Publications by authors named "Kikumi Ogiwara"

Melanoma is the most aggressive type of skin cancer and it is procured from activated or genetically altered epidermal melanocytes. In the present study, the tumor-suppressive effects of systemic and local injections of lupeol, a triterpene extracted from Indian lettuce (), in a melanoma-bearing mouse model were evaluated. Mice were injected once with lupeol or olive oil (solvent control) subcutaneously into the skin of the back or into the tumor tissue.

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Electron microscopic observation revealed that lupeol induced melanosome maturation in B16 2F2 mouse melanoma cells and we therefore studied the effects of lupeol on the intracellular events responsible for melanosome transport. Incubation with lupeol for 8 h attenuated the actin stress fiber assembly in B16 2F2 mouse melanoma cells, resulting in dendritic formation in the cells. Longer exposure to lupeol (48 h) increased the expression of tyrosinase, MITF (a specific transcription factor for tyrosinase), Rab27a, and myosin-Va, which are required for melanosome transport.

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Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) can stimulate human and rat bone marrow (BM) cells to differentiate into hepatocytes. A human placental hydrolysate (hPH) stimulates proliferation of hepatocytes, but its role as a potential inducer of BM cells to form hepatocytes is unclear. To determine if canine BM cells stimulated with HGF or hPH differentiate into hepatocyte-like cells, BM cells were cultured with HGF or hPH.

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