Publications by authors named "J Y Kageyama"

Plants produce ∼300 aromatic compounds enzymatically linked to prenyl side chains via C-O bonds. These -prenylated aromatic compounds have been found in taxonomically distant plant taxa, with some of them being beneficial or detrimental to human health. Although their -prenyl moieties often play crucial roles in the biological activities of these compounds, no plant gene encoding an aromatic -prenyltransferase (-PT) has been isolated to date.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study aims to improve the classification and treatment of systemic autoimmune diseases by identifying molecular clusters, moving beyond traditional clinical diagnosis methods.
  • - Researchers analyzed blood samples from 955 patients and 267 healthy controls, discovering four distinct clusters: three linked to inflammatory responses and one related to low disease activity associated with healthy controls.
  • - The findings suggest that these molecular clusters are stable over time and can aid in understanding disease mechanisms and improving treatment strategies, potentially changing how systemic autoimmune diseases are approached in clinical settings.
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Lithospermum erythrorhizon is a medicinal plant that produces shikonin, a red lipophilic naphthoquinone derivative that accumulates exclusively in roots. The biosynthetic steps required to complete the naphthalene ring of shikonin and its mechanism of secretion remain unclear. Multiple omics studies identified several candidate genes involved in shikonin production.

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Amputation of the axolotl forelimb results in the formation of a blastema, a transient tissue where progenitor cells accumulate prior to limb regeneration. However, the molecular understanding of blastema formation had previously been hampered by the inability to identify and isolate blastema precursor cells in the adult tissue. We have used a combination of Cre-loxP reporter lineage tracking and single-cell messenger RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) to molecularly track mature connective tissue (CT) cell heterogeneity and its transition to a limb blastema state.

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