Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Takako Yasuda is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Takako Yasuda.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2004

Morphogenesis and regionalization of the medaka embryonic brain

Takahiro Kage; Hiroyuki Takeda; Takako Yasuda; Kouichi Maruyama; Naoyuki Yamamoto; Masami Yoshimoto; Kazuo Araki; Keiji Inohaya; Hiroyuki Okamoto; Shigeki Yasumasu; Kaori Watanabe; Hironobu Ito; Yuji Ishikawa

We examined the morphogenesis and regionalization of the embryonic brain of an acanthopterygian teleost, medaka (Oryzias latipes), by in situ hybridization using 14 gene probes. We compared our results with previous studies in other vertebrates, particularly zebrafish, an ostariophysan teleost. During the early development of the medaka neural rod, three initial brain vesicles arose: the anterior brain vesicle, which later developed into the telencephalon and rostral diencephalon; the intermediate brain vesicle, which later developed into the caudal diencephalon, mesencephalon, and metencephalon; and the posterior brain vesicle, which later developed into the myelencephalon. In the late neural rod, the rostral brain bent ventrally and the axis of the brain had a marked curvature at the diencephalon. In the final stage of the neural rod, ventricles began to develop, transforming the neural rod into the neural tube. In situ hybridization revealed that the brain can be divided into three longitudinal zones (dorsal, intermediate, and ventral) and many transverse subdivisions, on the basis of molecular expression patterns. The telencephalon was subdivided into two transverse domains. Our results support the basic concept of neuromeric models, including the prosomeric model, which suggests the existence of a conserved organization of all vertebrate neural tubes. Our results also show that brain development in medaka differs from that reported in other vertebrates, including zebrafish, in gene‐expression patterns in the telencephalon, in brain vesicle formation, and in developmental speed. Developmental and genetic programs for brain development may be somewhat different even among teleosts. J. Comp. Neurol. 476:219–239, 2004.


Brain Behavior and Evolution | 2007

Developmental Origin of Diencephalic Sensory Relay Nuclei in Teleosts

Yuji Ishikawa; Naoyuki Yamamoto; Masami Yoshimoto; Takako Yasuda; Kouichi Maruyama; Takahiro Kage; Hiroyuki Takeda; Hironobu Ito

We propose here a novel interpretation of the embryonic origin of cells of diencephalic sensory relay nuclei in teleosts based on our recent studies of gene expression patterns in the medaka (Oryzias latipes) embryonic brain and comparative hodological studies. It has been proposed that the diencephalic sensory relay system in teleosts is unique among vertebrates. Teleost relay nuclei, the preglomerular complex (PG), have been assumed to originate from the basal plate (the posterior tuberculum) of the diencephalon, whereas relay nuclei in mammals are derived from the alar plate (dorsal thalamus) of the diencephalon. Our results using in situ hybridization show, however, that many pax6- or dlx2-positive cells migrate laterally and ventrocaudally from the diencephalic alar plate to the basal plate during development. Massive clusters of the migrated alar cells become localized in the mantle layer lateral to the posterior tubercular neuroepithelium, from which main nuclei of the PG appear to differentiate. We therefore consider most if not all neurons in the PG to be of alar, not basal, origin. Thus, the teleost PG, at least in part, can be regarded as migrated alar nuclei. Developmental and hodological data strongly suggest that the teleost PG is homologous to a part of the mammalian dorsal thalamus. The organization and origin of the diencephalic sensory relay system might have been conserved across vertebrates.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1965

Iron-chelating enzyme from rat liver.

Yoshimasa Yoneyama; Astuko Tamai; Takako Yasuda; Haruhisa Yoshikawa

Summary Iron-chelating enzyme was extracted from rat-liver mitochondria. The measurement of the stoichiometry showed that no side reaction occurred. The reaction product was heme, not hemeprotein. Some other properties, such as pH response, Km for iron and protoporphyrin and effect of supernatant are reported.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2004

Axonogenesis in the medaka embryonic brain.

Yuji Ishikawa; Takahiro Kage; Naoyuki Yamamoto; Masami Yoshimoto; Takako Yasuda; Atsuko Matsumoto; Kouichi Maruyama; Hironobu Ito

In order to know the general pattern of axonogenesis in vertebrates, we examined axonogenesis in the embryonic brain of a teleost fish, medaka (Oryzias latipes), and the results were compared with previous studies in zebrafish and mouse. The axons and somata were stained immunocytochemically using antibodies to a cell surface marker (HNK‐1) and acetylated tubulin and visualized by retrograde and anterograde labeling with a lipophilic dye. The fiber systems developed correlating with the organization of the longitudinal and transverse subdivisions of the embryonic brain. The first axons extended from the synencephalic tegmentum, forming the first fiber tract (fasciculus longitudinalis medialis) in the ventral longitudinal zone of the neural rod, 38 hours after fertilization. In the neural tube, throughout the entire brain two pairs of longitudinal fiber systems, one ventral series and one dorsal or intermediate series, and four pairs of transverse fiber tracts in the rostral brain were formed sequentially during the first 16 hours of axon production. In one of the dorsal longitudinal tracts, its branch retracted and disappeared at later stages. One of the transverse tracts was found to course in the telencephalon and hypothalamus. The overall pattern of the longitudinal fiber systems in medaka brain is similar to that in mouse, but apparently different from that in zebrafish. We propose that a ventral tract reported in zebrafish partially belongs to the dorsal fiber system, and that the longitudinal fiber systems in all vertebrate brains pass through a common layout defined by conserved genetic and developmental programs. J. Comp. Neurol. 476:240–253, 2004.


Cell Death and Disease | 2012

Gamma-ray irradiation promotes premature meiosis of spontaneously differentiating testis–ova in the testis of p53-deficient medaka (Oryzias latipes)

Takako Yasuda; Shoji Oda; Z Li; Y Kimori; Yasuhiro Kamei; Tokiro Ishikawa; Takeshi Todo; Hiroshi Mitani

In this study, the roles of p53 in impaired spermatogenic male germ cells of p53-deficient medaka were investigated by analyzing histological changes, and gene expressions of 42Sp50, Oct 4 and vitellogenin (VTG2) by RT-PCR or in situ hybridization in the testes. We found that a small number of oocyte-like cells (testis–ova) differentiated spontaneously in the cysts of type A and early type B spermatogonia in the p53-deficient testes, in contrast to the wild-type (wt) testes in which testis–ova were never found. Furthermore, ionizing radiation (IR) irradiation increased the number of testis–ova in p53-deficient testes, increased testis–ova size and proceeded up to the zygotene or pachytene stages of premature meiosis within 14 days after irradiation. However, 28 days after irradiation, almost all the testis–ova were eliminated presumably by p53-independent apoptosis, and spermatogenesis was restored completely. In the wt testis, IR never induced testis–ova differentiation. This is the first study to demonstrate the pivotal role of the p53 gene in the elimination of spontaneous testis–ova in testes, and that p53 is not indispensable for the restoration of spermatogenesis in the impaired testes in which cell cycle regulation is disturbed by IR irradiation.


Zoological Science | 2008

Early Development of the Cerebellum in Teleost Fishes: A Study Based on Gene Expression Patterns and Histology in the Medaka Embryo

Yuji Ishikawa; Takako Yasuda; Takahiro Kage; Shigeo Takashima; Masami Yoshimoto; Naoyuki Yamamoto; Kouichi Maruyama; Hiroyuki Takeda; Hironobu Ito

Abstract The cerebellar structures of teleosts are markedly different from those of other vertebrates. The cerebellum continues rostrally into the midbrain ventricle, forming the valvula cerebelli, only in ray-finned fishes among vertebrates. To analyze the ontogenetic processes that underlie this morphological difference, we examined the early development of the cerebellar regions, including the isthmus (mid/hindbrain boundary, MHB), of the medaka (Oryzias latipes), by histology and in-situ hybridization using two gene (wnt1 and fgf8) probes. Isthmic wnt1 was expressed stably in the caudalmost mesencephalic region in the neural tube at all developmental stages examined, defining molecularly the caudal limit of the mesencephalon. The wnt1-positive mesencephalic cells became located rostrally to the isthmic constriction at Iwamatsus stages 25–26. Isthmic fgf8 expression changed dynamically and became restricted to the rostralmost metencephalic region at stage 24. The rostralmost part (prospective valvula cerebelli) of the fgf8-positive rostral metencephalon protruded rostrally into the midbrain ventricle, bypassing the isthmic constriction, at stages 25–26. Thus, the isthmic constriction shifted caudally with respect to the molecularly defined MHB at stages 25–26. Paired cerebellar primordia were formed from the alar plates of the fgf8-positive rostral metencephalon and the fgf8-negative caudal metencephalon in the medaka neural tube. Our results show that cerebellar development differs between teleosts and murines: both the rostral and caudal metencephalic alar plates develop into the cerebellum in medaka, whereas in the murines only the caudal metencephalic alar plate develops into the cerebellum, and the rostral plate is reduced to a thin membrane.


Brain Behavior and Evolution | 2001

Brain Structures of a Medaka Mutant, el(eyeless), in Which Eye Vesicles Do Not Evaginate

Yuji Ishikawa; Masami Yoshimoto; Naoyuki Yamamoto; Hironobu Ito; Takako Yasuda; Fumio Tokunaga; Masayuki Iigo; Yuko Wakamatsu; Kenjiro Ozato

Eye development and brain structures of a mutant teleost fish were investigated. The el(eyeless) mutation in medaka (Oryzias latipes) is recessive and affects eye formation; in the most severe cases, it results in the absence of eyes. Developmental studies revealed that normal eyeballs are not formed in the el mutant embryos, but small optic cup-like structures differentiate in situ in the walls of the prosencephalon without evagination. The anophthalmic el homozygous fish hatched normally, although they did not respond behaviorally to visual stimuli. A small fraction of these fish grew to adulthood. In the adult anophthalmic el homozygous fish, the brain exhibited abnormalities in several subdivisions. A pair of small abnormal protrusions was observed on the surface of the ventral telencephalon and preoptic area. Immunocytochemistry using a rhodopsin monoclonal antibody showed that opsin-positive cells were present in the abnormal structures. Bodian staining showed that the optic nerves were present near the abnormal structures, although the number of optic nerve fibers was extremely small. The optic tectum was extremely small, and the thickness of the stratum opticum and stratum fibrosum et griseum superficiale was reduced. These behavioral and morphological observations suggest that the adult anophthalmic el homozygous fish are functionally blind, although small retina-like structures were partially differentiated and persisted in the adult fish brain. Moreover, the adult anophthalmic el homozygous fish were infertile, and the sizes of the hypophysis and the hypothalamus were reduced. Thus, the el mutation affects not only the brain structures that are related to the visual system but also those related to the reproductive system.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Embryonic Medaka Model of Microglia in the Developing CNS Allowing In Vivo Analysis of Their Spatiotemporal Recruitment in Response to Irradiation.

Takako Yasuda; Shoji Oda; Yusuke Hibi; Satomi Satoh; Kento Nagata; Kei Hirakawa; Natsumaro Kutsuna; Hiroshi Sagara; Hiroshi Mitani

Radiation therapy (RT) is pivotal in the treatment of many central nervous system (CNS) pathologies; however, exposure to RT in children is associated with a higher risk of secondary CNS tumors. Although recent research interest has focused on the reparative and therapeutic role of microglia, their recruitment following RT has not been elucidated, especially in the developing CNS. Here, we investigated the spatiotemporal dynamics of microglia during tissue repair in the irradiated embryonic medaka brain by whole-mount in situ hybridization using a probe for Apolipoprotein E (ApoE), a marker for activated microglia in teleosts. Three-dimensional imaging of the distribution of ApoE-expressing microglia in the irradiated embryonic brain clearly showed that ApoE-expressing microglia were abundant only in the late phase of phagocytosis during tissue repair induced by irradiation, while few microglia expressed ApoE in the initial phase of phagocytosis. This strongly suggests that ApoE has a significant function in the late phase of phagocytosis by microglia in the medaka brain. In addition, the distribution of microglia in p53-deficient embryos at the late phase of phagocytosis was almost the same as in wild-type embryos, despite the low numbers of irradiation-induced apoptotic neurons, suggesting that constant numbers of activated microglia were recruited at the late phase of phagocytosis irrespective of the extent of neuronal injury. This medaka model of microglia demonstrated specific recruitment after irradiation in the developing CNS and could provide a useful potential therapeutic strategy to counteract the detrimental effects of RT.


Journal of Experimental Zoology | 2008

Expression of brain-type fatty acid-binding protein (fabp7) in medaka during development

Kouichi Maruyama; Ayako Kojima; Takako Yasuda; Katsutoshi Suetomi; Yoshihisa Kubota; Sentaro Takahashi; Yuji Ishikawa; Akira Fujimori

Fatty acid-binding proteins (FABPs) belong to a multigene family of small intracellular proteins that bind hydrophobic ligands. Recent studies have indicated that FABP7 plays important roles in neurogenesis or neuronal migration in vertebrates. In this study, we isolated cDNA and the genomic fragment containing the fabp7 gene for medaka fish and examined the expression of the medaka fabp7 gene through the development of their central nervous system (CNS). The medaka fabp7 gene consists of four exons in approximately 1 kb of the genomic region. Its deduced amino acid sequence exhibits over 80% identity with those of other higher vertebrates. In situ hybridization analysis demonstrated that fabp7-positive cells first appear at stage 22 in a small dorsal domain of the retina, dorsal diencephalon, and rhombencephalon, then expand to the entire CNS including the retina and the spinal cord. In addition, we generated two lines of transgenic medaka with 1.7 kb upstream of the fabp7 gene combined with the enhanced-green fluorescence protein (EGFP) gene. The spatio-temporal expression patterns of EGFP in these animals were consistent with the results of in situ hybridization analysis. The result of our reporter assays with a series of truncated fabp7 promoters suggested that POU elements play a role in fabp7 expression in medaka as well as in other vertebrates. Our transgenic animal will contribute to clarifying the role of FABP7 in the development of CNS.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Histological and Transcriptomic Analysis of Adult Japanese Medaka Sampled Onboard the International Space Station

Yasuhiko Murata; Takako Yasuda; Tomomi Watanabe-Asaka; Shoji Oda; Akiko Mantoku; Kazuhiro Takeyama; Masahiro Chatani; Akira Kudo; Satoko Uchida; Hiromi Suzuki; Fumiaki Tanigaki; Masaki Shirakawa; Koichi Fujisawa; Yoshihiko Hamamoto; Shuji Terai; Hiroshi Mitani

To understand how humans adapt to the space environment, many experiments can be conducted on astronauts as they work aboard the Space Shuttle or the International Space Station (ISS). We also need animal experiments that can apply to human models and help prevent or solve the health issues we face in space travel. The Japanese medaka (Oryzias latipes) is a suitable model fish for studying space adaptation as evidenced by adults of the species having mated successfully in space during 15 days of flight during the second International Microgravity Laboratory mission in 1994. The eggs laid by the fish developed normally and hatched as juveniles in space. In 2012, another space experiment (“Medaka Osteoclast”) was conducted. Six-week-old male and female Japanese medaka (Cab strain osteoblast transgenic fish) were maintained in the Aquatic Habitat system for two months in the ISS. Fish of the same strain and age were used as the ground controls. Six fish were fixed with paraformaldehyde or kept in RNA stabilization reagent (n = 4) and dissected for tissue sampling after being returned to the ground, so that several principal investigators working on the project could share samples. Histology indicated no significant changes except in the ovary. However, the RNA-seq analysis of 5345 genes from six tissues revealed highly tissue-specific space responsiveness after a two-month stay in the ISS. Similar responsiveness was observed among the brain and eye, ovary and testis, and the liver and intestine. Among these six tissues, the intestine showed the highest space response with 10 genes categorized as oxidation–reduction processes (gene ontogeny term GO:0055114), and the expression levels of choriogenin precursor genes were suppressed in the ovary. Eleven genes including klf9, klf13, odc1, hsp70 and hif3a were upregulated in more than four of the tissues examined, thus suggesting common immunoregulatory and stress responses during space adaptation.

Collaboration


Dive into the Takako Yasuda's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yuji Ishikawa

National Institute of Radiological Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kouichi Maruyama

National Institute of Radiological Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Atsuko Matsumoto

National Institute of Radiological Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tomomi Watanabe-Asaka

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kazuko Aoki

National Institute of Radiological Sciences

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge