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Dive into the research topics where Diana Takahashi is active.

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Featured researches published by Diana Takahashi.


Nature Medicine | 1999

Unique checkpoints during the first cell cycle of fertilization after intracytoplasmic sperm injection in rhesus monkeys.

Laura Hewitson; Tanja Dominko; Diana Takahashi; Crista Martinovich; João Ramalho-Santos; Peter Sutovsky; John Fanton; Darla Jacob; Daymond Monteith; Martha Neuringer; David E. Battaglia; C Simerly; Gerald Schatten

Intracytoplasmic sperm injection has begun an era of considerable improvements in treating male infertility. Despite its success, questions remain about the dangers of transmitting traits responsible for male infertility, sex and autosomal chromosome aberrations and possible mental, physical and reproductive abnormalities. We report here the first births of rhesus monkeys produced by intracytoplasmic sperm injection at rates greater or equal to those reported by clinics. Essential assumptions about this process are flawed, as shown by results with the preclinical, nonhuman primate model and with clinically discarded specimens. Dynamic imaging demonstrated the variable position of the second meiotic spindle in relation to the first polar body; consequently, microinjection targeting is imprecise and potentially lethal. Intracytoplasmic sperm injection resulted in abnormal sperm decondensation, with the unusual retention of vesicle-associated membrane protein and the perinuclear theca, and the exclusion of the nuclear mitotic apparatus from the decondensing sperm nuclear apex. Male pronuclear remodeling in the injected oocytes was required before replication of either parental genome, indicating a unique G1-to-S transition checkpoint during zygotic interphase (the first cell cycle). These irregularities indicate that the intracytoplasmic sperm injection itself might lead to the observed increased chromosome anomalies.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2010

Chronic Consumption of a High-Fat Diet during Pregnancy Causes Perturbations in the Serotonergic System and Increased Anxiety-Like Behavior in Nonhuman Primate Offspring

Elinor L. Sullivan; Bernadette E. Grayson; Diana Takahashi; Nicola D. Robertson; Adriane Maier; Cynthia L. Bethea; M. Susan Smith; Kristine Coleman; Kevin L. Grove

Childhood obesity is associated with increased risk of behavioral/psychological disorders including depression, anxiety, poor learning, and attention deficient disorder. As the majority of women of child-bearing age are overweight or obese and consume a diet high in dietary fat, it is critical to examine the consequences of maternal overnutrition on the development of brain circuitry that regulates offspring behavior. Using a nonhuman primate model of diet-induced obesity, we found that maternal high-fat diet (HFD) consumption caused perturbations in the central serotonergic system of fetal offspring. In addition, female infants from HFD-fed mothers exhibited increased anxiety in response to threatening novel objects. These findings have important clinical implications as they demonstrate that exposure to maternal HFD consumption during gestation, independent of obesity, increases the risk of developing behavioral disorders such as anxiety.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Maternal High Fat Diet Is Associated with Decreased Plasma n–3 Fatty Acids and Fetal Hepatic Apoptosis in Nonhuman Primates

Wilmon F. Grant; Melanie B. Gillingham; Ayesha K. Batra; Natasha M. Fewkes; Sarah M. Comstock; Diana Takahashi; Theodore P. Braun; Kevin L. Grove; Jacob E. Friedman; Daniel L. Marks

To begin to understand the contributions of maternal obesity and over-nutrition to human development and the early origins of obesity, we utilized a non-human primate model to investigate the effects of maternal high-fat feeding and obesity on breast milk, maternal and fetal plasma fatty acid composition and fetal hepatic development. While the high-fat diet (HFD) contained equivalent levels of n-3 fatty acids (FAs) and higher levels of n-6 FAs than the control diet (CTR), we found significant decreases in docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and total n-3 FAs in HFD maternal and fetal plasma. Furthermore, the HFD fetal plasma n-6∶n-3 ratio was elevated and was significantly correlated to the maternal plasma n-6∶n-3 ratio and maternal hyperinsulinemia. Hepatic apoptosis was also increased in the HFD fetal liver. Switching HFD females to a CTR diet during a subsequent pregnancy normalized fetal DHA, n-3 FAs and fetal hepatic apoptosis to CTR levels. Breast milk from HFD dams contained lower levels of eicosopentanoic acid (EPA) and DHA and lower levels of total protein than CTR breast milk. This study links chronic maternal consumption of a HFD with fetal hepatic apoptosis and suggests that a potentially pathological maternal fatty acid milieu is replicated in the developing fetal circulation in the nonhuman primate.


International Journal of Obesity | 2013

Maternal high-fat diet impacts endothelial function in nonhuman primate offspring

L. Fan; S. R. Lindsley; S. M. Comstock; Diana Takahashi; Anne E. Evans; G. W. He; K. L. Thornburg; Kevin L. Grove

OBJECTIVE:The link between maternal under-nutrition and cardiovascular disease (CVD) in the offspring later in life is well recognized, but the impact of maternal over-nutrition on the offsprings cardiovascular function and subsequent risk for CVD later in life remains unclear. Here, we investigated the impact of maternal exposure to a high-fat/calorie diet (HFD) during pregnancy and early postnatal period on endothelial function of the offspring in a nonhuman primate model.METHODS:Offspring, naturally born to either a control (CTR) diet (14% fat calories) or a HFD (36% fat calories) consumption dam, were breast-fed until weaning at about 8 months of age. After weaning, the offspring were either maintained on the same diet (CTR/CTR, HFD/HFD), or underwent a diet switch (CTR/HFD, HFD/CTR). Blood samples and arterial tissues were collected at necropsy when the animals were about 13 months of age.RESULTS:HFD/HFD juveniles displayed an increased plasma insulin level and glucose-stimulated insulin secretion in comparison with CTR/CTR. In abdominal aorta, but not the renal artery, acetylcholine-induced vasorelaxation was decreased remarkably for HFD/HFD juveniles compared with CTR/CTR. HFD/HFD animals also showed a thicker intima wall and an abnormal vascular-morphology, concurrent with elevated expression levels of several markers related to vascular inflammation and fibrinolytic function. Diet-switching animals (HFD/CTR and CTR/HFD) displayed modest damage on the abdominal vessel.CONCLUSION:Our data indicate that maternal HFD exposure impairs offsprings endothelial function. Both early programming events and postweaning diet contribute to the abnormalities that could be reversed partially by diet intervention.


Fertility and Sterility | 2002

Rhesus offspring produced by intracytoplasmic injection of testicular sperm and elongated spermatids

Laura Hewitson; Crista Martinovich; Calvin Simerly; Diana Takahashi; Gerald Schatten

OBJECTIVE To establish pregnancies in rhesus monkeys using testicular sperm and elongated spermatids injected into oocytes. DESIGN Comparative animal study. SETTING Regional Primate Research Center. ANIMAL(S) Prime, fertile rhesus monkeys. INTERVENTION(S) Oocytes collected by laparoscopy from gonadotropin-stimulated female rhesus monkeys were injected with testicular sperm or elongated spermatids obtained from the testis of males. Cleavage stage embryos were transferred to surrogate females. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) Fertilization, embryo cleavage, and the establishment of pregnancies. Fertilization failures were fixed and processed for the detection of microtubules and chromatin configurations. RESULT(S) Fertilization, assessed by the presence of two pronuclei within 15 hours after injection, was 60% for intracytoplasmic sperm injection with testicular sperm and 47% for elongated spermatid injection. Fertilized zygotes co-cultured in Connaughts Medical Research Labs (CMRL) medium on a Buffalo Rat Liver cell monolayer resulted in hatched blastocysts after testicular sperm extraction-intracytoplasmic sperm injection and elongated spermatids. Embryos transferred at the 4- to 8-cell stage gave rise to three pregnancies: 2/3 from testicular sperm and 1/1 from an elongated spermatid. Three healthy infants were delivered by cesarean. Oocytes that failed to fertilize typically remained arrested in metaphase of meiosis. CONCLUSION(S) Testicular sperm and elongated spermatids can be used for fertilization in the rhesus monkey resulting in live births.


Cloning | 1999

Optimization Strategies for Production of Mammalian Embryos by Nuclear Transfer

Tanja Dominko; João Ramalho-Santos; Anthony W.S. Chan; Ricardo D. Moreno; C. M. Luetjens; C Simerly; Laura Hewitson; Diana Takahashi; Crista Martinovich; J. M. White; Gerald Schatten

In order to optimize each of the individual steps in the nuclear transfer procedure, we report alternative protocols useful for producing recipient cytoplasts and for improving the success rate of nuclear transfer embryos in cattle, rhesus monkey, and hamster. Vital labeling of maternal chromatin/spindle is accomplished by long wavelength fluorochromes Sybr14 and rhodamine labeled tubulin allowing constant monitoring and verification during enucleation. The use of Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) donor cells expressing the viral influenza hemagglutinin fusion protein (HA-300a+), to adhere and induce fusion between the donor cells and enucleated cow, rhesus and hamster oocytes was examined. Cell surface hemagglutinin was activated with trypsin prior to nuclear transfer and fusion was induced by a short incubation of a newly created nuclear transfer couplet at pH 5.2 at room temperature. Donor cell cytoplasm was dynamically labeled with CMFDA, or further transfected with the green fluorescence protein (GFP) gene, so that fusion could be directly monitored using live imaging. High rates of fusion were observed between CHO donor cells and hamster (100%), rhesus (100%), and cow recipient cytoplasts (81.6%). Live imaging during fusion revealed rapid intermixing of cytoplasmic components between a recipient and a donor cell. Prelabeled donor cytoplasmic components were uniformly distributed throughout the recipient cytoplast, within minutes of fusion, while the newly introduced nucleus remained at the periphery. The fusion process did not induce activation as evidenced by unchanged distribution and density of cortical granules in the recipient cytoplasts. After artificial activation, the nuclear transfer embryos created in this manner were capable of completing several embryonic cell divisions. These procedures hold promise for enhancing the efficiency of nuclear transfer in mammals of importance for biomedical research, agriculture, biotechnology, and preserving unique, rare, and endangered species.


Obesity | 2015

Maternal high-fat diet and obesity impact palatable food intake and dopamine signaling in nonhuman primate offspring

Heidi M. Rivera; Paul Kievit; Melissa A. Kirigiti; Leigh Ann Bauman; Karalee Baquero; Peter Blundell; Tyler Dean; Jeanette C. Valleau; Diana Takahashi; Tim Frazee; Luke Douville; Jordan Majer; M. Susan Smith; Kevin L. Grove; Elinor L. Sullivan

To utilize a nonhuman primate model to examine the impact of maternal high‐fat diet (HFD) consumption and pre‐pregnancy obesity on offspring intake of palatable food and to examine whether maternal HFD consumption impaired development of the dopamine system, critical for the regulation of hedonic feeding.


Molecular metabolism | 2013

High-fat diet consumption during pregnancy and the early post-natal period leads to decreased α cell plasticity in the nonhuman primate

Sarah Comstock; Lynley D. Pound; Jacalyn M. Bishop; Diana Takahashi; Ashley M. Kostrba; M. Susan Smith; Kevin L. Grove

We investigated the impact of poor maternal nutrition and metabolic health on the development of islets of the nonhuman primate (NHP). Interestingly, fetal offspring of high fat diet (HFD) fed animals had normal total islet and β cell mass; however, there was a significant reduction in α cell mass, and decreased expression of transcription factors involved in α cell differentiation. In juvenile animals all offspring maintained on a HFD during the postweaning period demonstrated increases in total islet mass, however, the control offspring displaying increased islet number, and HFD offspring displayed increased islet size. Finally, while control offspring had increases in α and β cells, the HFD offspring had increases only in β cell number. These studies indicate that consumption of a HFD diet during pregnancy in the NHP, independent of maternal metabolic health, causes long-term abnormalities in α cell plasticity that may contribute to chronic disease susceptibility.


Pediatric Research | 2013

Postweaning exposure to a high-fat diet is associated with alterations to the hepatic histone code in Japanese macaques

Melissa Suter; Diana Takahashi; Kevin L. Grove; Kjersti Aagaard

Background:Expression of circadian gene, Npas2, is altered in fetal life with maternal high-fat (HF) diet exposure by virtue of alterations in the fetal histone code. We postulated that these disruptions would persist postnatally.Methods:Pregnant macaques were fed a control (CTR) or HF diet and delivered at term. When offspring were weaned, they were placed on either CTR or HF diet for a period of 5 mo to yield four exposure models (in utero diet/postweaning diet: CTR/CTR n = 5; CTR/HF n = 4; HF/CTR n = 4; and HF/HF n = 5). Liver specimens were obtained at necropsy at 1 y of age.Results:Hepatic trimethylation of lysine 4 of histone H3 is decreased (CTR/HF 0.87-fold, P = 0.038; HF/CTR 0.84-fold, P = 0.038), whereas hepatic methyltransferase activity increased by virtue of diet exposure (HF/HF 1.3-fold, P = 0.019). Using chromatin immunoprecipitation to determine Npas2 promoter occupancy, we found alterations of both repressive and permissive histone modifications specifically with postweaning HF diet exposure.Conclusion:We found that altered Npas2 expression corresponds with a change in the histone code within the Npas2 promoter.


JCI insight | 2016

Maternal obesity reduces oxidative capacity in fetal skeletal muscle of Japanese macaques.

Carrie E. McCurdy; Simon Schenk; Byron Hetrick; Julie A. Houck; Brian G. Drew; Spencer Kaye; Melanie Lashbrook; Bryan C. Bergman; Diana Takahashi; Tyler Dean; Travis Nemkov; Ilya Gertsman; Kirk C. Hansen; Andrew Philp; Andrea L. Hevener; Adam J. Chicco; Kjersti Aagaard; Kevin L. Grove; Jacob E. Friedman

Maternal obesity is proposed to alter the programming of metabolic systems in the offspring, increasing the risk for developing metabolic diseases; however, the cellular mechanisms remain poorly understood. Here, we used a nonhuman primate model to examine the impact of a maternal Western-style diet (WSD) alone, or in combination with obesity (Ob/WSD), on fetal skeletal muscle metabolism studied in the early third trimester. We find that fetal muscle responds to Ob/WSD by upregulating fatty acid metabolism, mitochondrial complex activity, and metabolic switches (CPT-1, PDK4) that promote lipid utilization over glucose oxidation. Ob/WSD fetuses also had reduced mitochondrial content, diminished oxidative capacity, and lower mitochondrial efficiency in muscle. The decrease in oxidative capacity and glucose metabolism was persistent in primary myotubes from Ob/WSD fetuses despite no additional lipid-induced stress. Switching obese mothers to a healthy diet prior to pregnancy did not improve fetal muscle mitochondrial function. Lastly, while maternal WSD alone led only to intermediary changes in fetal muscle metabolism, it was sufficient to increase oxidative damage and cellular stress. Our findings suggest that maternal obesity or WSD, alone or in combination, leads to programmed decreases in oxidative metabolism in offspring muscle. These alterations may have important implications for future health.

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Kevin L. Grove

Oregon National Primate Research Center

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Kjersti Aagaard

Baylor College of Medicine

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Amanda Prince

Baylor College of Medicine

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Elinor L. Sullivan

Oregon National Primate Research Center

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Jun Ma

Baylor College of Medicine

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Karalee Baquero

Oregon National Primate Research Center

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Tyler Dean

Oregon National Primate Research Center

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Paul Kievit

Oregon National Primate Research Center

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Peter Blundell

Oregon National Primate Research Center

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