Publications by authors named "Rie Satoh"

BW10kDa, which is a buckwheat (BW) allergen, belongs to the 2S-albumin protein family, akin to Fag e 2. Detailed analyses of BW10kDa were lacking until this study. Herein, we conducted these analyses using monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) to recombinant BW10kDa (rBW10kDa).

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Buckwheat allergy is an immediate hypersensitivity reaction that includes anaphylaxis mediated by specific IgE antibodies. Several IgE-binding proteins in common buckwheat have been reported to be possible clinically relevant buckwheat allergens. Although common buckwheat is popularly consumed in Asia, buckwheat allergy is becoming a serious problem not only in Asia but also in Europe.

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To understand the allergenicity of rice bran, the distribution of rice allergens in brown rice grains was analysed and the allergenicity of cosmetics and health foods containing rice bran determined. RAG2 and a 19-kDa globulin were localized in polished rice, while a 52-kDa globulin was localized in rice bran. The 52-kDa globulin was also identified as the most likely causative allergen of rice bran allergy.

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Scope: Buckwheat is a common food allergen frequently consumed in Asian countries, with Fag e 1 and Fag e 2 being the major buckwheat allergens. The purpose of this study is to prepare an oral immunotherapy agent by attenuating these allergens via phosphorylation. The immunomodulatory effects of phosphorylated Fag e 2 (P-Fag e 2) in a mouse model of buckwheat allergy are evaluated.

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In rice, several allergens have been identified such as the non-specific lipid transfer protein-1, the α-amylase/trypsin-inhibitors, the α-globulin, the 33 kDa glyoxalase I (Gly I), the 52-63 kDa globulin, and the granule-bound starch synthetase. The goal of the present study was to define optimal rice extraction and detection methods that would allow a sensitive and reproducible measure of several classes of known rice allergens. In a three-laboratory ring-trial experiment, several protein extraction methods were first compared and analyzed by 1D multiplexed SDS-PAGE.

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Salt-soluble proteins extracted from non-transgenic and transgenic rice were evaluated for the presence of known and potential allergens by proteomic techniques. The salt-soluble proteins were extracted, separated by 1D and 2D electrophoresis, and analyzed by Western blotting. 1D immunoblot analysis with patients' sera revealed few qualitative differences between the IgE-binding proteins of the non-transgenic and transgenic rice.

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To produce crops that are more tolerant to stresses such as heat, cold, and salt, transgenic plants have been produced those express stress-associated proteins. In this study, we used immunoproteomic and two-dimensional difference gel electrophoresis (2D-DIGE) methods to investigate the allergenicity of transgenic potatoes expressing Arabidopsis DREB1A (dehydration responsive element-binding protein 1A), driven by the rd29A promoter or the 35S promoter. Immunoproteomic analysis using sera from potato-allergic patients revealed several immunoglobulin E (IgE)-binding protein spots.

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The 2D-DIGE (2-Dimensional Fluorescence Difference Gel Electrophoresis) method was applied to proteomic phenotyping of natural variants in 10 varieties of rice (Nipponbare, Koshihikari, Sasanishiki, Akitakomachi, Hitomebore, Hinohikari, Kasalath, Rexark, Bleiyo, Cho-ko) from the world rice collection (WRC) in the GenBank of the National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences (NIAS), Japan. Salt-soluble protein extracts of Nipponbare brown rice were labeled with Cy2 fluorochrome and used as an internal standard. Protein extracts from nine other rice varieties were labeled with Cy3 or Cy5 fluorochrome and applied to 2D-PAGE (13cm gel length) analysis.

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Background: The buckwheat 16-kDa protein (BWp16), as reported in our previous study, is a major allergen in buckwheat; however, the IgE-binding epitopes of BWp16 have not as yet been identified.

Methods: We screened candidates for IgE-binding epitopes on BWp16 by using arrays of overlapping peptides synthesized on activated cellulose membranes (SPOTs membrane). The mimotope method was also used to analyze IgE-binding epitopes of BWp16.

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During the fall of 2009, a trace of unauthorized genetically modified (GM) flax (Linum usitatissimum L.) line, CDC Triffid, which is resistant to sulfonylurea herbicides, was detected in many countries including Japan. A method to reliably identify the CDC Triffid line was urgently required.

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A 16 kDa buckwheat protein (BWp16) is a major allergen responsible for immediate hypersensitivity reactions including anaphylaxis. A deletion mutant of BWp16 (rBWp16DeltaN) was overproduced and purified and was shown to be immunologically active. A three-wavelength MAD data set was collected from a crystal of selenomethionine-labelled rBWp16DeltaN.

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Genetically modified (GM) foods are beneficial from the standpoint of ensuring a constant supply of foodstuffs, but they must be tested for safety before being released on the market, including by allergenicity tests to ensure that they do not contain new allergens or higher concentrations of known allergens than the same non-GM foods. In this study we used GM-amago salmon into which a growth hormone gene had been introduced and compared the allergens contained in the GM and the non-GM-amago salmons. We used a combination of Western blotting with allergen-specific antibodies and a proteomic analysis of their allergens with patients' sera, a so-called allergenome analysis, to analyze allergens.

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Buckwheat allergy is one of the most critical diseases manifested by severe and dangerous symptoms in Japan and other countries. We previously isolated the cDNA encoding protein BWp16, a member of the 2S albumin family with a conserved motif of 8 cysteine (Cys) residues. Comparison of the deduced amino acid sequences of BWp16 and related proteins in the 2S albumin family showed similarities between BWp16 and BW 8-kDa from buckwheat, Ara h 6 from peanuts and Ric c 1 from castor bean.

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The relationship between the structure and cytotoxic activity of azulenequinones and trihaloacetylazulenes was investigated based on theoretical calculations. Four different dipole moments (mu(G), mu(ESP-G), mu(W) and mu(ESP-W)) and heats of formation (DeltaH(f)) of the azulenequinones [1-27] and trihaloacetylazulenes [28a,b-40a,b] were separately calculated in gas phase and aqueous solution using the conductor-like screening model/parametric method 3 (COSMO/PM3) method. The cytotoxic activity of azulenequinones was well correlated to DeltaDeltaH(f) HOMO energy and mu(ESP-w).

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ABSCISIC ACID-RESPONSIVE ELEMENT BINDING PROTEIN1 (AREB1) (i.e., ABF2) is a basic domain/leucine zipper transcription factor that binds to the abscisic acid (ABA)-responsive element (ABRE) motif in the promoter region of ABA-inducible genes.

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We have previously reported that sodium fluoride (NaF) showed slightly higher cytotoxicity against human oral tumor cell lines than normal human oral cells. Possible changes in the NaF sensitivity of three normal human oral cell types (gingival fibroblast HGF, pulp cell HPC, periodontal ligament fibroblast HPLF) during in vitro ageing were investigated in the present study. When these cells were subcultured at 1:4 split ratio every week, their saturation density declined with increasing population doubling level (PDL), and they ceased to divide when they reached 20 PDL.

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A total of eleven stilbenes [1-6] and flavonoids [7-11] were investigated for their tumor- specific cytotoxicity and apoptosis-inducing activity, using four human tumor cell lines (squamous cell carcinoma HSC-2, HSC-3, submandibular gland carcinoma HSG and promyelocytic leukemia HL-60) and three normal human oral cells (gingival fibroblast HGF, pulp cell HPC, periodontal ligament fibroblast HPLF). All of the compounds, especially sophorastilbene A [1], (+)-alpha-viniferin [2], piceatannol [5], quercetin [9] and isoliquiritigenin [10], showed higher cytotoxicity against the tumor cell lines than normal cells, yielding tumor-specific indices of 3.6, 4.

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A 6-bp sequence, ACTCAT, acts as a cis-acting element involved in hypoosmolarity- and proline-responsive expression of an Arabidopsis proline dehydrogenase (ProDH) gene. Search of the database for plant cis-acting elements revealed that the ACTCAT sequence is similar to the GCN4 motif [ATGA(C/G)TCAT] that is recognized by bZIP transcription factors. To identify transcription factor(s) for regulation of ProDH, we examined whether Arabidopsis bZIPs function as transcription factors for the ACTCAT sequence.

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Plants respond and adapt to drought stress in order to survive under stress conditions. Several genes that respond to drought at the transcriptional level have been described, but there are few reports on genes involved in the recovery from dehydration. Analysis of rehydration-inducible genes should help not only to understand the molecular mechanisms of stress responses in higher plants, but also to improve the stress tolerance of crops by gene manipulation.

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Diabetes, a disease in which carbohydrate and lipid metabolism are regulated improperly by insulin, is a serious worldwide health issue. Insulin is secreted from pancreatic beta cells in response to elevated plasma glucose, with various factors modifying its secretion. Free fatty acids (FFAs) provide an important energy source as nutrients, and they also act as signalling molecules in various cellular processes, including insulin secretion.

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Proline (Pro) is one of the most widely distributed osmolytes in water-stressed plants. We previously isolated from Arabidopsis a gene encoding Pro dehydrogenase (ProDH), a mitochondrial enzyme involved in the first step of the conversion of Pro to glutamic acid. The ProDH gene in Arabidopsis is up-regulated by rehydration after dehydration but is down-regulated by dehydration.

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