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Dive into the research topics where Kentaro Ohishi is active.

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Featured researches published by Kentaro Ohishi.


Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry | 2008

Matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization quadrupole ion trap time‐of‐flight (MALDI‐QIT‐TOF)‐based imaging mass spectrometry reveals a layered distribution of phospholipid molecular species in the mouse retina

Takahiro Hayasaka; Naoko Goto-Inoue; Yuki Sugiura; Nobuhiro Zaima; Hiroki Nakanishi; Kentaro Ohishi; Setsuko Nakanishi; Takayuki Naito; Ryo Taguchi; Mitsutoshi Setou

We recently developed a matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization quadrupole ion trap time-of-flight (MALDI-QIT-TOF)-based imaging mass spectrometry (IMS) system. This system enables us to perform structural analyses using tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS), as well as to visualize phospholipids and peptides in frozen sections. In the retina, phototransduction is regulated by the light-sensitive interaction between visual pigment-coupled receptor proteins, such as rhodopsin, and G proteins, such as transducin. There are some reports that the conformation of rhodopsin is influenced by the composition of phospholipids in the lipid bilayer membrane. However, these results were based on in vitro experiments and have not been analyzed in vivo. In this study, we visualized and identified phospholipids in mouse retinal sections with the MALDI-QIT-TOF-based IMS system. From a spectrum obtained by raster-scanned analysis of the sections, ions with high signal intensities were selected and analyzed by MS/MS. As a result, sixteen ions were identified as being from four diacyl-phosphatidylcholine (PC) species, i.e., PC (16:0/16:0), PC (16:0/18:1), PC (16:0/22:6), and PC (18:0/22:6), with different ion forms. The ion images revealed different distributions on the retinal sections: PC (16:0/18:1) was distributed in the inner nuclear layer and outer plexiform layer, PC (16:0/16:0) in the outer nuclear layer and inner segment, and both PC (16:0/22:6) and PC (18:0/22:6) in the outer segment and pigment epithelium. In conclusion, our in vivo IMS analyses demonstrated a three-zone distribution of PC species on the retinal sections. This approach may be useful for analyzing lipid changes and their contribution to phototransduction in the retina.


Free Radical Research | 2005

Iron release analyses from ferritin by visible light irradiation

Kentaro Ohishi; Xiao Mei Zhang; Shin-Ichi Moriwaki; Tadahisa Hiramitsu; Seiichi Matsugo

We investigated the iron release from ferritin by irradiation from a white fluorescent light in the absence or presence of ADP. Irradiation of a ferritin solution at 17,000 lx in the absence of ADP slightly induces iron release from ferritin but only at acidic pH conditions (pH 5.0 or pH 6.0). Irradiation in the presence of ADP markedly enhances iron release from ferritin under the same conditions. In the absence of irradiation, the iron release from ferritin was low even in the presence of ADP. The induction of the iron release by irradiation in the presence of ADP was also affected by various factors such as irradiation dose and acidity, but not temperature (4–47°C), oxygen concentration, or free radical generations during the irradiation. The iron release during the irradiation ceased to increase by turning off the light and was found to increase again after additional irradiation. These results suggest that visible light directly induces iron release from ferritin via the photoreduction of iron stored inside ferritin.


Ophthalmic Genetics | 2008

Novel RDH5 Mutation in Family with Mother Having Fundus Albipunctatus and Three Children with Retinitis Pigmentosa

Chunxia Wang; Nobuo Nakanishi; Kentaro Ohishi; Akiko Hikoya; Kenro Koide; Miho Sato; Makoto Nakamura; Yoshihiro Hotta; Shinsei Minoshima

Purpose: To identify mutations in the RDH5 gene in a family with a mother having fundus albipunctatus (FA) and 3 children with retinitis pigmentosa (RP). Methods: Ophthalmological examinations were performed to diagnose FA and RP. Mutational analysis of RDH5 was performed. Results/Conclusions: The mother was diagnosed with FA, and 3 children were diagnosed with RP. The probands mother, brother, and sister had a novel mutation c.689_690CT > GG in RDH5. The proband and mother had a previously reported mutation c.928delCinsGAAG. Consequently, the mothers FA was caused by compound heterozygous mutations. Further studies will be needed to determine the gene responsible for childrens RP.


Free Radical Research | 2006

In the presence of ferritin, visible light induces lipid peroxidation of the porcine photoreceptor outer segment

Kentaro Ohishi; Xiao Mei Zhang; Shin-Ichi Moriwaki; Tadahisa Hiramitsu; Seiichi Matsugo

We studied the synergistic effect of visible light and ferritin on the lipid peroxidation on a fraction of porcine photoreceptor outer segment (POS). Reaction mixtures containing the POS fraction and horse spleen ferritin were irradiated under white fluorescent light mainly at 17,000 lx or incubated under dark conditions at 37°C. The lipid peroxidation was evaluated by both the thiobarbituric acid method and the ferrous oxidation/xylenol orange method. The irradiation-induced lipid peroxidation was affected by some experimental factors such as the irradiation dose and acidity of the material. When the irradiation was stopped, the lipid peroxidation was also stopped; thereafter, the re-irradiation induced lipid peroxidation. Moreover, this lipid peroxidation was inhibited by desferrioxamine, an iron chelator, or by dimethylthiourea, a hydroxyl radical scavenger, suggesting that the lipid peroxidation involves hydroxyl radicals generated via the Fenton reaction by iron ion released from ferritin. The lipid peroxidation did not take place under dark conditions or in the absence of ferritin. This study suggested the possibility that the visible light-induced lipid peroxidation of the POS fraction in the presence of ferritin may participate in the etiology of human retinal degenerative diseases as the human retina is exposed to light for life.


Cell Biology International | 2014

Interaction between optineurin and the bZIP transcription factor NRL.

Chunxia Wang; Katsuhiro Hosono; Masafumi Ohtsubo; Kentaro Ohishi; Jie Gao; Nobuo Nakanishi; Akiko Hikoya; Miho Sato; Yoshihiro Hotta; Shinsei Minoshima

Although the gene encoding optineurin (OPTN) is a causative gene for glaucoma and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, it is ubiquitously expressed in all body tissues, including the retina. To study the function of OPTN in retinal ganglion cells as well as the whole retina, we previously isolated OPTN‐interacting proteins and identified the gene encoding the bZIP transcription factor neural retina leucine zipper (NRL), which is a causative gene for retinitis pigmentosa. Herein, we investigated the binding between OPTN and NRL proteins in HeLaS3 cells. Co‐expression of HA‐tagged NRL and FLAG‐tagged OPTN in HeLaS3 cells followed by immunoprecipitation and Western blotting with anti‐tag antibodies demonstrated the binding of these proteins in HeLaS3 cells, which was confirmed by proximity ligation assay. NRL is the first OPTN‐binding protein to show eye‐specific expression. A series of partial‐deletion OPTN plasmids demonstrated that the tail region (423–577 amino acids [aa]) of OPTN was necessary for binding with NRL. Immunostaining showed that Optn (rat homologue of OPTN) was expressed in rat photoreceptors and localised in the cytoplasm of photoreceptor cells. This is a novel demonstration of Optn expression in photoreceptor cells. OPTN was not detected in photoreceptor nuclei under our experimental conditions. Further analyses are necessary to elucidate the function of OPTN and the significance of its possible binding with NRL in photoreceptor cells.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2004

Comparison of pH management during antegrade selective cerebral perfusion in canine models with old cerebral infarction

Kazuhiro Ohkura; Teruhisa Kazui; Seiji Yamamoto; Katsushi Yamashita; Hitoshi Terada; Naoki Washiyama; Takayasu Suzuki; Kazuchika Suzuki; Michio Fujie; Kentaro Ohishi


Experimental Eye Research | 2001

Microdialysis Measurement of Ascorbic Acid in Rabbit Vitreous after Photodynamic Reaction

Xiao Mei Zhang; Kentaro Ohishi; Tadahisa Hiramitsu


Experimental Eye Research | 2006

Ascorbic acid concentration in rabbit vitreous measured by microdialysis with HPLC-electrochemical detection before and after vitreous surgery

Kenro Koide; Xiao Mei Zhang; Kentaro Ohishi; Yoshimasa Usami; Yoshihiro Hotta; Tadahisa Hiramitsu


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2007

Effect of prophylactically administered edaravone during antegrade cerebral perfusion in a canine model of old cerebral infarction

Takayasu Suzuki; Teruhisa Kazui; Seiji Yamamoto; Naoki Washiyama; Kazuhiro Ohkura; Kentaro Ohishi; Abul Hasan Muhammad Bashar; Katsushi Yamashita; Hitoshi Terada; Kazuchika Suzuki; Satoshi Akuzawa; Michio Fujie


The Japanese Biochemical Society/The Molecular Biology Society of Japan | 2017

Identification of a Gene Responsible for the Susceptibility to Photic Injury of Rat Retina

Kentaro Ohishi; Masafumi Ohtsubo; Akira Obana; Yoshihiro Hotta; Shinsei Minoshima

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