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Dive into the research topics where Kazuo Ohki is active.

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Featured researches published by Kazuo Ohki.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1986

Reversal by protein kinase C inhibitor of suppressive actions of phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate on polyphosphoinositide metabolism and cytosolic Ca2+ mobilization in thrombin-stimulated human platelets

Toyohiko Tohmatsu; Hiroaki Hattori; Seiji Nagao; Kazuo Ohki; Yoshinori Nozawa

In the presence of 1-(5-isoquinolinesulfonyl)-2-methylpiperazine (H-7), a potent inhibitor of protein kinase C in vitro, phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA) did not suppress the thrombin-induced increase of cytosolic Ca2+ concentration in human platelets. The H-7 reversal of the inhibitory action of PMA was also observed in thrombin-induced polyphosphoinositide breakdown by phospholipase C. These results provide additional support to the developing theory that the inhibition of PMA on Ca2+ mobilization and phosphoinositide turnover may be mediated by protein kinase C activation.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1982

Effect of phosphatidylinositol replacement by diacylglycerol on various physical properties of artificial membranes with respect to the role of phosphatidylinositol response

Kazuo Ohki; Takashi Sekiya; Taeko Yamauchi; Yoshinori Nozawa

In an attempt to gain insight into the physiological role of phosphatidylinositol turnover enhanced by extracellular stimuli, the physical properties of artificial membranes (egg yolk phosphatidylcholine/bovine brain phosphatidylserine) containing phosphatidylinositol or diacylglycerol were studied by ESR using spin probes and freeze-fracture electron microscopy. Diacylglycerol lost both the ability to form lipid bilayer structures and its susceptibility to calcium ions. Yeast phosphatidylinositol included in dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine liposomes lowered the phase transition temperature of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine and expanded the temperature range of phase transition. However, diacylglycerol at the same concentration did not undergo the effects caused by phosphatidylinositol but the phase transition temperature was slightly raised. Phase separation of phosphatidylserine induced by calcium ions was enhanced when the phosphatidylinositol was replaced by diacylglycerol in phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylinositol (3:5:2, by molar ratio) mixtures. The mobility of phosphatidylcholine spin probe was decreased in phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylserine/diacylglycerol (3:5:2, by molar ratio) liposomes compared with phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylserine/phosphatidylinositol (3:5:2, by molar ratio) liposomes. An additional component from protonated stearic acid spin probes was observed in phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylinositol (8:2, by molar ratio) liposomes at 40 degrees C, whereas the component was not seen in phosphatidylcholine/diacylglycerol (8:2, by molar ratio) liposomes. This may indicate the alteration of surface charge induced by the replacement of phosphatidylinositol by diacylglycerol. Indeed, in the presence of 1 mM Ca2+, the additional component was removed by an electrostatic interaction between Ca2+ and phosphatidylinositol molecules in phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylinositol liposomes at 40 degrees C. These results support the hypothesis that the enhanced turnover of phosphatidylinositol may play a triggering role for various cellular responses to exogenous stimuli by altering membrane physical states.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1981

Physical properties of phosphatidylcholine-phosphatidylinositol liposomes in relation to a calcium effect

Kazuo Ohki; Takashi Sekiya; Taeko Yamauchi; Yoshinori Nozawa

Physical properties of binary mixtures of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine and yeast phosphatidylinositol were studied by ESR analysis using TEMPO (2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl) and lipid spin probes, freeze-fracture electronmicroscopy and particle microelectrophoresis, and they were compared with those of phosphatidylcholine/bovine brain phosphatidylserine mixtures. The phase diagram of the binary mixtures of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylinositol was obtained from the thermal features of TEMPO spectral parameter in the lipid mixtures. The phase diagram provided evidence that these two phospholipids in various combinations were miscible in the crystalline state. The addition of 10 mM Ca2+ slightly shifted the phase diagram upward. TEMPO titration of the binary mixture of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine and bovine brain phosphatidylserine revealed that 10 mM Ca2+ caused the complete phase separation of this lipid mixture. Studies of phase separations using phosphatidylcholine spin probe manifested that 10 mM Ca2+ induced almost complete phase separation in egg yolk phosphatidylcholine/bovine brain phosphatidylserine mixtures but only slight phase separation in egg yolk phosphatidylcholine/yeast phosphatidylinositol mixtures. However, some phase changes around the fluidus and the solidus curves were visualized by the freeze-fracture electronmicroscopy. The molecular motion of lipid spin probe was decreased by the addition of Ca2+ in the liposomes containing phosphatidylinositol. The temperature dependence of electrophoretic mobility was also examined in the absence and presence of 1 mM Ca2+. Liposomes of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine-phosphatidylinositol (90 : 10, mol/mol) exhibited a clear transition in the thermal features of electrophoretic mobilities. Raising the phosphatidylinositol content up to 25 mol% rendered the transition broad and unclear. The addition of 1 mM Ca2+ decreased the electrophoretic mobility but did not change its general profile of the thermal dependence. These results suggest that the addition of calcium ions induced a small phase change in the binary mixture of phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylinositol while Ca2+ causes a remarkable phase separation in phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylserine mixture. The physical role of phosphatidylinositol is discussed related to the formation of diacylglycerol.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1979

Correlation between fluidity and fatty acid composition of phospholipid species in Tetrahymena pyriformis during temperature acclimation.

Kazuo Ohki; Reiko Kasai; Yoshinori Nozawa

The correlation between the fluidity of phospholipids and their fatty acid composition was studied by spin label technique and gas-liquid chromatography for three major phospholipid species in Tetrahymena pyriformis during temperature acclimation. The fluidity of 2-aminoethylphosphonolipid increased within the first 10 h of the cold-acclimation when the content of gamma-linolenic acid in 2-aminoethylphosphonolipid was highest, and it then decreased up to 24 h. On the other hand, the fluidities of phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylcholine showed a gradual decrease up to 24 h after the temperature shift, although gamma-linolenic acid contents were highest at 10 h after the temperature shift. Thus the fluidity changes of these two phospholipids were interpreted as resulting from the altered content of other fatty acids in addition to gamma-linolenic acid, since the gamma-linolenic acid content was smaller than that of 2-aminoethylphosphonolipid. The results suggest that the content of gamma-linolenic acid in 2-aminoethylphosphonolipid plays a role in regulating the thermal adaptation process.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1981

Thermal adaptation of Tetrahymena membranes with special reference to mitochondria Role of cardiolipin in fluidity of mitochondrial membranes

Taeko Yamauchi; Kazuo Ohki; Hitomi Maruyama; Yoshinori Nozawa

During temperature acclimation of Tetrahymena pyriformis, the changes in fluidity and composition of total lipids from three membrane fractions, mitochondria, pellicles and microsomes were studied by a spin-label technique using a stearate probe and thin-layer and gas-liquid chromatography. The increase of fluidity observed in microsomal and pellicular lipids following the temperature shift from 39 to 15 degrees C corresponds with the increase of the ratio of total unsaturated to saturated fatty acid content. However, despite the increase of this ratio, the fluidity of mitochondrial lipids was found to be constant up to 10 h after the temperature shift. The fluidity of total lipids of mitochondria isolated from Tetrahymena cells grown at 39 degrees C was not changed by removal of cardiolipin, whereas cardiolipin-depleted lipids of mitochondria from 15 degrees C-acclimated cells showed a decrease in fluidity. The re-addition of cardiolipin to the mitochondrial lipids depleted of cardiolipin restored the fluidity to the initial level, thereby confirming the rigidifying effect of cardiolipin in cold-acclimated cells. These results suggest that cardiolipin may be implicated in maintaining consistent fluidity of mitochondrial membranes against change in thermal environment.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1980

Aggregation-induced alterations in human platelet membranes: A spin label study

Kazuo Ohki; Atsushi Imai; Yoshinori Nozawa

Abstract Washed human platelets were labeled with stearate or methyl stearate spin probe. The order parameter of stearate spin probe was decreased markedly when the platelets were aggregated by thrombin, ADP or epinephrine. Central peak width of methyl stearate spin probe was also reduced in the aggregation induced by thrombin and ADP. However, isolated plasma membrane did not show any decrease of the order parameter by the addition of thrombin. Aspirin inhibited both the platelet aggregation and the decrease of the order parameter. The results suggest that ESR spectral changes might be caused by reorganization of membrane constituents rather than their quantitative or qualitative alteration.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1985

Kinetics near the pretransition of a multilamellar phospholipid studied by ESR

Kazuaki Tsuchida; Ichiro Hatta; Shigeo Imaizumi; Kazuo Ohki; Yoshinori Nozawa

The kinetics of the pretransition were studied by electron spin resonance (ESR) of the spin probe, TEMPO, in multilamellar dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine liposomes. The temperature was jumped from the Pβ′ phase to the Lβ′ phase and vice versa. The relaxation process to the equilibrium state at fixed temperature was obtained by measuring the change of the peak height of the ESR line with time. It was clearly established that both the relaxation processes, Pβ′aLβ′and Lβ′aPβ′, were well described by the sum of the fast and the slow relaxation times, t1 and t2, in each relaxation process were determined by a least-squares fitting analysis at various fixed temperatures near the pretransition temperature Tp. The slow relaxation time, t2, is more than one order longer than the fast relaxation time, t1. Both relaxation times, t1 and t2, in the cooling experiment are larger than those in the heating experiment. The logarithm of t1 and t2 increases towards Tp almost linearly against temperature.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1982

Evidence for a correlation between swimming velocity and membrane fluidity of Tetrahymena cells

Masako Goto; Kazuo Ohki; Yoshinori Nozawa

The influence of the physical state of the membrane on the swimming behaviour of Tetrahymena pyriformis was studied in cells with lipid-modified membranes. When the growth temperature of Tetrahymena cells was increased from 15 degrees C to 34 degrees C or decreased from 39 degrees C to 15 degrees C, their swimming velocity changed gradually in a similar to the adaptive change in membrane lipid composition. Therefore, such adaptive changes in swimming velocity were not observed during short exposures to a different environment. Tetrahymena cells adapted to 34 degrees C swam at 570 microns/s. On incubation at 15 degrees C these cells swam at 100 microns/s. When the temperature was increased to 34 degrees C after a 90-min incubation at 15 degrees C, the initial velocity was immediately recovered. On replacement of tetrahymanol with ergosterol, the swimming velocity of 34 degrees C-grown cells decreased to 210 microns/s, and the cells ceased to move when the temperature was decreased to 15 degrees C. To investigate the influence of the physical state of the membrane on the swimming velocity, total phospholipids were prepared from Tetrahymena cells grown under these different conditions. The fluidities of liposomes of these phospholipid were measured using stearate spin probe. The membrane fluidity of the cells cooled to 15 degrees C increased gradually during incubation at 15 degrees C. On the other hand, the fluidity of the heated cell decreased during incubation at 34 degrees C. Replacement of tetrahymanol with ergosterol decreased the membrane fluidity markedly. Consequently, a good correlation was observed between swimming velocity and membrane fluidity; as the membrane fluidity increased, the swimming velocity increased linearly up to 600 microns/s. These results provide evidence for the regulation of the swimming behaviour by physical properties of the membrane.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1981

A possible role of stimulus-enhanced phosphatidylinositol turnover: Calcium-sparing effect of diacylglycerol in inducing phase separation of phosphatidylcholine/phosphatidylserine mixtures

Kazuo Ohki; Taeko Yamauchi; Yoshiko Banno; Yoshinori Nozawa

Summary A physiological role of phosphatidylinositol turnover accelerated by a stimulus was studied using a model system composed of egg yolk phosphatidylcholine (PC), bovine brain phosphatidylserine (PS), yeast phosphatidylinositol (PI) and diacylglycerol (DG) prepared from yeast PI by PI-specific phospholipase C of Bacillus cereus . The effects of PI and DG on Ca 2+ -induced phase separation of PS were examined using the spin-spin exchange interaction of PC spin probes. DG enhanced Ca 2+ -induced phase separation in PC/PS mixtures while PI had almost no effect on the phase separation. The results suggest a calcium-sparing effect of DG in inducing phase separation in the PS-containing membranes.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1986

Effect of fatty acyl chain length of phosphatidylcholine on their transfer from liposomes to erythrocytes and transverse diffusion in the membranes inferred by TEMPO-phosphatidylcholine spin probes

Akira Tamura; Katsumi Yoshikawa; Tatsuzo Fujii; Kazuo Ohki; Yoshinori Nozawa; Yoshio Sumida

TEMPO-phosphatidylcholine (PC) spin probes which have homologous saturated acyl chains of 10, 12, 14 and 16 carbon atoms, were synthesized as analogues of PC. Transfer of TEMPO-PCs from liposomal membrane to the ghost membrane of human erythrocyte and transverse diffusion of TEMPO-PCs within the membrane of intact erythrocytes were determined by measurement of spontaneous increase and decrease in signal amplitude of an anisotropic triplet spectrum, due to dilution of the label by natural phospholipid of the membrane and reduction of the label by the cytoplasmic content of the erythrocyte, respectively. TEMPO-PC molecules in TEMPO-PC liposomes, except dipalmitoyl TEMPO-PC, were rapidly incorporated into the ghost membrane by incubation at 37 degrees C; the PC having shorter acyl chains was transferred faster. The cytoplasmic content of the erythrocyte rapidly reduced the nitroxide radical of the spin probe. The central peak height of ESR signal was once increased by incorporation of TEMPO-PC into the erythrocyte membrane and then was spontaneously decreased during further incubation at 37 degrees C. This decrease indicates that PC molecules traverse from the outer to the inner layer of the membrane lipid bilayer. The decrease of signal amplitude was faster with PC of shorter acyl chain. These findings suggest that both transfer between membranes and transverse diffusion in the membrane may be favored to the PC species with shorter acyl chains.

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Akira Tamura

Kyoto Pharmaceutical University

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