Publications by authors named "H Iinuma"

A 21-year-old previously healthy Japanese woman visited an outpatient clinic because of abdominal pain, watery diarrhea, vomiting, and mild fever that had started on the previous day. She traveled to rural and urban areas of Rwanda and returned to Japan 3 days before. Stool culture yielded the Plesiomonas shigelloides strain TMCH301018, against which minimum inhibitory concentrations of cefotaxime and cefotaxime-clavulanate were 128 and ≤0.

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Ryanodine receptor 2 (RyR2) is a Ca release channel mainly located on the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membrane of heart muscle cells and regulates the concentration of Ca in the cytosol. RyR2 overactivation causes potentially lethal cardiac arrhythmias, but no specific inhibitor is yet available. Herein we developed the first highly potent and selective RyR2 inhibitor, TMDJ-035, containing 3,5-difluoro substituents on the A ring and a 4-fluoro substituent on the B ring, based on a comprehensive structure-activity relationship (SAR) study of tetrazole compound 1.

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Ryanodine receptor 1 (RyR1) is a Ca-release channel expressed on the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membrane. RyR1 mediates release of Ca from the SR to the cytoplasm to induce muscle contraction, and mutations associated with overactivation of RyR1 cause lethal muscle diseases. Dantrolene sodium salt (dantrolene Na) is the only approved RyR inhibitor to treat malignant hyperthermia patients with RyR1 mutations, but is poorly water-soluble.

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Background & Aims: A detailed understanding of antitumor immunity is essential for optimal cancer immune therapy. Although defective mutations in the B2M and HLA-ABC genes, which encode molecules essential for antigen presentation, have been reported in several studies, the effects of these defects on tumor immunity have not been quantitatively evaluated.

Methods: Mutations in HLA-ABC genes were analyzed in 114 microsatellite instability-high colorectal cancers using a long-read sequencer.

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Mutations in the type 1 ryanodine receptor (RyR1), a Ca release channel in skeletal muscle, hyperactivate the channel to cause malignant hyperthermia (MH) and are implicated in severe heat stroke. Dantrolene, the only approved drug for MH, has the disadvantages of having very poor water solubility and long plasma half-life. We show here that an oxolinic acid-derivative RyR1-selective inhibitor, 6,7-(methylenedioxy)-1-octyl-4-quinolone-3-carboxylic acid (Compound 1, Cpd1), effectively prevents and treats MH and heat stroke in several mouse models relevant to MH.

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