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Featured researches published by Yutaka Fujito.


Neuroscience Letters | 1997

Enhancement of an inhibitory input to the feeding central pattern generator in Lymnaea stagnalis during conditioned taste-aversion learning

Satoshi Kojima; Hiroshi Nanakamura; Shin Nagayama; Yutaka Fujito; Etsuro Ito

To study the neuronal mechanism of a conditioned taste-aversion (CTA) learning in the pond snail Lymnaea stagnalis, we examined the synaptic connection between the neuron 1 medial (N1M) cell and the cerebral giant cell (CGC), the former is an interneuron in central pattern generator for the feeding response and the latter is a regulatory neuron to the central pattern generator. Inhibitory postsynaptic potential (IPSP) which was evoked in the N1M cell by activation of the CGC was larger and lasted longer in the conditioned animal than that in the control animal. The electrical properties of the cell body of CGC and the responses of the CGC to the chemosensory inputs were not changed during the CTA learning. These results, together with the previous report indicating the existence of excitatory projection from the N1M cell to the feeding motoneuron, suggest that enhanced IPSP in the N1M cell may underlie the suppression of feeding responses in the Lymnaea CTA learning.


Neuroscience Research | 1998

Histochemical study on the relation between NO-generative neurons and central circuitry for feeding in the pond snail, Lymnaea stagnalis.

Hisayo Sadamoto; Dai Hatakeyama; Satoshi Kojima; Yutaka Fujito; Etsuro Ito

To examine whether nitric oxide (NO)-generative neurons are included in the central circuitry for generation of feeding pattern in the pond snail, Lymnaea stagnalis, two staining techniques for NADPH diaphorase and serotonin (5-HT) were applied for its central nervous system (CNS). The former technique is known to show localization of NO synthase; the latter is well employed as a marker for the feeding circuitry because 5-HT is a main transmitter in it. In the buccal ganglion, B2 motoneuron was found to be a putative NO-generative neuron. This motoneuron is not involved directly in the coordination of feeding pattern but is activated simultaneously with the feeding to control the oesophageal and gut tissues for the digestion. Taking account of the diffusion effects of NO, the NO released from B2 motoneuron, when the feeding is started, is thought to sufficiently modulate the feeding circuitry. In the cerebral ganglion, the superior lip nerve, the median lip nerve and the tentacle nerve included both putative NO-generative fibers and serotonergic fibers. These fibers are not identical, but the NO released in the nerves may activate the serotonergic fibers, resulting in the influence upon the initiation of the feeding. Therefore, our present findings clearly showed that NO is not involved in transmission within the central circuitry for the feeding, but suggested that NO can crucially affect the feeding behavior, such as initiation and modulation of the feeding pattern.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2006

Altered gene activity correlated with long-term memory formation of conditioned taste aversion in Lymnaea

Sachiyo Azami; Akiko Wagatsuma; Hisayo Sadamoto; Dai Hatakeyama; Takeshi Usami; Manabu Fujie; Ryo Koyanagi; Kaoru Azumi; Yutaka Fujito; Ken Lukowiak; Etsuro Ito

The pond snail Lymnaea stagnalis is capable of learning conditioned taste aversion (CTA) and then consolidating that learning into long‐term memory (LTM) that persists for at least 1 month. LTM requires de novo protein synthesis and altered gene activity. Changes in gene activity in Lymnaea that are correlated with, much less causative, memory formation have not yet been identified. As a first step toward rectifying this situation, we constructed a cDNA microarray with mRNAs extracted from the central nervous system (CNS) of Lymnaea. We then, using this microarray assay, identified genes whose activity either increased or decreased following CTA memory consolidation. We also identified genes whose expression levels were altered after inhibition of the cyclic AMP response element‐binding protein (CREB) that is hypothesized to be a key transcription factor for CTA memory. We found that the molluscan insulin‐related peptide II (MIP II) was up‐regulated during CTA‐LTM, whereas the gene encoding pedal peptide preprohormone (Pep) was down‐regulated by CREB2 RNA interference. We next examined mRNAs of MIP II and Pep using real‐time RT‐PCR with SYBR Green. The MIP II mRNA level in the CNS of snails exhibiting “good” memory for CTA was confirmed to be significantly higher than that from the CNS of snails exhibiting “poor” memory. In contrast, there was no significant difference in expression levels of the Pep mRNA between “good” and “poor” performers. These data suggest that in Lymnaea MIP II may play a role in the consolidation process that forms LTM following CTA training.


Neuroscience Research | 2006

Involvement of medullary GABAergic and serotonergic raphe neurons in respiratory control: electrophysiological and immunohistochemical studies in rats.

Ying Cao; Kiyoji Matsuyama; Yutaka Fujito; Mamoru Aoki

In the present study we first examined the possible involvement of the putative neurotransmitters gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and serotonin (5-HT) in raphe-induced facilitatory or inhibitory effects on the respiratory activity of rats. Secondly, we investigated the possibility of spinal projections of GABAergic and serotonergic neurons from the medullary raphe nuclei to the phrenic motor nucleus (PMN). We observed that an intravenous (i.v.) injection of (+)-bicuculline, a GABA(A) receptor antagonist, significantly reduced respiratory inhibition induced by electrical stimulation of the raphe magnus (RM) or the raphe obscurus (RO). On the other hand, an i.v. injection of methysergide, a broad-spectrum 5-HT receptor antagonist, significantly reduced the respiratory facilitation induced by electrical stimulation of the raphe pallidus (RP) or RO. By using a combined method of retrograde tracing with Texas Red injected into the PMN region at segments C4 and C5 and immunohistochemical labeling, we observed that glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD; a GABA synthesizing enzyme) immunopositive and Texas Red double labeled neurons were predominantly localized in the RM, and additionally in the RO. However 5-HT immunopositive and Texas Red double-labeled neurons were predominantly localized in the RP, and additionally in the RO and RM. These findings suggest that RM-, or RO-induced inhibitory effects, are transmitted, at least in part, to the PMN via a direct GABAergic descending pathway. The RP-, or RO-induced facilitatory effects in rats however, are transmitted via a serotonergic descending pathway.


Neuroscience Letters | 2000

Nitric oxide suppresses fictive feeding response in Lymnaea stagnalis

Suguru Kobayashi; Hiroto Ogawa; Yutaka Fujito; Etsuro Ito

Fictive feeding activity was monitored in the buccal ganglia of semi-intact preparations of the pond snail, Lymnaea stagnalis, to examine the effects of nitric oxide (NO) released from motoneurons innervating the esophagus on the feeding response. The present results suggest that first; even the low concentration of constitutive NO precisely regulates the feeding rhythm by suppressing high frequency feeding responses; second, that the high concentration of NO released after activation of the feeding central pattern generator following appetitive stimulation of the lips suppresses the feeding rate, resulting in recurrent inhibition. This is the first direct evidence that NO can function to suppress rhythmic activity in the brain.


Neuroscience Research | 1999

PHYSIOLOGICAL CHARACTERIZATION OF LIP AND TENTACLE NERVES IN LYMNAEA STAGNALIS

Hiroshi Nakamura; Satoshi Kojima; Suguru Kobayashi; Iori Ito; Yutaka Fujito; Hideo Suzuki; Etsuro Ito

The lip and tentacle nerves of the pond snail, Lymnaea stagnalis, were characterized using electrophysiological techniques. When the activity of those nerves was induced in lip-tentacle preparations, aversive taste signals were transmitted through all the lip and tentacle nerves, but appetitive signals could be recorded only through the superior lip nerve. In the CNS immersed in high Mg2+ -high Ca2+ saline, electrical stimuli applied to any of the nerves failed to induce action potentials in one of the regulatory neurons (cerebral giant cell: CGC) involved in feeding responses, implying that the signals are polysynaptically transmitted to the CGC. Intracellular recordings revealed that the CGCs in semi-intact half-body preparations received both appetitive and aversive taste signals not only through the superior lip nerve but also through the median lip nerve. In addition, an osphradium was ruled out as a candidate for appetitive reception. The present results, together with our preceding data arrived at by the histochemical analyses, indicate that the appetitive taste transduction responsible for generating feeding responses is performed through the superior lip nerve with some contribution of the median lip nerve. The data showing that the CGC can receive various taste signals suggests that it may play a crucial role in feeding behavior as demonstrated in the study of conditioned taste-aversion.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2006

Taste discrimination in conditioned taste aversion of the pond snail Lymnaea stagnalis

Rio Sugai; Hatsuki Shiga; Sachiyo Azami; Takayuki Watanabe; Hisayo Sadamoto; Yutaka Fujito; Ken Lukowiak; Etsuro Ito

SUMMARY Conditioned taste aversion (CTA) in the pond snail Lymnaea stagnalis has been widely used as a model for gaining an understanding of the molecular and behavioral mechanisms underlying learning and memory. At the behavioral level, however, it is still unclear how taste discrimination and CTA interact. We thus examined how CTA to one taste affected the feeding response induced by another appetitive food stimulus. We first demonstrated that snails have the capacity to recognize sucrose and carrot juice as distinct appetitive stimuli. We then found that snails can become conditioned (i.e. CTA) to avoid one of the stimuli and not the other. These results show that snails can distinguish between appetitive stimuli during CTA, suggesting that taste discrimination is processed upstream of the site where memory consolidation in the snail brain occurs. Moreover, we examined second-order conditioning with two appetitive stimuli and one aversive stimulus. Snails acquired second-order conditioning and were still able to distinguish between the different stimuli. Finally, we repeatedly presented the conditional stimulus alone to the conditioned snails, but this procedure did not extinguish the long-term memory of CTA in the snails. Taken together, our data suggest that CTA causes specific, irreversible and rigid changes from appetitive stimuli to aversive ones in the conditioning procedure.


Neuroscience Research | 1986

The possible role of collateral sprouting in the functional restitution of corticospinal connections after spinal hemisection

Mamoru Aoki; Yutaka Fujito; Hajime Satomi; Yoichi Kurosawa; Toshiharu Kasaba

We investigated in monkeys whether the corticospinal fibers increase their connections with lumbosacral neurons after spinal hemisection, using the retrograde horseradish peroxidase (HRP) method. In three monkeys 3.5-38 months after spinal hemisection at the lower thoracic or upper lumbar cord, HRP was injected into the lumbosacral cord unilaterally on the hemisected side at a level caudal to the lesion. Control injections were performed in two intact monkeys and in two other monkeys immediately after hemisection. In all animals, corticospinal neurons in the precentral motor cortex were labeled bilaterally. However, in the chronically spinal hemisected monkeys, the number of the labeled neurons was significantly increased on the side ipsilateral to the lesion. These results suggest that corticospinal connections to lumbosacral motoneurons are newly formed on the side of spinal cord hemisection. This synapse formation may be due to collateral sprouting of intact corticospinal fibers, and it may underlie the mechanisms of motor recovery.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Involvement of Insulin-Like Peptide in Long-Term Synaptic Plasticity and Long-Term Memory of the Pond Snail Lymnaea stagnalis

Jun Murakami; Ryuichi Okada; Hisayo Sadamoto; Suguru Kobayashi; Koichi Mita; Yuki Sakamoto; Miki Yamagishi; Dai Hatakeyama; Emi Otsuka; Akiko Okuta; Hiroshi Sunada; Satoshi Takigami; Manabu Sakakibara; Yutaka Fujito; Masahiko Awaji; Shunsuke Moriyama; Ken Lukowiak; Etsuro Ito

The pond snail Lymnaea stagnalis is capable of learning taste aversion and consolidating this learning into long-term memory (LTM) that is called conditioned taste aversion (CTA). Previous studies showed that some molluscan insulin-related peptides (MIPs) were upregulated in snails exhibiting CTA. We thus hypothesized that MIPs play an important role in neurons underlying the CTA–LTM consolidation process. To examine this hypothesis, we first observed the distribution of MIP II, a major peptide of MIPs, and MIP receptor and determined the amounts of their mRNAs in the CNS. MIP II was only observed in the light green cells in the cerebral ganglia, but the MIP receptor was distributed throughout the entire CNS, including the buccal ganglia. Next, when we applied exogenous mammalian insulin, secretions from MIP-containing cells or partially purified MIPs, to the isolated CNS, we observed a long-term change in synaptic efficacy (i.e., enhancement) of the synaptic connection between the cerebral giant cell (a key interneuron for CTA) and the B1 motor neuron (a buccal motor neuron). This synaptic enhancement was blocked by application of an insulin receptor antibody to the isolated CNS. Finally, injection of the insulin receptor antibody into the snail before CTA training, while not blocking the acquisition of taste aversion learning, blocked the memory consolidation process; thus, LTM was not observed. These data suggest that MIPs trigger changes in synaptic connectivity that may be correlated with the consolidation of taste aversion learning into CTA–LTM in the Lymnaea CNS.


Brain Research | 1998

Sensory preconditioning for feeding response in the pond snail, Lymnaea stagnalis

Satoshi Kojima; Suguru Kobayashi; Mari Yamanaka; Hisayo Sadamoto; Hiroshi Nakamura; Yutaka Fujito; Ryo Kawai; Manabu Sakakibara; Etsuro Ito

We demonstrated a sensory preconditioning in the pond snail, Lymnaea stagnalis. An appetitive sucrose solution (a conditioned stimulus: CS1) and weak vibration (another conditioned stimulus: CS2) were first associated, and then the CS2 and an aversive KCl solution (an unconditioned stimulus: UCS) were done. To build the conditioning, two different training procedures, spaced and massed, were examined. After the both training, the sensory preconditioning was built: significantly fewer feeding response to the CS1 became elicited; slower latency to the first bite to the CS1 was induced. No significant differences on the memory retention between these training procedures were found in the sensory preconditioning.

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Etsuro Ito

Tokushima Bunri University

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Mamoru Aoki

Sapporo Medical University

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Suguru Kobayashi

Tokushima Bunri University

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Hisayo Sadamoto

Tokushima Bunri University

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Miki Yamagishi

Tokushima Bunri University

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