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Featured researches published by Isao Ohta.


Apmis | 1994

Alteration of immunoreactivity by hydrated autoclaving, microwave treatment, and simple heating of paraffin‐embedded tissue sections

Hisaki Igarashi; Haruhiko Sugimura; Keiji Maruyama; Yasuhiko Kitayama; Isao Ohta; Makoto Suzuki; Masamitsu Tanaka; Yoh Dobashi; Isamu Kino

The effects of treatment in a hydrated autoclave (121 °C, 2 atm for 20 min), microwave oven (in water), and simple heating (60 °C overnight in distilled water or 90 °C for 10 min in ZnSO4) on the stainability of 56 antigens by commercially available antibodies in formalin‐fixed paraffin‐embedded tissue sections were evaluated. The detectability of nuclear antigens, glycoprotein, lymphocytic surface markers, and chromogranin A was significantly and reproducibly improved by these treatments, whereas the detectability of viral antigens and peptide hormones was attenuated or unchanged. This enhancement includes not only the distinctiveness of the positive staining, but also the number of positive cells, as revealed by comparing serial sections. Among these four heating procedures, microwave heating and autoclaving were more effective than the others on p53, c‐erbB‐2, and CA125, whereas simple heating was best for smooth‐muscle actin (HHF35 and CGA7). Generally the effects of the heating procedures for these antigens were consistent among the cases, but the effects on GFAP varied with the case. The alterations we observed could significantly influence the interpretation of immunohistochemical staining of currently popular tumor markers such as p53 in terms of their prevalence (28%vs 64% in gastric cancer; 36%vs 82% in metastatic liver cancer) and other diagnostically important markers.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

A thin polymer membrane, nano-suit, enhancing survival across the continuum between air and high vacuum

Yasuharu Takaku; Hiroshi Suzuki; Isao Ohta; Daisuke Ishii; Yoshinori Muranaka; Masatsugu Shimomura; Takahiko Hariyama

Most multicellular organisms can only survive under atmospheric pressure. The reduced pressure of a high vacuum usually leads to rapid dehydration and death. Here we show that a simple surface modification can render multicellular organisms strongly tolerant to high vacuum. Animals that collapsed under high vacuum continued to move following exposure of their natural extracellular surface layer (or that of an artificial coat-like polysorbitan monolaurate) to an electron beam or plasma ionization (i.e., conditions known to enhance polymer formation). Transmission electron microscopic observations revealed the existence of a thin polymerized extra layer on the surface of the animal. The layer acts as a flexible “nano-suit” barrier to the passage of gases and liquids and thus protects the organism. Furthermore, the biocompatible molecule, the component of the nano-suit, was fabricated into a “biomimetic” free-standing membrane. This concept will allow biology-related fields especially to use these membranes for several applications.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Kallikrein-related peptidase 5 functions in proteolytic processing of profilaggrin in cultured human keratinocytes

Jun-ichi Sakabe; Mami Yamamoto; Satoshi Hirakawa; Akira Motoyama; Isao Ohta; Kazuki Tatsuno; Taisuke Ito; Kenji Kabashima; Toshihiko Hibino; Yoshiki Tokura

Background: Filaggrin is a skin barrier function-related factor processed from profilaggrin. The identity of human profilaggrin-processing enzymes remains unclear. Results: The protease kallikrein 5 (KLK5) specifically processed a recombinant human filaggrin fragment fused to a linker. Conclusion: KLK5 is potentially a key molecule in human profilaggrin maturation. Significance: KLK5 may function in formation of the skin barrier. Filaggrin protein is synthesized in the stratum granulosum of the skin and contributes to the formation of the human skin barrier. Profilaggrin is cleaved by proteolytic enzymes and converted to functional filaggrin, but its processing mechanism remains not fully elucidated. Kallikrein-related peptidase 5 (KLK5) is a major serine protease found in the skin, which is secreted from lamellar granules following its expression in the stratum granulosum and activated in the extracellular space of the stratum corneum. Here, we searched for profilaggrin-processing protease(s) by partial purification of epidermal extracts and found KLK5 as a possible candidate. We used high performance liquid chromatography coupled with electrospray tandem mass spectrometry to show that KLK5 cleaves profilaggrin. Furthermore, based on a proximity ligation assay, immunohistochemistry, and immunoelectron microscopy analysis, we reveal that KLK5 and profilaggrin co-localize in the stratum granulosum in human epidermis. KLK5 knockdown in normal cultured human epidermal keratinocytes resulted in higher levels of profilaggrin, indicating that KLK5 potentially functions in profilaggrin cleavage.


Journal of Electron Microscopy | 2014

Dressing living organisms in a thin polymer membrane, the NanoSuit, for high-vacuum FE-SEM observation

Isao Ohta; Yasuharu Takaku; Hiroshi Suzuki; Daisuke Ishii; Yoshinori Muranaka; Masatsugu Shimomura; Takahiko Hariyama

Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) has made remarkable progress and has become an essential tool for observing biological materials at microscopic level. However, various complex procedures have precluded observation of living organisms to date. Here, a new method is presented by which living organisms can be observed by field emission (FE)-SEM. Using this method, active movements of living animals were observed in vacuo (10(-5)-10(-7) Pa) by protecting them with a coating of thin polymer membrane, a NanoSuit, and it was found that the surface fine structure of living organisms is very different from that of traditionally fixed samples. After observation of mosquito larvae in the high vacuum of the FE-SEM, it was possible to rear them subsequently in normal culture conditions. This method will be useful for numerous applications, particularly for electron microscopic observations in the life sciences.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Resistance of a rodent malaria parasite to a thymidylate synthase inhibitor induces an apoptotic parasite death and imposes a huge cost of fitness.

Francis W. Muregi; Isao Ohta; Uchijima Masato; Hideto Kino; Akira Ishih

Background The greatest impediment to effective malaria control is drug resistance in Plasmodium falciparum, and thus understanding how resistance impacts on the parasites fitness and pathogenicity may aid in malaria control strategy. Methodology/Principal Findings To generate resistance, P. berghei NK65 was subjected to 5-fluoroorotate (FOA, an inhibitor of thymidylate synthase, TS) pressure in mice. After 15 generations of drug pressure, the 2% DT (the delay time for proliferation of parasites to 2% parasitaemia, relative to untreated wild-type controls) reduced from 8 days to 4, equalling the controls. Drug sensitivity studies confirmed that FOA-resistance was stable. During serial passaging in the absence of drug, resistant parasite maintained low growth rates (parasitaemia, 15.5%±2.9, 7 dpi) relative to the wild-type (45.6%±8.4), translating into resistance cost of fitness of 66.0%. The resistant parasite showed an apoptosis-like death, as confirmed by light and transmission electron microscopy and corroborated by oligonucleosomal DNA fragmentation. Conclusions/Significance The resistant parasite was less fit than the wild-type, which implies that in the absence of drug pressure in the field, the wild-type alleles may expand and allow drugs withdrawn due to resistance to be reintroduced. FOA resistance led to depleted dTTP pools, causing thymineless parasite death via apoptosis. This supports the tenet that unicellular eukaryotes, like metazoans, also undergo apoptosis. This is the first report where resistance to a chemical stimulus and not the stimulus itself is shown to induce apoptosis in a unicellular parasite. This finding is relevant in cancer therapy, since thymineless cell death induced by resistance to TS-inhibitors can further be optimized via inhibition of pyrimidine salvage enzymes, thus providing a synergistic impact. We conclude that since apoptosis is a process that can be pharmacologically modulated, the parasites apoptotic machinery may be exploited as a novel drug target in malaria and other protozoan diseases of medical importance.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Structural and immunological effects of skin cryoablation in a mouse model.

Akira Kasuya; Isao Ohta; Yoshiki Tokura

Cryoablation is therapeutically applied for various disorders in several organs, and skin diseases are typical targets as this cryotherapy has been widely used for viral warts, benign tumors, and actinic keratosis. The main mechanisms of cryoablation consist of direct freezing effect on skin constituents, thrombosis formation in microcirculation, and subsequent immunological responses. Among them, however, the immunological mechanism remains unelucidated, and it is an issue how the direct freezing injury induces immunological consequences. We established a mouse cryoablation model with liquid nitrogen applied to the shaved back skin, and used this system to study the immunological excitement. After application of liquid nitrogen, the thermal decrease ratio was -25°C/sec or less and the lowest temperature was less than -100°C, which was sufficient to induce ulceration. Destruction of cornified layer and necrosis of epidermal cells were observed in transmission electron microscopy image, and increased transepidermal water loss and skin permeability were detected by the functional measurements. By flow cytometry, antigen-presenting dendritic cells (DCs), including PDCA1+B220+CD19- plasmacytoid DCs (pDCs) and CD11c+ myeloid DCs, as well as neutrophils and macrophages were increased in subcutaneous tissue. In parallel, the mRNA expressions of interferon α1 which are known as pDC-producing cytokines, was elevated. We also found marked degranulation of mast cells, providing a possibility that released histamine attracts pDCs. Finally, FITC migration assay revealed that pDCs and CD11c+ DCs emigrated from the cryoablated skin to the draining lymph nodes. Our study suggests that cryoablation induces destruction of the barrier/epidermis, accumulation of pDCs and CD11c+ DCs to the skin, and migration of DCs to regional lymph nodes. Viral elements or tumor cell lysates released from damaged keratinocytes may stimulate the DCs, thereby leading to antiviral or antitumor effect.


PLOS ONE | 2013

In Situ Preparation of Biomimetic Thin Films and Their Surface-Shielding Effect for Organisms in High Vacuum

Hiroshi Suzuki; Yasuharu Takaku; Isao Ohta; Daisuke Ishii; Yoshinori Muranaka; Masatsugu Shimomura; Takahiko Hariyama

Self-standing biocompatible films have yet to be prepared by physical or chemical vapor deposition assisted by plasma polymerization because gaseous monomers have thus far been used to create only polymer membranes. Using a nongaseous monomer, we previously found a simple fabrication method for a free-standing thin film prepared from solution by plasma polymerization, and a nano-suit made by polyoxyethylene (20) sorbitan monolaurate can render multicellular organisms highly tolerant to high vacuum. Here we report thin films prepared by plasma polymerization from various monomer solutions. The films had a flat surface at the irradiated site and were similar to films produced by vapor deposition of gaseous monomers. However, they also exhibited unique characteristics, such as a pinhole-free surface, transparency, solvent stability, flexibility, and a unique out-of-plane molecular density gradient from the irradiated to the unirradiated surface of the film. Additionally, covering mosquito larvae with the films protected the shape of the organism and kept them alive under the high vacuum conditions in a field emission-scanning electron microscope. Our method will be useful for numerous applications, particularly in the biological sciences.


Clinical and Experimental Nephrology | 2008

Analysis of intra-GBM microstructures in a SLE case with glomerulopathy associated with podocytic infolding

Yoshihide Fujigaki; Yoshinori Muranaka; Masanori Sakakima; Isao Ohta; Yukitoshi Sakao; Tomoyuki Fujikura; Yuan Sun; Ritsuko Katafuchi; Kensuke Joh; Akira Hishida

BackgroundSystemically podocytic infolding into the GBM which causes nonargyrophilic holes in the GBM in association with intra-GBM microstructures has been considered as a new pathological entity. However, its pathomechanisms are largely unknown.MethodsWe analyzed intra-GBM microstructures in an SLE patient with glomerulopathy associated with podocytic infolding by immunoelectron microscopy for vimentin (a marker for both podocyte and endothelium) and C5b-9 and by 3D reconstruction of transmission electron microscopy (TEM) images by computer tomography method.ResultsImmunofluorescent study showed immunoglobulin deposition in a diffuse, capillary pattern; however, electron-dense deposits like stage 3 membranous nephropathy could be found only in some capillary loops by TEM in spite of the systemic existence of podocytic infolding and the intra-GBM microstructures. Three-dimensional reconstructed images of the TEM images revealed that some of the intra-GBM microstructures made connections with the podocyte. The clustered microstructures underneath the podocyte and their surroundings looked as a whole like the degraded part of podocyte in 3D reconstructed images. Immunoelectron microscopy showed that vimentin was positive in most intra-GBM microstructures. C5b-9 was positive along the entire epithelial side of the GBM and in some microstructures, suggesting that the podocytes may be attacked by C5b-9 and that the microstructures may contain C5b-9 bound cellular membranes.ConclusionIntra-GBM microstructures may be originated mainly from the podocyte. Podotyte and GBM injuries caused by C5b-9 attack to podocytes might contribute in part to podocytic infolding and intra-GBM microstructures in this case.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2015

Direct profiling of the phospholipid composition of adult Caenorhabditis elegans using whole-body imaging mass spectrometry

Saira Hameed; Koji Ikegami; Eiji Sugiyama; Shoko Matsushita; Yoshishige Kimura; Takahiro Hayasaka; Yuki Sugiura; Noritaka Masaki; Michihiko Waki; Isao Ohta; Amir Hossen; Mitsutoshi Setou

A protocol for the direct analysis of the phospholipid composition in the whole body of adult soil nematode, Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans), was developed, which combined freeze-cracking of the exoskeletal cuticle and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-imaging mass spectrometry (MALDI-IMS). Biomolecules in the m/z range from 700 to 900 were more effectively detected in the freeze-cracked than from simple frozen adult nematode bodies. Different distribution of biomolecules was observed in a nematode body when the matrix was applied with a sublimation deposition method. The whole-body IMS technique was applied on genetically deficient mutant C. elegans to combine whole-body lipidomics and genetics, by comparing the fatty acid compositions, especially of the phosphatidylcholine (PC) species, between the wild-type and fat-1 mutants, which lack the gene encoding an n-3 fatty acid desaturase. A significant reduction of PC(20:5/20:5) and PC(20:4/20:5) and a marked increase of PC(20:4/20:4), PC(20:3/20:4), and PC(20:3/20:3) were detected in the fat-1 mutants in positive ion mode. In addition, phospholipid compositions other than PCs were analyzed in negative ion mode. A loss of a possible phosphatidylinositol (PI) with 18:0/20:5 and a compensative accumulation of putative PI(18:0/20:4) were detected in the fat-1 mutants. In conclusion, the whole-body MALDI-IMS technique is useful for the profiling of multiple biomolecules in C. elegans in both intra- and inter-individual levels.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2015

A ‘NanoSuit’ surface shield successfully protects organisms in high vacuum: observations on living organisms in an FE-SEM

Yasuharu Takaku; Hiroshi Suzuki; Isao Ohta; Takami Tsutsui; Haruko Matsumoto; Masatsugu Shimomura; Takahiko Hariyama

Although extremely useful for a wide range of investigations, the field emission scanning electron microscope (FE-SEM) has not allowed researchers to observe living organisms. However, we have recently reported that a simple surface modification consisting of a thin extra layer, termed ‘NanoSuit’, can keep organisms alive in the high vacuum (10−5 to 10−7 Pa) of the SEM. This paper further explores the protective properties of the NanoSuit surface-shield. We found that a NanoSuit formed with the optimum concentration of Tween 20 faithfully preserves the integrity of an organisms surface without interfering with SEM imaging. We also found that electrostatic charging was absent as long as the organisms were alive, even if they had not been coated with electrically conducting materials. This result suggests that living organisms possess their own electrical conductors and/or rely on certain properties of the surface to inhibit charging. The NanoSuit seems to prolong the charge-free condition and increase survival time under vacuum. These findings should encourage the development of more sophisticated observation methods for studying living organisms in an FE-SEM.

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Yasuharu Takaku

National Institute of Genetics

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Masatsugu Shimomura

Chitose Institute of Science and Technology

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Daisuke Ishii

Nagoya Institute of Technology

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