Ryo Yamamoto
Kanazawa Medical University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ryo Yamamoto.
Neuropharmacology | 2015
Li Wang; Huicong Kang; Yongzhi Li; Yuan Shui; Ryo Yamamoto; Tokio Sugai; Nobuo Kato
We previously showed that activity of the large conductance calcium-activated potassium (Big-K; BK) channels is suppressed in 3xTg Alzheimer disease (AD) model mice. However, its behavioral significance is not known. In the present report, ventricular injection of the BK channel activator isopimaric acid (ISO) was conducted to examine whether BK channel activation ameliorates cognition in 3xTg mice. The novel object recognition (NOR) test revealed that chronic injection of ISO improved non-spatial memory in 3xTg mice. In the Morris water maze, the probe test demonstrated an improved spatial memory after ISO injection. Electrophysiological underpinnings of the ISO effect were then examined in slices obtained from the mice after behavior. At hippocampal CA1 synapses, the basic synaptic transmission was abnormally elevated and long-term potentiation (LTP) was partially suppressed in 3xTg mice. These were both recovered by ISO treatment. We then confirmed suppressed BK channel activity in 3xTg mice by measuring the half-width of evoked action potentials. This was also recovered by ISO treatment. We previously showed that the recovery of BK channel activity accompanies reduction of neuronal excitability in pyramidal cells. Here again, pyramidal cell excitability, as assessed by calculating the frequency of evoked spikes, was elevated in the 3xTg mouse and was normalized by ISO. ELISA experiments demonstrated an ISO-induced reduction of Aβ1-42 content in hippocampal tissue in 3xTg mice. The present study thus suggests a potential therapeutic utility of BK channel activators for AD.
Neuropharmacology | 2014
Ryo Yamamoto; Natsuki Hatano; Tokio Sugai; Nobuo Kato
Regional differences are known in the serotonin-induced modulation of neuronal activity within the amygdala. This in vitro study in rats focuses on analyzing the ionic mechanism underlying serotonin-induced depolarization in the lateral amygdala. Serotonin depolarized membrane potential by 5 mV, which is underlain by a serotonin-induced inward current at rest with a characteristic reversal potential of -105 mV. From pharmacological experiments, the 5-HT2C subtype was singled out as the receptor subtype involved. Under blockade of K(+) channels by Ba(2+), 5-HT induced an inward current with no reversal at the range between -50 and -130 mV, which was identified as a TRPC-like current. This current was blocked by the specific phosphatidylinositol 3-kinse (PI3-kinase) inhibitor LY294002, pointing to its dependence on PI3-kinase. The Ba(2+)-sensitive component, obtained by subtraction, showed a strong outward rectification and the reversal potential of K(+), indicating that this component results from a serotonin-induced inhibition of G-protein coupled inwardly rectifying K(+) channel (GIRK) current. By wortmannin, an inhibitor of both PI3-kinase and PI4-kinase, a serotonin-induced phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) depletion was revealed to underlie GIRK inhibition. Thus, the serotonin-induced current turned out to be caused by a combined occurrence of GIRK inhibition and PI3-kinase-dependent TRPC-like current. With serotonergic modulation, all these mechanisms should be recruited in lateral amygdala principal neurons and likely contribute to generation of region-specific neuronal activity patterns within the amygdala, which may at least partly implement its required role in fear and anxiety.
Physiology & Behavior | 2015
Peng Sun; Qing Zhang; Yu Zhang; Furong Wang; Li Wang; Ryo Yamamoto; Tokio Sugai; Nobuo Kato
It was previously shown that depression-like behavior is accompanied with suppression of the large-conductance calcium activated potassium (BK) channel in cingulate cortex pyramidal cells. To test whether BK channels are also involved in fear conditioning, we studied neuronal properties of amygdala principal cells in fear conditioned mice. After behavior, we made brain slices containing the amygdala, the structure critically relevant to fear memory. The resting membrane potential in lateral amygdala (LA) neurons obtained from fear conditioned mice (FC group) was more depolarized than in neurons from naïve controls. The frequencies of spikes evoked by current injections were higher in neurons from FC mice, demonstrating that excitability of LA neurons was elevated by fear conditioning. The depolarization in neurons from FC mice was shown to depend on BK channels by using the BK channel blocker charybdotoxin. Suppression of BK channels in LA neurons from the FC group was further confirmed on the basis of the spike width, since BK channels affect the descending phase of spikes. Spikes were broader in the FC group than those in the naïve control in a manner dependent on BK channels. Consistently, quantitative real-time PCR revealed a decreased expression of BK channel mRNA. The present findings suggest that emotional disorder manifested in the forms of fear conditioning is accompanied with BK channel suppression in the amygdala, the brain structure critical to this emotional disorder.
Chemical Senses | 2012
Tokio Sugai; Ryo Yamamoto; Hiroshi Yoshimura; Nobuo Kato
The endopiriform nucleus (EPN) is a large group of multipolar cells located in the depth of the piriform cortex (PC). Although many studies have suggested that the EPN plays a role in temporal lobe epilepsy, the normal function of the EPN remains to be elucidated. By using optical imaging of coronal brain slice preparations with voltage-sensitive dye, we found signal propagation from the PC or gustatory cortex (GC) to the EPN in normal medium. In our previous research, we failed to elicit a reliable signal reproducibly in the EPN by single stimulation either to the PC or GC. In our current research, we found that a double-pulse stimulation to either the PC or GC (interpulse interval: 20-100 ms) induced robust signal propagation to the EPN through excitation in the agranular division of the insular cortex (AI), with further extension to the claustrum. Finally, double site paired-pulse stimulation to the PC and GC also evoked excitation in the AI, claustrum, and EPN. These results suggest that the EPN has dual roles: 1) further processing of modality-specific olfactory and gustatory information from the PC and GC, respectively and 2) synergistic integration of PC-derived olfactory information and GC-derived gustatory information.
Neuroscience | 2012
Ryo Yamamoto; Yoshifumi Ueta; Tokio Sugai; Nobuo Kato
The amygdala and serotonergic innervations thereunto are considered to cooperatively modulate affective behaviors. By whole-cell recording, the present study examined effects of serotonin (5-HT) on synaptic transmission in the rat basolateral amygdala (BLA) complex, which is the amygdalar entrance for sensory information. Application of 5-HT-attenuated excitatory postsynaptic currents at synapses from the lateral amygdala (LA) to the BLA proper, and also at synapses from putative thalamic afferents to LA principal neurons, both depending on 5-HT(2) receptors. This reduction of synaptic responses was confirmed in the BLA under current clamp. In the LA, by contrast, synaptic potentials were not reduced, but enhanced by 5-HT. With 5-HT bath-applied, a prolonged depolarization was induced in LA neurons by strong synaptic stimulation, which appears similar to a slow after-depolarization (sADP) induced by injecting depolarizing currents. Occurrence of such current-induced sADP was confirmed in LA neurons. Both the synaptically-activated prolonged depolarization and the current-induced sADPs depended on 5-HT(2) receptor activation and postsynaptic calcium increase, suggesting that the same postsynaptic intrinsic mechanisms are involved. Reduction of potassium currents was identified as a major ionic mechanism for this sADPs. We thus revealed that 5-HT usually reduces overall synaptic transmission in the whole BLA complex, but enables sADPs to occur, thereby increasing synaptic responsiveness of LA neurons in a positive feedback manner. With this duality of 5-HT actions in operation, a weak input to the BLA complex would be usually eliminated, but could be selected were it associated with sufficiently large depolarization.
Brain Research | 2015
Yuan Shui; Li Wang; Xianwen Luo; Osamu Uchiumi; Ryo Yamamoto; Tokio Sugai; Nobuo Kato
Homer1a is implicated in depression in humans and depression-like behavior in mice. To further understand the role of Homer1a in stress-induced emotional changes, we applied very mild stress to Homer1a knockout (H1a KO) mice. The wild-type (WT) and H1a KO mice were restrained for 2h daily for 7 consecutive days at the same time of the day. The restraint was so mild that no changes in anxiety- or depression-like behavior were detected in either type of mice. However, total locomotion in the open field test and forced swimming test was increased by restraint in H1a KO mice only. After behavior, we made brain slices to examine neuronal excitability in cingulate cortex pyramidal cells and synaptic efficiency in hippocampal CA1 synapses. The excitability, assessed on the basis of the frequency of spikes elicited by current injection, was increased by restraint in H1a KO mice. The synaptic efficiency was evaluated by comparing the input-output relationship between the size of fiber volley and the slope of field excitatory postsynaptic potentials, and was shown to be increased by restraint in H1a KO mice only. Thus, predictable subtle stress, which failed to induce behavioral or electrophysiological changes in WT mice, resulted in a minor behavioral change that accompany upregulation of neuronal excitability and synaptic efficiency in H1a KO mice, suggesting that Homer1a may play a critical role in resilience to subtle stress.
Physiology & Behavior | 2015
Peng Sun; Qing Zhang; Yu Zhang; Furong Wang; Rui Chen; Ryo Yamamoto; Nobuo Kato
A significant number of depressed people are resistant to drug therapy. Promising alternative therapy may be brain stimulation achievable by diverse methods. In a mouse model of depression, we previously investigated the mechanisms by which repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) reverses depression-like behavior, and found an essential involvement of the immediate early gene product Homer1a. Home1a is known to be expressed not just by rTMS but also by photic stimulation (PS) via activation of the retino-geniculo-cortical pathway, suggesting that PS may have an antidepressant effect. This was tested by using a two-phase version of forced swimming (FS), in which the first phase consists of a 10-min swimming for 5 consecutive days and the second phase takes place at a 4-week interval for testing behavior. During the 4-week period, PS was applied everyday (300lx, 2Hz for 6h daily). After the last swimming, the brains were removed and subjected to quantitative RT-PCR and electrophysiological analysis. The 4-week-long PS alleviated depression-like behavior to the extent comparable to that obtained with rTMS previously. Homer1a expression was drastically reduced by FS and recovered by PS. Consistently with our previous studies, activity of the large conductance calcium-activated potassium (BK) channel was facilitated by PS in a Homer1a-dependent manner. PS may thus have a potential utility for depression therapy. Furthermore, given that Homer1a is implicated in various neuropsychiatric disorders, brain stimulations that induce Homer1a expression, such as rTMS or PS, may have a wider applicability than currently thought.
eNeuro | 2018
Ryo Yamamoto; Nowrin Ahmed; Tetsufumi Ito; Nur Zeynep Gungor; Denis Paré
Abstract The basomedial amygdala (BM) influences the ventromedial nucleus of the hypothalamus (VMH) through direct glutamatergic projections as well as indirectly, through the anterior part of the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNSTa). However, BM and BNSTa axons end in a segregated fashion in VMH. BM projects to the core of VMH, where VMH’s projection cells are located, whereas BNSTa projects to the shell of VMH, where GABAergic cells that inhibit core neurons are concentrated. However, the consequences of this dual regulation of VMH by BM and BNSTa are unknown. To study this question, we recorded the responses of VMH’s shell and core neurons to the optogenetic activation of BM or BNSTa inputs in transgenic mice that selectively express Cre-recombinase in glutamatergic or GABAergic neurons. Glutamatergic BM inputs fired most core neurons but elicited no response in GABAergic shell neurons. Following BM infusions of AAV-EF1α-DIO-hChR2-mCherry in Vgat-ires-Cre-Ai6 mice, no anterograde labeling was observed in the VMH, suggesting that GABAergic BM neurons do not project to the VMH. In contrast, BNSTa sent mostly GABAergic projections that inhibited both shell and core neurons. However, BNSTa-evoked IPSPs had a higher amplitude in shell neurons. Since we also found that activation of GABAergic shell neurons causes an inhibition of core neurons, these results suggest that depending on the firing rate of shell neurons, BNSTa inputs could elicit a net inhibition or disinhibition of core neurons. Thus, the dual regulation of VMH by BM and BNSTa imparts flexibility to this regulator of defensive and social behaviors.
IBRO Reports | 2017
Xianwen Luo; Yuan Shui; Furong Wang; Ryo Yamamoto; Nobuo Kato
By using a 5-day forced swimming test (FS) that we previously developed, swim immobility was induced in 3xTg Alzheimers model mice and wild-type (WT) mice. After the initial 5-day FS, the next and last swimming session was performed at a 4-week interval, during which the immobility was reduced in 3xTg mice, but was maintained fully in WT mice. After FS, context-dependent fear learning was normally induced in WT mice, but was impaired in 3xTg mice, suggesting that FS may exaggerate cognitive deficits typical to 3xTg mice. Hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP) at Schaffer collateral-CA1 synapses was suppressed by FS in WT mice, but not in 3xTg mice, indicating that FS modifies LTP in the WT mouse hippocampus, but not in 3xTg tissue. FS increased excitability of cingulate cortex pyramidal cells similarly in WT and 3xTg mice. Agreeing with our previous finding that expression of Homer1a protein is decreased in the cingulate cortex in harmony with FS-induced immobility, western blot showed that Homer1a expression is reduced by FS in the WT mice. In 3xTg mice, by contrast, FS failed to reduce Homer1a expression. The disrupted endurance of FS-induced immobility in 3xTg mice appears to be attributable to impaired cognition typical to this genotype. Failure of FS to alter LTP magnitude might be related to unaltered Homer1a expression after FS in 3xTg mice.
Neuroscience Research | 2010
Tokio Sugai; Peng Sun; Yu Zhang; Furong Wang; Ryo Yamamoto; Zhengda Wang; Qing Zhang; Nobuo Kato
There is growing evidence suggesting that early life events have long-term effects on the neuroendocrine and behavioral developments of rodents. However, little is known about the involvement of early life events in the susceptibility to subsequent stress exposure during adulthood. The present study characterized the effect of maternal separation, an animal model of early life adversity, on the behavioral response to repeated restraint stress in adult rats and investigated the molecular mechanism underlying behavioral vulnerability to chronic stress induced by the maternal separation. Rat pups were separated from the dams for 180 min per day from postnatal day 2 through 14 (HMS180 rats). We found that adult HMS180 rats showed a greater hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis response to acute restraint stress than non-separated control rats. In addition, repeatedly restrained HMS180 rats showed increased depression-like behavior and an anhedonic response compared with non-restrained HMS180 rats. Furthermore, HMS180 rats showed increased expression of REST4, a neuron-specific splicing variant of the transcriptional repressor REST, and a variety of REST target gene mRNAs and microRNAs in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). Finally, REST4 overexpression in the mPFC of neonatal mice via polyethyleniminemediated gene transfer enhanced the expression of its target genes as well as behavioral vulnerability to repeated restraint stress. In contrast, REST4 overexpression in the mPFC of adult mice did not affect depression-like behaviors after the repeated stress exposure. These results suggest that the activation of REST4-mediated gene regulation in the mPFC during postnatal development is involved in stress vulnerability.