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Dive into the research topics where Machiko Munakata is active.

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Featured researches published by Machiko Munakata.


Journal of Hypertension | 2001

Identification of endogenous ouabain in culture supernatant of PC12 cells

Yutaka Komiyama; Noriko Nishimura; Machiko Munakata; Tsuyoshi Mori; Kazuyuki Okuda; Norihiro Nishino; Shinji Hirose; Chiya Kosaka; Midori Masuda; Hakuo Takahashi

Objective Ouabain-like factor (OLF), assayed as ouabain-like immunoreactivity (OLI), is thought to represent an endogenous digitalis-like factor. We found increased plasma OLI during the surgical removal of a pheochromocytoma. The elution volume of the OLI extracted from plasma and the pheochromocytoma tissue was the same as that for authentic ouabain, using reverse phase high-performance liquid chromatography. The present study was performed to characterize OLF from the culture supernatant of a rat pheochromocytoma cell line, PC12 cells. Design OLI from culture supernatant and chromatographic fractions were assayed by a sensitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for ouabain. PC12 cells, subcultured in RPMI 1640 with 10% horse serum and 5% fetal bovine serum, were washed, and then cultured in Iscoves modified Dulbeccos medium (Life Technologies, Rockville, Maryland, USA) with 0.4% bovine serum albumin (without serum). Progesterone was added to augment the production or secretion of OLI. The conditioned medium was acidified to dissociate the binding protein, and OLI was purified by five steps of octadecylsilane (ODS) column chromatography. The structural identity of this OLI was determined by liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry (LC/MS). Results OLI in the culture medium increased after addition of progesterone in a dose-dependent manner. The concentration in the culture medium was approximately double of that in homogenized PC12 cells. After five rounds of ODS column chromatography, approximately 100 ng of OLI was purified from 2 l of culture supernatant, without fetal calf serum, in the presence of progesterone. The molecular size of purified OLI was found to be identical to authentic ouabain, based on analysis by LC/MS. Conclusion Mammalian cells originating from a rat pheochromocytoma cell line were found to produce and/or secrete OLF by the addition of progesterone.


Thrombosis Research | 2000

Activation of coagulation in C57BL/6 mice given verotoxin 2 (VT2) and the effect of co-administration of LPS with VT2.

Junko Sugatani; Takashi Igarashi; Machiko Munakata; Yutaka Komiyama; Hakuo Takahashi; Naoko Komiyama; Toshio Maeda; Tae Takeda; Masao Miwa

To obtain better insight into the pathogenesis of verotoxin-producing Escherichia coli-associated diseases, in this study, we explored the effect of verotoxin 2 (VT2) on coagulation in an animal model. After being given VT2 (50 ng/kg, lethal dose), C57BL/6 mice showed progressively increasing expression of TF mRNA in the kidney and brain and elevated plasma levels of thrombin-antithrombin III complex (TAT), normotest, fibrinogen, and PAI-1 paralleling the disease course over 24 hours; platelet counts were decreased at 48 hours with hemorrhage in the kidney and brain. Co-administration of lipopolysaccharide (LPS, 0.5 mg/kg) with VT2 (50 ng/kg) exhibited more prominant and/or prolonged increase in not only expression of TF and PAI-1 mRNAs in the kidney and brain but also plasma levels of TAT, fibrinogen, and PAI-1 and was associated with more remarkable hemorrhage in the tissues. Although VT2 (5 ng/kg) was not a lethal dose, co-administration of LPS (0.5 mg/kg) with VT2 (5 ng/kg) enhanced the susceptibility to VT2, resulting in more prolonged elevation of TAT levels during the first 24 hours than that in the LPS group and a second elevation at 72 hours, followed by death. Plasma IL-1beta level reached a maximum at 24 hours after VT2 (50 ng/kg) injection prior to the increase in TAT levels, whereas the increase in TNFalpha level immediately after injection was associated with the increase in PAI-1 mRNA. These observations indicate that the activation of coagulation by VT2 may occur through a mechanism different from that used by LPS, since plasma TAT levels rose in the mice immediately after LPS injection and returned to normal over 36 hours.


Journal of Hypertension | 1996

Effects of intracerebroventricular administration of 6-hydroxydopamine on ouabain-like immunoreactivity in plasma and the hypothalamo-pituitary axis in rats

Yutaka Komiyama; Tsuyoshi Mori; Kazuhiro Okuda; Machiko Munakata; Takashi Murakami; Midori Masuda; Atsuo Goto; Kaoru Yamada; Hakuo Takahashi

Objective To examine the role of central mechanisms on the production and release of an ouabain-like factor, the effects of intracerebroventricular injections of 6-hydroxydopamine on the tissue content and on the plasma level of the ouabain-like factor were determined in rats. Methods The vehicle (0.1% ascorbic acid in 0.9% saline) and 6− hydroxydopamine (250 μg/rat) were injected into the left lateral ventricle in ether-anaesthetized Wistar rats. Hypothalamus, pituitary, adrenal and venous blood was sampled 24 h and 7 days later. The procedure was repeated using another rat group 7 days later. Characteristics of immunoreactive ouabain-like factor were determined by a combination of high-performance liquid chromatography and a highly sensitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for ouabain. The level of the ouabain-like factor in these tissues and in plasma extracts measured by the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was compared between the two groups receiving 6− hydroxydopamine and the vehicle. Results Twenty-four hours after the intracerebroventricular injections of 6-hydroxydopamine, the ouabain-like factor level in the pituitary, hypothalamus and plasma had decreased significantly, whereas the ouabain-like factor level in the adrenal had not changed. The content of noradrenaline in the hypothalamus was also decreased markedly 7 days later and the content of ouabain-like factor in the pituitary remained low. On liquid chromatography the elution pattern of the ouabain-like factor in plasma and in tissue extracts coincided with that of authentic ouabain. Conclusions Intracerebroventricular treatments with 6− hydroxydopamine elicited decreases in ouabain-like factor contents in the pituitary, the hypothalamus and the plasma. These results suggest that the production and release of ouabain-like factor are closely associated with the brain, particularly the hypothalamus-pituitary axis, and that noradrenergic or dopaminergic neurons, or both, play a key role in this mechanism.


Clinical and Experimental Hypertension | 1998

Purification and characterization of ouabain-binding protein in human plasma.

Yutaka Komiyama; Noriko Nishimura; Norihiro Nishino; Kazuyuki Okuda; Machiko Munakata; Chiya Kosaka; Midori Masuda; Hakuo Takahashi

Ouabainlike factors are thought to be a kind of important modulators of salt and water metabolism in essential hypertension. We purified the binding-protein of ouabain (OBP) from human plasma. The amino-terminal sequence of OBP from human plasma, (NH2-TLGQPREPQVYTLPPXREEM-), indicated that OBP is the carboxy-terminal fragment (14.4 kDa by SDS-PAGE) from T218 of IgG2 heavy chain and from A221 of the IgG1 heavy chain constant region. Moreover, plasmin-cleaved Fc fragment (pFc) of IgG possessed the ouabain-binding activity by the gel-filtration method of pFc and authentic ouabain mixture, whereas neither intact, aggregate, nor papain-cleaved Fc fragment did. The amino-terminal sequence of pFc was NH2-THTXPPXPAPELLGGPXVFL-, and this sequence corresponded to the T105 to L125 fragment of the IgG1 heavy chain constant region. The growth of cultured THP-1 cells were arrested in the dose-dependent manner by ouabain, which was inhibited by the addition of 20 microg/mL of pFc. These results suggested that plasmin-cleaved Fc of human IgG is one of the binding protein of ouabain/ouabainlike factor(s) in human plasma.


Thrombosis Research | 1990

Determination of the minimal concentrations of contact activation factors in deficient substrate plasmas required to assess accurately factor XII, factor XI, factor IX, and high molecular weight kininogen

Machiko Munakata; Atsuko Teraok; Yutaka Komiyama; Midori Masuda; Takashi Murakami; Kenjiro Murata

Using combined deficient plasmas prepared by passage of a deficient plasma over an anti-factor XI-monoclonal antibody column, we have determined the threshold concentrations of each coagulation factor of contact phase in factor-deficient substrate plasmas required to determine accurately the functional activities of factor XII, factor XI, factor IX and high molecular weight kininogen (HMWK). In order to reliably quantitate factor XI and factor IX activity levels, at least 20% factor XII and 20% factor XI, respectively, were required in the deficient substrate plasmas. In the assessment of factor XII activity, approximately 40% factor XI was required in the factor XII-deficient substrate plasma. On the other hand, only 11-12% factor XI or HMWK was required in the deficient substrate plasmas in the assessment of these two clotting factors. Our data emphasize that deficiencies of other clotting factors may reduce the apparent activity of the clotting factor in question if their concentration is rate-limiting in the clotting assay.


Hypertension Research | 1999

Increases in Plasma Ouabainlike Immunoreactivity during Surgical Extirpation of Pheochromocytoma.

Yutaka Komiyama; Noriko Nishimura; Machiko Munakata; Kazuyuki Okuda; Norihiro Nishino; Chiya Kosaka; Midori Masuda; Tsuyoshi Mori; Hakuo Takahashi


Clinical and Experimental Hypertension | 1997

Vasodepressor Effects of Exercise are Accompanied by Reduced Circulating Ouabainlike Immunoreactivity and Normalization of Nitric Oxide Synthesis

Yutaka Komiyama; Yutaka Kimura; Noriko Nishimura; Katuko Hara; Tuyoshi Mori; Kazuhisa Okuda; Machiko Munakata; Midori Masuda; Takashi Murakami; Hakuo Takahashi


Journal of Infection and Chemotherapy | 2007

Differences in antimicrobial susceptibility breakpoints for Pseudomonas aeruginosa, isolated from blood cultures, set by the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) and the Japanese Society of Chemotherapy

Tatsuya Nakamura; Chihiro Shimizu; Mayumi Kasahara; Chiyo Nakata; Machiko Munakata; Hakuo Takahashi


Journal of the Japan Society of Blood Transfusion | 2005

OFF-HOURS EMERGENCY TRANSFUSION MANUAL OF UNCROSSMATCHED BLOOD

Yuji Kishimoto; Fumiko Okamae; Yukari Terashima; Miyoko Arimoto; Mika Hosokawa; Misao Abe; Manabu Yamaoka; Tetsuji Otani; Setsuko Teranishi; Machiko Munakata; Hakuo Takahashi; Shirou Fukuhara


Seminars in Thrombosis and Hemostasis | 2000

Whole blood prothrombin time using diluted tissue factor is shortened in spontaneous hypertensive rats

Machiko Munakata; Yutaka Komiyama; Midori Masuda; Hideo Kagawa; Shosaku Nomura; Shirou Fukuhara; Hakuo Takahashi

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Hakuo Takahashi

Kansai Medical University

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Yutaka Komiyama

Kansai Medical University

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Midori Masuda

Kansai Medical University

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Kazuyuki Okuda

Kansai Medical University

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Chiya Kosaka

Kansai Medical University

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Shirou Fukuhara

Kansai Medical University

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Hideo Kagawa

Kansai Medical University

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