Publications by authors named "Kyogoku K"

This study aimed to clarify the effects of vertical bone defect width and a ferrule on fracture of the fragments of fractured tooth reattached with adhesive resin cement (reattached tooth). The reattached tooth was built up by a fiber post and composite resin core for abutment and formed to the abutment with or without a ferrule. The vertical bone defect was fabricated with a V-shaped defect in different widths.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

RNA interference (RNAi) can inhibit Influenza A virus (IAV) infection in a gene-specific manner. In this study, we constructed a transgene expressing a short hairpin RNA (shRNA) that targets the noncoding region of the IAV RNA gene encoding nucleoprotein (NP). To investigate the antiviral effects of the shRNA, we generated two transgenic mouse lines with this transgene.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The transgenic chicken is a candidate for the production of biopharmaceutical proteins with several economic superiorities. In general, the addition of sialic acid at the terminal of N-glycan is important for the bioactivity of biopharmaceuticals including plasma half-life; however, sialic acid has not been detected in the N-glycan of proteins produced in the egg white of genetically manipulated chickens. In this study, the extracellular domain of the TNF receptor and single chain Fv fused to Fc (referred to as TNFR/Fc and scFv/Fc, respectively) were purified from the egg yolk of genetically manipulated chickens and their sialylation in N-glycan was examined.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We generated genetically manipulated chickens and quail by infecting them with a retroviral vector expressing the human growth hormone under the control of chicken ovalbumin promoter/enhancer up to -3861 bp from the transcriptional start site. The growth hormone was expressed in an oviduct-specific manner and was found in egg white, although its level was low. The DNA sequence of the integrated form of the viral vector in the packaging cells was shown to be truncated and contained only the sequence spanning -3861 to -1569 bp.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A theoretical model for the adhesive friction between elastomers and rough solid surfaces is proposed on the basis of opening crack propagation processes at the boundary of the contact interfaces and the rate processes of formation of molecular bonds on the solid surface. This model, which is expressed as a product of the terms related to the two abovementioned processes, requires some measurable and fitted parameters such as the frictional shear strength expressed as a function of viscoelastic dissipation, rate-dependent elasticity, density of bonded molecular chains at a contact junction, critical velocity related to viscoelastic relaxation, and critical velocity related to the rate process of formation of molecular bonds on the solid surface. The friction-velocity relationship exhibits a remarkable fit to previously obtained experimental results for polymers such as engineering rubber, gels, and plastics (glassy polymers), and all fitting parameters are physically reasonable.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We previously reported the production of recombinant proteins using genetically manipulated chickens and quails. In this study, we constructed a retroviral vector encoding an expression cassette for a fusion protein of the extracellular domain of the human tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor 2 and Fc region of human IgG1 (TNFR/Fc), which is expected as an effective drug for inflammatory diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis. The concentrated viral vector was injected into developing chicken embryos.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The use of transgenic avian species as a transgenic bioreactor for the production of recombinant proteins has been proposed. In recent years, although various procedures for generating transgenic chickens have been reported, the expression of a useful protein at a commercially feasible level has rarely been attained. In this study, we injected a concentrated retroviral vector into quail embryos to generate genetically manipulated quails that produce recombinant proteins.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The production of retroviral vectors using a transient expression system has been improved to obtain a high-titer virus preparation that is difficult to produce using packaging cell lines due to the cytotoxic or cytostatic effect of transgenes. Here, we used one such production method, the so-called Q-vector system, and examined its potential for virus production. The Q-vector system could produce a similar level of viral vectors compared with the packaging cell system but the production seemed to depend on the size and nature of transgenes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We report here the generation of transgenic chickens using a retroviral vector for the production of recombinant proteins. It was found that the transgene expression was suppressed when a Moloney murine leukemia virus-based retroviral vector was injected into chicken embryos at the blastodermal stage. When a concentrated viral solution was injected into the heart of developing embryos after 50 to 60 h of incubation, transgene expression was observed throughout the embryo, including the gonads.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A Bacillus licheniformis DNA fragment which exhibits homology with the upstream region of the cell-wall hydrolase-encoding gene, cwlL, was cloned into Escherichia coli (Ec). Nucleotide sequencing indicated that there are two open reading frames (tentatively designated as xpaG1 and xpaG2) which encode polypeptides of 89 and 88 amino acids (aa) (10044 and 9764 Da, respectively). Ec cells harboring two compatible plasmids (pMWB1 and pHSGKH) containing the Bacillus subtilis cell-wall hydrolase-encoding gene, cwlA, and xpaG1-G2, respectively, exhibited higher extra-cellular cell-wall hydrolase activity than did cells harboring pMWB1 and a control plasmid, pHSG398.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The gastric cytoprotective action of SU-88, an anti-ulcer agent, was studied in rats. SU-88 dose-dependently prevented the formation of gastric lesions induced by absolute ethanol as observed by PGE2. The efficacy of SU-88 when given i.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

2'-Carboxymethoxy-4,4'-bis(3-methyl-2-butenyloxy) chalcone (SU-88) has an anti-ulcer effect which is considered to increase the resistant factors of the gastric mucosa. In order to clarify the mechanism of the action of SU-88, the biosynthesis of gastric sulfated mucosubstances (SMS) in vivo and in vitro was investigated in rats with gastric erosion induced by restraint and water-immersion. The incorporation of 35S-sulfate into gastric SMS was significantly reduced 18 hr after the onset of stress.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The topical and systemic anti-inflammatory activities of hydrocortisone 17-butyrate 21-propionate (HBP) were studied. The systemic anti-inflammatory activities of HBP and reference steroids were examined for their effects on dinitrochlorobenzene dermatitis, carrageenin edema, cotton pellet granuloma and adjuvant arthritis in rats and by the delayed allergic edema test in mice. The topical anti-inflammatory activities of these steroids were examined for their effects on croton oil dermatitis, croton oil ear edema, carrageenin edema and cotton pellet granuloma in rats.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A series of extracted fractions from sophora subprostrata was screened by determining anti-ulcer effects in pylorus ligated and stressed rats. Fr. [C-2] had the most potent anti-ulcer effects of all fractions extracted.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF