Publications by authors named "H Kitazaki"

It has been reported that anti-A and anti-B (ABO antibody) titers decrease with age, but little is known about the association between ABO antibody titers and physiologic/biochemical parameters such as body mass index (BMI), gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT), and total cholesterol (T-Cho). We investigated the present situation of ABO antibody titers among healthy blood donors in Japan and the physiologic/biochemical factors that may be associated with changes in ABO antibody titers. Plasma from 7450 Japanese blood donors was tested for ABO antibody titers using ABO reverse typing reagents by an automated microplate system; donor samples were classified into low, middle, and high titers according to the agglutination results obtained with diluted plasma samples.

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Background And Objectives: Previously (2007), it was reported that ABO antibody titers in Japanese blood donors had decreased significantly compared to 20 years before. Here we evaluated whether further decrease of antibody titers had occurred in recent years, and the potential factors associated with changes in antibody titers.

Materials And Methods: Serum/plasma from random blood donors in 2010 and 2021 (2010: 3369, 2021: 5796 donors) was classified into low, middle, and high ABO antibody titers according to the reactivity of diluted serum/plasma (2.

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Background: Several serum biomarkers such as antigens, soluble proteins, metabolites, and genes have been identified for the diagnosis of cancers and for monitoring the recurrence after cancer treatment.

Methods: In the present study, a protein kinase C (PKC) α-specific peptide substrate was phosphorylated with serum samples collected from cancer-bearing mice (U87, A431, HepG2, and A549) and the phosphorylation ratio was detected by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS).

Results: The phosphorylation ratio for peptide substrates significantly increased in the serum of cancer-bearing mice compared with the ratio found in control mice.

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Background: Recently, we reported on the existence of activated protein kinase Cα (PKCα) in blood and the possibility for its use in cancer diagnosis.

Materials And Methods: In the present study, serum samples collected from patients with different lung cancer types (small-cell cancer, adenocarcinoma, and anaplastic cancer) were phosphorylated with a PKCα-specific peptide substrate and the phosphorylation ratio was detected by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time-of-flight mass spectrometry.

Results: When 13 patient serum samples were phosphorylated with peptide substrates, phosphorylated peaks were obtained in eight samples.

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We succeeded in applying gold nanorods (NRs) for the detection of protein kinase (PK) activity based on a substrate-induced coagulation mechanism. Because NRs have cationic surface charges due to surface-adsorbed cetyltrimethylammonium bromide, phosphorylated substrate peptides, which gain augmented anionic charges by phosphorylation, induce coagulation of the NRs, resulting in a red-to-blue color change of the corresponding NR dispersion. A large absorption coefficient of the NRs at the near-IR region enabled clear-cut detection of the peptide-induced coagulation.

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