Masako Fujita
Okayama University
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Featured researches published by Masako Fujita.
Brain Research | 2004
Hiroyuki Ichikawa; Tomohiro Fukunaga; H.W. Jin; Masako Fujita; Teruko Takano-Yamamoto; Tomosada Sugimoto
Immunohistochemistry for vanilloid receptor subtype 1 (VR1), vanilloid receptor 1-like receptor (VRL-1) and P2X3 receptor was performed in the rat temporomandibular joint (TMJ). Blood vessels in the articular disk and capsule, the synovial membrane and the fibrous tissue around the condylar process were innervated by VR1- or P2X3 receptor-immunoreactive (ir) nerve fibers. However, VRL-1-immunoreactivity (ir) could not be detected in the TMJ. Retrograde tracing and immunohistochemical methods revealed that 25%, 41% and 52% of TMJ neurons in the trigeminal ganglion (TG) exhibited VR1-, VRL-1- and P2X3 receptor-ir, respectively. VR1-ir TMJ neurons were mostly small to medium-sized, whereas VRL-1- and P2X3 receptor-ir TMJ neurons were predominantly medium-sized to large. In addition, 73%, 28% and 44% of VR1-, VRL-1- and P2X3 receptor-ir TMJ neurons, respectively, coexpressed calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)-ir. The present study suggests that the TMJ has abundant nociceptors which respond to vanilloid compounds, protons, heat and extracellular ATP.
American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2009
Motoi Kobashi; Mamoru Yanagihara; Masako Fujita; Yoshihiro Mitoh; Ryuji Matsuo
The effects of fourth ventricular administration of ghrelin on motility of the proximal stomach were examined in anesthetized rats. Intragastric pressure (IGP) was measured using a balloon situated in the proximal part of the stomach. Administration of ghrelin into the fourth ventricle induced relaxation of the proximal stomach in a dose-dependent manner. Significant reduction of IGP was observed at doses of 3, 10, or 30 pmol. The administration of ghrelin (10 or 30 pmol) with growth hormone secretagogue receptor (GHS-R) antagonist ([D-Lys3] GHRP-6; 1 nmol) into the fourth ventricle did not induce a significant change in IGP. The sole administration of [D-Lys3] GHRP-6 also did not induce a significant change in IGP. Bilateral sectioning of the vagi at the cervical level abolished the relaxation induced by the administration of ghrelin (10 or 30 pmol) into the fourth ventricle, suggesting that relaxation induced by ghrelin is mediated by vagal preganglionic neurons. Microinjections of ghrelin (200 fmol) into the caudal part of the dorsal vagal complex (DVC) induced obvious relaxation of the proximal stomach. Similar injections into the intermediate part of the DVC did not induce significant change. Dose-response analyses revealed that the microinjection of 2 fmol of ghrelin into the caudal DVC significantly reduced IGP. These results revealed that ghrelin induced relaxation in the proximal stomach via GHS-R situated in the caudal DVC.
Brain Research | 2005
H.W. Jin; Hiroyuki Ichikawa; Masako Fujita; Tomoichiro Yamaai; Kazuo Mukae; Kayo Nomura; Tomosada Sugimoto
Capsaicin induces apoptosis in some types of neurons, but the exact molecular mechanism remains unclear. In this study, capsaicin was systemically administrated in newborn rats and the dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons were examined for caspase-immunoreactivity. Capsaicin-induced neuronal apoptosis was revealed by TUNEL. TUNEL-positive neurons rapidly increased, reaching the peak at 24 h post-injection when 10.6% of DRG neurons were apoptotic. Neurons expressing immunoreactivity for activated caspases-9 and -3 concomitantly increased. At 24 h, 15.9% and 17.7% of DRG neurons exhibited immunoreactivity for caspase-9 and caspase-3, respectively. DNA fragmentation signal and caspase-immunoreactivity were detected in less than 0.5% of DRG neurons of vehicle control rats. The immunoreactivity and TUNEL-positivity returned to the vehicle control level by 120 h. Double label immunohistochemistry revealed co-expression of caspase-9 and DNA fragmentation or caspase-3 and DNA fragmentation. These results suggest that the caspase cascade is involved in the primary neuronal apoptosis induced by neurotoxin capsaicin.
Brain Research | 2014
Naoto Maeda; Motoi Kobashi; Yoshihiro Mitoh; Masako Fujita; Shogo Minagi; Ryuji Matsuo
To evaluate the role of the masticatory area in the cerebral cortex in the masticatory-salivary reflex, we investigated submandibular salivary secretion, jaw-movement trajectory and electromyographic activity of the jaw-opener (digastric) and jaw-closer (masseter) muscles evoked by repetitive electrical stimulation of the cortical masticatory area in anesthetized rats. Rats have two cortical masticatory areas: the anterior area (A-area) in the orofacial motor cortex, and the posterior area (P-area) in the insular cortex. Our defined P-area extended more caudally than the previous reported one. P-area stimulation induced vigorous salivary secretion (about 20 µl/min) and rhythmical jaw movements (3-4 Hz) resembling masticatory movements. Salivary flow persisted even after minimizing jaw movements by curarization. A-area stimulation induced small and fast rhythmical jaw movements (6-8 Hz) resembling licking of solutions, but not salivary secretion. These findings suggest that P-area controls salivary secretion as well as mastication, and may be involved in the masticatory-salivary reflex.
Regulatory Peptides | 2010
Motoi Kobashi; Song Yu Xuan; Masako Fujita; Yoshihiro Mitoh; Ryuji Matsuo
The effect of ghrelin on rhythmic reflex swallowing was examined in urethane-chloralose anesthetized rats. Swallowing was monitored by recording electromyographic activities of the suprahyoid muscle. Fourth ventricular administration of ghrelin decreased swallowing frequency during electrical stimulation of the central cut end of the superior laryngeal nerve (SLN stimulation). A significant decrease in swallowing frequency was observed after ghrelin administration at doses of 3, 10, 30 and 100 pmol. The administration of ghrelin with growth hormone secretagogue receptor antagonist ([D-Lys(3)] GHRP-6) did not change swallowing frequency during SLN stimulation. Neither mean blood pressure nor heart rate changed after the administration of 10 pmol ghrelin. Bilateral vagotomy did not disrupt the ghrelin response. These observations indicate that the ghrelin response does not depend on either cardiovascular or abdominal responses. Microinjection of ghrelin (0.3 pmol) into the vicinity of the solitary tract inhibited swallowing induced by SLN stimulation. Fourth ventricular administration of orexin-A (3 nmol) also inhibited reflex swallowing elicited by SLN stimulation. These results suggest that ghrelin and other orexigenic peptides inhibit reflex swallowing by modifying neural activities of the dorsal medulla where the swallowing center is housed.
Neuroscience Letters | 2011
Hirotaka Ueda; Yoshihiro Mitoh; Masako Fujita; Motoi Kobashi; Takashi Yamashiro; Tomosada Sugimoto; Hiroyuki Ichikawa; Ryuji Matsuo
The superior salivatory nucleus (SSN) contains preganglionic parasympathetic neurons to the submandibular and sublingual salivary glands. Cevimeline, a muscarinic acetylcholine receptor agonist, stimulates the salivary glands and is presently used as sialogogue in the treatment of dry mouth. Since cevimeline passes through the blood-brain barrier, it is also able to act on muscarinic acetylcholine receptors in the central nervous system. Our preliminary experiment using the whole-cell patch-clamp technique has shown that cevimeline excites SSN neurons in rat brain slices, suggesting that SSN neurons have muscarinic acetylcholine receptors; however, it is unclear which subtypes of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors exist in SSN neurons. In the present study, we investigated immunohistochemically muscarinic acetylcholine receptor subtypes, M1 receptor (M1R), M2R, M3R, M4R, and M5R in SSN neurons. SSN neurons innervating the salivary glands, retrogradely labeled with a fluorescent tracer from the chorda-lingual nerve, mostly expressed M3R immunoreactivity (-ir) (92.3%) but not M1R-ir. About half of such SSN neurons also showed M2R- (40.1%), M4R- (54.0%) and M5R-ir (46.0%); therefore, it is probable that SSN neurons co-express M3R-ir with at least two of the other muscarinic receptor subtypes. This is the first report to show that SSN neurons contain muscarinic acetylcholine receptors.
Neuroreport | 2001
Tomosada Sugimoto; Akihiro Takeyama; Masako Fujita; Hiroyuki Ichikawa; Teruko Takano-Yamamoto
To determine the target of cytotoxicity of cisplatin (CDDP), we injected newborn rats with 2 mg/kg CDDP and examined the trigeminal ganglion for possible cell death. A nick translation method for DNA fragmentation revealed CDDP-induced glial cell death. DNA fragmentation was detected in both Schwann cells and satellite cells. Satellite cell death was observed as early as 0.5 day after injection, most frequent at 1–3 days and subsided thereafter. The incidence of neuronal death was very low and comparable to that observed in vehicle control rats. CDDP has selective toxicity to peripheral glial cells, though the damage did not culminate in cell death in adults. The glial toxicity may contribute to clinical symptoms of CDDP neuropathy.
Brain Research | 2008
Yoshihiro Mitoh; Makoto Funahashi; Akihito Fujii; Masako Fujita; Motoi Kobashi; Ryuji Matsuo
The primary parasympathetic center of the submandibular and sublingual salivary glands is the superior salivatory (SS) nucleus, neurons of which receive excitatory (glutamatergic) and inhibitory (GABAergic and glycinergic) synaptic transmissions in rats. In the present study, to examine postnatal neural development, we focused on inhibitory transmission to the SS neurons in neonatal rats from postnatal day 2 (P2) to P14. Conventional and gramicidin-perforated whole-cell patch-clamp techniques were applied to the neurons in brainstem slices. The decay time constants of GABAergic and glycinergic postsynaptic currents (PSCs) consisted of fast (tau(fast)) and slow (tau(slow)) components. Both tau(fast) and tau(slow) of PSC components tended to become faster with development. The equilibrium potential of Cl(-) (E(Cl-)) was estimated from the reversal potentials of total PSCs (GABAergic plus glycinergic). The E(Cl-) in the P8-P14 group was significantly more negative than E(Cl-) in the P2-P7 group. Exogenous GABA application at the resting potentials produced depolarization in 83% of SS neurons at P2-P7 and accompanied the action potential in some neurons. In contrast, at P8-P14, GABA evoked hyperpolarization in 78% of SS neurons; therefore, SS neurons did not acquire mature inhibitory systems until P14. The development of SS neurons is discussed as compared with the development of peripheral salivary gland tissue and brainstem neurons that participate in oral motor and sensory functions.
Brain Research | 2005
Hiroyuki Ichikawa; H.W. Jin; Masako Fujita; Noriyuki Nagaoka; Tomosada Sugimoto
Immunohistochemistry for osteocalcin (OC) was performed on the rat vagal and glossopharyngeal sensory ganglia. OC-immunoreactive (IR) neurons were detected in the jugular (10%), petrosal (11%) and nodose ganglia (6%). The cell size analysis demonstrated that OC-IR neurons were predominantly small to medium-sized in the jugular ganglion (mean+/-S.D.=356.3+/-192.2 microm(2), range=86.5-831.5 microm(2)). On the other hand, such neurons were medium-sized to large in the petrosal (mean+/-S.D.=725.6+/-280.7 microm(2), range=124.7-1540.4 microm(2)) and nodose ganglia (mean+/-S.D.=857.5+/-330.2 microm(2), range=367.1-1608.0 microm(2)). In the circumvallate papilla, OC-IR nerve fibers were located in the vicinity of taste buds. Some taste bud cells were also immunoreactive for the calcium-binding protein (CaBP). In the carotid body, however, OC-IR nerve fibers could not be detected. Retrograde tracing with fluorogold revealed that OC-IR nerve fibers in the circumvallate papilla mainly originated from the petrosal ganglion. These findings may suggest that OC-IR petrosal neurons have chemoreceptive function in the tongue.
Experimental Neurology | 2000
Tomosada Sugimoto; Yue Ling Li; Hiroto Kishimoto; Masako Fujita; Hiroyuki Ichikawa
The sciatic nerve was cut in newborn rats, and prevented from regenerating for 8 weeks. The number of dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons in L4 and L5, the distribution of central axon terminals of primary nociceptors, and the activity of secondary nociceptors were examined in the lumbar dorsal horn. The neonatal sciatic lesion caused about 60% reduction of DRG neurons. The central terminal field of the sciatic primary nociceptors negatively labeled by in situ binding of Bandeiraea simplicifolia isolectin B4 (BsIB4) markedly shriveled. Instead, the central representation of the saphenous nerve and the posterior cutaneous nerve of the thigh (PC) expanded. The laminae I/II neuropil in the medialmost (1/4) of the L3 dorsal horn and in the second lateral (1/4) around the L4/5 junction was occupied by the BsIB4 binding sites derived from the saphenous and the PC primary neurons, respectively. Noxious stimuli applied to the receptive fields of the saphenous and the PC nerves induced c-Fos-like immunoreactivity in many neurons in the expanded central terminal fields of the nerves. The collateral sprouts of uninjured primary nociceptors did not only invade the deafferented area of the dorsal horn but also established functional synaptic connections.