Publications by authors named "A Nagasaka"

Background: The acini, the secretory endpieces of the salivary glands, are composed of serous and/or mucous acinar cells and surrounded by myoepithelial cells. Myoepithelial cells are multipolar, stellate cells with long processes encircling the acini and intercalated ducts. These cells contract to facilitate salivary secretion and transport.

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Objectives: Adiponectin is a hormone produced by adipocytes with anti-atherosclerotic and anti-diabetic properties. We previously discovered that adiponectin is specifically localized in the myoepithelial cells of rat sublingual glands. This study aims to investigate the localization of adiponectin and its receptors, AdipoR1 and AdipoR2, in adult rats, postnatally developing rats, and diabetic model rats.

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Inflammasome activation is implicated in diseases of aberrant angiogenesis such as age-related macular degeneration (AMD), though its precise role in choroidal neovascularization (CNV), a characteristic pathology of advanced AMD, is ill-defined. Reports on inhibition of inflammasome constituents on CNV are variable and the precise role of inflammasome in mediating pathological angiogenesis is unclear. Historically, subretinal injection of inflammasome agonists alone has been used to investigate retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE) degeneration, while the laser photocoagulation model has been used to study pathological angiogenesis in a model of CNV.

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Article Synopsis
  • International travel increases the risk of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) due to factors like more sexual opportunities and the appeal of the sex industry.
  • A study in Japan from October 2017 to December 2022 found that out of 4,545 travel-related illnesses, only 52 (1.1%) were STIs, predominantly affecting males with a median age of 31.
  • The most common STIs reported were HIV (17%), genital herpes (13%), syphilis (13%), and gonorrhea (12%), highlighting the need for greater awareness and vaccination to prevent these infections.
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Along with the rapid development of cellular biological research in recent years, there has been an urgent need for a high-speed, high-precision method of separating target cells from a highly heterogeneous cell population. Among the various cell separation technologies proposed so far, dielectrophoresis (DEP)-based approaches have shown particular promise because they are noninvasive to cells. We have developed a new DEP-based device to separate large numbers of live and dead cells of the human mammary cell line MCF10A.

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