Matsubara, Shinji, Homan, Kentaro, Hishimura, Ryosuke, Xu, Liang, Iwasaki, Norimasa, Hontani, Kazutoshi, Onodera, Tomohiro, Terashima, Michiyo, Momma, Daisuke, Matsuoka, Masatake, Baba, Rikiya, Joutoku, Zenta, Matsubara, Shinji, Homan, Kentaro, Hishimura, Ryosuke, Xu, Liang, and Iwasaki, Norimasa
- Abstract
As articular cartilages have rarely healed by themselves because of their characteristics of avascularity and low cell density, surgical intervention is ideal for patients with cartilaginous injuries. Because of structural characteristics of the cartilage tissue, a three-dimensional culture of stem cells in biomaterials is a favorable system on cartilage tissue engineering. Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) are a new cell source in cartilage tissue engineering for its characteristics of self-renewal capability and pluripotency. However, the optimal cultivation condition for chondrogenesis of iPSCs is still unknown. Here we show that a novel chondrogenic differentiation method of iPSCs using the combination of three-dimensional cultivation in ultra-purified alginate gel (UPAL gel) and multi-step differentiation via mesenchymal stem cell-like cells (iPS-MSCs) could efficiently and specifically differentiate iPSCs into chondrocytes. The iPS-MSCs in UPAL gel culture sequentially enhanced the expression of chondrogenic marker without the upregulation of that of osteogenic and adipogenic marker and histologically showed homogeneous chondrogenic extracellular matrix formation. Our results suggest that the pluripotency of iPSCs can be controlled when iPSCs are differentiated into iPS-MSCs before embedding in UPAL gel. These results lead to the establishment of an efficient three-dimensional system to engineer artificial cartilage tissue from iPSCs for cartilage regeneration. (c) 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part A: 107A: 1086-1093, 2019.
- Published
- 2019
13. Chondrogenic differentiation of mouse induced pluripotent stem cells using the three-dimensional culture with ultra-purified alginate gel
- Author
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1000010805279, Hontani, Kazutoshi, 1000070547174, Onodera, Tomohiro, Terashima, Michiyo, 1000050779866, Momma, Daisuke, 1000070816066, Matsuoka, Masatake, 1000040815742, Baba, Rikiya, Joutoku, Zenta, Matsubara, Shinji, 1000040823331, Homan, Kentaro, Hishimura, Ryosuke, Xu, Liang, 1000030322803, Iwasaki, Norimasa, 1000010805279, Hontani, Kazutoshi, 1000070547174, Onodera, Tomohiro, Terashima, Michiyo, 1000050779866, Momma, Daisuke, 1000070816066, Matsuoka, Masatake, 1000040815742, Baba, Rikiya, Joutoku, Zenta, Matsubara, Shinji, 1000040823331, Homan, Kentaro, Hishimura, Ryosuke, Xu, Liang, 1000030322803, and Iwasaki, Norimasa
- Abstract
As articular cartilages have rarely healed by themselves because of their characteristics of avascularity and low cell density, surgical intervention is ideal for patients with cartilaginous injuries. Because of structural characteristics of the cartilage tissue, a three-dimensional culture of stem cells in biomaterials is a favorable system on cartilage tissue engineering. Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) are a new cell source in cartilage tissue engineering for its characteristics of self-renewal capability and pluripotency. However, the optimal cultivation condition for chondrogenesis of iPSCs is still unknown. Here we show that a novel chondrogenic differentiation method of iPSCs using the combination of three-dimensional cultivation in ultra-purified alginate gel (UPAL gel) and multi-step differentiation via mesenchymal stem cell-like cells (iPS-MSCs) could efficiently and specifically differentiate iPSCs into chondrocytes. The iPS-MSCs in UPAL gel culture sequentially enhanced the expression of chondrogenic marker without the upregulation of that of osteogenic and adipogenic marker and histologically showed homogeneous chondrogenic extracellular matrix formation. Our results suggest that the pluripotency of iPSCs can be controlled when iPSCs are differentiated into iPS-MSCs before embedding in UPAL gel. These results lead to the establishment of an efficient three-dimensional system to engineer artificial cartilage tissue from iPSCs for cartilage regeneration. (c) 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Biomed Mater Res Part A: 107A: 1086-1093, 2019.
- Published
- 2019
14. Depletion of Gangliosides Enhances Articular Cartilage Repair in Mice
- Author
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Matsuoka, Masatake, Onodera, Tomohiro, Homan, Kentaro, Sasazawa, Fumio, Furukawa, Jun-ichi, Momma, Daisuke, Baba, Rikiya, Hontani, Kazutoshi, Joutoku, Zenta, Matsubara, Shinji, Yamashita, Tadashi, Iwasaki, Norimasa, Matsuoka, Masatake, Onodera, Tomohiro, Homan, Kentaro, Sasazawa, Fumio, Furukawa, Jun-ichi, Momma, Daisuke, Baba, Rikiya, Hontani, Kazutoshi, Joutoku, Zenta, Matsubara, Shinji, Yamashita, Tadashi, and Iwasaki, Norimasa
- Abstract
Elucidation of the healing mechanisms in damaged tissues is a critical step for establishing breakthroughs in tissue engineering. Articular cartilage is clinically one of the most successful tissues to be repaired with regenerative medicine because of its homogeneous extracellular matrix and few cell types. However, we only poorly understand cartilage repair mechanisms, and hence, regenerated cartilage remains inferior to the native tissues. Here, we show that glycosylation is an important process for hypertrophic differentiation during articular cartilage repair. GM3, which is a precursor molecule for most gangliosides, was transiently expressed in surrounding damaged tissue, and depletion of GM3 synthase enhanced cartilage repair. Gangliosides also regulated chondrocyte hypertrophy via the Indian hedgehog pathway. These results identify a novel mechanism of cartilage healing through chondrocyte hypertrophy that is regulated by glycosylation. Manipulation of gangliosides and their synthases may have beneficial effects on articular cartilage repair.
- Published
- 2017
15. Depletion of Gangliosides Enhances Articular Cartilage Repair in Mice
- Author
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Matsuoka, Masatake, primary, Onodera, Tomohiro, additional, Homan, Kentaro, additional, Sasazawa, Fumio, additional, Furukawa, Jun-ichi, additional, Momma, Daisuke, additional, Baba, Rikiya, additional, Hontani, Kazutoshi, additional, Joutoku, Zenta, additional, Matsubara, Shinji, additional, Yamashita, Tadashi, additional, and Iwasaki, Norimasa, additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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