Seiko Narushima
University of Tokyo
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Featured researches published by Seiko Narushima.
Cancer | 1996
Kyotaro Kanazawa; Fumio Konishi; V D Tomotari Mitsuoka; V D Atsushi Terada; V D Kikuji Itoh; Seiko Narushima; Megumi Kumemura; Hiroyuki Kimura
Cancer of the sigmoid colon is especially sensitive to environmental factors such as food. The authors have conducted a series of studies with food as the external environmental factor and intestinal microflora as the internal environmental factor in relation to sigmoid colon carcinogenesis.
Microbiology and Immunology | 2002
Eisaku Kikuchi; Yukiko Miyamoto; Seiko Narushima; Kikuji Itoh
The genus Clostridium is dominant in human intestinal tracts and plays an important role in human health. We designed species‐specific primers to identify 13 species of Clostridium (C. perfringens, C. paraputrificum, C. bifermentans, C. difficile, C. clostridiiforme, C. nexile, C. sphenoides, C. indolis, C. ramosum, C. cocleatum, C. butyricum, C. sordellii, and C. innocuum) easily and rapidly. The PCR annealing temperature was set at a uniform 60 C for application to all strains at the same time. To confirm the specificities of these primers, 85 intestinal bacteria in total, including type strains, reference strains, and isolates were used. Ten primers (including those for C. perfringens to C. cocleatum) indicated high specificities. Although there were some cross‐reactions with the other three primers, the target species were distinguishable from other bacteria by the different sizes of PCR products.
Lipids | 2006
Seiko Narushima; Kikuji Itoh; Yukiko Miyamoto; Sang-Hee Park; Keiko Nagata; Kazuo Kuruma; Kiyohisa Uchida
In humans and animals, intestinal flora is indispensable for bile acid transformation. The goal of our study was to establish gnotobiotic mice with intestinal bacteria of human origin in order to examine the role of intestinal bacteria in the transformation of bile acids in vivo using the technique of gnotobiology. Eight strains of bile acid-deconjugating bacteria were isolated from ex-germ-free mice inoculated with a human fecal dilution of 10−6, and five strains of 7α-dehydroxylating bacteria were isolated from the intestine of limited human flora mice inoculated only with clostridia. The results of biochemical tests and 16S rDNA sequence analysis showed that seven out of eight bile acid-deconjugating strains belong to a bacteroides cluster (Bacteroides vulgatus, B. distasonis, and B. uniformis), and one strain had high similarity with Bilophila wadsworthia. All five strains that converted cholic acid to deoxycholic acid had greatest similarity with Clostridium hylemonae. A combination of 10 isolated strains converted taurocholic acid into deoxycholic acid both in vitro and in the mouse intestine. These results indicate that the predominant bacteria, mainly Bacteroides, in human feces comprise one of the main bacterial groups for the deconjugation of bile acids, and clostridia may play an important role in 7α-dehydroxylation of free-form primary bile acids in the intestine although these strains are not predominant. The gnotobiotic mouse with bacteria of human origin could be a useful model in studies of bile acid metabolism by human intestinal bacteria in vivo.
Lipids | 2000
Seiko Narushima; Kikuji Iton; Kazuo Kuruma; Kiyohisa Uchida
Germfree (GF) mice were orally inoculated with human fecal suspension or various components of human fecal microbiota. Three weeks after the inoculation, cecal bile acid composition of these mice was examined. More than 80% of total bile acids was deconjugated in the cecal contents of ex-GF mice associated with human fecal dilutions of 10−2 or 10−6, or anaerobic growth from a dilution of 10−6. In these ex-GF mice, deoxycholic acid accounted for about 20% of total bile acids. In the cecal contents of ex-GF mice associated only with clostridia, unconjugated bile acids made up less than 40% of total bile acids, about half of those in other ex-GF groups. However, the percentage of deoxycholic acid in these mice was the same as that in the other groups. These results indicate that dominant anaerobic bacterial combination is efficient for deconjugation of primary bile acids, and that clostridia in the human feces may play an important role in 7α-dehydroxylation of unconjugated primary bile acids in the intestine.
Lipids | 1999
Kiyohisa Uchida; Takashi Satoh; Seiko Narushima; Kikuji Itoh; Haruto Takase; Kazuo Kuruma; Hiroyuki Nakao; Nobuo Yamaga; Kazuo Yamada
The effects on bile acid and sterol transformation of clostridia (fusiform bacteria), the dominant intestinal bacteria in rodents (ca. 1010 counts per g wet feces) were examined in Wistar rats. After inoculation of clostridia into germ-free rats and into rats previously inoculated solely with Escherichia coli, most of the endogenous bile acids were deconjugated, and cholic acid and chenodeoxycholic acid were 7α-dehydroxylated to deoxycholic acid and lithocholic acid, respectively. Tauro-β-muricholic acid, another major bile acid in rats, was deconjugated, but only part of it (ca. 30%) was transformed into hyodeoxycholic acid. Cholesterol and sitosterol were also reduced to coprostanol and sitostanol, respectively. Escherichia coli transformed neither bile acids nor sterols. These data suggest that clostridia play an imporant role in the formation of secondary bile acids and coprostanol in rats.
Microbiology and Immunology | 1999
Seiko Narushima; Kikuji Itoh; Fusae Takamine; Kiyohisa Uchida
Germ‐free mice were orally inoculated with human intestinal 7α‐dehydroxylating bacterial strains to evaluate their ability to transform bile acids in vivo. Three weeks after inoculation of the bacteria, cecal bile acids were examined. Among free‐form bile acids, only β‐muricholic acid was detected in the cecal contents of gnotobiotic mice associated with Bacteroides distasonis strain K‐5. No secondary bile acid was observed in the cecal contents of any of the gnotobiotic mice associated with 7α‐dehydroxylating bacteria, Clostridium species strain TO‐931 or Eubacterium species strain 36S.
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2014
Eri Shimura; Akiko Shibui; Seiko Narushima; Aya Nambu; Sachiko Yamaguchi; Aoi Akitsu; Warren J. Leonard; Yoichiro Iwakura; Kenji Matsumoto; Hajime Suto; Ko Okumura; Katsuko Sudo; Susumu Nakae
IL-17RA is a shared receptor subunit for several cytokines of the IL-17 family, including IL-17A, IL-17C, IL-17E (also called IL-25) and IL-17F. It has been shown that mice deficient in IL-17RA are more susceptible to sepsis than wild-type mice, suggesting that IL-17RA is important for host defense against sepsis. However, it is unclear which ligands for IL-17RA, such as IL-17A, IL-17C, IL-17E/IL-25 and/or IL-17F, are involved in the pathogenesis of sepsis. Therefore, we examined IL-17A, IL-17E/IL-25 and IL-17F for possible involvement in LPS-induced endotoxin shock. IL-17A-deficient mice, but not IL-25- or IL-17F-deficient mice, were resistant to LPS-induced endotoxin shock, as compared with wild-type mice. Nevertheless, studies using IL-6-deficient, IL-21Rα-deficient and Rag-2-deficient mice, revealed that neither IL-6 and IL-21, both of which are important for Th17 cell differentiation, nor Th17 cells were essential for the development of LPS-induced endotoxin shock, suggesting that IL-17A-producing cells other than Th17 cells were important in the setting. In this connection, IL-17A was produced by macrophages, DCs and eosinophils after LPS injection. Taken together, these findings indicate that IL-17A, but not IL-17F or IL-25, is crucial for LPS-induced endotoxin shock. In addition, macrophages, DCs and eosinophils, but not Th17 cells or γδ T cells, may be sources of IL-17A during LPS-induced endotoxin shock.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Sachiko Yamaguchi; Aya Nambu; Takafumi Numata; Takamichi Yoshizaki; Seiko Narushima; Eri Shimura; Yoshihisa Hiraishi; Ken Arae; Hideaki Morita; Kenji Matsumoto; Ichiro Hisatome; Katsuko Sudo; Susumu Nakae
IL-17C, which is a member of the IL-17 family of cytokines, is preferentially produced by epithelial cells in the lung, skin and colon, suggesting that IL-17C may be involved in not only host defense but also inflammatory diseases in those tissues. In support of that, IL-17C was demonstrated to contribute to development of T cell-dependent imiquimod-induced psoriatic dermatitis and T cell-independent dextran sodium sulfate-induced acute colitis using mice deficient in IL-17C and/or IL-17RE, which is a component of the receptor for IL-17C. However, the roles of IL-17C in other inflammatory diseases remain poorly understood. Therefore, we investigated the contributions of IL-17C to development of certain disease models using Il17c−/− mice, which we newly generated. Those mice showed normal development of T cell-dependent inflammatory diseases such as FITC- and DNFB-induced contact dermatitis/contact hypersensitivity (CHS) and concanavalin A-induced hepatitis, and T cell-independent inflammatory diseases such as bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis, papain-induced airway eosinophilia and LPS-induced airway neutrophilia. On the other hand, those mice were highly resistant to LPS-induced endotoxin shock, indicating that IL-17C is crucial for protection against that immunological reaction. Therefore, IL-17C neutralization may represent a novel therapeutic approach for sepsis, in addition to psoriasis and acute colitis.
Experimental Animals | 1998
Seiko Narushima; Kikuji Itoh; Tomotari Mitsuoka; Hiroyuki Nakayama; Toshio Itoh; Kyoji Hioki; Tatsuji Nomura
Journal of Experimental & Clinical Cancer Research | 2001
Ohno K; Seiko Narushima; Takeuchi S; Kikuji Itoh; Toshio Itoh; Kyoji Hioki; Tatsuji Nomura