Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Masashi Nagase is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Masashi Nagase.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2014

On-Site Energy Supply at Synapses through Monocarboxylate Transporters Maintains Excitatory Synaptic Transmission

Masashi Nagase; Yukari Takahashi; Ayako M. Watabe; Yoshihiro Kubo; Fusao Kato

ATP production through oxidative phosphorylation in the mitochondria is the most efficient way to provide energy to various energy-consuming activities of the neurons. These processes require a large amount of ATP molecules to be maintained. Of these, synaptic transmission is most energy consuming. Here we report that lactate transported through monocarboxylate transporters (MCTs) at excitatory synapses constitutively supports synaptic transmission, even under conditions in which a sufficient supply of glucose and intracellular ATP are present. We analyzed the effects of MCT inhibition on neuronal activities using whole-cell recordings in brain slices of rats in the nucleus of the solitary tract. MCT inhibitors (α-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid (4-CIN), phloretin, and d-lactate) significantly decreased the amplitude of EPSCs without reducing release probability. Although 4-CIN significantly reduced currents mediated by heterologously expressed AMPA-Rs in oocytes (a novel finding in this study), the IC50 of the inhibitory effect on EPSC in brain slices was ∼3.8 times smaller than that on AMPA-R currents in oocytes. Removal of intracellular ATP significantly potentiated the inhibition of EPSC with 4-CIN in a manner that was counteracted by intracellular lactate addition. In addition, extracellular lactate rescued aglycemic suppression of EPSC, in a manner that was prevented by 4-CIN. Inhibition of MCTs also reduced NMDA-R-mediated EPSCs and, to a lesser extent, the IPSC. The reduction in EPSC amplitude by γ-d-glutamylglycine was enhanced by 4-CIN, suggesting also a decreased quantal content. We conclude that “on-site” astrocyte-neuron lactate transport to presynaptic and postsynaptic elements is necessary for the integrity of excitatory synaptic transmission.


Molecular Brain | 2015

The lateral parabrachial nucleus is actively involved in the acquisition of fear memory in mice

Masaru Sato; Mariko Ito; Masashi Nagase; Yae K. Sugimura; Yukari Takahashi; Ayako M. Watabe; Fusao Kato

BackgroundPavlovian fear conditioning is a form of learning accomplished by associating a conditioned stimulus (CS) and an unconditioned stimulus (US). While CS–US associations are generally thought to occur in the amygdala, the pathway mediating US signal processing has only been partially identified. The external part of the pontine lateral parabrachial nucleus (elPB) is well situated for providing US nociceptive information to the central amygdala (CeA), which was recently revealed to play a primary role in fear acquisition. Therefore, we manipulated the elPB activity to examine its role in the regulation of fear learning.ResultsFirst, we transiently inactivate the elPB during the acquisition of fear memory. Mice received bilateral elPB injections of the GABAA agonist muscimol (MUS) or phosphate-buffered saline (drug control), with bilateral misplacement of MUS defined as a placement control group. After the injection, mice were conditioned with a pure tone and foot-shock. On a memory retrieval test on day 2, the freezing ratio was significantly lower in the MUS group compared with that in the drug control or placement control groups. A second retrieval test using a pip tone on day 4 following de novo training on day 3, resulted in significant freezing with no group differences, indicating integrity of fear learning and a temporary limited effect of MUS. Next, we examined whether selectively activating the elPB-CeC pathway is sufficient to induce fear learning when paired with CS. Mice with channelrhodopsin2 (ChR2) expressed in the elPB received a pure tone (CS) in association with optical stimulation in the CeA (CS-LED paired group). On the retrieval test, CS-LED paired mice exhibited significantly higher freezing ratios evoked by CS presentation compared with both control mice receiving optical stimulation immediately after being placed in the shock chamber and exposed to the CS much later (immediate shock group) and those expressing only GFP (GFP control group). These results suggest that selective stimulation of the elPB-CeC pathway substitutes for the US to induce fear learning.ConclusionsThe elPB activity is necessary and sufficient to trigger fear learning, likely as a part of the pathway transmitting aversive signals to the CeA.


Molecular Brain | 2013

Synaptic potentiation in the nociceptive amygdala following fear learning in mice

Ayako M. Watabe; Toshitaka Ochiai; Masashi Nagase; Yukari Takahashi; Masaru Sato; Fusao Kato

BackgroundPavlovian fear conditioning is a classical form of associative learning, which depends on associative synaptic plasticity in the amygdala. Recent findings suggest that the central amygdala (CeA) plays an active role in the acquisition of fear learning. However, little is known about the synaptic properties of the CeA in fear learning. The capsular part of the central amygdala (CeC) receives direct nociceptive information from the external part of the lateral parabrachial nucleus (lPB), as well as highly processed polymodal signals from the basolateral nucleus of the amygdala (BLA). Therefore, we focused on CeC as a convergence point for polymodal BLA signals and nociceptive lPB signals, and explored the synaptic regulation of these pathways in fear conditioning.ResultsIn this study, we show that fear conditioning results in synaptic potentiation in both lPB-CeC and BLA-CeC synapses. This potentiation is dependent on associative fear learning, rather than on nociceptive or sensory experience, or fear memory retrieval. The synaptic weight of the lPB-CeC and BLA-CeC pathways is correlated in fear-conditioned mice, suggesting that fear learning may induce activity-dependent heterosynaptic interactions between lPB-CeC and BLA-CeC pathways. This synaptic potentiation is associated with both postsynaptic and presynaptic changes in the lPB-CeC and BLA-CeC synapses.ConclusionsThese results indicate that the CeC may provide an important locus of Pavlovian association, integrating direct nociceptive signals with polymodal sensory signals. In addition to the well-established plasticity of the lateral amygdala, the multi-step nature of this association system contributes to the highly orchestrated tuning of fear learning.


Science | 2017

Overlapping memory trace indispensable for linking, but not recalling, individual memories

Jun Yokose; Reiko Okubo-Suzuki; Masanori Nomoto; Noriaki Ohkawa; Hirofumi Nishizono; Akinobu Suzuki; Mina Matsuo; Shuhei Tsujimura; Yukari Takahashi; Masashi Nagase; Ayako M. Watabe; Masakiyo Sasahara; Fusao Kato; Kaoru Inokuchi

Unrelated memories get blurred together If one retrieves two memories around the same time, a small number of neurons will become involved in both memories. Yokose et al. investigated the cellular ensemble mechanisms underlying the association between two such memories. In mice, a small population of neurons mediates the association. Memory traces for two independent emotional memories in the brain partially overlapped when the two memories were retrieved synchronously to create a linkage. Suppressing the activity of the overlapping memory trace interrupted the linkage without damaging the original memories. Science, this issue p. 398 In mice, repeated simultaneous reactivation of two initially separated memory traces links them together. Memories are not stored in isolation from other memories but are integrated into associative networks. However, the mechanisms underlying memory association remain elusive. Using two amygdala-dependent behavioral paradigms—conditioned taste aversion (CTA) and auditory-cued fear conditioning (AFC)—in mice, we found that presenting the conditioned stimulus used for the CTA task triggered the conditioned response of the AFC task after natural coreactivation of the memories. This was accompanied through an increase in the overlapping neuronal ensemble in the basolateral amygdala. Silencing of the overlapping ensemble suppressed CTA retrieval-induced freezing. However, retrieval of the original CTA or AFC memory was not affected. A small population of coshared neurons thus mediates the link between memories. They are not necessary for recalling individual memories.


Nature Communications | 2016

Cellular tagging as a neural network mechanism for behavioural tagging

Masanori Nomoto; Noriaki Ohkawa; Hirofumi Nishizono; Jun Yokose; Akinobu Suzuki; Mina Matsuo; Shuhei Tsujimura; Yukari Takahashi; Masashi Nagase; Ayako M. Watabe; Fusao Kato; Kaoru Inokuchi

Behavioural tagging is the transformation of a short-term memory, induced by a weak experience, into a long-term memory (LTM) due to the temporal association with a novel experience. The mechanism by which neuronal ensembles, each carrying a memory engram of one of the experiences, interact to achieve behavioural tagging is unknown. Here we show that retrieval of a LTM formed by behavioural tagging of a weak experience depends on the degree of overlap with the neuronal ensemble corresponding to a novel experience. The numbers of neurons activated by weak training in a novel object recognition (NOR) task and by a novel context exploration (NCE) task, denoted as overlapping neurons, increases in the hippocampal CA1 when behavioural tagging is successfully achieved. Optical silencing of an NCE-related ensemble suppresses NOR–LTM retrieval. Thus, a population of cells recruited by NOR is tagged and then preferentially incorporated into the memory trace for NCE to achieve behavioural tagging.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2017

Essential role of endogenous calcitonin gene-related peptide in pain-associated plasticity in the central amygdala

Kei Shinohara; Ayako M. Watabe; Masashi Nagase; Yuya Okutsu; Yukari Takahashi; Hiroki Kurihara; Fusao Kato

The role of the neuropeptide calcitonin gene‐related peptide (CGRP) is well established in nociceptive behaviors. CGRP is highly expressed in the projection pathway from the parabrachial nucleus to the laterocapsular region of the central amygdala (CeC), which plays a critical role in relaying nociceptive information. The CeC is a key structure in pain behavior because it integrates and modulates nociceptive information along with other sensory signals. Previous studies have demonstrated that blockade of the amygdalar CGRP‐signaling cascade attenuates nociceptive behaviors in pain models, while CGRP application facilitates amygdalar synaptic transmission and induces pain behaviors. Despite these lines of evidence, it remains unclear whether endogenous CGRP is involved in the development of nociceptive behaviors accompanied with amygdalar plasticity in a peripheral inflammation model in vivo. To directly address this, we utilized a previously generated CGRP knockout (KO) mouse to longitudinally study formalin‐induced plasticity and nociceptive behavior. We found that synaptic potentiation in the right PB‐CeC pathway that was observed in wild‐type mice was drastically attenuated in the CGRP KO mice 6 h post‐inflammation, when acute nociceptive behavior was no longer observed. Furthermore, the bilateral tactile allodynia 6 h post‐inflammation was significantly decreased in the CGRP KO mice. In contrast, the acute nociceptive behavior immediately after the formalin injection was reduced only at 20–25 min post‐injection in the CGRP KO mice. These results suggest that endogenous CGRP contributes to peripheral inflammation‐induced synaptic plasticity in the amygdala, and this plasticity may underlie the exaggerated nociception–emotion linkage in pain chronification.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2016

SAD-B kinase regulates pre-synaptic vesicular dynamics at hippocampal Schaffer collateral synapses and affects contextual fear memory

Ayako M. Watabe; Masashi Nagase; Akari Hagiwara; Yamato Hida; Megumi Tsuji; Toshitaka Ochiai; Fusao Kato; Toshihisa Ohtsuka

Synapses of amphids defective (SAD)‐A/B kinases control various steps in neuronal development and differentiation, such as axon specifications and maturation in central and peripheral nervous systems. At mature pre‐synaptic terminals, SAD‐B is associated with synaptic vesicles and the active zone cytomatrix; however, how SAD‐B regulates neurotransmission and synaptic plasticity in vivo remains unclear. Thus, we used SAD‐B knockout (KO) mice to study the function of this pre‐synaptic kinase in the brain. We found that the paired‐pulse ratio was significantly enhanced at Shaffer collateral synapses in the hippocampal CA1 region in SAD‐B KO mice compared with wild‐type littermates. We also found that the frequency of the miniature excitatory post‐synaptic current was decreased in SAD‐B KO mice. Moreover, synaptic depression following prolonged low‐frequency synaptic stimulation was significantly enhanced in SAD‐B KO mice. These results suggest that SAD‐B kinase regulates vesicular release probability at pre‐synaptic terminals and is involved in vesicular trafficking and/or regulation of the readily releasable pool size. Finally, we found that hippocampus‐dependent contextual fear learning was significantly impaired in SAD‐B KO mice. These observations suggest that SAD‐B kinase plays pivotal roles in controlling vesicular release properties and regulating hippocampal function in the mature brain.


Molecular Pain | 2017

Potentiation of NMDA receptor-mediated synaptic transmission at the parabrachial-central amygdala synapses by CGRP in mice

Yuya Okutsu; Yukari Takahashi; Masashi Nagase; Kei Shinohara; Ryo Ikeda; Fusao Kato

The capsular part of the central amygdala (CeC) is called the “nociceptive amygdala,” as it receives nociceptive information from various pathways, including monosynaptic input from the lateral part of the parabrachial nucleus (LPB), a major target of ascending neurons in the spinal and medullary dorsal horn. LPB-CeC synaptic transmission is mediated by glutamate but the fibers from the LPB also contain calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) and the CeC is rich in CGRP-binding sites. CGRP might be released in response to strong nociception and activate these CGRP receptors. Though it has been shown that CGRP affects the excitatory postsynaptic current (EPSC) amplitude at this synapse in a manner sensitive to NMDA receptor (NMDA-R) blockers, the effect of CGRP on postsynaptic NMDA-R-mediated current recorded in isolation has never been directly examined. Thus, we evaluated the effects of CGRP on NMDA-R-mediated EPSCs that were pharmacologically isolated in brain slices from naïve mice. CGRP significantly increased the amplitude of EPSCs mediated by NMDA-Rs in a manner dependent on protein kinase A activation, but not that mediated by alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptors, in concentration-dependent and antagonist-sensitive manners. This CGRP-induced potentiation of synaptic NMDA-R function would have a potent impact on the strengthening of the nociception-emotion link in persistent pain.


Experimental Neurology | 2017

Facilitation of distinct inhibitory synaptic inputs by chemical anoxia in neurons in the oculomotor, facial and hypoglossal motor nuclei of the rat.

Satoshi Takagi; Yu Kono; Masashi Nagase; Soichiro Mochio; Fusao Kato

&NA; Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurodegenerative disorder characterized by the selective loss of motor neurons in the brainstem and spinal cord. Clinical studies have indicated that there is a distinct region‐dependent difference in the vulnerability of motor neurons. For example, the motor neurons in the facial and hypoglossal nuclei are more susceptible to neuronal death than those in the oculomotor nucleus. To understand the mechanism underlying the differential susceptibility to cell death of the neurons in different motor nuclei, we compared the effects of chemical anoxia on the membrane currents and postsynaptic currents in different motor nuclei. The membrane currents were recorded from neurons in the oculomotor, facial and hypoglossal nuclei in brain slices of juvenile Wistar rats by using whole‐cell recording in the presence of tetrodotoxin that prevents action potential‐dependent synaptic transmission. NaCN consistently induced an inward current and a significant increase in the frequency of spontaneous synaptic inputs in neurons from these three nuclei. However, this increase in the synaptic input frequency was abolished by strychnine, a glycine receptor antagonist, but not by picrotoxin in neurons from the hypoglossal and facial nuclei, whereas that in neurons from the oculomotor nucleus was abolished by picrotoxin, but not by strychnine. Blocking ionotropic glutamate receptors did not significantly affect the NaCN‐induced release facilitation in any of the three motor nuclei. These results suggest that anoxia selectively facilitates glycine release in the hypoglossal and facial nuclei and GABA release in the oculomotor nucleus. The region‐dependent differences in the neurotransmitters involved in the anoxia‐triggered release facilitation might provide a basis for the selective vulnerability of motor neurons in the neurodegeneration associated with ALS. HighlightsALS has a characteristic of the selective motor neurons loss.We compared the effects of chemical anoxia in the VII and XII.Chemical anoxia facilitated glycine‐mediated transmission in the VII and XII.Chemical anoxia also facilitated GABA‐mediated transmission in III.These results would help uncover the mechanism of the selective motor neurons loss.


Current opinion in behavioral sciences | 2019

Parabrachial-to-amygdala control of aversive learning

Masashi Nagase; Kaori Mikami; Ayako M. Watabe

Elucidating neuronal circuitry mechanisms underlying adaptive behaviors and memory formation is fundamental to understanding brain function. Pavlovian fear conditioning studies have provided important insights into the neuronal mechanisms of conditioned and unconditioned stimuli in the amygdala, and their associative mechanisms and plasticity have been intensively studied. Recent advances in optogenetics and pharmacogenetics combined with genetic manipulation tools, however, reveal new insights into unconditioned stimuli themselves. Importantly, how unconditioned stimuli are transmitted and regulated has been explored at the circuitry level. This review focuses on recent advances and earlier studies on the specific neuronal pathways regulating unconditioned stimulus information processing in intra-amygdala and extra-amygdala circuits, and provides a working model of the neural tuning mechanisms underlying adaptive behaviors.

Collaboration


Dive into the Masashi Nagase's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Fusao Kato

Jikei University School of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ayako M. Watabe

Jikei University School of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yukari Takahashi

Jikei University School of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Masaru Sato

Jikei University School of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Satoshi Takagi

Jikei University School of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge