Mari Hirata
Kobe University
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Featured researches published by Mari Hirata.
Thrombosis Research | 1979
Akiko Hijikata; Mari Hirata; Hiromichi Kitaguchi
Abstract Inducement of secondary fibrinolysis can be explained most simply by assuming that a substance newly formed in the process of blood coagulation acts on the endothelial cells and releases plasminogen activator (P. A. ) into the circulatory blood. In the present study, it was found that thrombin caused release of P.A. from isolated dog leg perfused with physiological solution. Following administration of purified thrombin to the isolated perfused dog leg, P.A. was released within 10 sec and reached its peak activity at 15∼30 sec. A dose response in P.A. activity released to thrombin was also detected to some extent (1 unit/ml∼50 units/ml). These results suggest that thrombin mediates secondary fibrinolysis. The effects on P.A. release of DFP-treated thrombin and TLCK-treated thrombin, which are inactive in fibrinogen-fibrin conversion, were examined. These chemically modified forms of thrombin did not release P.A. Furthermore, examination of the effects of acetylated thrombin revealed that it also did not cause P.A. release. These results indicate that P.A. is released from the vascular wall by thrombin so long as the latter maintains an intact active center of proteolysis.
Thrombosis Research | 1984
Michiko Miki; Koji Ogawa; Mari Hirata; Hiromichi Kitaguchi; Funahara Y
Which vasoactive substances that are synthesized in vivo could induce the release of a sufficient amount of prostacyclin (PGI2) to inhibit platelet aggregation from the vascular wall was investigated in the isolated dog heart perfused by a modified method of Langendorff. Infusion of 5 microM bradykinin or 25 u/ml crude thrombin into the heart for 30 sec resulted in the transient appearance of inhibitory activity of platelet aggregation. The inhibitory activity was stable at alkaline pH but unstable at acidic pH and thermolabile. The appearance of the inhibitory activity was prevented by treatment of the coronary vessel with 30 microM indomethacin or 1 mM tranylcypromine. These results indicated that the inhibitory activity was caused by PGI2. When 25 microM acetylcholine, 25 microM noradrenaline, 25 microM isoproterenol, 10 microM adenosine triphosphate (ATP), 5 microM adenosine, 1 microM angiotensin II, 25 microM histamine or 1 microM serotonin was infused for 30 sec, no inhibitory activity of platelet aggregation was observed. Bradykinin (5 X 10(-9) approximately 5 X 10(-6) M) and purified thrombin (1 X 10(-9) approximately 1 X 10(-7) M) induced a dose-dependent release of PGI2 which was assayed using a radioimmunoassay for 6-keto-prostaglandin F1 alpha (6-keto-PGF1 alpha).
Thrombosis Research | 1979
Hiromichi Kitaguchi; Mari Hirata; Funahara Y; K. Tada; Shosuke Okamoto
Abstract The present study was carried out to determine whether factor VIII with procoagulant activity was released by vasoactive agents from blood vessels of dog hind leg perfused with artificial physiological solution. F. VIII procoagulant activity was measured by the one-stage method using F. VIII deficient plasma. When bradykinin, acetylcholine, isoproterenol or salbutamol was administered via the perfused femoral artery, a transient but steep rise in F. VIII procoagulant activity was clearly observed in the venous perfusate. On the other hand, when adrenaline or noradrenaline was administered, a characteristic long-lasting release of F. VIII was observed. The effects of angiotensin II and vasopressin were found to be far weaker than those of the other vasoactive agents. The above results indicate that F. VIII with procoagulant activity may be released from the blood vessels by vasoactive agents. Furthermore, two different patterns of F. VIII release were demonstrated, viz. the transient release induced by bradykinin, acetylcholine, isoproterenol or salbutamol, and the long-lasting release induced by adrenaline or noradrenaline.
Thrombosis Research | 1985
Koji Ogawa; Michiko Miki; Mari Hirata; Funahara Y; Hiromichi Kitaguchi
The present study was undertaken to determine which cells participate in plasminogen activator (PA) release from the vascular wall. Canine coronary vessel was confirmed to release PA when various agents were administered in perfusion experiments. Endothelial cells from the coronary vessel were then isolated and cultured for 2 days. PA activity was observed in lysates of the cultured cells, and the medium used for the cultivation was found to contain little PA activity. This suggests that the endothelial cells participate in PA release from the vascular wall. In addition, the PA synthesis was also studied in cultured endothelial cells from human umbilical artery and vein. Both contained little PA activity, indicating that vascular endothelial cells may vary in PA synthesis and release according to the vessel.
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine | 1998
Mari Hirata; Valaya Kuropakornpong; Funahara Y; Isao Kamae; Shigeaki Sato
The association of nutrition status of children aged 7–12 years (n=663) with socioeconomic factors in a province of southern Thailand in 1995 was investigated. Three type of schools were surveyed: a school with a higher educational standard (elite school) in the municipality of the province, a school with many children from low-income families (low-income school) in the same municipality, and five ordinary schools in rural areas of the province (district schools). The proportions of obese children were 22.1%, 5.8% and 2.7%, respectively for the three type of schools, when obesity was defined as weight to height of over 120% of the median of children in Bangkok. The risk ratios and 95% confidence intervals for obesity in the elite and the low-income schools were 5.0 (3.5–7.2) and 1.9 (0.8–4.8), respectively, taking the district schools as a reference. Our research suggested that the high prevalence of obesity among elite-school children could be related to the comparatively high socioeconomic status of the children’s families. It also shows that the children in the province studied were as a whole considerably leaner than children in the big cities of Thailand. These results imply a need for appropriate interventions which cannot only prevent obesity, but also improve the malnutrition of school children in the rural provinces of southern Thailand.
Thrombosis Research | 1987
Akiko Hijikata-Okunomiya; Hiromichi Kitaguchi; Mari Hirata
Biology and Fertility of Soils | 2008
Shingo Matsumoto; Noriharu Ae; Yohichi Koyama; Katsumasa Iijima; Rumiko Kodashima; Mari Hirata; Junko Kasuga; Nobuhisa Koga
Japanese Journal of Thrombosis and Hemostasis | 1980
Hiromichi Kitaguchi; Mari Hirata; Akiko Hijikata
Archive | 1987
Akiko Hijikata-Okunomiya; Hiromichi Kitaguchi; Mari Hirata; Shosuke Okamoto
Japanese Journal of Thrombosis and Hemostasis | 1984
Funahara Y; Koji Ogawa; Michiko Miki; Mari Hirata; Hiromichi Kitaguchi; Rahajuningsih Dharma