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Dive into the research topics where Takemasa Shiraishi is active.

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Featured researches published by Takemasa Shiraishi.


Peptides | 2006

Leptin facilitates learning and memory performance and enhances hippocampal CA1 long-term potentiation and CaMK II phosphorylation in rats.

Yutaka Oomura; N. Hori; Takemasa Shiraishi; Kohji Fukunaga; H. Takeda; M. Tsuji; T. Matsumiya; Masaru Ishibashi; Shuji Aou; X.L. Li; Daisuke Kohno; K. Uramura; H. Sougawa; Toshihiko Yada; Matthew J. Wayner; Kazuo Sasaki

Leptin, an adipocytokine encoded by an obesity gene and expressed in adipose tissue, affects feeding behavior, thermogenesis, and neuroendocrine status via leptin receptors distributed in the brain, especially in the hypothalamus. Leptin may also modulate the synaptic plasticity and behavioral performance related to learning and memory since: leptin receptors are found in the hippocampus, and both leptin and its receptor share structural and functional similarities with the interleukin-6 family of cytokines that modulate long-term potentiation (LTP) in the hippocampus. We therefore examined the effect of leptin on (1) behavioral performance in emotional and spatial learning tasks, (2) LTP at Schaffer collateral-CA1 synapses, (3) presynaptic and postsynaptic activities in hippocampal CA1 neurons, (4) the intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) in CA1 neurons, and (5) the activity of Ca(2+)/calmodulin protein kinase II (CaMK II) in the hippocampal CA1 tissue that exhibits LTP. Intravenous injection of 5 and/or 50mug/kg, but not of 500mug/kg leptin, facilitated behavioral performance in passive avoidance and Morris water-maze tasks. Bath application of 10(-12)M leptin in slice experiments enhanced LTP and increased the presynaptic transmitter release, whereas 10(-10)M leptin suppressed LTP and reduced the postsynaptic receptor sensitivity to N-methyl-d-aspartic acid. The increase in the [Ca(2+)](i) induced by 10(-10)M leptin was two times greater than that induced by 10(-12)M leptin. In addition, the facilitation (10(-12)M) and suppression (10(-10)M) of LTP by leptin was closely associated with an increase and decrease in Ca(2+)-independent activity of CaMK II. Our results show that leptin not only affects hypothalamic functions (such as feeding, thermogenesis, and neuroendocrine status), but also modulates higher nervous functions, such as the behavioral performance related to learning and memory and hippocampal synaptic plasticity.


Brain Research | 1988

Blockade of the histamine H1-receptor in the rat ventromedial hypothalamus and feeding elicitation

Toshiie Sakata; Kazuyoshi Ookuma; Koji Fukagawa; Kazuma Fujimoto; Hironobu Yoshimatsu; Takemasa Shiraishi; Hiroshi Wada

All H1-, but no H2-antagonists infused into the rat third cerebroventricle, induced feeding during the early light, but not during the early dark, reflecting a concentration of hypothalamic histamine. Bilateral microinfusion identified the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH), but not the lateral hypothalamus or the paraventricular nucleus, as a main locus for the induction of feeding by an H1-antagonist. The effect was completely abolished when brain histamine was decreased by pretreatment with alpha-fluoromethylhistidine. Hypothalamic neuronal histamine suppresses food intake, at least in part, through H1-receptors in the VMH.


Physiology & Behavior | 2000

Effects of leptin and orexin-A on food intake and feeding related hypothalamic neurons

Takemasa Shiraishi; Yutaka Oomura; Kazuo Sasaki; Matthew J. Wayner

The lateral hypothalamic area (LHA) and the ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus (VMH) have historically been implicated in ingestive behavior, energy balance and body mass regulation. The LHA is more closely associated with the initiation of eating; whereas the VMH mediates the cessation of eating. The parvocellular part of the paraventricular nucleus (pPVN) is also included in the suppressing mechanism. Recently, two hypothalamic peptides, orexin-A and orexin-B, localized in the posterior and lateral hypothalamic perifornical region were discovered in the rat brain and they increase food intake. Leptin, a protein encoded by an obesity gene, expressed in adipose tissue and released into the blood also affects food intake. Orexin and leptin receptors have been localized in the LHA, pPVN, and VMH. The purpose of this study was to measure food intake in the rat in response to leptin and orexin-A; and to determine their electrophysiological effects on feeding related hypothalamic neurons. Results clearly show that leptin suppresses food intake whereas orexin-A increases food intake. These differences are associated with leptin and orexin-A modulatory effects on LHA, pPVN, and VMH glucose responding neurons. In the LHA, leptin inhibits a larger proportion of both glucose-sensitive neurons (GSNs) and non-GSNs. In the pPVN, leptin increases more GSNs in comparison to non-GSNs. Whereas in the VMH, leptin increases the activity of glucoreceptor neurons (GRNs) in comparison to non-GRNs. Orexin-A had opposite effects: increases activity of GSNs more than the non-GSNs in the LHA and significantly suppresses GRNs in the VMH. In the pPVN, orexin-A had no observable effects on neurons that have a low density of orexin 2 receptors. Results are discussed in terms of hypothalamic neural circuits that are sensitive to endogenous food intake inducing and reducing substances.


Nutrition | 1999

Leptin Effects on Feeding-Related Hypothalamic and Peripheral Neuronal Activities in Normal and Obese Rats

Takemasa Shiraishi; Kazuo Sasaki; Akira Niijima; Yutaka Oomura

We investigated the effects of leptin on central and/or peripheral feeding-related neuronal networks in Wistar male rats either normal (350-450 g) or Zucker obese (500-800 g). Low doses (1-10 pg) of leptin inhibited glucose-sensitive vagal hepatic afferent discharges and facilitated sympathetic efferent discharges to brown and white adipose tissue. Most (40-75%) neurons in the arcuate nucleus were significantly inhibited by superperfusion with leptin (0.1 nM-10 pM) under in vitro conditions. In anesthetized animals, leptin was applied electrophoretically to single hypothalamic neurons. Both glucose-sensitive neurons (GSNs) and non-GSNs in the feeding center (LHA) were significantly inhibited. Most glucoreceptor neurons in the satiety center (VMH) were significantly excited. Their depolarization was confirmed by activation of Na+ and K+ channels by 10(-11) M leptin using the perforate blind patch-clamp method. Although leptin excited GSNs in the parvocellular part of the paraventricular nucleus, the effects of leptin on such neuronal activity were slight or absent in Zucker obese rats. These results suggest that the feeding-suppression effects of leptin are mediated by its effects on signal transduction through both the central and the peripheral nervous systems.


Brain Research Bulletin | 1995

Effects of auricular stimulation on feeding-related hypothalamic neuronal activity in normal and obese rats

Takemasa Shiraishi; Mariko Onoe; Takaaki Kojima; Yasuo Sameshima; Teruo Kageyama

It is known that auriculotherapy occasionally affects dramatic body weight reduction for obese patients, although the physiological and anorexigenic functions are not clear. Effects of auricular stimulation on feeding-related lateral (LHA) and ventromedial (VMH) hypothalamic neuronal activity in normal and experimental (hypothalamic and dietary) obese rats were investigated. The LHA and/or VMH neuronal activity were recorded from feeding-related regions in Wistar SPF/VAF male and experimental (hypothalamic and dietary) obese rats, anesthetized with urethane-chloralose, under stereotaxic coordination. Recording was through 3 M KCI glass microelectrodes, while stimulating the ipsilateral vagal innervated region of the auricle. This is equivalent to the cavum conchae in the human, and was identified by resistance less than 10-50 k omega. The stimulating electrode was a stainless steel ear acupuncture (0.12 x 2.0 mm). The latency of potentials evoked in the LHA by unilateral stimulation of a specific site in the ear was 28.1 +/- 3.3 ms (8-92, n = 41). LHA neuronal activity was depressed 45.6% (n = 12, p < 0.01), and VMH activity was excited (60.5%, n = 18, p < 0.01). The auricular acupuncture stimulation clearly modulates feeding-related hypothalamic neuronal activity of experimental (both hypothalamic and dietary) obese rats. These auricle acupuncture stimulation effects were correlated to the degree of obesity. In conclusion, the results suggest that auricular acupuncture stimulation may not reduce appetite, but is more likely concerned with satiation formation and preservation. Thus, auricular acupuncture should be more effective on obese rats than on normal rats.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 1988

Feeding induced by blockade of histamine H1-receptor in rat brain

Toshiie Sakata; Koji Fukagawa; Kazuma Fujimoto; Hironobu Yoshimatsu; Takemasa Shiraishi; Hiroshi Wada

Histamine antagonists were infused into the third ventricle of the cerebrum in rats. All the H1-, but none of the H2-antagonists tested, induced initial feeding during the early portion of the light phase when histamine level was highest. No periprandial drinking was observed. Ambulation increased during feeding. The effect on feeding was attenuated when brain histamine was normally low during the early portion of the dark phase, or was decreased by α-fluoromethylhistidine. Hypothalamic neuronal histamine may suppress food intake through H1-receptors, and diurnal fluctuations of food intake may mirror neuronal histamine levels.


Neuroscience | 2003

Orexin-A (Hypocretin-1) impairs Morris water maze performance and CA1-schaffer collateral long-term potentiation in rats

Shuji Aou; Xue-Liang Li; A.-J. Li; Yutaka Oomura; Takemasa Shiraishi; Kazuo Sasaki; T. Imamura; M.J. Wayner

Glucose-sensitive neurons in the lateral hypothalamic area produce orexin-A (hypocretin-1) and orexin-B (hypocretin-2) and send their axons to the hippocampus, which predominantly expresses orexin receptor 1 showing a higher sensitivity to orexin-A. The purpose of the present study was to assess the effects of orexin-A on the performance of Wistar rats during the Morris water maze test and then to determine the effects of orexin-A on both the long-term potentiation and long-term depression in Schaffer collateral/commissural-CA1 synapses in hippocampal slices. The results of the Morris water maze test show that 1.0 and 10 nmol of orexin-A, when administered intracerebroventricularly, retarded spatial learning. A probe test examined after training of water maze task also showed an impairment in spatial memory. The results of an electrophysiological study using hippocampal slices demonstrated that 1.0 to 30 nM of orexin-A applied to the perfusate produces a dose-dependent and time dependent suppression of the long-term potentiation. In addition, the long-term depression was not affected by orexin-A. The results of a paired-pulse facilitation experiment indicated that the effects of orexin-A were post-synaptic and not due to presynaptic transmitter release. These results show that orexin-A impairs spatial performance and these impairments can be attributed to a suppression of long-term potentiation in the Schaffer collateral-CA1 hippocampal synapses.


Physiology & Behavior | 1990

CCK as a central satiety factor: Behavioral and electrophysiological evidence

Takemasa Shiraishi

CCK and its derivatives potently inhibit feeding, even after vagotomy. This effect is thus considered to be peripheral. Recently, however, the vagal gastric branch was reported to essentially bring feeding inhibition into full play. In the present study, it was found that CCK-8, administered into the third cerebroventricle (III-cv), or into the lateral hypothalamus (LHA), significantly and dose-dependently inhibited feeding induced by electrical stimulation of the contralateral LHA (LHA-ESIF) in the chronic rat. This inhibition by CCK-8 was not affected by systemic pretreatment with proglumide (1 mg), a selective antagonist, while CCK (250 ng) simultaneously microinjected into the III-cv with 5 micrograms proglumide almost completely eliminated the CCK effect on LHA-ESIF. Neuronal activity of the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH) was enhanced, and that of the LHA was suppressed by electrophoretic direct application of CCK on neurons in urethane-chloralose-anesthetized rats. CCK also markedly decreased the threshold of VMH glucose responding neurons. These results indicate that the satiety effect is not only peripheral, but might also be central, especially through feeding-related hypothalamic neurons, which are probably important in feeding inhibition.


Brain Research Bulletin | 1988

Hypothalamic control of gastric acid secretion

Takemasa Shiraishi

Study of hypothalamic control of gastric acid secretion (GAS) has revealed GAS-related neurons, their location in the lateral hypothalamic area (LHA), their characteristics, and implications of their relations to feeding and other functions. Some LHA glucose-sensitive neurons are referred to as gastric type because of their effects on gastric oxyntic cells via specific gastric related neurons of the medulla oblongata and the vagus. The 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2-DG), or insulin induced GAS was completely abolished by bilateral subdiaphragmatic vagotomy, or micro-lesions in specific sites of the LHA. These gastric type glucose-sensitive neurons were thus believed to contribute to control of GAS. The paraventricular nucleus (PVN) was also found to affect GAS. GAS-related PVN neurons were observed in the rostral PVN. Electrophoretic application of various chemicals, especially glucose, also affected neurons in the rostral PVN. Electrophoretically applied norepinephrine (NE) increased PVN single neuron activity and suppressed GAS. Results suggest that the rostral PVN may be another site to modulate LHA control of GAS, and NE may be a transmitter or modulator.


Experimental Biology and Medicine | 2003

Effects of Bilateral Auricular Acupuncture Stimulation on Body Weight in Healthy Volunteers and Mildly Obese Patients

Takemasa Shiraishi; Mariko Onoe; Takaaki Kojima; Teruo Kageyama; Shoichi Sawatsugawa; Kohji Sakurai; Hironobu Yoshimatsu; Toshiie Sakata

We investigated the effects of auricular acupuncture stimulation on non-obese healthy volunteers and mildly obese patients. Subjects (n = 55 and 5, respectively) averaged 34.5 years old, and BMI was 24.3 and less than 27.5 kg/m2, respectively. We also studied the effects of single-blind sham treatment in approximately 500 age-, sex-, and BMI-matched subjects. Small (0.15 × 2.0 mm) auricular needles were placed intracutaneously into the bilateral cavum conchae identified by having a resistance of less than 100 kΩ/cm2. In the 2-week pretreatment the period, in which body weight was measured without auricular acupuncture stimulation, 57.1% of the subjects showed a reduction in body weight. This indicates that charting ones own body weight might itself be a useful method of weight control. In the auricular acupuncture treatment period, 35 healthy subjects of 55 (63.6%) showed a decreased body weight, 11 (20%) showed an increased body weight, and 9 (16.4%) showed no change in body weight. The obese patients showed individual variation, but all achieved weight reduction, with a highly significant correlation between body weight and fat volume. The CT/MRI cross-sectional pictures supported these findings. Sham treatment had no statistically significant effect on body weight. These results suggest that success in achieving weight reduction can be partly attributed to the act of charting of ones own weight pattern. Bilateral auricular acupuncture stimulation can help reduce body weight both in mildly obese patients and in healthy non-obese subjects. In conclusion, this is in accord with the bilateral auricular acupuncture stimulation that it may be useful in the treatment of the obesity. We propose a possible mechanism for the weight-reducing effects of bilateral auricular acupuncture stimulation.

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Shuji Aou

Kyushu Institute of Technology

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