Miyu Yoshida
Tohoku University
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Featured researches published by Miyu Yoshida.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Daisuke Tadaki; Daichi Yamaura; Shun Araki; Miyu Yoshida; Kohei Arata; Takeshi Ohori; Kenichi Ishibashi; Miki Kato; Teng Ma; Ryusuke Miyata; Yuzuru Tozawa; Hideaki Yamamoto; Michio Niwano; Ayumi Hirano-Iwata
The self-assembled bilayer lipid membrane (BLM) is the basic component of the cell membrane. The reconstitution of ion channel proteins in artificially formed BLMs represents a well-defined system for the functional analysis of ion channels and screening the effects of drugs that act on them. However, because BLMs are unstable, this limits the experimental throughput of BLM reconstitution systems. Here we report on the formation of mechanically stable solvent-free BLMs in microfabricated apertures with defined nano- and micro-tapered edge structures. The role of such nano- and micro-tapered structures on the stability of the BLMs was also investigated. Finally, this BLM system was combined with a cell-free synthesized human ether-a-go-go-related gene channel, a cardiac potassium channel whose relation to arrhythmic side effects following drug treatment is well recognized. Such stable BLMs as these, when combined with a cell-free system, represent a potential platform for screening the effects of drugs that act on various ion-channel genotypes.
Langmuir | 2018
Daichi Yamaura; Daisuke Tadaki; Shun Araki; Miyu Yoshida; Kohei Arata; Takeshi Ohori; Kenichi Ishibashi; Miki Kato; Teng Ma; Ryusuke Miyata; Hideaki Yamamoto; Ryugo Tero; Masao Sakuraba; Toshio Ogino; Michio Niwano; Ayumi Hirano-Iwata
Artificial bilayer lipid membranes (BLMs) provide well-defined systems for investigating the fundamental properties of membrane proteins, including ion channels, and for screening the effect of drugs that act on them. However, the application of this technique is limited due to the low stability and low reconstitution efficiency of the process. We previously reported on improving the stability of BLM based on the fabrication of microapertures having a tapered edge in SiO2/Si3N4 septa and efficient ion channel incorporation based on vesicle fusion accelerated by a centrifugal force. Although the BLM stability and incorporation probability were dramatically improved when these approaches were used, some BLMs were ruptured when subjected to a centrifugal force. To further improve the BLM stability, we investigated the effect of modifying the surface of the SiO2/Si3N4 septa on the stability of BLM suspended in the septa. The modified surfaces were characterized in terms of hydrophobicity, lipophobicity, and surface roughness. Diffusion coefficients of the lipid monolayers formed on the modified surfaces were also determined. Highly fluidic lipid monolayers were formed on the amphiphobic substrates that had been modified with long-chain perfluorocarbons. Free-standing BLMs formed in amphiphobic septa showed a much higher mechanical stability, including tolerance to water movement and applied centrifugal forces with and without proteoliposomes, than those formed in the septa that had been modified with a short alkyl chain. These results demonstrate that highly stable BLMs are formed when the surface of the septa has amphiphobic properties. Because highly fluidic lipid monolayers that are formed on the septa seamlessly connect with BLMs in a free-standing region, the high fluidity of the lipids contributes to decreasing potential damage to BLMs when mechanical stresses are applied. This approach to improve the BLM stability increases the experimental efficiency of the BLM systems and will contribute to the development of high-throughput platforms for functional assays of ion channel proteins.
Scientific Reports | 2016
Miyu Yoshida; Kenji Ishii; Makoto Naka; Sumio Ishihara; Ignace Jarrige; K. Ikeuchi; Youichi Murakami; Kazutaka Kudo; Yoji Koike; Tomoko Nagata; Yukimasa Fukada; Naoshi Ikeda; J. Mizuki
In strongly correlated electron systems, enhanced fluctuations in the proximity of the ordered states of electronic degrees of freedom often induce anomalous electronic properties such as unconventional superconductivity. While spin fluctuations in the energy-momentum space have been studied widely using inelastic neutron scattering, other degrees of freedom, i.e., charge and orbital, have hardly been explored thus far. Here, we use resonant inelastic x-ray scattering to observe charge fluctuations proximate to the charge-order phase in transition metal oxides. In the two-leg ladder of Sr14−xCaxCu24O41, charge fluctuations are enhanced at the propagation vector of the charge order (qCO) when the order is melted by raising temperature or by doping holes. In contrast, charge fluctuations are observed not only at qCO but also at other momenta in a geometrically frustrated triangular bilayer lattice of LuFe2O4. The observed charge fluctuations have a high energy (~1 eV), suggesting that the Coulomb repulsion between electrons plays an important role in the formation of the charge order.
Biophysical Journal | 2016
Ayumi Hirano-Iwata; Yutaka Ishinari; Miyu Yoshida; Shun Araki; Daisuke Tadaki; Ryusuke Miyata; Ken-ichi Ishibashi; Hideaki Yamamoto; Yasuo Kimura; Michio Niwano
The Japan Society of Applied Physics | 2010
Katsuhiko Miyamoto; Miyu Yoshida; Torsten Wagner; Y. Tatsuo; Michael J. Schöning
Scientific Reports | 2017
Ryugo Tero; Kohei Fukumoto; Toshinori Motegi; Miyu Yoshida; Michio Niwano; Ayumi Hirano-Iwata
The Japan Society of Applied Physics | 2018
Miki Kato; Miyu Yoshida; Daichi Yamaura; Kohei Arata; Daisuke Tadaki; Hideaki Yamamoto; Yuzuru Tozawa; Michio Niwano; Ayumi Hirano
The Japan Society of Applied Physics | 2017
Kohei Arata; Ayumi Hirano-Iwata; Daisuke Tadaki; Daichi Yamaura; Shun Araki; Miyu Yoshida; Takeshi Ohori; Hideaki Yamamoto; Michio Niwano
The Japan Society of Applied Physics | 2017
Daisuke Tadaki; Ayumi Hirano-Iwata; Daichi Yamaura; Shun Araki; Miyu Yoshida; Kohei Arata; Takeshi Ohori; Hideaki Yamamoto; Michio Niwano
The Japan Society of Applied Physics | 2017
Takeshi Ohori; Ayumi Hirano-Iwata; Daisuke Tadaki; Daichi Yamaura; Shun Araki; Miyu Yoshida; Kohei Arata; Hideaki Yamamoto; Michio Niwano