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Dive into the research topics where Seiichiro Jinde is active.

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Featured researches published by Seiichiro Jinde.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2010

Loss of GluN2B-Containing NMDA Receptors in CA1 Hippocampus and Cortex Impairs Long-Term Depression, Reduces Dendritic Spine Density, and Disrupts Learning

Jonathan L. Brigman; Tara Wright; Giuseppe Talani; Shweta Prasad-Mulcare; Seiichiro Jinde; Gail K. Seabold; Poonam Mathur; Margaret I. Davis; Roland Bock; Richard M. Gustin; Roger J. Colbran; Veronica A. Alvarez; Kazu Nakazawa; Eric Delpire; David M. Lovinger; Andrew Holmes

NMDA receptors (NMDARs) are key mediators of certain forms of synaptic plasticity and learning. NMDAR complexes are heteromers composed of an obligatory GluN1 subunit and one or more GluN2 (GluN2A–GluN2D) subunits. Different subunits confer distinct physiological and molecular properties to NMDARs, but their contribution to synaptic plasticity and learning in the adult brain remains uncertain. Here, we generated mice lacking GluN2B in pyramidal neurons of cortex and CA1 subregion of hippocampus. We found that hippocampal principal neurons of adult GluN2B mutants had faster decaying NMDAR-mediated EPSCs than nonmutant controls and were insensitive to GluN2B but not NMDAR antagonism. A subsaturating form of hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP) was impaired in the mutants, whereas a saturating form of LTP was intact. An NMDAR-dependent form of long-term depression (LTD) produced by low-frequency stimulation combined with glutamate transporter inhibition was abolished in the mutants. Additionally, mutants exhibited decreased dendritic spine density in CA1 hippocampal neurons compared with controls. On multiple assays for corticohippocampal-mediated learning and memory (hidden platform Morris water maze, T-maze spontaneous alternation, and pavlovian trace fear conditioning), mutants were impaired. These data further demonstrate the importance of GluN2B for synaptic plasticity in the adult hippocampus and suggest a particularly critical role in LTD, at least the form studied here. The finding that loss of GluN2B was sufficient to cause learning deficits illustrates the contribution of GluN2B-mediated forms of plasticity to memory formation, with implications for elucidating NMDAR-related dysfunction in disease-related cognitive impairment.


Neuron | 2012

Hilar Mossy Cell Degeneration Causes Transient Dentate Granule Cell Hyperexcitability and Impaired Pattern Separation

Seiichiro Jinde; Veronika Zsiros; Zhihong Jiang; Kazuhito Nakao; James Pickel; Kenji Kohno; Juan E. Belforte; Kazu Nakazawa

Although excitatory mossy cells of the hippocampal hilar region are known to project both to dentate granule cells and to interneurons, it is as yet unclear whether mossy cell activitys net effect on granule cells is excitatory or inhibitory. To explore their influence on dentate excitability and hippocampal function, we generated a conditional transgenic mouse line, using the Cre/loxP system, in which diphtheria toxin receptor was selectively expressed in mossy cells. One week after injecting toxin into this line, mossy cells throughout the longitudinal axis were degenerated extensively, theta wave power of dentate local field potentials increased during exploration, and deficits occurred in contextual discrimination. By contrast, we detected no epileptiform activity, spontaneous behavioral seizures, or mossy-fiber sprouting 5-6xa0weeks after mossy cell degeneration. These results indicate that the net effect of mossy cell excitation is to inhibit granule cell activity and enable dentate pattern separation.


Nature Neuroscience | 2013

GluN2B in corticostriatal circuits governs choice learning and choice shifting

Jonathan L. Brigman; Rachel A. Daut; Tara Wright; Ozge Gunduz-Cinar; Carolyn Graybeal; Margaret I. Davis; Zhihong Jiang; Lisa M. Saksida; Seiichiro Jinde; Matthew Pease; Timothy J. Bussey; David M. Lovinger; Kazu Nakazawa; Andrew Holmes

A choice that reliably produces a preferred outcome can be automated to liberate cognitive resources for other tasks. Should an outcome become less desirable, behavior must adapt in parallel or it becomes perseverative. Corticostriatal systems are known to mediate choice learning and flexibility, but the molecular mechanisms of these processes are not well understood. We integrated mouse behavioral, immunocytochemical, in vivo electrophysiological, genetic and pharmacological approaches to study choice. We found that the dorsal striatum (DS) was increasingly activated with choice learning, whereas reversal of learned choice engaged prefrontal regions. In vivo, DS neurons showed activity associated with reward anticipation and receipt that emerged with learning and relearning. Corticostriatal or striatal deletion of Grin2b (encoding the NMDA-type glutamate receptor subunit GluN2B) or DS-restricted GluN2B antagonism impaired choice learning, whereas cortical Grin2b deletion or OFC GluN2B antagonism impaired shifting. Our convergent data demonstrate how corticostriatal GluN2B circuits govern the ability to learn and shift choice behavior.


Frontiers in Psychiatry | 2013

Mismatch Negativity as a “Translatable” Brain Marker Toward Early Intervention for Psychosis: A Review

Tatsuya Nagai; Mariko Tada; Kenji Kirihara; Tsuyoshi Araki; Seiichiro Jinde; Kiyoto Kasai

Recent reviews and meta-analyses suggest that reducing the duration of untreated psychosis leads to better symptomatic and functional outcome in patients with psychotic disorder. Early intervention attenuates the symptoms of individuals at clinical high-risk (HR) for psychosis and may delay or prevent their transition to psychosis. Identifying biological markers in the early stages of psychotic disorder is an important step toward elucidating the pathophysiology, improving prediction of the transition to psychosis, and introducing targeted early intervention for help-seeking individuals aiming for better outcome. Mismatch negativity (MMN) is a component of event-related potentials that reflects preattentive auditory sensory memory and is a promising biomarker candidate for schizophrenia. Reduced MMN amplitude is a robust finding in patients with chronic schizophrenia. Recent reports have shown that people in the early stages of psychotic disorder exhibit attenuation of MMN amplitude. MMN in response to duration deviants and in response to frequency deviants reveals different patterns of deficits. These findings suggest that MMN may be useful for identifying clinical stages of psychosis and for predicting the risk of development. MMN may also be a “translatable” biomarker since it reflects N-methyl-d-aspartte receptor function, which plays a fundamental role in schizophrenia pathophysiology. Furthermore, MMN-like responses can be recorded in animals such as mice and rats. This article reviews MMN studies conducted on individuals with HR for psychosis, first-episode psychosis, recent-onset psychosis, and on animals. Based on the findings, the authors discuss the potential of MMN as a clinical biomarker for early intervention for help-seeking individuals in the early stages of psychotic disorder, and as a translatable neurophysiological marker for the preclinical assessment of pharmacological agents used in animal models that mimic early stages of the disorder.


Frontiers in Neural Circuits | 2013

Hilar mossy cell circuitry controlling dentate granule cell excitability.

Seiichiro Jinde; Veronika Zsiros; Kazu Nakazawa

Glutamatergic hilar mossy cells of the dentate gyrus can either excite or inhibit distant granule cells, depending on whether their direct excitatory projections to granule cells or their projections to local inhibitory interneurons dominate. However, it remains controversial whether the net effect of mossy cell loss is granule cell excitation or inhibition. Clarifying this controversy has particular relevance to temporal lobe epilepsy, which is marked by dentate granule cell hyperexcitability and extensive loss of dentate hilar mossy cells. Two diametrically opposed hypotheses have been advanced to explain this granule cell hyperexcitability—the “dormant basket cell” and the “irritable mossy cell” hypotheses. The “dormant basket cell” hypothesis proposes that mossy cells normally exert a net inhibitory effect on granule cells and therefore their loss causes dentate granule cell hyperexcitability. The “irritable mossy cell” hypothesis takes the opposite view that mossy cells normally excite granule cells and that the surviving mossy cells in epilepsy increase their activity, causing granule cell excitation. The inability to eliminate mossy cells selectively has made it difficult to test these two opposing hypotheses. To this end, we developed a transgenic toxin-mediated, mossy cell-ablation mouse line. Using these mutants, we demonstrated that the extensive elimination of hilar mossy cells causes granule cell hyperexcitability, although the mossy cell loss observed appeared insufficient to cause clinical epilepsy. In this review, we focus on this topic and also suggest that different interneuron populations may mediate mossy cell-induced translamellar lateral inhibition and intralamellar recurrent inhibition. These unique local circuits in the dentate hilar region may be centrally involved in the functional organization of the dentate gyrus.


The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology | 2010

Association between autism and variants in the wingless-type MMTV integration site family member 2 ( WNT2 ) gene

Tetsuya Marui; Ikuko Funatogawa; Shinko Koishi; Kenji Yamamoto; Hideo Matsumoto; Ohiko Hashimoto; Seiichiro Jinde; Hisami Nishida; Toshiro Sugiyama; Kiyoto Kasai; Keiichiro Watanabe; Yukiko Kano; Nobumasa Kato

Autism is a severe neurodevelopmental disorder with a complex genetic aetiology. The wingless-type MMTV integration site family member 2 (WNT2) gene has been considered as a candidate gene for autism. We conducted a case-control study and followed up with a transmission disequilibrium test (TDT) analysis to confirm replication of the significant results for the first time. We conducted a case-control study of nine single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within the WNT2 gene in 170 patients with autism and 214 normal controls in a Japanese population. We then conducted a TDT analysis in 98 autistic families (trios) to replicate the results of the case-control study. In the case-control study, three SNPs (rs3779547, rs4727847 and rs3729629), two major individual haplotypes (A-T-C and G-G-G, consisting of rs3779547, rs4727847, and rs3729629), and global probability values of the haplotype distributions in the same region (global p=0.0091) showed significant associations with autism. Furthermore, all of these significant associations were also observed in the TDT analysis. Our findings provide evidence for a significant association between WNT2 and autism. Considering the important role of the WNT2 gene in brain development, our results therefore indicate that the WNT2 gene is one of the strong candidate genes for autism.


Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 2011

The NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase 1 alpha subcomplex 5 (NDUFA5) gene variants are associated with autism.

Tetsuya Marui; Ikuko Funatogawa; S. Koishi; Kenji Yamamoto; Hideo Matsumoto; Ohiko Hashimoto; Seiichiro Jinde; H. Nishida; T. Sugiyama; Kiyoto Kasai; Keiichiro Watanabe; Yukiko Kano; Nobumasa Kato

Marui T, Funatogawa I, Koishi S, Yamamoto K, Matsumoto H, Hashimoto O, Jinde S, Nishida H, Sugiyama T, Kasai K, Watanabe K, Kano Y, Kato N. The NADH‐ubiquinone oxidoreductase 1 alpha subcomplex 5 (NDUFA5) gene variants are associated with autism.


The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology | 2005

Maternal separation stress drastically decreases expression of transthyretin in the brains of adult rat offspring

Kazuhisa Kohda; Seiichiro Jinde; Kazuya Iwamoto; Miki Bundo; Nobumasa Kato; Tadafumi Kato

Adversity in early life has been recognized as a risk factor for psychiatric disorders. In experimental animals, maternal separation (MS) during the neonatal period has been shown to be critical for susceptibility to stress in adult offspring. In this study, we used DNA microarray analysis of rat hippocampal samples to investigate differential gene expression caused by 8-hour MS (MS-8h) every other day during the neonatal period. We found 15 up-regulated and 9 down-regulated genes. We added samples from a daily 15-minute MS (MS-15m) group and performed quantitative real-time PCR to validate the results. Expression of transthyretin (TTR), which is specifically expressed in the choroid plexus (CP), was drastically reduced in the MS-8h group. Two other CP-enriched genes, angiotensin I converting enzyme I and insulin-like growth factor II (IGF-II), were also significantly down-regulated in the MS-8h rats, while significant reduction of IGF-II expression was also found in the MS-15m group. These MS-induced differential gene expressions could be involved in the molecular mechanisms of stress susceptibility. Our findings indicate that the CP, in addition to the neuronal and glial system, might play an important role in determining stress susceptibility.


Neuroscience | 2002

Differential changes in messenger RNA expressions and binding sites of neuropeptide Y Y1, Y2 and Y5 receptors in the hippocampus of an epileptic mutant rat: Noda epileptic rat

Seiichiro Jinde; Akira Masui; Shigeru Morinobu; A Noda; Nobumasa Kato

The anti-convulsive effects of neuropeptide Y have been suggested in several animal models of epilepsy. We have found the sustained increase of neuropeptide Y contents and the seizure-induced elevation of hippocampal messenger RNA in a novel spontaneous epileptic mutant rat: Noda epileptic rat. In the present study, we investigated the change of neuropeptide Y Y1 and Y2 receptor messenger RNA expressions and binding sites in the hippocampus following a spontaneous generalized tonic-clonic seizure of Noda epileptic rat. Furthermore, the binding sites of a more recently isolated receptor subtype, neuropeptide Y Y5 receptors, were also evaluated by receptor autoradiography. A marked elevation of neuropeptide Y immunoreactivity in the mossy fiber, and Y2-receptor up-regulation in the dentate gyrus were observed in the hippocampus of Noda epileptic rat, which coincided with the previous results of the other epileptic models. In contrast, Y1-receptor down-regulation was not found after a spontaneous seizure of Noda epileptic rat while this occurs in kindling and after kainic acid-induced seizures. [125I][Leu31, Pro34]peptide YY/BIBP 3226-insensitive (Y5 receptor) binding sites in CA1 stratum radiatum were significantly decreased following a spontaneous seizure of Noda epileptic rat. The present results suggest that a spontaneous seizure of Noda epileptic rat induces significant changes in neuropeptide Y-mediated transmission in the hippocampus via Y2 and Y5 receptors, but not Y1 receptors. Therefore, specific subset of neuropeptide Y receptor subtypes might be involved in the epileptogenesis of Noda epileptic rat.


Neuroscience Research | 2010

Levetiracetam inhibits kindling-induced synaptic potentiation in the dentate gyrus of freely moving rats.

Yuki Sugaya; Seiichiro Jinde; Nobumasa Kato; Eiichi Maru

A novel antiepileptic drug, levetiracetam, strongly suppresses the development of kindling, although the mechanisms by which it does so are still unknown. Kindling-induced synaptic potentiation (KIP) is considered to play an important role in the development of kindling. Therefore, we examined the effect of levetiracetam on KIP during perforant path kindling in freely moving rats. Daily administration of levetiracetam significantly suppressed the development of kindling. Furthermore, levetiracetam significantly inhibited the development of KIP during 21 days of kindling. These results suggest that levetiracetam may suppress kindling development through the suppression of KIP.

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Kazu Nakazawa

National Institutes of Health

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Tadafumi Kato

RIKEN Brain Science Institute

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Juan E. Belforte

University of Buenos Aires

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Akira Masui

Shiga University of Medical Science

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Arata Oh-Nishi

National Institute of Radiological Sciences

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