Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Chihiro Tabata is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Chihiro Tabata.


Bone | 2011

Eldecalcitol, a second-generation vitamin D analog, drives bone minimodeling and reduces osteoclastic number in trabecular bone of ovariectomized rats

Paulo Henrique Luiz de Freitas; Tomoka Hasegawa; Satoshi Takeda; Muneteru Sasaki; Chihiro Tabata; Kimimitsu Oda; Minqi Li; Hitoshi Saito; Norio Amizuka

To elucidate the histological events that follow administration of eldecalcitol, a second-generation of vitamin D analog currently awaiting approval as a drug for treatment of osteoporosis, we employed the ovariectomy (OVX) rat model. OVX rats received vehicle or 30ng/kg of eldecalcitol, and sham-operated animals received vehicle only. Rats were sacrificed after 12weeks and had their femora and tibiae removed and processed for histochemical and histomorphometrical analyses. When compared with OVX group, osteoclastic number and bone resorption parameters were significantly reduced in eldecalcitol-treated rats, accompanied by decreased bone formation parameters. The preosteoblastic layer, with which osteoclastic precursors interact for mutual differentiation, was poorly developed in the eldecalcitol group, indicating less cell-to-cell contact between preosteoblasts and osteoclast precursors. Interestingly, eldecalcitol did promote a type of focal bone formation that is independent of bone resorption, a process known as bone minimodeling. While the number of ED-1-positive macrophages was higher in the bone marrow of treated rats, though osteoclastic number was deceased. Taken together, our findings suggest that eldecalcitol stimulates preosteoblastic differentiation rather than their proliferation, which in turn may prevent or diminish cell-to-cell contact between preosteoblasts and osteoclastic precursors, and therefore, lead to lower osteoclast numbers and decreased bone resorption.


Bone | 2013

Altered distribution of bone matrix proteins and defective bone mineralization in klotho-deficient mice

Muneteru Sasaki; Tomoka Hasegawa; Tamaki Yamada; Hiromi Hongo; Paulo Henrique Luiz de Freitas; Reiko Suzuki; Tomomaya Yamamoto; Chihiro Tabata; Satoru Toyosawa; Tsuneyuki Yamamoto; Kimimitsu Oda; Minqi Li; Nobuo Inoue; Norio Amizuka

In an attempt to identify the histological properties of the klotho-deficient (kl/kl) bone matrix, bone mineralization and the localization of Ca(2+)-binding bone matrix proteins - osteocalcin, dentin matrix protein-1 (DMP-1) and matrix Gla protein (MGP) - were examined in kl/kl tibiae. While a widespread osteocalcin staining could be verified in the wild-type bone matrix, localization of the same protein in the kl/kl tibiae seemed rather restricted to osteocytes with only a faint staining of the whole bone matrix. In wild-type mice, MGP immunoreactivity was present at the junction between the epiphyseal bone and cartilage, and at the insertion of the cruciate ligaments. In kl/kl mice, however, MGP was seen around the cartilaginous cores of the metaphyseal trabeculae and in the periphery of some cells of the bone surface. DMP-1 was identified in the osteocytic canalicular system of wild-type tibiae, but in the kl/kl tibiae this protein was mostly found in the osteocytic lacunae and in the periphery of some cells of the bone surface. Mineralization of the kl/kl bone seemed somewhat defective, with broad unmineralized areas within its matrix. In these areas, mineralized osteocytes along with their lacunae and osteocytic cytoplasmic processes were found to have intense osteocalcin and DMP-1 staining. Taken together, it might be that the excessive production of Ca(2+)-binding molecules such as osteocalcin and DMP-1 by osteocytes concentrates mineralization around such cells, disturbing the completeness of mineralization in the kl/kl bone matrix.


Histology and Histopathology | 2013

Histological examination on osteoblastic activities in the alveolar bone of transgenic mice with induced ablation of osteocytes

Minqi Li; Tomoka Hasegawa; Hiromi Hogo; Sawako Tatsumi; Zhusheng Liu; Ying Guo; Muneteru Sasaki; Chihiro Tabata; Tsuneyuki Yamamoto; Kyoji Ikeda; Norio Amizuka

The purpose of this study was to examine histological alterations on osteoblasts from the alveolar bone of transgenic mice with targeted ablation of osteoctyes. Eighteen weeks-old transgenic mice based on the diphtheria toxin (DT) receptor-mediated cell knockout (TRECK) system were used in these experiments. Mice were injected intraperitoneally with 50 µg/kg of DT in PBS, or only PBS as control. Two weeks after injections, mice were subjected to transcardiac perfusion with 4% paraformaldehyde in 0.1M phosphate buffer (pH 7.4), and the available alveolar bone was removed for histochemical analyses. Approximately 75% of osteocytes from alveolar bones became apoptotic after DT administration, and most osteocytic lacunae became empty. Osteoblastic numbers and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity were markedly reduced at the endosteum of alveolar bone after DT administration compared with the control. Osteoblastic ALP activity in the periodontal ligament region, on the other hand, hardly showed any differences between the two groups even though numbers were reduced in the experiment group. Silver impregnation showed a difference in the distribution of bone canaliculi between the portions near the endosteum and the periodontal ligament: the former appeared regularly arranged in contrast to the latters irregular distribution. Under transmission electron microscopy (TEM), the osteoblasts in the periodontal ligament showed direct contact with the Sharpeys fibers. Thus, osteoblastic activity was affected by osteocyte ablation in general, but osteoblasts in contact with the periodontal ligament were less affected than endosteal osteoblasts.


Journal of Electron Microscopy | 2012

Structure and formation of the twisted plywood pattern of collagen fibrils in rat lamellar bone

Tsuneyuki Yamamoto; Tomoka Hasegawa; Muneteru Sasaki; Hiromi Hongo; Chihiro Tabata; Zhusheng Liu; Minqi Li; Norio Amizuka

This study was designed to elucidate details of the structure and formation process of the alternate lamellar pattern known to exist in lamellar bone. For this purpose, we examined basic internal lamellae in femurs of young rats by transmission and scanning electron microscopy, the latter employing two different macerations with NaOH at concentrations of 10 and 24%. Observations after the maceration with 10% NaOH showed that the regular and periodic rotation of collagen fibrils caused an alternation between two types of lamellae: one consisting of transversely and nearly transversely cut fibrils, and the other consisting of longitudinally and nearly longitudinally cut fibrils. This finding confirms the consistency of the twisted plywood model. The maceration method with 24% NaOH removed bone components other than cells, thus allowing for three-dimensional observations of osteoblast morphology. Osteoblasts extended finger-like processes paralleling the inner bone surface, and grouped in such a way that, within a group, the processes arranged in a similar direction. Transmission electron microscopy showed that newly deposited fibrils were arranged alongside these processes. For the formation of the alternating pattern, our findings suggest that: (1) osteoblasts control the collagen fibril arrangement through their finger-like process position; (2) osteoblasts behave similarly within a group; (3) osteoblasts move their processes synchronously and periodically to promote alternating different fibril orientation; and (4) this dynamic sequential deposition of fibrils results in the alternate lamellar (or twisted plywood) pattern.


Physical Review B | 2016

Peculiar magnetism of UAu2Si2

Chihiro Tabata; Naoyuki Miura; Klára Uhlířová; Michal Vališka; Hiraku Saito; Hiroyuki Hidaka; Tatsuya Yanagisawa; V. Sechovský; H. Amitsuka

Single-crystalline UAu


Philosophical Magazine | 2014

X-ray backscattering study of crystal lattice distortion in hidden order of URu2Si2

Chihiro Tabata; T. Inami; S. Michimura; M. Yokoyama; Hiroyuki Hidaka; Tatsuya Yanagisawa; H. Amitsuka

_2


Journal of Electron Microscopy | 2012

Immunolocalization of sclerostin synthesized by osteocytes in relation to bone remodeling in the interradicular septa of ovariectomized rats

Ying Guo; Minqi Li; Liu Zhusheng; Tamaki Yamada; Muneteru Sasaki; Tomoka Hasegawa; Hiromi Hongo; Chihiro Tabata; Reiko Suzuki; Kimimitsu Oda; Tsuneyuki Yamamoto; Masamitsu Kawanami; Norio Amizuka

Si


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Discovery of the Pt-Based Superconductor LaPt5As

Masaya Fujioka; Manabu Ishimaru; Taizo Shibuya; Yoichi Kamihara; Chihiro Tabata; H. Amitsuka; Akira Miura; Masashi Tanaka; Yoshihiko Takano; Hideo Kaiju; Junji Nishii

_2


Physical Review B | 2017

Neutron diffraction study on single-crystalline UAu2Si2

Chihiro Tabata; M. Klicpera; Bachir Ouladdiaf; Hiraku Saito; Michal Vališka; Klara Uhlirova; Naoyuki Miura; V. Sechovsky; H. Amitsuka

has been grown by a floating-zone melting method, and its magnetic, thermal and transport properties have been investigated through measurements of magnetization, specific heat and electrical resistivity to reveal its peculiar magnetism. It is shown that UAu


Biomedical Research-tokyo | 2011

Morphological assessment of bone mineralization in tibial metaphyses of ascorbic acid-deficient ODS rats

Tomoka Hasegawa; Minqi Li; Kuniko Hara; Muneteru Sasaki; Chihiro Tabata; Paulo Henrique Luiz de Freitas; Hiromi Hongo; Reiko Suzuki; Masatoshi Kobayashi; Kiichiro Inoue; Tsuneyuki Yamamoto; Noboru Oohata; Kimimitsu Oda; Yasuhiro Akiyama; Norio Amizuka

_2

Collaboration


Dive into the Chihiro Tabata's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge