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Dive into the research topics where Yoshiharu Matsumae is active.

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Featured researches published by Yoshiharu Matsumae.


Analytical Chemistry | 2015

Improving the Electrochemical Imaging Sensitivity of Scanning Electrochemical Microscopy-Scanning Ion Conductance Microscopy by Using Electrochemical Pt Deposition

Mustafa Şen; Yasufumi Takahashi; Yoshiharu Matsumae; Yoshiko Horiguchi; Akichika Kumatani; Kosuke Ino; Hitoshi Shiku; Tomokazu Matsue

We fabricated a platinum-based double barrel probe for scanning electrochemical microscopy-scanning ion conductance microscopy (SECM-SICM) by electrodepositing platinum onto the carbon nanoelectrode of the double barrel probe. The deposition conditions were optimized to attain highly sensitive electrochemical measurements and imaging. Simultaneous SECM-SICM imaging of electrochemical features and noncontact topography by using the optimized probe afforded high-resolution images of epidermal growth factor receptors (EGFR) on the membrane surface of the A431 cells.


Analytical Chemistry | 2015

Nanoscale imaging of an unlabeled secretory protein in living cells using scanning ion conductance microscopy.

Yuji Nashimoto; Yasufumi Takahashi; Hiroki Ida; Yoshiharu Matsumae; Kosuke Ino; Hitoshi Shiku; Tomokazu Matsue

Scanning ion conductance microscopy (SICM) was applied to evaluate an unlabeled secretory protein in living cells. The target protein, von Willebrand factor (vWF), was released from human endothelial cells by adding phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA). We confirmed that SICM could be used to clearly visualize the complex network of vWF and to detect strings with widths as low as 60 nm without any artifact. By acquiring the sequential SICM images of living cells, the protrusion and strings formation were observed. We also detected the opening and closing motions of a small pore (∼500 nm), which is difficult to visualize with fluorescence methods. The results clearly demonstrate that SICM is a powerful tool to examine the changes in living cells during exocytosis.


Analytical Chemistry | 2013

Noninvasive Measurement of Alkaline Phosphatase Activity in Embryoid Bodies and Coculture Spheroids with Scanning Electrochemical Microscopy

Toshiharu Arai; Taku Nishijo; Yoshiharu Matsumae; Yuanshu Zhou; Kosuke Ino; Hitoshi Shiku; Tomokazu Matsue

Alkaline phosphatase (ALP) is an enzyme commonly used as an undifferentiated marker of embryonic stem cells (ESCs). Although noninvasive ALP detection has long been desired for stem cell research and in cell transplantation therapy, little progress has been made in developing such techniques. In this study, we propose a noninvasive evaluation method for detecting ALP activity in mouse embryoid bodies (mEBs) using scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM). SECM has several advantages, including being noninvasive, nonlabeled, quantitative, and highly sensitive. First, we found that SECM-based ALP evaluation permits the comparison of ALP activity among mEBs of different sizes by monitoring the p-aminophenol (PAP) production rate in aqueous solution containing p-aminophenylphosphate (PAPP) normal to the surface area of each sample. Second, coculture spheroids, consisting of mEB and MCF-7 cells for the core and the concentric outer layer, respectively, were prepared as model samples showing heterogeneous ALP activities. The overall PAP production rate dramatically declined in the presence of the MCF-7 cell outer layer, which blocked the mass transfer of PAPP to inner mEB. This result indicated that the SECM response mainly originated from ALP located at the surface of the cellular aggregate, including mEBs and coculture spheroids. Third, taking advantage of the noninvasive nature of SECM, we examined the relevance of ALP activity and cardiomyocyte differentiation. Collectively, these results suggested that noninvasive SECM-based ALP activity normalized by the sample surface enables the selection of EBs with a higher potential to differentiate into cardiomyocytes, which can contribute toward various types of stem cell research.


Analytica Chimica Acta | 2014

Electrochemical monitoring of intracellular enzyme activity of single living mammalian cells by using a double-mediator system

Yoshiharu Matsumae; Yasufumi Takahashi; Kosuke Ino; Hitoshi Shiku; Tomokazu Matsue

UNLABELLED We evaluated the intracellular NAD(P)H quinone oxidoreductase (NQO) activity of single HeLa cells by using the menadione-ferrocyanide double-mediator system combined with scanning electrochemical microscopy (SECM). The double-mediator system was used to amplify the current response from the intracellular NQO activity and to reduce menadione-induced cell damage. The electron shuttle between the electrode and menadione was mediated by the ferrocyanide/ferricyanide redox couple. Generation of ferrocyanide was observed immediately after the addition of a lower concentration (10 μM) of menadione. The ferrocyanide generation rate was constant for 120 min. At a higher menadione concentration (100 μM), the ferrocyanide generation rate decreased within 30 min because of the cytotoxic effect of menadione. We also investigated the relationship between intracellular reactive oxygen species or glutathione levels and exposure to different menadione concentrations to determine the optimal condition for SECM with minimal invasiveness. The present study clearly demonstrates that SECM is useful for the analysis of intracellular enzymatic activities in single cells with a double-mediator system.


Electrochemistry | 2014

Nanoscale Cell Surface Topography Imaging using Scanning Ion Conductance Microscopy

Yasufumi Takahashi; Komachi Ito; Xiongwei Wang; Yoshiharu Matsumae; Hirokazu Komaki; Akichika Kumatani; Kosuke Ino; Hitoshi Shiku; Tomokazu Matsue


Chemical Communications | 2013

Evaluation of the differentiation status of single embryonic stem cells using scanning electrochemical microscopy

Yoshiharu Matsumae; Toshiharu Arai; Yasufumi Takahashi; Kosuke Ino; Hitoshi Shiku; Tomokazu Matsue


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2017

3D electrochemical and ion current imaging using scanning electrochemical–scanning ion conductance microscopy

Yasufumi Takahashi; Hiroki Ida; Yoshiharu Matsumae; Hirokazu Komaki; Yuanshu Zhou; Akichika Kumatani; Makoto Kanzaki; Hitoshi Shiku; Tomokazu Matsue


ChemElectroChem | 2018

Quantitative Real-Time Monitoring of Antibody-Induced Internalization of Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor on Single Living Mammalian Cells Using Scanning Electrochemical Microscopy

Yoshiharu Matsumae; Yasufumi Takahashi; Hitoshi Shiku; Tomokazu Matsue


生物物理 | 2014

3P105 膜受容体内在化のリアルタイムモニタリング : 走査型電気化学顕微鏡(SECM)による低侵襲・定量的・単一細胞レベルでの測定(03. 膜蛋白質,ポスター,第52回日本生物物理学会年会(2014年度))

Yoshiharu Matsumae; Yasufumi Takahashi; Kosuke Ino; Hitoshi Shiku; Tomokazu Matsue


Seibutsu Butsuri | 2014

3P105 Real-time Monitoring of Membrane Receptor Internalization : Low-Invasive, Quantitative and Single-Cell Level Measurement by SECM(03. Membrane proteins,Poster,The 52nd Annual Meeting of the Biophysical Society of Japan(BSJ2014))

Yoshiharu Matsumae; Yasufumi Takahashi; Kosuke Ino; Hitoshi Shiku; Tomokazu Matsue

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