263 results on '"Saito, Yasunori"'
Search Results
252. Design and daytime performance of laser-induced fluorescence spectrum lidar for simultaneous detection of multiple components, dissolved organic matter, phycocyanin, and chlorophyll in river water.
- Author
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Saito Y, Kakuda K, Yokoyama M, Kubota T, Tomida T, and Park HD
- Abstract
In this work, we developed mobile laser-induced fluorescence spectrum (LIFS) lidar based on preliminary experiments on the excitation emission matrix of a water sample and a method for reducing solar background light using the synchronous detection technique. The combination of a UV short-pulse laser (355 nm, 6 ns) for fluorescence excitation with a 10-100 ns short-time synchronous detection using a gated image-intensified multi-channel CCD of the fluorescence made the LIFS lidar operation possible even in daytime. The LIFS lidar with this construction demonstrated the potential of natural river/lake water quality monitoring at the Tenryu River/Lake Suwa. Three main components in the fluorescence data of the water, dissolved organic matter, phycocyanin, and chlorophyll, were extracted by spectral analysis using the standard spectral functions of these components. Their concentrations were estimated by adapting experimentally calibrated data. Results of long-term field observations using our LIFS lidar from 2010 to 2012 show the necessity of simultaneous multi-component detection to understand the natural water environment.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
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253. Comparison of whole mitochondrial genome sequences from two clades of the invasive ascidian, Didemnum vexillum.
- Author
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Smith KF, Abbott CL, Saito Y, and Fidler AE
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- Animal Distribution, Animals, Base Sequence, Computational Biology, DNA Primers genetics, Genetics, Population, Molecular Sequence Annotation, Molecular Sequence Data, Phylogeny, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide genetics, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Species Specificity, Adaptation, Biological genetics, Genetic Variation, Genome, Mitochondrial genetics, Phenotype, Urochordata genetics
- Abstract
The mitochondria are the main source of cellular energy production and have an important role in development, fertility, and thermal limitations. Adaptive mitochondrial DNA mutations have the potential to be of great importance in determining aspects of the life history of an organism. Phylogenetic analyses of the globally invasive marine ascidian Didemnum vexillum using the mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase 1 (COX1) coding region, revealed two distinct clades. Representatives of one clade (denoted by 'B') are geographically restricted to D. vexillum's native region (north-west Pacific Ocean, including Japan), whereas members of the other clade (denoted by 'A') have been introduced and become invasive in temperate coastal areas around the world. Persistence of clade B's restricted distribution may reflect it being inherently less invasive than clade A. To investigate this we sought to determine if the two clades differ significantly in other mitochondrial genes of functional significance, specifically, alterations in amino acids encoded in mitochondrial enzyme subunits. Differences in functional mitochondrial genes could indicate an increased ability for clade A colonies to tolerate a wider range of environmental temperature. Full mitochondrial genomic sequences from D. vexillum clades A and B were obtained and they predict significant sequence differences in genes encoding for enzymes involved in oxidative phosphorylation. Diversity levels were relatively high and showed divergence across almost all genes, with p-distance values between the two clades indicating recent divergence. Both clades showed an excess of rare variants, which is consistent with balancing selection or a recent population expansion. Results presented here will inform future research focusing on examining the functional properties of the corresponding mitochondrial respiration enzymes, of A and B clade enzymes. By comparing closely related taxa that have differing distributions it is possible to identify genes and phenotypes suited to particular environments. The examination of mitochondrial genotypes, and associated enzyme functioning, across populations may aid in our understanding of thermal tolerance and environmental adaptation., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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254. Development of a UV laser-induced fluorescence lidar for monitoring blue-green algae in Lake Suwa.
- Author
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Saito Y, Takano K, Kobayashi F, Kobayashi K, and Park HD
- Subjects
- Equipment Design, Equipment Failure Analysis, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Water Microbiology, Water Pollutants analysis, Cyanobacteria isolation & purification, Environmental Monitoring instrumentation, Lakes microbiology, Radar instrumentation, Spectrometry, Fluorescence instrumentation, Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet instrumentation
- Abstract
We developed a UV (355 nm) laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) lidar for monitoring the real-time status of blue-green algae. Since the fluorescence spectrum of blue-green algae excited by 355 nm showed the specific fluorescence at 650 nm, the lidar was designed to be able to detect the 650 nm fluorescence as a surveillance method for the algae. The usefulness was confirmed by observation at Lake Suwa over four years (2005-2008). The detection limit of the LIF lidar was 16.65 mg/L for the blue-green algae, which is the range of concentrations in the safe level set by the World Health Organization.
- Published
- 2014
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255. Suppressive effects of Amarouciaxanthin A on 3T3-L1 adipocyte differentiation through down-regulation of PPARγ and C/EBPα mRNA expression.
- Author
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Yim MJ, Hosokawa M, Mizushina Y, Yoshida H, Saito Y, and Miyashita K
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- 3T3-L1 Cells, Adipocytes drug effects, Adipogenesis drug effects, Animals, Down-Regulation, Enzyme Inhibitors pharmacology, Glycerolphosphate Dehydrogenase antagonists & inhibitors, Mice, RNA, Messenger analysis, Adipocytes cytology, CCAAT-Enhancer-Binding Protein-alpha genetics, Cell Differentiation drug effects, Gene Expression drug effects, PPAR gamma genetics, Xanthophylls pharmacology
- Abstract
Fucoxanthin is converted to fucoxanthinol and amarouciaxanthin A in mice. It was previously reported that fucoxanthinol attenuated the adipogenesis of 3T3-L1 cells. However, the effects of amarouciaxanthin A on adipocyte differentiation have not been clarified. This study examined the effects of amarouciaxanthin A on 3T3-L1 adipogenesis by comparing the effects of fucoxanthinol, isofucoxanthinol, and amarouciaxanthin B. Amarouciaxanthin A significantly decreased glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GPDH) activity, which was measured as an indicator of adipocyte differentiation. The suppressive effect of amarouciaxanthin A was stronger than that of fucoxanthinol, amarouciaxanthin B, and isofucoxanthinol. The mRNA expressions of adipocyte fatty acid-binding protein (aP2), lipoprotein lipase (LPL), and glucose-transporter 4 (Glut4) in 3T3-L1 cells were markedly down-regulated by amarouciaxanthin A compared to fucoxanthinol. Furthermore, the expression levels of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARγ) and CCAAT-enhancer-binding protein α (C/EBPα),, which are the key adipogenic transcriptional factors, were also decreased by amarouciaxanthin A during adipocyte differentiation. These results show that amarouciaxanthin A, which is a dominant metabolite of fucoxanthin in white adipose tissue, suppressed 3T3-L1 adipocyte differentiation.
- Published
- 2011
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256. Sodium temperature lidar based on injection seeded Nd:YAG pulse lasers using a sum-frequency generation technique.
- Author
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Kawahara TD, Kitahara T, Kobayashi F, Saito Y, and Nomura A
- Abstract
We report on a sodium (Na) temperature lidar based on two injection seeded Nd:YAG pulse lasers using single-pass sum-frequency generation. The laser power at 589 nm is 400 mW (40 mJ per pulse at a repetition rate of 10 Hz) and the pulse width is 22 nsec FWHM. The narrowband laser tuned to the Doppler broadened Na D2 spectrum enables us to measure the temperature of the mesopause region (80-115 km). This solid-state transportable system demonstrated high performance and capability at Syowa Station in Antarctica for 3 years and at Uji in Japan for an additional year without any major operational troubles.
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- 2011
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257. Morphological characterization of the asexual reproduction in the acorn worm Balanoglossus simodensis.
- Author
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Miyamoto N and Saito Y
- Subjects
- Animals, Chordata, Nonvertebrate cytology, Chordata, Nonvertebrate anatomy & histology, Chordata, Nonvertebrate growth & development, Morphogenesis, Reproduction, Asexual
- Abstract
The acorn worm Balanoglossus simodensis reproduces asexually by fragmentation and subsequent regeneration from the body fragments. We examined the morphogenesis of its asexual reproduction. At first, we collected asexually reproducing specimens and observed their morphogenesis. Then, we succeeded in inducing the asexual reproduction artificially by cutting the worm at the end of the genital region. The process of morphogenesis is completely the same between naturally collected and artificially induced specimens. The stages during morphogenesis were established on the basis of the external features of the asexually reproducing fragments. The internal features of the fragments were also examined at each stage. In a separate phase of the study, the capacity for regeneration of some body parts was also examined by dividing intact worms into about 10 fragments. Although the capacity for regeneration varied among the different body parts, some fragments regenerated into complete individuals in 1 month. The process of regeneration was the same as that in the asexually produced fragments.
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- 2010
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258. Inhibition of IkappaB kinase beta restrains oncogenic proliferation of pancreatic cancer cells.
- Author
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Ochiai T, Saito Y, Saitoh T, Dewan MZ, Shioya A, Kobayashi M, Kawachi H, Muto S, Itai A, Uota S, Eishi Y, Yamamoto N, Tanaka S, Arii S, and Yamaoka S
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- Animals, Benzamides metabolism, Binding, Competitive, Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Proliferation drug effects, Enzyme Activation drug effects, Enzyme Inhibitors metabolism, Gene Knockdown Techniques, Humans, I-kappa B Kinase genetics, Mice, Mice, Inbred NOD, Mice, Knockout, Mice, SCID, RNA Interference, Signal Transduction, Transfection, Benzamides pharmacology, Enzyme Inhibitors pharmacology, I-kappa B Kinase antagonists & inhibitors, NF-kappa B antagonists & inhibitors, Pancreatic Neoplasms enzymology
- Abstract
Purpose: Pancreatic cancer is characterized by an extremely poor prognosis due to the aggressive disease course and lack of effective therapeutic intervention. IkappaB kinase (IKK), a central kinase for nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) activation, is often constitutively activated in pancreatic cancer cells, playing a crucial role in the malignant phenotype and resistance to anti-cancer agents. This study explored how specific inhibition of IKKbeta suppresses oncogenic proliferation of pancreatic cancer cells., Experimental Design: We employed two different approaches, RNA interference-mediated depletion of IKKbeta (IKKbetai) and use of a novel molecularly designed IKKbeta inhibitor IMD-0354 to investigate the effects on the in vitro and in vivo growth and apoptotic response of pancreatic cancer cells., Results: IKKbetai and IMD-0354 efficiently suppressed constitutive NF-kappaB activity and the growth of pancreatic cancer cells in monolayer and soft agar. IMD-0354 induced Annexin V expression, a typical apoptotic cell response. Notably, daily administration of IMD-0354 significantly suppressed tumor growth in NOD/SCID/gamma c(null) (NOG) mice without any deleterious side effect., Conclusions: These results identify IKKbeta as an attractive molecular target for pancreatic cancer therapy.
- Published
- 2008
259. Analysis of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 integration by using a specific, sensitive and quantitative assay based on real-time polymerase chain reaction.
- Author
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Yamamoto N, Tanaka C, Wu Y, Chang MO, Inagaki Y, Saito Y, Naito T, Ogasawara H, Sekigawa I, and Hayashida Y
- Subjects
- Base Sequence, Cell Line, DNA, Viral analysis, DNA, Viral biosynthesis, DNA, Viral genetics, HIV Long Terminal Repeat, HIV-1 physiology, Humans, In Vitro Techniques, Jurkat Cells, Kinetics, Leukocytes, Mononuclear virology, Polymerase Chain Reaction statistics & numerical data, Sensitivity and Specificity, U937 Cells, HIV-1 genetics, Polymerase Chain Reaction methods, Virus Integration genetics
- Abstract
A novel real-time nested-PCR assay was developed to quantify integrated human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) DNA with high specificity and sensitivity. This assay reproducibly allowed the detection of three copies of integrated HIV DNA in a background of 100,000 cell equivalents of human chromosomal DNA. The non-specific amplification of unintegrated HIV-1 DNA was significantly inhibited in this assay and the specificity of this assay was much higher than the previously reported method. This assay showed that kinetics in viral DNA synthesis was cell-type dependent and that the kinetics of HIV-1 DNA integration was very rapid in Jurkat T cell line. This method may provide new insights into the integration processes and be useful in evaluating future integrase inhibitors.
- Published
- 2006
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260. Postembryonic epigenesis of Vasa-positive germ cells from aggregated hemoblasts in the colonial ascidian, Botryllus primigenus.
- Author
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Sunanaga T, Saito Y, and Kawamura K
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Cell Aggregation physiology, DEAD-box RNA Helicases genetics, DEAD-box RNA Helicases ultrastructure, Female, Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental, Humans, Male, Molecular Sequence Data, Oocytes enzymology, Oocytes ultrastructure, Oogonia enzymology, Oogonia ultrastructure, Ovary enzymology, Ovary ultrastructure, Ovum ultrastructure, Spermatozoa ultrastructure, Urochordata ultrastructure, DEAD-box RNA Helicases biosynthesis, Epigenesis, Genetic genetics, Ovum enzymology, Spermatozoa enzymology, Urochordata cytology, Urochordata growth & development
- Abstract
We investigated whether Vasa was a germline-specific marker in the colonial ascidian Botryllus primigenus, and whether it was inducible epigenetically in the adult life span. We cloned a Botryllus Vasa homologue (BpVas). The deduced open reading frame encoded 687 amino acid residues. It was expressed specifically by germline cells such as the loose cell mass, oogonia and juvenile oocytes in the ovary, and the primordial testis (compact cell mass), spermatogonia and juvenile spermatocytes in the testis. The loose cell mass, the most primitive germline cells, showed an ultrastructure of undifferentiated cells known as hemoblasts. The hemoblasts did not contain electron-dense materials or a mitochondrial assembly in the cytoplasm. These organelles appeared later in the oogonia and oocytes. When the loose cell mass and developing germ cells were eliminated by extirpating all zooids and buds from the colonies, BpVas transcripts disappeared completely from the vascularized colonies. After 14 days, when the colonies regenerated by vascular budding, BpVas-positive cells reappeared in some cases, and in 30 day colonies, BpVas-positive germ cells were observed in all the regenerated colonies. These results show that in B. primigenus, germ cells are inducible de novo from the Vasa-negative cells even at postembryonic stages.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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261. Experimental allometry: effect of size manipulation on metabolic rate of colonial ascidians.
- Author
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Nakaya F, Saito Y, and Motokawa T
- Subjects
- Animals, Biometry, Japan, Regression Analysis, Urochordata anatomy & histology, Body Weight, Energy Metabolism physiology, Urochordata physiology
- Abstract
The allometric scaling of metabolic rate of organisms, the three-quarters power rule, has led to a questioning of the basis for the relation. We attacked this problem experimentally for the first time by employing the modular organism, the ascidian that forms a single layered flat colony, as a model system. The metabolic rate and colony size followed the three-quarters power relation, which held even after the colony size was experimentally manipulated. Our results established that the three-quarters power relation is a real continuous function, not an imaginary statistical regression. The fact that all the hypotheses failed to explain why the two-dimensional organism adhered to the three-quarters power relation led us to propose a new hypothesis, in which the allometric relation derives from the self-organized criticality based on local interaction between modulus-comprising organisms.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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262. Switching of metabolic-rate scaling between allometry and isometry in colonial ascidians.
- Author
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Nakaya F, Saito Y, and Motokawa T
- Subjects
- Animals, Models, Biological, Oxygen Consumption, Population Density, Urochordata metabolism, Energy Metabolism, Urochordata physiology
- Abstract
The metabolic rate and its scaling relationship to colony size were studied in the colonial ascidian Botrylloides simodensis. The colonial metabolic rate, measured by the oxygen consumption rate (V(O2) in millilitres of O(2) per hour) and the colony mass (wet weight M(w) in grams) showed the allometric relationship (V(O2) = 0.0412 M(w)(0.799). The power coefficient was statistically not different from 0.75, the value for unitary organisms. The size of the zooids and the tunic volume fraction in a colony were kept constant irrespective of the colonial size. These results, together with the two-dimensional colonial shape, excluded shape factors and colonial composition as possible causes of allometry. Botryllid ascidians show a takeover state in which all the zooids of the parent generation in a colony degenerate and zooids of a new generation develop in unison. The media for connection between zooids such as a common drainage system and connecting vessels to the common vascular system experienced reconstruction. The metabolic rate during the takeover state was halved and was directly proportional to the colonial mass. The scaling thus changed from being allometric to isometric. The alteration in the scaling that was associated with the loss of the connection between the zooids strongly support the hypothesis that the allometry was derived from mutual interaction among the zooids. The applicability of this hypothesis to unitary organisms is discussed.
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
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263. EVOLUTION OF ALLORECOGNITION IN BOTRYLLID ASCIDIANS INFERRED FROM A MOLECULAR PHYLOGENY.
- Author
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Cohen CS, Saito Y, and Weissman IL
- Abstract
Despite the functional and phyletic ubiquity of highly polymorphic genetic recognition systems, the evolution and maintenance of these remarkable loci remain an empirical and theoretical puzzle. Many clonal invertebrates use polymorphic genetic recognition systems to discriminate kin from unrelated individuals during behavioral interactions that mediate competition for space. Space competition may have been a selective force promoting the evolution of highly polymorphic recognition systems, or preexisting polymorphic loci may have been coopted for the purpose of mediating space competition. Ascidian species in the family Botryllidae have an allorecognition system in which fusion or rejection between neighboring colonies is controlled by allele-sharing at a single, highly polymorphic locus. The behavioral sequence involved in allorecognition varies in a species-specific fashion with some species requiring extensive intercolony tissue integration prior to the allorecognition response, while other species contact opposing colonies at only a few points on the outer surface before resolving space conflicts. Due to an apparent species-specific continuum of behavioral variation in the degree of intercolony tissue integration required for allorecognition, this system lends itself to a phylogenetic analysis of the evolution of an allorecognition system. We constructed a molecular phylogeny of the botryllids based on 18S rDNA sequence and mapped allorecognition behavioral variation onto the phylogeny. Our phylogeny shows the basal allorecognition condition for the group is the most internal form of the recognition reaction. More derived species show progressively more external allorecognition responses, and in some cases loss of some features of internal function. We suggest that external allorecognition appears to be a secondary function of a polymorphic discriminatory system that was already in place due to other selective pressures such as gamete, pathogen, or developmental cell lineage recognition., (© 1998 The Society for the Study of Evolution.)
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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