Hirofumi Ogino
Setsunan University
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Featured researches published by Hirofumi Ogino.
Alcohol | 2014
Fumitoshi Sakazaki; Hirofumi Ogino; Tomohiro Arakawa; Tomofumi Okuno; Hitoshi Ueno
Alcohol injures dendritic cells and suppresses cellular immunity, while some evidence indicates that drinking alcohol aggravates allergic asthma. This study investigated the effect of low doses of ethanol in enhancing allergic reactions in the skin of mice. Liquid food containing alcohol was administered to conventional NC/Nga mice to induce alcoholic hepatic steatosis, and spontaneous dermatitis was evaluated. BALB/c mice were administered approximately 1 g/kg body weight of ethanol by gavage, and contact hypersensitivity (CHS) or active cutaneous anaphylaxis (ACA) was induced. Spleens were collected 24 h after the elicitation of CHS and mRNA expressions of interferon (IFN)-γ, interleukin (IL)-4, IL-6, IL-10, and IL-18 were measured by quantitative RT-PCR. Alcohol-containing diet exaggerated spontaneous dermatitis in conventional NC/Nga mice and contact hypersensitivity in BALB/c mice. Ethanol administered by gavage for 5 days enhanced contact hypersensitivity in BALB/c mice. Ethanol administration with gavage also enhanced ACA of BALB/c mice. Ethanol did not affect mRNA expression of IFN-γ and IL-4, but did enhance IL-6, IL-10, and IL-18 mRNA expression. Histological evaluation revealed an absence of hepatic steatosis in mice administered ethanol by gavage for 5 days. In ethanol-administered mice, inflamed areas presented as lesions or a local extreme accumulation of mononuclear cells in the epidermis. These findings suggest that ethanol enhances the expression of inflammatory cytokines independently from T helper (Th)1/Th2 cytokine phenotypes, causing abnormalities in the epidermis resulting in exacerbated allergic reactivity.
Allergology International | 2015
Hirofumi Ogino; Fumitoshi Sakazaki; Tomofumi Okuno; Tomohiro Arakawa; Hitoshi Ueno
BACKGROUND The consumption of cooking oils may exacerbate some allergic diseases. In the present study, the effects of naturally oxidized olive oil on immediate- and/or delayed-type allergic reactions were investigated in BALB/c mice. METHODS Mouse models of 3 types of allergic reactions: contact hypersensitivity (CHS), active cutaneous anaphylaxis (ACA), and DNFB-induced hypersensitivity, were orally administered naturally oxidized olive oil that was obtained by keeping the oil at room temperature for more than 3 years. The effects of ultraviolet ray (UV)-irradiated olive oil and other dietary oils as well as their possible oxidation products on CHS were also investigated. RESULTS Naturally oxidized olive oil had a high peroxide value (POV) and exacerbated CHS, ACA, and DNFB-induced hypersensitivity in a POV-dependent manner. UV-irradiated olive oil, corn oil, sesame oil and triolein had high POVs, but almost the same acid value (AV) and thiobarbituric acid-reactive substance (TBARS) level as fresh oils. Fresh olive oil and the representative oxidation product with a high AV or TBARS level had no effect on CHS, whereas all UV-irradiated oils and naturally oxidized olive oil exacerbated it. CONCLUSIONS Oxidized dietary oils that have high POVs exacerbated immediate- and/or delayed-type allergic reactions regardless of the different oil constituents or oxidation processes.
Biological & Pharmaceutical Bulletin | 2018
Koichi Murano; Hirofumi Ogino; Tomofumi Okuno; Tomohiro Arakawa; Hitoshi Ueno
The role of supplementary selenium on the induction of insulin resistance and oxidative stress in a diabetic mouse model was investigated in NSY mice on a high fat diet (HFD) and administered seleno-L-methionine (SeMet)-containing water for 12 weeks. Significant increases in oral glucose tolerance-tested (OGTT), insulin tolerance-tested, and non-fasting blood glucose levels were observed in mice on a HFD, as well as the significant increases in OGTT and non-fasting plasma insulin levels. Mice on a HFD had decreased plasma adiponectin levels and increased free fatty acid (FFA) levels. Supplementary SeMet significantly augmented OGTT blood glucose levels in mice on a HFD and plasma FFA levels in mice on a normal diet. The mRNA levels of six selenoproteins were measured, and glutathione peroxidase (GPx) 1 and selenoprotein P (SelP) were selected as candidates that may be associated with insulin resistance or oxidative stress in the liver. Hepatic GPx1 expression was elevated in mice on a HFD and SeMet supplementation, and SelP expression increased in mice on a HFD. Histopathological observations in hepatic tissues showed hypertrophy of parenchymal cells and significant expression of 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal in mice on a HFD, indicating lipid accumulation and oxidative stress induction. Hepatic protein tyrosine phosphatase activity also increased by a HFD. These results suggest that hepatic lipid accumulation in NSY mice on a HFD promoted oxidative stress and hepatic SelP expression, and supplementary SeMet induced hepatic GPx1 expression.
Food and Agricultural Immunology | 2014
Fumitoshi Sakazaki; Tomohiro Arakawa; Ryo Shimizu; Hirofumi Ogino; Tomofumi Okuno; Hitoshi Ueno
The present study investigated the effects of selenium status on allergy in vivo. A total of 20 NC/Nga mice or 20 BALB/c mice were randomly assigned to one of four treatment groups and given a diet containing 0, 1, 2 or 3 µg/g selenomethionine. Their allergic responses were subsequently evaluated. Spontaneous dermatitis was inhibited in NC/Nga mice given a diet without selenomethionine, enhanced in mice given a diet containing 1 µg/g selenomethionine and suppressed in mice given a diet containing 3 µg/g selenomethionine. Further, active cutaneous anaphylaxis, a type-I allergic response of BALB/c mice, was inhibited in mice given a diet without selenomethionine, enhanced in mice given a diet containing 1 µg/g selenomethionine and suppressed in mice given a diet containing 3 µg/g selenomethionine. Allergies seem to be aggravated in the presence of a slight selenium deficiency, but abrogated when the diet is sufficient in, or supplemented with, selenomethionine.
Biological & Pharmaceutical Bulletin | 2018
Tomohiro Arakawa; Takahiro Sugiyama; Haruka Matsuura; Tomofumi Okuno; Hirofumi Ogino; Fumitoshi Sakazaki; Hitoshi Ueno
Effects of selenium supplementation on atopic dermatitis (AD) were investigated by administering seleno-L-methionine (SeMet) using a mouse model of AD caused by repeated application of 2,4,6-trinitrochlorobenzene (TNCB). BALB/c mice were sensitized with TNCB to the abdomen on day -7; then, TNCB was applied repeatedly to each ear three times a week from days 0 to 23. SeMet was orally administered to the mice from days 0 to 23. The efficacy of SeMet on AD was assessed by measuring ear thickness, histologic evaluation, serum total immunoglobulin (Ig) E levels, and expression of interleukin (IL)-4 in the ear and superficial parotid lymph node. Ear thickness was remarkably increased by repeated application of TNCB, and SeMet significantly suppressed ear thickness in BALB/c mice. SeMet inhibited epidermal hyperplasia and dense infiltration of inflammatory cells. The number of TNCB-induced mast cells was significantly decreased by SeMet. Serum total IgE levels that increased by the repeated application of TNCB were significantly suppressed by SeMet. Repeated application of TNCB induced expression of IL-4, a T-helper (Th) 2 cytokine, in the ear and superficial parotid lymph node of BALB/c mice and its expression was significantly inhibited by SeMet. These results demonstrated that SeMet supplementation suppresses AD-like skin lesions in BALB/c mice and inhibits the expression of total IgE and IL-4.
Biological & Pharmaceutical Bulletin | 2014
Tomofumi Okuno; Eri Honda; Tomohiro Arakawa; Hirofumi Ogino; Hitoshi Ueno
Biological & Pharmaceutical Bulletin | 2014
Hitoshi Ueno; Ryo Shimizu; Tomofumi Okuno; Hirofumi Ogino; Tomohiro Arakawa; Fumitoshi Sakazaki; Katsuhiko Nakamuro
Biological & Pharmaceutical Bulletin | 2013
Tomohiro Arakawa; Takeshi Deguchi; Fumitoshi Sakazaki; Hirofumi Ogino; Tomofumi Okuno; Hitoshi Ueno
Biological & Pharmaceutical Bulletin | 2018
Hitoshi Ueno; Ryo Shimizu; Tomofumi Okuno; Hirofumi Ogino; Tomohiro Arakawa; Koichi Murano; Katsuhiko Nakamuro
The Japanese Biochemical Society/The Molecular Biology Society of Japan | 2017
Tomohiro Arakawa; Yasuki Yoshii; Hirofumi Ogino; Tomofumi Okuno; Hitoshi Ueno