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Dive into the research topics where Masaki Yokoo is active.

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Featured researches published by Masaki Yokoo.


International Review of Cytology-a Survey of Cell Biology | 2004

Cumulus-oocyte complex interactions during oocyte maturation.

Masaki Yokoo; Eimei Sato

In most mammals, the oocyte in the Graafian follicle is surrounded by tightly packed layers of cumulus cells, forming the cumulus-oocyte complex. During the preovulatory period, cumulus cells change from a compact cell mass into a dispersed structure of cells for the synthesis and deposition of a mucoid intercellular matrix, a process referred to as cumulus expansion. Cumulus expansion is thought to influence a variety of fundamental developmental changes during oocyte maturation. Volumetric expansion of the cumulus-oocyte complex correlates, at least in pig, with the outcome of oocyte maturation, fertilization, and embryo development. Therefore, detailed functional studies of cumulus expansion seem to be required to elucidate the mechanism of oocyte maturation. We summarize the current knowledge about (1) morphological changes of cumulus-oocyte complexes during oocyte maturation, (2) follicle factors inducing cumulus expansion, (3) the role of cumulus expansion in oocyte maturation, (4) cytoplasmic regulators of oocyte maturation, and (5) possible roles of cumulus expansion.


Biology of Reproduction | 2002

Identification of Hyaluronic Acid-Binding Proteins and Their Expressions in Porcine Cumulus-Oocyte Complexes During In Vitro Maturation

Masaki Yokoo; Yasunori Miyahayashi; Takako Naganuma; Naoko Kimura; Hiroshi Sasada; Eimei Sato

Abstract Hyaluronic acid-binding proteins (HABPs) are necessary for expansion of the cumulus-oocyte complex (COC) during oocyte maturation. In this study, to obtain the detailed information of HABPs during cumulus expansion, we examined the expression of HABPs in porcine COCs during in vitro maturation (IVM). After maturation culture, proteins were extracted from porcine COCs and separated by SDS-PAGE and then transferred to polyvinylidene fluoride membranes. After transfer, the membranes were subjected to ligand blotting with biotinylated hyaluronic acid (bHA) or fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled hyaluronic acid (FITC-HA). Furthermore, the extracted proteins were subjected to immunoprecipitation, Western blotting, and immunofluorescence analysis to dissect the HABPs. Ligand blotting with FITC-HA could detect HABPs. Using this ligand-blotting method, 13 and 14 bands of HABPs were detected in porcine COCs after 0 and 48 h in culture, respectively. Of these, the level of expression of 85-kDa HABP increased with cumulus expansion during IVM and was newly detected after culture. Immunoprecipitation, Western blotting, and immunofluorescent analysis confirmed that the 85-kDa HABP corresponded to CD44 and that it existed on/in the membrane of cumulus cells. The present results indicated that HABP expressed in porcine COCs during IVM, particularly CD44, may form a network of the matrices in the extracellular space of the oocyte with cumulus expansion during IVM.


Zygote | 2005

Hyaluronan and its binding proteins in the epithelium and intraluminal fluid of the bovine oviduct

Ann-Sofi Bergqvist; Masaki Yokoo; Paraskevi Heldin; Jan H. M. Frendin; Eimei Sato; Heriberto Rodriguez-Martinez

Hyaluronan (HA) is involved in several important steps of sperm storage and of fertilization. This study investigates the presence and concentration of HA in oviductal fluid (ODF), together with the localization of HA and the presence of hyaluronan-binding proteins (HABPs) in the oviductal epithelium of normally cycling dairy heifers and cows. The concentration and amount of HA in ODF, collected over the course of several oestrous cycles via catheters placed in the isthmic and ampullar tubal segments, were measured using an ELISA. The concentration and amount of HA in ODF did not vary significantly between these anatomical regions, nor between the stages of the oestrous cycle (p > 0.05), although the amount of HA seemed to peak during oestrous. The most HA per day (2.9 +/- 0.64 microg, least square mean +/- SEM) was produced on the day of ovulation, whereas the lowest amount (1.25 +/- 0.68 microg) was produced 4 days before ovulation. To investigate the localization of HA, tissue samples were retrieved at well-defined stages of the oestrous cycle and from corresponding regions of the oviduct. Sections and protein extracts from the tissue samples were studied histochemically using biotinylated HABP and immunoblotted with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-HA, respectively. Presence of HA labelling in the oviductal epithelium was restricted to the sperm reservoir, a localization that seemed to be cycle-independent. The immunoblotting of samples from the lining epithelium revealed seven bands of HABPs. We confirm that the bovine oviduct produces HA and its binding proteins, and that HA is mainly localized to the epithelium of the sperm reservoir.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2009

A microfluidic dual capillary probe to collect messenger RNA from adherent cells and spheroids

Hitoshi Shiku; Takeshi Yamakawa; Yuji Nashimoto; Yasufumi Takahashi; Yu-suke Torisawa; Tomoyuki Yasukawa; Takahiro Ito-Sasaki; Masaki Yokoo; Hiroyuki Abe; Hideki Kambara; Tomokazu Matsue

Collection of bioanalytes from single cells is still a challenging technology despite the recent progress in many integrated microfluidic devices. A microfluidic dual capillary probe was prepared from a theta (theta)-shaped glass capillary to analyze messenger RNA (mRNA) from adherent cells and spheroids. The cell lysis buffer solution was introduced from the injection aperture, and the cell-lysed solution from the aspiration aperture was collected for further mRNA analysis based on reverse transcription real-time PCR. The cell lysis buffer can be introduced at any targeted cells and never spilled out of the targeted area by using the microfluidic dual capillary probe because laminar flow was locally formed near the probe under the optimized injection/aspiration flow rates. This method realizes the sensitivity of mRNA at the single cell level and the identification of the cell types on the basis of the relative gene expression profiles.


Biology of Reproduction | 2006

Expression and Glycosylation with Polylactosamine of CD44 Antigen on Macrophages During Follicular Atresia in Pig Ovaries

Yuko Miyake; Hiromichi Matsumoto; Masaki Yokoo; Kohtaro Miyazawa; Naoko Kimura; Woro Anindito Sri Tunjung; Takashi Shimizu; Hiroshi Sasada; Hisashi Aso; Takahiro Yamaguchi; Eimei Sato

Abstract Macrophages are essential in cleaning up apoptotic debris during follicular atresia. However, the key factors of this process are still unclear. In the present study, we evaluated CD44 mRNA, CD44 protein, and CD44 antigen glycosylation on macrophages during follicular atresia in the pig. Atresia was classified into five stages: stage I, healthy follicles; stage II, early atretic follicles having apoptotic granulosa cells with an unclear basement membrane; stage III, progressing atretic follicles having apoptotic granulosa cells completely diffused from the basement membrane; stage IV, late atretic follicles with increasing lysosomal activity; and stage V, disintegrated atretic follicles having collapsed theca cells and strong lysosomal activity. Immunohistological analysis showed that macrophages expressing CD44 invaded the inside of stage III follicles, accompanied by a collapse of basement membrane. Semiquantitative RT-PCR showed that only mRNA of the CD44 standard isoform (CD44s) was present in inner cells of follicles, and not any CD44 variant isoform (CD44v) mRNAs. The amount of CD44s mRNA was increased at stage III. Western blot and lectin blot analyses showed that CD44 was markedly expressed at stage III and glycosylated with polylactosamine at the same time. After macrophages invaded atretic follicles at stages III–V, the CD44 expressed on macrophages was glycosylated with polylactosamine. The lysosomal activity began to increase at stage IV, and reached the highest level at stage V. Increased CD44s protein and posttranslational modification of CD44 with polylactosamine on macrophages from stage III could be involved in the cleaning up apoptotic granulosa cells.


Zygote | 2002

Localisation of the hyaluronan receptor CD44 in porcine cumulus cells during in vivo and in vitro maturation

Masaki Yokoo; Paisan Tienthai; Naoko Kimura; Koji Niwa; Eimei Sato; Heriberto Rodriguez-Martinez

Polyspermy is fairly common during porcine in vitro fertilisation (IVF), perhaps due to incomplete in vitro oocyte maturation (IVM). Porcine cumulus cells (CCs) layered around the oocyte produce large amounts of extracellular hyaluronan (HA) when forming an expanding cell cloud during the last phase of oocyte maturation. The specific actions of HA are mediated via HA-binding proteins (HABPs), such as CD44, which act as receptors. In this study using immunocytochemistry and western blotting we investigated the localisation of CD44 in CCs obtained from in vivo-matured pig cumulus-oocyte complexes (COCs) and compared it with that in CCs from immature COCs and of COCs subjected to IVM and IVF procedures. Immunolabelling of CD44 was absent or very weak in CCs from immature COCs but strongly present on the surface of the CCs obtained from in vivo, displaying a similar localisation in the in vitro-matured COCs. In the latter, the labelling decreased but did not disappear in CCs 4 h after sperm co-incubation during IVF. Immunoblotting detected bands of between 73 and 88 kDa, corresponding to CD44, in the protein extract from in vivo CCs collected immediately prior to, or following spontaneous ovulation. The in vitro-matured CCs, however, presented bands ranging from 81 kDa to 88 kDa. Also, the bands found in the in vivo-matured CCs showed a larger variation of intensity and migration among animals than did the batches of in vitro-matured CCs. No CD44 band was detected on aliquots of the frozen-thawed boar spermatozoa used for IVF. The results clearly demonstrate that the specific HA receptor CD44 is present in expanding CCs of in vivo-matured pig COCs, in relation to increasing amounts of inter-CC HA. The subtle differences in molecular weight and migration ability observed between in vivo and in vitro samples may relate to differences in glycosylation and thus explain differences in HA-binding ability, of consequence for optimising in vitro culture conditions.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2011

Monitoring oxygen consumption of single mouse embryos using an integrated electrochemical microdevice.

Yasumoto Date; Shinichiro Takano; Hitoshi Shiku; Kosuke Ino; Takahiro Ito-Sasaki; Masaki Yokoo; Hiroyuki Abe; Tomokazu Matsue

Oxygen consumption (respiration activity) has been found to be the most remarkable criterion for determining the viability of an embryo produced in vitro. In this study, we propose an accurate, simple, and user-friendly device for measurement of the oxygen consumption of single mammalian embryos. An integrated electrode array was fabricated to determine the oxygen consumption of a single embryo, including the blastocyst stage, which has an inhomogeneous oxygen consumption rate, using a single measurement procedure. A single mouse embryo was positioned in a microwell at the center of an integrated electrode array, using a mouthpiece pipette, and immobilized by a cylindrical micropit with good reproducibility. The oxygen consumption of two-cell, morula, and blastocyst stages was measured amperometrically using the device. The recorded current profile was corrected to take into consideration transient background current during the measurement. A calculation method for oxygen consumption based on spherical diffusion centered on the defined point of the device was developed. This procedure is quite simple because it is not necessary to estimate the radius of the embryo being measured. The calculated values of oxygen consumption for two-cell, morula, and blastocyst stages were 1.36±0.33×10(-15) mol s(-1), 1.38±0.58×10(-15) mol s(-1), and 3.44±2.07×10(-15) mol s(-1), respectively. The increasing pattern of oxygen consumption from morula to blastocyst agreed well with measurements obtained using conventional scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM).


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2009

Effect of hyaluronan to inhibit caspase activation in porcine granulosa cells.

Woro Anindito Sri Tunjung; Masaki Yokoo; Yumi Hoshino; Yuko Miyake; Akane Kadowaki; Eimei Sato

We studied the ability of hyaluronan (HA) to inhibit apoptosis in porcine granulosa cells. The granulosa layer with cumulus-oocyte complex is cultured in media supplemented with follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) and 4-MU an inhibitor of hyaluronan synthases. The concentration of HA significantly increased after supplemented with FSH, but significantly decreased with 4-MU. CD44, receptor of HA, expressed after cultured with FSH, decreased in addition low concentration of 4-MU, whereas not detected in high concentration of 4-MU, indicating parallel relation between the amount of HA and CD44 expression. The 4-MU treatment also decreased the expression of procaspase-3, -8, -9 suggesting that inhibition of HA synthesis leads to activation of these caspases. Moreover, addition of anti-CD44 antibody decreased the expression of procaspases suggesting that perturbation of HA-CD44 binding leads activation of caspases. Hence, HA has ability to inhibit apoptosis and HA-CD44 binding is important on apoptosis inhibitory mechanism in porcine granulosa cells.


Cellular Reprogramming | 2010

Anomalous oxygen consumption in porcine somatic cell nuclear transfer embryos.

Satoshi Sugimura; Masaki Yokoo; Ken Ichi Yamanaka; Manabu Kawahara; Satoru Moriyasu; Takuya Wakai; Takashi Nagai; Hiroyuki Abe; Eimei Sato

Oxygen consumption reflects overall metabolic activity of mammalian embryos. We measured oxygen consumption in individual porcine somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) and in vitro-fertilized (IVF) embryos by modified scanning electrochemical microscopy. Oxygen consumption in IVF embryos rapidly increased at day 5 of the blastocyst stage (D5BL). IVF embryos that consumed >0.81 x 10(14)/mol sec(-1) of oxygen at D5BL exhibited significantly higher hatching and hatched rates at D7BL, whereas D5BL SCNT embryos using porcine fetal fibroblasts did not show an increase in oxygen consumption until D7BL. The numbers of inner cell mass and trophectoderm (TE) cells and incidence of apoptosis did not significantly differ between IVF and SCNT embryos at D5BL. At D7BL, a significant lower number of TE cell and higher incidence of apoptosis were observed in SCNT than in IVF embryos; this significantly correlated with their oxygen consumption at D5BL. Use of cumulus cells as donor cells neutralized the low oxygen consumption in SCNT embryos at D5BL, regardless of the difference between the recipient cytoplasm and donor nucleus. Some of SCNT embryos at D7BL were retrieved the hatching completion and were improved the number of TE cell and apoptosis incidence by using cumulus cells. Thus, anomalous oxygen consumption in porcine SCNT embryos at D5BL could be sign of limited hatchability, which may be responsible for the low TE cell number and high apoptosis incidence.


Journal of Mammalian Ova Research | 2008

Evaluating the Quality of Human Embryos with a Measurement of Oxygen Consumption by Scanning Electrochemical Microscopy

Takafumi Utsunomiya; Kaori Goto; Megumi Nasu; Yoko Kumasako; Yasuhisa Araki; Masaki Yokoo; Takahiro Itoh-Sasaki; Hiroyuki Abe

ABSTRACT Morphological evaluation has been widely used to evaluate embryo quality because it is non-invasive and useful in predicting pregnancy rate. However, morphological evaluations are subjective and categorization standards often vary between investigators. The respiration rate of embryos is a useful parameter for evaluating embryo quality. The scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM) measuring system provides a non-invasive, simple, accurate, and consistent measurement of the respiration activity of human embryos. After morphological evaluation by Veecks method, oxygen consumption by individual human embryos was quantified by SECM. Fundamentally, the maturation of mitochondria correlated with an increase in oxygen consumption during the development of embryos. The development of mitochondria may be an important factor in embryo quality, because mitochondria provide ATP for embryonic development by metabolism of nutrients in the cytoplasm. The respiration rates on the day 3 after in vitro fertilization (IVF) were measured and significant differences in oxygen consumption were registered even among embryos with the same morphological classification. There were no significant differences between the mean rates of oxygen consumption at each cleavage stage, however, there was considerable variation in respiration rate within embryos of the same morphological grade. The safety of SECM is assured as the embryos which were examined by SECM for oxygen consumption showed the same development levels as the control group. These results support the hypothesis that measuring embryonic respiration provides additional and valuable information about embryo quality.

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