
Yoshinori Sahara- Iwate Medical University
Yoshinori Sahara
- Iwate Medical University
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58
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Publications (58)
Cortical activity during jaw movement has been analyzed using various non-invasive brain imaging methods, but the contribution of orofacial sensory input to voluntary jaw movements remains unclear. In this study, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to observe brain activities during a simple teeth tapping task in adult dentulous (A...
The G protein-regulated inducer of neurite growth (GRIN) family has three isoforms (GRIN1-3), which bind to the Gαi/o subfamily of G protein that mediate signal processing via G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). Here, we show that GRIN3 is involved in regulation of dopamine-dependent behaviors and is essential for activation of the dopamine recept...
In demyelinating diseases such as multiple sclerosis (MS), an imbalance between the demyelination
and remyelination rates underlies the degenerative processes. Microglial activation is observed in
demyelinating lesions; however, the molecular mechanism responsible for the homeostatic/envi-
ronmental change remains elusive. We previously found that...
Research has clearly demonstrated that vacuolar H+-ATPase (V-ATPase) is involved in the acidification of intracellular organelles such as vacuoles, lysosomes, synaptic vesicles, endosomes, secretory granules, and the Golgi apparatus in all eukaryotic cells. V-ATPase is also involved in mediating proton transport across the plasma membrane of epithe...
The primary vestibular neurons convey afferent information from hair cells in the inner ear to the vestibular nuclei and the cerebellum. The intrinsic firing properties of vestibular ganglion cells (VGCs) are heterogeneous to sustained membrane depolarization, and undergo marked developmental changes from phasic to tonic types during the early post...
Objective: In dental clinics, patients often complain of taste disorder when marginal area between hard palate and soft palate is covered with the removable dentures. Direct coverage of taste buds on the palate seems to be a major reason, yet, various modality involved in an oral sensation may affect to the taste sensitibity. In order to examine wh...
Neurons in the medial nucleus of the amygdala (MeA) play a key role in the innate maternal, reproductive, defensive, and social behaviors. However, it is unclear how activation of the vomeronasal system leads to the behavioral outputs that are associated with pheromones. Here, we characterized the electrophysiological and morphological properties o...
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has considerably advanced the understanding of peripheral and central neural mechanisms underlying orofacial movements (e.g., chewing, swallowing, digestion, and speech). The principle advantages of fMRI lie in its noninvasive nature, relatively high spatiotemporal resolution, and ability to identify the...
The efficacy of 3% mepivacaine hydrochloride (mepivacaine) as a local anesthetic has attracted attention due to the increasing demand for local anesthetics without a vasopressor agent in dental patients who present a medically compromised disease. We conducted this research to clarify the action of mepivacaine and related mechanisms by measuring ch...
The expression of purinergic receptors (P2X) on rat vestibular ganglion neurons (VGNs) was examined using whole-cell patch-clamp recordings. An application of adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP; 100microM) evoked inward currents in VGNs at a holding potential of -60mV. The decay time constant of the ATP-evoked currents was 2-4s, which is in between the...
Objectives: It is believed several ionic channels on the plasma membrane in odontoblasts play a critical role in dentin formation and the mediation of sensation of dentin and pulp. To clarify the direct ionic mechanism underlying the nociceptive function of odontoblasts, we investigated expression of transient receptor potential vallinoid subfamily...
Objectives: Peripheral olfactory receptor neurons, each putatively responsive to just a particular molecular attribute of odorants, are intermixed in the receptor epithelium. Their axons are sorted with respect to receptor identity and terminate in non-overlapping clusters in structures called glomeruli. In the accessory olfactory bulb (AOB), vomer...
Intracellular Ca(2+) is essential to many signal transduction pathways, and its level is tightly regulated by the Ca(2+) extrusion system in the plasma membrane, which includes the Na(+)-Ca(2+) exchanger (NCX). Although expression of NCX1 isoforms has been demonstrated in odontoblasts, the detailed properties of NCX remain to be clarified. In this...
We examined the firing properties of vestibular ganglion cells (VGCs) acutely isolated from wild or heterozygous brain-derived neurotrophic factor null mice, using the patch-clamp technique. VGCs obtained from wild-type mice showed diverse firing properties during sustained membrane depolarization; approximately half of the neurons exhibited strong...
Salivary gland acinar cells secrete large amounts of water and electrolytes, where aquaporins (AQPs) are thought to be involved in the secretion. In the present study, we investigated expression/localization of AQP6, and the anion transporting properties of AQP6 in mouse parotid acinar cells. RT-PCR, western blotting and immunohistochemical analyse...
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is accompanied by cognitive deficits and psychiatric symptoms. In the brain, dystrophin, the protein responsible for DMD, is localized to a subset of GABAergic synapses, but its role in brain function has not fully been addressed. Here, we report that defensive behaviour, a response to danger or a threat, is enhanc...
Individual primary vestibular afferents exhibit spontaneous activity the regularity of which can vary from regular to irregular. Different aspects of vestibular responsiveness have been associated with this dimension of regularity of resting discharge. Isolated rat vestibular ganglion cells (VGCs) showed heterogeneous intrinsic firing properties du...
GRIN1 (Gprin 1) is a signaling molecule coexpression of which with constitutively active form of Galphao can stimulate neurite extensions in Neuro2a cells, yet its in vivo roles remain elusive. Here, we examine expression profiles of GRIN1 during mouse development by in situ hybridization (ISH) and immunohistochemistry. ISH analysis revealed that G...
By altering their morphology, astrocytes, including those involved in the maintenance and plasticity of neurons and in clearance of transmitter, play important roles in synaptic transmission; however, the mechanism that regulates the morphological plasticity of astrocytes remains unclear. Recently, we reported that T1, a subtype of TrkB (a family o...
Membrane docking and fusion in neurons is a highly regulated process requiring the participation of a large number of SNAREs (soluble N-ethylmaleimide sensitive factor attachment protein receptors) and SNARE-interacting proteins. We found that mammalian Class C Vps protein complex associated specifically with nSec-1/Munc18-a, and syntaxin 1A both i...
Through tropomyosin-related kinase B (TrkB) receptors, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) performs many biological functions such as neural survival, differentiation, and plasticity. T1, an isoform of TrkB receptors that lacks a tyrosine kinase, predominates in the adult mammalian CNS, yet its role remains controversial. In this study, to exa...
Neurotransmitter is stored in synaptic vesicles and released by exocytosis into the synaptic cleft. One of the fundamental questions in central synaptic transmission is whether a quantal packet of transmitter saturates postsynaptic receptors. To address this question, we loaded the excitatory transmitter L-glutamate via whole-cell recording pipette...
The kinetic properties of tetrodotoxin-sensitive (TTX-S) and tetrodotoxin-resistant (TTX-R) Na' channels in acutely dissociated neonatal rat trigeminal ganglion neurons were studied using whole-cell and cell-attached patch-clamp recordings. The time course of TTX-R currents was slower than that of TTX-S currents. Compared with TTX-S currents, TTX-R...
Although agonists and competitive antagonists presumably occupy overlapping binding sites on ligand-gated channels, these interactions cannot be identical because agonists cause channel opening whereas antagonists do not. One explanation is that only agonist binding performs enough work on the receptor to cause the conformational changes that lead...
The cellular localization of metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) (mGluR1alpha, 2/3, 5a and 7) in the main and accessory olfactory bulb (MOB and AOB) of adult rats was compared by using affinity purified polyclonal antibodies directed to their C-termini. mGluR1alpha and mGluR5a immunoreactivities were located in comparable structures of the MO...
1. Paired whole-cell recordings were made from a glutamatergic giant nerve terminal, the calyx of Held, and its postsynaptic target cell in the medial nucleus of the trapezoid body (MNTB) in the brainstem slice of juvenile rat. Excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) were evoked by presynaptic action potentials triggered by brief (1 ms) depolarizi...
The effects of α-pompilidotoxin (α-PMTX), a new neurotoxin isolated from the venom of a solitary wasp, were studied on the neuromuscular synapses in lobster walking leg and the rat trigeminal ganglion (TG) neurons. Paired intracellular recordings from the presynaptic axon terminals and the innervating lobster leg muscles revealed that α-PMTX induce...
At nicotinic and glutamatergic synapses, the duration of the postsynaptic response depends on the affinity of the receptor for transmitter (Colquhoun et al., 1977;Pan et al., 1993). Affinity is often thought to be determined by the ligand unbinding rate, whereas the binding rate is assumed to be diffusion-limited. In this view, the receptor selects...
At many central excitatory synapses, AMPA receptors relay the electrical signal, whereas activation of NMDA receptors is conditional and serves a modulatory function. We show here quite a different role for NMDA receptors at dendrodendritic synapses between mitral and granule cells in the rat olfactory bulb. In whole-cell patch-clamp recordings in...
AMPA and NMDA receptor channels are closely related molecules, yet they respond to glutamate with distinct kinetics, attributable to differences in ligand binding and channel gating steps (for review, see Edmonds et al., 1995). We used two complementary approaches to investigate the number of functional binding sites on AMPA channels on outside-out...
To determine the subunit composition of high-affinity kainate receptors in native neurons is a challenging problem because of the expression of more than one GluR subunit. In the present study the question of whether GluR5 and/or GluR6 subunits combine with KA-1 or KA-2 subunits in vivo is addressed by performing detailed physiological, pharmacolog...
Premotor neurons projecting to the hypoglossal (XII) nucleus and participating in cortically-induced rhythmical tongue movements were defined by extracellular recording in the cat. Two thirds (37/57) of antidromically identified XII premotor neurons sampled in the rostral medullary parvocellular reticular formation showed changes in their firing pa...
17 beta-Estradiol (E2) has been shown to up-regulate the binding activity of the TRH receptor in rat pituitary cells. In this report, we investigated whether and how E2 alters TRH receptor expression at the mRNA level using the oocyte mRNA expression system, Northern blot analysis, and nuclear run-on assay. In oocytes injected with mRNA from the an...
The modulation of high-threshold Ca2+ currents by the selective metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluR) agonist (1S,3R)-1-aminocyclopentane-1,3-dicarboxylic acid (ACPD), was investigated in cultured hippocampal neurons using whole-cell voltage-clamp recording. ACPD reduced high-threshold Ca2+ currents carried by Ba2+ with an EC50 of 15.5 microM. Th...
Using the single-electrode voltage-clamp technique, we have examined the effects of a non-N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) antagonist. Joro spider toxin (JSTX), and of an NMDA antagonist, zinc, on excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) evoked by stimulation of stratum radiatum in CA1 pyramidal cells of the guinea-pig hippocampal slice. Pressure applic...
In order to measure unitary properties of receptor channels at the postsynaptic site, the noise within the decay phases of inhibitory postsynaptic currents (IPSCs) and of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)-dependent excitatory postsynaptic currents (EPSCs) in rat hippocampal neurons was studied by nonstationary fluctuation analysis. Least squares scaling...
A neurotoxin (JSTX) was isolated from the venom of spider (Nephila clavata). JSTX blocked both the excitatory postsynaptic (EPSPs) and glutamate-induced potentials in lobster neuromuscular synapse and squid giant synapse. In mammalian central nervous system, JSTX blocked the EPSPs in CAI pyramidal neurons resulting from stimulation of Schaffer coll...
1. The afferent-evoked synaptic input to lumbar spinal cord (L5-S1) neurons that were activated antidromically from the medial pontomedullary reticular formation (nucleus reticularis gigantocelluaris and vicinity) was investigated with the use of intracellular recordings in pentobarbital sodium-anesthetized cats. 2. Spinoreticular tract (SRT) neuro...
It is known that painful tissue injury evokes an increase in dynorphin in spinal neurons. It is not known, however, whether dynorphinergic systems respond similarly to the pain that accompanies peripheral neuropathy. Radioimmunoassays and immunocytochemistry were used to evaluate changes in dynorphin A(1-8) in the spinal cord of rats with a painful...
The effect of a toxin (JSTX) obtained from Nephila clavata (Joro spider) on the CA1 pyramidal neurons of the hippocampus was studied using slice preparations. JSTX blocked the excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) in the pyramidal neuron evoked by Schaffer collateral stimulation but was without effect on the antidromic action potentials or on...
Many of the neuropathic pain states that occur when human somatosensory nerves are damaged by disease or trauma are thought to involve pathological changes within the spinal segments innervated by the affected nerve. Investigations in animals that have had a peripheral nerve transected or crushed have revealed several neurochemical changes within t...
1. Single-unit activity was recorded from 215 neurons in the medial bulbar reticular formation during the masticatory sequence, from intake to deglutition, of 3 kinds of food (cat food pellets, canned fish, and milk) in 8 chronically prepared, unanesthetized, spontaneously respiring cats with their head fixed to a stereotaxic apparatus without pain...
Intracellular recordings were made from hypoglossal motoneurons during cortically-induced fictive mastication in paralyzed encéphale isolé cats. Repetitive stimulation of the masticatory area of the cerebral cortex induced rhythmical tongue movements coordinated with jaw movements. After the animal was immobilized, the cortical stimulation still in...
Synaptic basis of the rhythmical activity induced by repetitive stimulation of the masticatory area of the cerebral cortex was studied by intracellular recording from hypoglossal motoneurons in cats, with the following results: (1) Repetitive cortical stimulation induced rhythmical tongue movements coordinated with rhythmical jaw movements. After t...
Y Nakamura K Hiraba M Taira- [...]
A Iriki
Unitary activity was recorded from 17 bulbar reticular neurons, which fired rhythmically during mastication, in unanesthetized, spontaneously respiring cats during sleep and wakefulness. All these neurons showed the highest mean firing rate during food ingestion, and none of them showed any tonic discharge during active sleep. The results are discu...
We sought to identify those cells involved in the generation of atonia of the masseter muscles during active sleep. A neuronal population was examined in the medullary reticular formation which has been shown to project monosynaptically to trigeminal motoneurons and provide inhibitory input to them. These neurons exhibited a pattern of state-depend...
The diagastric nerve reflex response to stimulation of the upper lip was studied in urethan-anesthetized rabbits paralysed with pancuronium bromide. Rhythmic bursts of masticatory activity were evoked in the nerve by repetitive electrical stimulation of the motor cortex. The amplitude and latency of the reflex responses during fictive mastication w...
During food ingestion in cats, the activity of single bulbar reticular neurons showed rhythmical spike bursts during the active jaw opening phase of mastication. By utilizing spike-triggered averaging techniques, certain reticular cells were strongly suggested to be inhibitory neurons projecting to jaw closer motoneurons. We propose that these bulb...