Publications by authors named "Atsushi Miyata"

The oleaginous yeast is receiving widespread attention as an alternative energy source for biofuels due to its unicellular nature, high growth rate and because it can be fermented on a large-scale. In this study, was cultured under both light and dark conditions in order to understand the light response involved in lipid and carotenoid biosynthesis. Our results from phenotype and gene expression analysis showed that responded to light by producing darker pigmentation with an associated increase in carotenoid production.

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Cement lines represent mineralized, extracellular matrix interfacial boundaries at which bone resorption by osteoclasts is followed by bone deposition by osteoblasts. To determine the contribution of cement lines to bone quality, the osteopetrotic c-Src mouse model-where cement lines accumulate and persist as a result of defective osteoclastic resorption-was used to investigate age-related changes in structural and mechanical properties of bone having long-lasting cement lines. Cement lines of osteopetrotic bones in c-Src knockout mice progressively mineralized with age up to the level that the entire matrix of cement lines was lost by EDTA decalcification.

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Background: The main challenge to the long-term treatment of osteoporosis with bisphosphonates has been patient adherence. The purposes of this cohort study were to investigate the 3-year outcome of alendronate treatment in postmenopausal Japanese women with osteoporosis and to identify factors that contributed to the discontinuation of alendronate treatment.

Methods: A total of 72 postmenopausal Japanese women with osteoporosis and aged from 58 to 85 years were treated with alendronate in a 3-year trial.

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A retrospective study was conducted to evaluate the outcome of treatment with alendronate (ALN) for 5 years in postmenopausal Japanese women with an increased risk of fractures. Forty postmenopausal Japanese women with osteoporosis or osteopenia and clinical risk factors for fractures (mean age: 75.4 years) were analyzed; 33 patients were treated with alendronate and 7 were treated with alfacalcidol (ALF, controls) in an outpatient clinic run by general practitioners.

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C-src deficiency is characterized by osteopetrosis due to impaired bone resorption by hypofunctional osteoclasts and the resultant failure of tooth eruption. In preliminary observations, we frequently encountered erupted molars in c-src deficient mice unlike in other osteopetrotic animals. Here we examine the effects of c-src deficiency on the development of molar teeth with an emphasis on the spatial relation of growing teeth with the surrounding bones.

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To investigate the long-term effects of c-src deficiency on skeletal and dental tissues, we examined the lower jaws and long bones of c-src gene knockout (c-src KO) mice by histological and histochemical methods. Numerous multinucleated osteoclasts were distributed throughout the mandible in 5-wk-old c-src KO mice, but by 14 wk they had almost completely disappeared from the alveolar bone, leaving tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP)-positive layers along the bone surface. Deposition of osteopontin-positive mineralized tissue, reminiscent of acellular afibrillar cementum (AAC), was confirmed along the TRAP-positive bone surface at 14 wk.

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