Yukio Yoshioka
Hiroshima University
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Featured researches published by Yukio Yoshioka.
Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2005
Mitsuhiro Nakamura; Takahiko Kakuda; Jianhua Qi; Masayuki Hirata; Tomoaki Shintani; Yukio Yoshioka; Tetsuji Okamoto; Yuichi Oba; Hideshi Nakamura; Makoto Ojika
Xestoquinone and related metabolites (the xestoquinone family) occur in marine sponges and are known to show a variety of biological activities. In this study, the first comprehensive evaluation of antifungal activity was performed for xestoquinone and nine natural and unnatural analogues in comparison with their cytotoxicity. The cytotoxicity against two human squamous cell carcinoma cell lines, A431 and Nakata, indicated that the terminal quinone structure of the polycyclic molecules was important (xestoquinone, etc.) and that the presence of a ketone group at C-3 of the opposite terminus dramatically diminished the activity (halenaquinone, etc.). In contrast, a ketone group at C-3 enhanced the antifungal activity against the plant pathogen, Phytophthora capsici, regardless of the presence of a quinone moiety. The cytotoxicity and antifungal activity of the xestoquinone family were negatively correlated with each other.
Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2004
Ken-ichi Onodera; Takuya Fukatsu; Nozomi Kawai; Yukio Yoshioka; Tetsuji Okamoto; Hideshi Nakamura; Makoto Ojika
A novel fatty acid derivative named zooxanthellactone (ZL) was isolated from several strains of symbiotic microalgae, dinoflagellates of the genus Symbiodinium. The metabolite is structurally related to docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) and seems to be biosynthesized by oxidation and subsequent lactonization. The absolute stereochemistry was determined from the specific rotation of the perhydro derivative. The distribution of ZL within several Symbiodinium isolates was quantitatively analyzed by HPLC techniques and suggested a relationship between the productivity of this metabolite and the Symbiodinium phylogeny. The cytotoxicity of ZL was evaluated by using human squamous cell carcinoma cell lines in comparison with that of DHA and other common fatty acids, suggesting that the long unsaturated chain was important rather than the γ-lactone moiety.
Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2013
Yukio Yoshioka; Shigeaki Toratani; Ikuko Ogawa; Tetsuji Okamoto
Ameloblastic carcinoma is a rare, odontogenic, malignant tumor that has features of ameloblastoma in addition to cytologic atypia with or without metastasis. It is classified as primary type; secondary type, intraosseous; and secondary type, peripheral according to the World Health Organization classification of 2005. Ameloblastic carcinoma, secondary type, is extremely rare, and few cases have been reported in the English-language literature. The authors report a case of ameloblastic carcinoma, secondary type, arising at the mandible in a 17-year-old Japanese boy.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2012
Sudhakar V. S. Govindam; Yukio Yoshioka; Akihiko Kanamoto; Takeshi Fujiwara; Tetsuji Okamoto; Makoto Ojika
A new 10-membered-ring diterpene, cyclolobatriene (1), along with three other known diterpenes, lobatriene (2), eunicol (3), and fuscol (4), were isolated from the Okinawan soft coral Lobophytum pauciflorum. Their structures were established by extensive NMR spectroscopic analyses. Cyclolobatriene (1) is an additional example of rare prenylated germacrenes. Although 1, due to a 10-membered-ring structure, exists as an equilibrium mixture of three conformers, the NMR measurement in CDCl(3) at 7°C enabled us to assign the NMR signals of the three, which is the first example of the complete NMR assignment of all the existing conformers of germacrene-type compounds. Cyclolobatriene (1) was thermally unstable and converted into 2 through Cope rearrangement upon heating at 70°C. Eunicol (3) also possesses the same prenylated germacrene structure as 1, showing similar physico-chemical properties to 1. All four compounds 1-4 showed cytotoxic effect with IC(50)s of 0.64, 0.41, 0.35 and 0.52 μM, respectively, against human epidermoid carcinoma A431 cells.
Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, and Oral Radiology | 2013
Yukio Yoshioka; Ikuko Ogawa; Takaaki Tsunematsu; Taishi Sakaue; Sachiko Yamasaki; Yasuto Fukui; Yasutaka Hayashido; Shigeaki Toratani; Tetsuji Okamoto
OBJECTIVE The objective of this study was to investigate the histogenesis of ectomesenchymal chondromyxoid tumors (ECTs) of the tongue. STUDY DESIGN The biochemical characteristics of a rarely occurring tumor of the tongue were analyzed by immunohistochemistry and reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), and its biological properties were assessed in primary culture in serum-free media. RESULTS Immunohistochemistry showed that the tumor cells were strongly positive for vimentin, S-100, and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), but negative for cytokeratin and epithelial membrane antigen. In primary cultures, the cells derived from the ECT were morphologically similar to neuronal cells and expressed Nanog, GFAP, and MAP2. RT-PCR analysis of the surgical specimen was positive for OCT3/4, Sox2, Nanog, MAP2, and CD105 mRNAs. CONCLUSIONS The results of the present study indicate that ECTs originate from the ectomesenchymal cells of the neural crest and are similar in their molecular and biological characteristics to undifferentiated mesenchymal stem cells.
Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2012
Sudhakar V. S. Govindam; Bong-Keun Choi; Yukio Yoshioka; Akihiko Kanamoto; Takeshi Fujiwara; Tetsuji Okamoto; Makoto Ojika
A library of extracts established from hundreds of marine organisms was screened by a cytotoxicity test. The active organic extract of an Okinawan marine sponge of the genus Dysidea was subjected to bioassay-guided fractionation to give three new polyoxygenated steroids dysideasterols F-H (1–3), together with two known related compounds (4 and 5). Their structures were confirmed by NMR and mass spectroscopic analyses. A characteristic structural feature of 2, 4 and 5 is an allylic epoxide, whereas this epoxide undergoes ring-opening by a neighbouring hydroxyl group to give a tetrahydrofuran ring in 1 and 3. All compounds 1–5 exhibited a similar cytotoxic effect with IC50 values of 0.15–0.3 µM against human epidermoid carcinoma A431 cells, demonstrating that the allylic epoxide moiety was not responsible for this cytotoxic effect.
Photodiagnosis and Photodynamic Therapy | 2016
Shigeaki Toratani; Ryouji Tani; Taku Kanda; Koichi Koizumi; Yukio Yoshioka; Tetsuji Okamoto
OBJECTIVES Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is a very effective treatment for superficial malignancies that does not result in loss of normal tissue. Here, we report successful PDT treatment of superficial oral cancers and its clinical outcome with long-term follow up. MATERIALS AND METHODS Thirty-four superficial oral squamous cell carcinomas were treated with PDT, and the effects were evaluated. Each patient received Photofrin (2mg/kg) intravenously 48h prior to light irradiation. Photoradiation was performed at doses of 100-150J/cm(2) using a 630-nm wavelength excimer dye laser. RESULTS Six months after PDT, 30 patients (88.2%) showed complete responses while 9 patients (26.5%) had local relapses during long-term follow-up. The 5-year overall survival, disease-specific survival, and disease-free survival rates were 76.5%, 84.6%, and 63.3%, respectively. Lesions with red patches had a significantly higher recurrence rate than lesions with white patches. Accurate evaluation of the extent of lesions and appropriate photoradiation were important in improving outcomes. Adverse events observed included sunburn and sequestrum formation of alveolar bone. No abnormal laboratory values or systemic complications were observed. CONCLUSION PDT using Photofrin as the photosensitizer is an effective treatment modality for superficial oral carcinomas, with excellent healing and minimal side effects.
Marine Drugs | 2018
Kasmiati Kasmiati; Yukio Yoshioka; Tetsuji Okamoto; Makoto Ojika
A crude methanolic extract of the Indonesian sponge Clathria bulbotoxa showed a potent cytotoxic activity against the human epidermoid carcinoma A431 cells. An investigation of the active components led to the isolation of three new compounds named crambescidins 345 (1), 361 (2), and 373 (3), together with the known related metabolites crambescidins 359 (4), 657 (5), and 800 (6). The structures of the compounds were determined by spectroscopic analysis. These compounds 1–4 that possess a simple pentacyclic guanidine core exhibited moderate cytotoxicity against the A431 cells with the IC50 values of 7.0, 2.5, 0.94, and 3.1 μM, respectively, while the known compounds 5 and 6 that possess a long aliphatic side chain were found to be significantly cytotoxic. On the other hand, in an anti-oomycete activity test against the fungus-like plant pathogen Phytophthora capsici, 1–4 showed a higher activity than that of 5 and 6, suggesting that the long aliphatic side chain plays a significant role for cytotoxicity, but is not effective or suppressive for anti-oomycete activity.
International Journal of Surgery Case Reports | 2018
Yukio Yoshioka; Hirotaka Nakatao; Tomoaki Hamana; Atsuko Hamada; Taku Kanda; Koichi Koizumi; Shigeaki Toratani; Tetsuji Okamoto
Highlights • A 64-year-old man underwent head and neck surgery for oral squamous cell carcinoma.• Multiple suture granulomas mimicking tumor recurrence developed in the radiation field.• The suture granulomas developed shortly after adjuvant chemoradiation therapy.• Suspect suture granulomas when nodules appear during postoperative radiotherapy.• Suture granulomas may show spontaneous resolution.
International Journal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery | 2018
Shigeaki Toratani; Ikuko Ogawa; H. Sasahara; Yukio Yoshioka; Taku Kanda; Ryouji Tani; Tetsuji Okamoto
The control of local failure (LF) is essential to improve outcomes in patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the oral cavity (OSCC). In this study, LF of OSCC was classified into three clinical types: deep recurrence (type 1R), adjacent superficial recurrence (type 2R), and distant primary tumour (type 3R). LF was analyzed after surgical resection of OSCC to determine the validity and usefulness of this classification system. Of 257 patients with OSCC, 58 experienced LF; 21 had type 1R, 23 had type 2R, and 20 had type 3R. Clinical factors influencing LF were analyzed by log-rank test and Cox test. Type 1R was significantly related to the TN classification, resection margin status, and invasive pattern. Type 2R was strongly associated with the grade of epithelial dysplasia at the surgical margins. Type 1R rarely developed more than 1year after surgery, whereas type 2R did not develop within 2 years. Type 1R may be caused by residual cancer cells in the deep margins, and type 2R by precancerous cells remaining in the marginal epithelium and gradually becoming invasive cancer. Type 3R may be considered an independent tumour. The newly proposed clinical classification is convenient and roughly reflects the causes and mechanisms of relapse.