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Featured researches published by Yasukazu Nagato.


Iubmb Life | 1997

Effect of cyclic polylactates on tumor cells and tumor bearing mice

Shigeo Takada; Yasukazu Nagato; Masaichi Yamamura

We studied the effect of cyclic polylactates ranging in size from a degree of polymerization number of 3 to 13 on pyruvate kinase, lactic dehydrogenase, anaerobic glycolysis, growth of tumor cells and survival of tumor bearing mice. Pyruvate kinase and lactic dehydrogenase activities were both inhibited by cyclic polylactates, and the inhibition mechanism of cyclic polylactates on lactic dehydrogenase was noncompetitive. About half the anaerobic glycolytic activity of FM3A ascites tumor cells was inhibited and tumor cell growth was also effectively inhibited by cyclic polylactates. Mice, which were treated with cyclic polylactates after inoculation of FM3A ascites tumor cells lived significantly longer than mice, which were treated with vehicle or non mice.


Developmental Brain Research | 1996

The abnormal distribution of mossy fiber bundles and morphological abnormalities in hippocampal formation of dreherJ (drJdrJ) mouse

Masaki Sekiguchi; Hiroshi Abe; Yasukazu Nagato; Osamu Tanaka; Huang Guo; Richard S. Nowakowski

The organization of pyramidal cells and mossy fibers in the hippocampal formation of homozygous dreher(J) mutant mice was investigated using Timms and Golgi methods. Five clear abnormalities were found: (1) some pyramidal cells were located below the infrapyramidal mossy fiber layer, (2) mossy fibers emerged in diffuse fashion from between the suprapyramidal and infrapyramidal mossy fiber layers, and their fibers invaded within the pyramidal cell layer, where they traveled as 3-6 small, usually quite short, bundles, (3) some normally situated pyramidal cells had unusual contacts with mossy fibers at two or three places on their apical and/or basal dendrites, (4) some normally situated pyramidal cells had abnormal dendritic trees typified by the occurrence of fine-caliber dendritic branches extending out of the apical dendrite or the apical portion of the soma, and (5) a few Timm positive fibers extending from the dentate hilus to the dentate molecular layer in both dreher(J) and control mice were observed. These abnormalities indicate that in the hippocampal formation a variety of cell populations and neuronal circuits can be indirectly modified by the dreher mutation.


Artificial Organs | 2014

Liposome-Encapsulated Hemoglobin Enhances Chemotherapy to Suppress Metastasis in Mice

Chieko Murayama; Akira T. Kawaguchi; Akemi Kamijo; Katsuko Naito; Kayoko Iwao; Hideo Tsukamoto; Kayo Yasuda; Yasukazu Nagato

Liposome-encapsulated hemoglobin with high O2 -affinity (P50 O2  = 10 mm Hg, h-LEH) was reported to enhance tumor radiosensitivity. We hypothesize that targeted O2 delivery to tumor hypoxia by h-LEH may also enhance chemotherapy to suppress tumor growth and metastasis in mice. Doxorubicin (DXR; 0.5 or 2 mg/kg i.p.) or S-1 (4 or 8 mg/kg orally) alone or in combination with h-LEH (5 mL/kg i.v.) was administered for 2 weeks to C57BL/6N mice inoculated with Lewis Lung Carcinoma (LLC) in the leg. After the 2-week therapy in six treatment groups, mice were sacrificed for quantitative assessment of tumor growth and lung metastasis. The tumor was then evaluated for its expression of hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α) and matrix metallopoteinase-2 (MMP-2) activity. Combined use of h-LEH and chemotherapeutic agents (DXR or S-1) showed no additional enhancement on suppression of the tumor growth over the chemotherapeutic agent alone. However, the combination use of h-LEH significantly suppressed the number and total area of metastatic colonies in the lung compared with each chemotherapeutic agent alone. Although HIF-1α expression and MMP-2 activity in the original tumor was significantly suppressed in the groups of mice treated with either DXR or S-1 alone, the addition of h-LEH to either agent showed further enhancement of oxygen-mediated degradation of HIF-1α and suppression of MMP-2 activity. Although the addition of h-LEH to DXR or S-1 had little effect on original LLC tumor growth, it significantly enhanced suppression of lung metastasis in mice.


Primates | 1994

Observation on the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium in the Japanese macaque (Macaca fuscata) using semithin sections

Yasukazu Nagato; Tomoo Enomoto

The stages of the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium in the Japanese macaque are investigated using testes fixed by a mixture of formaldehyde and glutaraldehyde containing picric acid and embedded in a methacrylate resin, Quetol 523M. Sections, 1.0–2.0 µm in thickness, were cut with glass knives and stained with periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) and hematoxylin. Sections from such resin blocks illustrated cellular detail without structural distortion during the polymerization process. Furthermore, staining affinity with PAS and hematoxylin was excellent. In stained sections, typical germ cell associations were described, based on the nuclear morphology of type A (dark and pale) spermatogonium, type B spermatogonium, various developmental stages of primary spermatocytes during meiosis, and the development of the acrosomic system. In the Japanese macaque, two different steps of spermatids (steps 3 and 4) were constantly seen in the same area of the tubular epithelium during stage III. Therefore, a classification into ten stages is proposed for the cycle in this species. Additional characteristics are described based on the observation of the seminiferous epithelium using semithin sections.


Primates | 1994

Seasonal changes in the spermatogenic epithelium of adult Japanese macaques (Macaca fuscata fuscata)

Tomoo Enomoto; Yasukazu Nagato; Mayumi Nakano

A histological study was undertaken to clarify seasonal changes in the spermatogenic epithelium of Japanese macaques. Testicular tissue samples were excised by biopsies from five adult laboratory-maintained males in mating and non-mating seasons. The samples were fixed with Bouins solution, embedded in paraffin, and stained with PAS and hematoxylin. Microscopic observations on cross-sections of seminiferous tubules revealed that the seminiferous epithelium in the mating season was thicker than in the non-mating season. PAS-stained granules were found in some of the dark A-type spermatogonia, which significantly increased in the non-mating season. Spermatids of the steps preceding the appearance of the acrosomic cap in stages I to III were observed significantly more often than those in the step coinciding with the formation of the acrosomic cap in stage IV. In stage I, the ratio of mature spermatids or spermatozoa to immature spermatids in the mating season was higher than that in the non-mating season. These findings suggest that spermiogenesis, as well as spermatocytogenesis, is inhibited in the non-mating season.


Primates | 1995

Seasonal changes in spermatogenic cell degeneration in the seminiferous epithelium of adult Japanese macaques (Macaca fuscata fuscata)

Tomoo Enomoto; Yasukazu Nagato; Mayumi Nakano

The degenerating pattern of spermatogenic cells in the seminiferous tubule of Japanese macaques was studied to clarify a relationship between seasonal changes of reproductive performances and cytological findings in the Japanese macaque. For light microscopy, testis samples were obtained from five adult animals by biopsy in April (nonmating season) and October (mating season). For electron microscopy, specimens from four additional macaques were used. Degenerating cells were found in all steps of spermatogenesis. In stages I to V of the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium, morphologically atypical pachytene spermatocytes were observed in 14.7 and 10.0% of the cells in the nonmating and mating seasons, respectively, although the difference in percentage was not significant. Mature spermatids with atypical features in those stages occupied 59.6% of the cells in the nonmating season, which significantly decreased to 34.1% in the mating season. These results imply that the seasonal change of sperm production is related, at least in part, to the process of degeneration of the spermatogenic cells in this species.


Archive | 2000

Physical strength enhancing agents and glycogen accumulation promoting agents

Shigeo Takada; Yasukazu Nagato; Masaichi Yamamura; Masahiro Murakami; Suketsune Iwagaki; Toshihiro Arai; Tamotsu Terao


Archive | 1996

Anti-malignant tumor agent useful for cancer selected from colon cancer, esophagus cancer and breast cancer

Yoshio Imanishi; Youichirou Naganushi; Yasukazu Nagato; Kiyotaka Sato; Shigeo Takada; 嘉男 今西; 喜代隆 佐藤; 陽一朗 長主; 康和 長戸; 繁生 高田


Archive | 2001

Cancer cell implantation inhibitors

Chieko Murayama; Yasukazu Nagato; Masahiro Murakami


Archive | 2000

Remedies for diabetes

Shigeo Takada; Yasukazu Nagato; Masahiro Murakami

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