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Dive into the research topics where Hidekazu Nakayama is active.

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Featured researches published by Hidekazu Nakayama.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Light-Regulated Activation of Cellular Signaling by Gold Nanoparticles That Capture and Release Amines

Jun Nakanishi; Hidekazu Nakayama; Takahiro Shimizu; Haruhisa Ishida; Yukiko Kikuchi; Kazuo Yamaguchi; Yasuhiro Horiike

A photoresponsive nanocarrier for amines based on gold nanoparticles (GNPs) having a photocleavable succinimidyl ester has been developed. It offers a useful platform for the synthesis of caged compounds. Using the GNPs, we have developed caged histamine for the first time and applied it to evoke intracellular signaling by controlled near-UV irradiation. The present work will allow for new possibilities in studies of inter- and intracellular signaling networks.


Langmuir | 2008

Arraying heterotypic single cells on photoactivatable cell-culturing substrates

Yukiko Kikuchi; Jun Nakanishi; Takahiro Shimizu; Hidekazu Nakayama; Satoshi Inoue; Kazuo Yamaguchi; Hideo Iwai; Yasuhiko Yoshida; Yasuhiro Horiike; Tohru Takarada; Mizuo Maeda

This article describes a photochemical method for the site-selective assembly of heterotypic cells on a glass substrate modified with a silane coupling agent having a caged functional group. Silane coupling agents having a carboxyl (COOH), amino (NH 2), hydroxyl (OH), or thiol (SH) group protected by a photocleavable 2-nitrobenzyl group were synthesized to modify the surfaces of glass coverslips. The caged substrates were first coated by the adsorption of a blocking agent, bovine serum albumin (BSA), to make the entire surface non-cell-adhesive and then irradiated at 365 nm under a standard fluorescence microscope. The photocleavage reaction on the surface was followed by contact angle measurements and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. When COS7, NIH3T3, and HEK293 cells were seeded onto these substrates in a serum-free medium, the cells adhered selectively and efficiently to the irradiated regions on the caged NH 2 substrate, whereas the other caged COOH, SH, and OH substrates were nonphotoactivatable for cell adhesion. Qualitative and quantitative analysis of BSA adsorbed to the uncaged substrates revealed that this highly efficient photoactivation on the caged NH 2 substrate arose because of the following reasons: (i) upon photoactivation, BSA adsorbed in advance on the 2-nitrobenzyl groups was readsorbed onto the uncaged functional groups and (ii) BSA readsorbed onto the NH 2 groups became unable to passivate the surface against cell adhesion whereas BSA on the other groups still had normal passivating activity. It was also demonstrated that heterotypic single COS7, NIH3T3, and HEK293 cells were positioned at any desired arrangement on the caged NH 2 substrate by repeating the UV irradiation at optimized array spot sizes and cell seeding in optimized cell concentrations. The present method will be particularly useful in studying the dynamic processes of cell-cell interactions at a single-cell level.


Science and Technology of Advanced Materials | 2011

Dynamic culture substrate that captures a specific extracellular matrix protein in response to light

Jun Nakanishi; Hidekazu Nakayama; Kazuo Yamaguchi; Andrés J. García; Yasuhiro Horiike

Abstract The development of methods for the off–on switching of immobilization or presentation of cell-adhesive peptides and proteins during cell culture is important because such surfaces are useful for the analysis of the dynamic processes of cell adhesion and migration. This paper describes a chemically functionalized gold substrate that captures a genetically tagged extracellular matrix protein in response to light. The substrate was composed of mixed self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of three disulfide compounds containing (i) a photocleavable poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG), (ii) nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA) and (iii) hepta(ethylene glycol) (EG7). Although the NTA group has an intrinsic high affinity for oligohistidine tag (His-tag) sequences in its Ni2+-ion complex, the interaction was suppressed by the steric hindrance of coexisting PEG on the substrate surface. Upon photoirradiation of the substrate to release the PEG chain from the surface, this interaction became possible and hence the protein was captured at the irradiated regions, while keeping the non-specific adsorption of non-His-tagged proteins blocked by the EG7 underbrush. In this way, we selectively immobilized a His-tagged fibronectin fragment (FNIII7–10) to the irradiated regions. In contrast, when bovine serum albumin—a major serum protein—was added as a non-His-tagged protein, the surface did not permit its capture, with or without irradiation. In agreement with these results, cells were selectively attached to the irradiated patterns only when a His-tagged FNIII7-10 was added to the medium. These results indicate that the present method is useful for studying the cellular behavior on the specific extracellular matrix protein in cell-culturing environments.


Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 2010

Silane coupling agent bearing a photoremovable succinimidyl carbonate for patterning amines on glass and silicon surfaces with controlled surface densities

Hidekazu Nakayama; Jun Nakanishi; Takahiro Shimizu; Yutaro Yoshino; Hideo Iwai; Shingo Kaneko; Yasuhiro Horiike; Kazuo Yamaguchi

Patterned immobilization of synthetic and biological ligands on material surfaces with controlled surface densities is important for various bioanalytical and cell biological purposes. This paper describes the synthesis, characterization, and application of a novel silane coupling agent bearing a photoremovable succinimidyl carbonate, which enables the photopatterning of various primary amines on glass and silicon surfaces. The silane coupling agent is 1-[5-methoxy-2-nitro-4-(3-trimethoxysilylpropyloxy)phenyl]ethyl N-succinimidyl carbonate. The distinct feature of this molecule is that it has a photocleavable 2-nitrobenzyl switch between a trimethoxysilyl group and a succinimidyl carbonate, each reactive to the hydroxy groups of inorganic oxides and primary amines. Based on this molecular design, the compound allows for the one-step introduction of succinimidyl carbonates onto the surface of glass and silicon, immobilization of primary amines, and region-selective and dose-dependent release of the amines by near-UV irradiation. Therefore, we were able to pattern amine ligands on the substrates in given surface densities and arbitrary geometries by controlling the doses and regions of photoirradiation. These features were verified by UV-vis spectroscopy, contact angle measurements, infrared (IR) spectroscopy, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), ellipsometry, and atomic force microscopy (AFM). The compound was applied to form a chemical density gradient of amino-biotin on a silicon substrate in a range of 0.87-0.12 chains/nm(2) by controlling photoirradiation under a standard fluorescence microscope. Furthermore, we also succeeded in forming a chemical density gradient at a lower surface density range (0.15-0.011 chains/nm(2)) on the substrate by diluting the feed amino-biotin with an inert control amine.


Supramolecular Chemistry | 2010

Precise patterning of photoactivatable glass coverslip for fluorescence observation of shape-controlled cells

Jun Nakanishi; Yukiko Kikuchi; Yuki Tsujimura; Hidekazu Nakayama; Shingo Kaneko; Takahiro Shimizu Kazuo Yamaguchi; Hideo Yokota; Yasuhiko Yoshida; Tohru Takarada; Mizuo Maeda; Yasuhiro Horiike

The shape of cells is a key determinant of cellular fates and activities. In this study, we demonstrate a method for controlling the cellular shape on a chemically modified glass coverslip with micropatterned cell adhesiveness. The glass surface was chemically modified with an alkylsiloxane monolayer having a caged carboxyl group, where single-cell-sized hydrophilic islands with hydrophobic background were created by irradiating the substrate in contact with a photomask to produce the carboxyl group. Thus, the created surface hydrophilicity pattern was converted to a negative pattern of a protein-repellent amphiphilic polymer, Pluronic F108, according to its preferential adsorption to the hydrophobic surfaces. The following addition of a cell-adhesive protein, fibronectin, resulted in its selective adsorption to the irradiated regions. In this way, cell-adhesive islands were produced reproductively, and the cells formed a given shape on the islands. As examples of the cell-shape control, we seeded HeLa cells and NIH3T3 cells to an array of triangular spots, and fluorescently imaged the dynamic motions of cell protrusions extended from the periphery of the cells. The present method will not only be useful for studying the molecular mechanism of cell polarity formation, but also for studying other shape-related cellular events such as apoptosis, differentiation and migration.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2004

Photoactivation of a substrate for cell adhesion under standard fluorescence microscopes.

Jun Nakanishi; Yukiko Kikuchi; Tohru Takarada; Hidekazu Nakayama; Kazuo Yamaguchi; Mizuo Maeda


Biomaterials | 2012

Switchable adhesive substrates: Revealing geometry dependence in collective cell behavior

Claudio G. Rolli; Hidekazu Nakayama; Kazuo Yamaguchi; Joachim P. Spatz; Ralf Kemkemer; Jun Nakanishi


Analytica Chimica Acta | 2006

Spatiotemporal control of cell adhesion on a self-assembled monolayer having a photocleavable protecting group.

Jun Nakanishi; Yukiko Kikuchi; Tohru Takarada; Hidekazu Nakayama; Kazuo Yamaguchi; Mizuo Maeda


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2011

Photocontrol of cell adhesion on amino-bearing surfaces by reversible conjugation of poly(ethylene glycol)via a photocleavable linker

Shingo Kaneko; Hidekazu Nakayama; Yutaro Yoshino; Daisuke Fushimi; Kazuo Yamaguchi; Yasuhiro Horiike; Jun Nakanishi


Chemistry Letters | 2008

Grafting Poly(ethylene glycol) to a Glass Surface via a Photocleavable Linker for Light-induced Cell Micropatterning and Cell Proliferation Control

Yukiko Kikuchi; Jun Nakanishi; Hidekazu Nakayama; Takahiro Shimizu; Yutaro Yoshino; Kazuo Yamaguchi; Yasuhiko Yoshida; Yasuhiro Horiike

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Jun Nakanishi

National Institute for Materials Science

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Yasuhiro Horiike

National Institute for Materials Science

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Shingo Kaneko

National Institute for Materials Science

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