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Dive into the research topics where Dai-ichiro Fuchimoto is active.

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Featured researches published by Dai-ichiro Fuchimoto.


Biology of Reproduction | 2003

Viable Piglets Generated from Porcine Oocytes Matured In Vitro and Fertilized by Intracytoplasmic Sperm Head Injection

Michiko Nakai; Naomi Kashiwazaski; Akiko Takizawa; Yuri Hayashi; Ena Nakatsukasa; Dai-ichiro Fuchimoto; Junko Noguchi; Hiroyuki Kaneko; Masao Shino; Kazuhiro Kikuchi

Abstract Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) of a nonmotile cell into the ooplasm for assisted fertilization is a highly specialized procedure for producing the next generation. The production of piglets by ICSI has succeeded when in vivo-matured oocytes have been used as recipients. Our objective was to generate viable piglets by using porcine oocytes matured in vitro and fertilized by ICSI after evaluating the efficacy of using donor spermatozoa in which the acrosome had been artificially removed by treatment with calcium ionophore A23187 (Ca-I). The rate of acrosomal loss in spermatozoa was increased significantly as the duration of treatment with 10 μM Ca-I was prolonged for 30–120 min (Ca-I treated; 55.6–78.6%), whereas the rate was not different as the duration of incubation without Ca-I was prolonged for 30–120 min (control; 45.3–58.4%). On the sixth day of in vitro culture after injection of the sperm head and subsequent stimulation with an electrical pulse, the rates of blastocyst formation were not significantly different between the two groups: the rates for oocytes injected with Ca-I-treated sperm heads (incubated for 120 min) and for those injected with control sperm heads were 8.6% and 4.0%, respectively. The mean cell numbers of the blastocysts were not significantly different between the two groups (25.6 and 22.7, respectively). Within 2 h after the stimulation, the injected oocytes were transferred to estrous-synchronized recipients. The three recipients that received oocytes injected with Ca-I-treated sperm heads (77–150 oocytes per recipient) were not pregnant, whereas two of the four recipients given oocytes injected with control sperm heads (55–100 oocytes per recipient) were pregnant. One of these farrowed three (a male and two female) healthy piglets. The results demonstrate clearly that in vitro-matured oocytes injected with sperm heads are developmentally competent and can produce viable piglets. They also suggest that removal of the acrosome from the spermatozoon before injection does not affect the development of the blastocyst in vitro. This might not also improve the production of piglets in vivo.


Cell Stem Cell | 2012

Il2rg Gene-Targeted Severe Combined Immunodeficiency Pigs

Shunichi Suzuki; Masaki Iwamoto; Yoriko Saito; Dai-ichiro Fuchimoto; Shoichiro Sembon; Misae Suzuki; Satoshi Mikawa; Michiko Hashimoto; Yuki Aoki; Yuho Najima; Shinsuke Takagi; Nahoko Suzuki; Emi Suzuki; Masanori Kubo; Jun Mimuro; Yuji Kashiwakura; Seiji Madoiwa; Yoichi Sakata; Anthony C.F. Perry; Fumihiko Ishikawa; Akira Onishi

A porcine model of severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) promises to facilitate human cancer studies, the humanization of tissue for xenotransplantation, and the evaluation of stem cells for clinical therapy, but SCID pigs have not been described. We report here the generation and preliminary evaluation of a porcine SCID model. Fibroblasts containing a targeted disruption of the X-linked interleukin-2 receptor gamma chain gene, Il2rg, were used as donors to generate cloned pigs by serial nuclear transfer. Germline transmission of the Il2rg deletion produced healthy Il2rg(+/-) females, while Il2rg(-/Y) males were athymic and exhibited markedly impaired immunoglobulin and T and NK cell production, robustly recapitulating human SCID. Following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation, donor cells stably integrated in Il2rg(-/Y) heterozygotes and reconstituted the Il2rg(-/Y) lymphoid lineage. The SCID pigs described here represent a step toward the comprehensive evaluation of preclinical cellular regenerative strategies.


Biology of Reproduction | 2005

A Novel Method for the Production of Transgenic Cloned Pigs: Electroporation-Mediated Gene Transfer to Non-Cultured Cells and Subsequent Selection with Puromycin

Satoshi Watanabe; Masaki Iwamoto; Shunichi Suzuki; Dai-ichiro Fuchimoto; Daisuke Honma; Takashi Nagai; Michiko Hashimoto; Satoko Yazaki; Masahiro Sato; Akira Onishi

Abstract Puromycin N-acetyl transferase gene (pac), of which the gene product catalyzes antibiotic puromycin (an effective inhibitor of protein synthesis), has been widely used as a dominant selection marker in embryonic stem (ES) cell-mediated transgenesis. The present study is the first to report on the usefulness of puromycin for production of enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) transgenic piglets after somatic cell cloning and embryo transfer. Somatic cells isolated from porcine fetuses at 73 days of gestation were immediately electroporated with a transgene (pCAG-EGFPac) carrying both EGFP cDNA and pac. This procedure aims to avoid aging effects thought to be generated during cell culture. The recombinant cells were selected with puromycin at a low concentration (2 µg/ml), cultured for 7 days, and then screened for EGFP expression before somatic cell cloning. The manipulated embryos were transplanted into the oviducts of 14 foster mother sows. Four of the foster sows became pregnant and nine piglets were delivered. Of the nine piglets, eight died shortly after birth and one grew healthy after weaning. Results indicate that puromycin can be used for the selection of recombinant cells from noncultured cells, and moreover, may confer the production of genetically engineered newborns via nuclear transfer techniques in pigs.


Zygote | 2003

Meiotic arrest maintained by cAMP during the initiation of maturation enhances meiotic potential and developmental competence and reduces polyspermy of IVM/IVF porcine oocytes.

T. Somfai; Kazuhiro Kikuchi; Akira Onishi; Masaki Iwamoto; Dai-ichiro Fuchimoto; Ágnes Bali Papp; Eimei Sato; Takashi Nagai

We investigated effects of invasive adenylate cyclase (iAC), 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine (IBMX) and dibutyryl cyclic AMP (dbcAMP) on porcine oocyte in vitro maturation (IVM), in vitro fertilisation (IVF) and subsequent embryonic development. Porcine oocytes were collected in Hepes-buffered NCSU-37 supplemented with or without 0.1 microg/ml iAC and 0.5 mM IBMX. IVM was performed in a modified NCSU-37 supplemented with or without 1 mM dbcAMP for 22 h and then without dbcAMP for an additional 24 h. After IVF, oocytes were cultured in vitro for 6 days. After 12 h of IVM, no difference in nuclear status was observed irrespective of supplementation with these chemicals during collection and IVM. At 22 h, most (95%) of the oocytes cultured with dbcAMP remained at the germinal vesicle (GV) stage, whereas 44.3% of the oocytes cultured without dbcAMP underwent GV breakdown. At 36 h, oocytes cultured with dbcAMP had progressed to prometaphase I or metaphase I (MI) (32.6% and 49.3%, respectively), whereas non-treated oocytes had progressed further to anaphase I, telophase I or metaphase II (MII) (13.6%, 14.3% and 38.0%, respectively). At 46 h, the rate of matured oocytes at MII was higher in oocytes cultured with dbcAMP (81%) than without dbcAMP (57%), while the proportion of oocytes arrested at MI was lower when cultured with dbcAMP (15%) than without dbcAMP (31%). The rate of monospermic fertilisation was higher when oocytes were cultured with dbcAMP (21%) than without dbcAMP (9%), with no difference in total penetration rates (58% and 52%, respectively). The blastocyst rate was higher in oocytes cultured with dbcAMP (32%) than without dbcAMP (19%). These results suggest that a change in intracellular level of cAMP during oocyte collection does not affect maturational and developmental competence of porcine oocytes and that synchronisation of meiotic maturation using dbcAMP enhances the meiotic potential of oocytes by promoting the MI to MII transition and results in high developmental competence by monospermic fertilisation.


Zygote | 2005

Effects of caffeine treatment on aged porcine oocytes: parthenogenetic activation ability, chromosome condensation and development to the blastocyst stage after somatic cell nuclear transfer

Masaki Iwamoto; Akira Onishi; Dai-ichiro Fuchimoto; T. Somfai; Shunichi Suzuki; Satoko Yazaki; Michiko Hashimoto; Kumiko Takeda; Takahiro Tagami; Hirofumi Hanada; Junko Noguchi; Hiroyuki Kaneko; Takashi Nagai; Kazuhiro Kikuchi

The possibility of using aged porcine oocytes treated with caffeine, which inhibits the decrease in M-phase promoting factor activity, for pig cloning was evaluated. Cumulus-oocyte complexes (COCs) were cultured initially for 36 h and subsequently with or without 5 mM caffeine for 24 h (in total for 60 h: 60CA+ or 60CA- group, respectively). As a control group, COCs were cultured for 48 h without caffeine (48CA-). The pronuclear formation rates at 10 h after electrical stimulation in the 60CA+ and 60CA- groups decreased significantly (p < 0.05) compared with the 48CA- group. However, the fragmentation rate was significantly higher (p < 0.05) in the 60CA- group than in the 60CA+ and 48CA- groups. When the stimulated oocytes were cultured for 6 days, the 60CA+ group showed significantly lower blastocyst formation and higher fragmentation or degeneration rates (p < 0.05) than the 48CA- group. However, the number of total cells in blastocysts was not affected by maturation period or caffeine treatment. When somatic cell nuclei were injected into the non-enucleated oocytes and exposed to cytoplasm for a certain duration (1-11 h) before the completion of maturation (48 or 60 h), the rate of nuclear membrane breakdown after exposure to cytoplasm for 1-2 h in the 60CA- oocytes was significantly lower (p < 0.05) than in the other experimental groups. The rate of scattered chromosome formation in the same 60CA- group tended to be lower (p = 0.08) than in the other groups. After the enucleation and transfer of nuclei, blastocyst formation rates in the 60CA+ and 60CA- groups were significantly lower (p < 0.05) than in the 48CA- group. Blastocyst quality did not differ among all the groups. These results suggest that chromosome decondensation of the transplanted somatic nucleus is affected by both the duration of exposure to cytoplasm and the age of the recipient porcine oocytes, and that caffeine treatment promotes nuclear remodelling but does not prevent the decrease in the developmental ability of cloned embryos caused by oocyte aging.


Xenotransplantation | 2012

Production of cloned pigs expressing human thrombomodulin in endothelial cells.

Satoko Yazaki; Masaki Iwamoto; Akira Onishi; Yuko Miwa; Michiko Hashimoto; Takatsugu Oishi; Shunichi Suzuki; Dai-ichiro Fuchimoto; Shoichiro Sembon; Tadashi Furusawa; D Liu; Takaharu Nagasaka; Takafumi Kuzuya; Haruko Ogawa; Koji Yamamoto; Kenta Iwasaki; Masataka Haneda; Shoichi Maruyama; Takaaki Kobayashi

Yazaki S, Iwamoto M, Onishi A, Miwa Y, Hashimoto M, Oishi T, Suzuki S, Fuchimoto D‐I, Sembon S, Furusawa T, Liu DG, Nagasaka T, Kuzuya T, Ogawa H, Yamamoto K, Iwasaki K, Haneda M, Maruyama S, Kobayashi T. Production of cloned pigs expressing human thrombomodulin in endothelial cells. Xenotransplantation 2012; 19: 82–91.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Porcine Model of Hemophilia A

Yuji Kashiwakura; Jun Mimuro; Akira Onishi; Masaki Iwamoto; Seiji Madoiwa; Dai-ichiro Fuchimoto; Shunichi Suzuki; Misae Suzuki; Shoichiro Sembon; Akira Ishiwata; Atsushi Yasumoto; Asuka Sakata; Tsukasa Ohmori; Michiko Hashimoto; Satoko Yazaki; Yoichi Sakata

Hemophilia A is a common X chromosome-linked genetic bleeding disorder caused by abnormalities in the coagulation factor VIII gene (F8). Hemophilia A patients suffer from a bleeding diathesis, such as life-threatening bleeding in the brain and harmful bleeding in joints and muscles. Because it could potentially be cured by gene therapy, subhuman animal models have been sought. Current mouse hemophilia A models generated by gene targeting of the F8 have difficulties to extrapolate human disease due to differences in the coagulation and immune systems between mice and humans. Here, we generated a porcine model of hemophilia A by nuclear transfer cloning from F8-targeted fibroblasts. The hemophilia A pigs showed a severe bleeding tendency upon birth, similar to human severe hemophiliacs, but in contrast to hemophilia A mice which rarely bleed under standard breed conditions. Infusion of human factor VIII was effective in stopping bleeding and reducing the bleeding frequency of a hemophilia A piglet but was blocked by the inhibitor against human factor VIII. These data suggest that the hemophilia A pig is a severe hemophilia A animal model for studying not only hemophilia A gene therapy but also the next generation recombinant coagulation factors, such as recombinant factor VIII variants with a slower clearance rate.


Xenotransplantation | 2009

Successful cross‐breeding of cloned pigs expressing endo‐β‐galactosidase C and human decay accelerating factor

Satoko Yazaki; Masaki Iwamoto; Akira Onishi; Yuko Miwa; Shunichi Suzuki; Dai-ichiro Fuchimoto; Shoichiro Sembon; Tadashi Furusawa; Michiko Hashimoto; Takatsugu Oishi; D Liu; Takaharu Nagasaka; Takafumi Kuzuya; Shoichi Maruyama; Haruko Ogawa; Kenji Kadomatsu; Kazuharu Uchida; Akimasa Nakao; Takaaki Kobayashi

Yazaki S, Iwamoto M, Onishi A, Miwa Y, Suzuki S, Fuchimoto D, Sembon S, Furusawa T, Hashimoto M, Oishi T, Liu D, Nagasaka T, Kuzuya T, Maruyama S, Ogawa H, Kadomatsu K, Uchida K, 
Nakao A, Kobayashi T. Successful cross‐breeding of cloned pigs expressing endo‐β‐galactosidase C and human decay accelerating factor. Xenotransplantation 2009; 16: 511–521.


Journal of the American Heart Association | 2016

Development of Human‐Like Advanced Coronary Plaques in Low‐Density Lipoprotein Receptor Knockout Pigs and Justification for Statin Treatment Before Formation of Atherosclerotic Plaques

Yuxin Li; Dai-ichiro Fuchimoto; Mitsumasa Sudo; Hironori Haruta; Qing‐Fei Lin; Tadateru Takayama; Shotaro Morita; Tomonori Nochi; Shunichi Suzuki; Shoichiro Sembon; Michiko Nakai; Misaki Kojima; Masaki Iwamoto; Michiko Hashimoto; Shunichi Yoda; Satoshi Kunimoto; Takafumi Hiro; Taro Matsumoto; Masako Mitsumata; Masahiko Sugitani; Satoshi Saito; Akira Onishi

Background Although clinical trials have proved that statin can be used prophylactically against cardiovascular events, the direct effects of statin on plaque development are not well understood. We generated low‐density lipoprotein receptor knockout (LDLR −/−) pigs to study the effects of early statin administration on development of atherosclerotic plaques, especially advanced plaques. Methods and Results LDLR −/− pigs were generated by targeted deletion of exon 4 of the LDLR gene. Given a standard chow diet, LDLR −/− pigs showed atherosclerotic lesions starting at 6 months of age. When 3‐month‐old LDLR −/− pigs were fed a high‐cholesterol, high‐fat (HCHF) diet for 4 months (HCHF group), human‐like advanced coronary plaques developed. We also fed 3‐month‐old LDLR −/− pigs an HCHF diet with pitavastatin for 4 months (Statin Prophylaxis Group). Although serum cholesterol concentrations did not differ significantly between the 2 groups, intravascular ultrasound revealed 52% reduced plaque volume in statin‐treated pigs. Pathological examination revealed most lesions (87%) in the statin prophylaxis group were early‐stage lesions, versus 45% in the HCHF diet group (P<0.01). Thin‐cap fibroatheroma characterized 40% of the plaques in the HCHF diet group versus 8% in the statin prophylaxis group (P<0.01), intraplaque hemorrhage characterized 11% versus 1% (P<0.01), and calcification characterized 22% versus 1% (P<0.01). Conclusions Results of our large animal experiment support statin prophylaxis before the occurrence of atherosclerosis. Early statin treatment appears to retard development of coronary artery atherosclerosis and ensure lesion stability. In addition, the LDLR −/− pigs we developed represent a large animal model of human‐like advanced coronary plaque suitable for translational research.


Zygote | 2008

Sex identification of pigs using polymerase chain reaction amplification of the amelogenin gene

Shoichiro Sembon; Shunichi Suzuki; Dai-ichiro Fuchimoto; Masaki Iwamoto; Tatsuo Kawarasaki; Akira Onishi

The amelogenin (AMEL) gene exists on both sex chromosomes of various mammalian species and the length and sequence of the noncoding regions differ between the two chromosome-specific alleles. Because both forms can be amplified using a single primer set, the use of AMEL in polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based methods has facilitated sex identification in various mammalian species, including cattle, sheep and humans. In this study, we designed PCR primers to yield different-sized products from the AMEL genes on the X (AMELX) and Y (AMELY) chromosomes of pigs. PCR amplification of genomic DNA samples collected from various breeds of pigs (European breeds: Landrace, Large White, Duroc and Berkshire; Chinese breeds: Meishan and Jinhua and their crossbreeds) yielded the expected products. For all breeds, DNA from male pigs produced two bands (520 and 350 bp; AMELX and AMELY, respectively), whereas samples from female pigs generated only the 520 bp product. We then tested the use of PCR of AMEL for sex identification of in vitro-produced (IVP) porcine embryos sampled at 2 or 5 to 6 days after fertilization; germinal vesicle (GV)-stage oocytes and electroactivated embryos were used as controls. More than 88% of the GV-stage oocytes and electroactivated embryos yielded a single 520 bp single band and about 50% of the IVP embryos tested produced both bands. Our findings show that PCR analysis of the AMEL gene is reliable for sex identification of pigs and porcine embryos.

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Shunichi Suzuki

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Shoichiro Sembon

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Takashi Nagai

Seoul National University

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Kazuhiro Kikuchi

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Michiko Nakai

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Junko Noguchi

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Hiroyuki Kaneko

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Misae Suzuki

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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