Publications by authors named "Shoichi Yamada"

Article Synopsis
  • Core-collapse supernovae (CCSNe) are super powerful explosions that happen when big stars die, creating things like neutron stars and black holes.
  • This review explains how CCSNe work, focusing on the importance of particles called neutrinos in these explosions.
  • It also looks into the details of how neutrinos interact and discusses some of the unresolved questions scientists still have.
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Aims: Sarcopenia, which shortens healthy life expectancy, has recently been attracting attention because the Japanese population is rapidly aging. In this preliminary study, we estimated the prevalence of elderly diabetic patients who were complicated with sarcopenia and searched for any related clinical factors.

Methods: Elderly (≥65 years of age) Japanese patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus were recruited by asking doctors to supply candidates for the study.

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Aim: Diabetes mellitus is reported to be a risk factor for dementia. We evaluated the cognitive function in elderly diabetic patients and estimated the prevalence of patients with cognitive impairment and looked for any related clinical factors.

Subjects And Methods: Using 281 elderly (65 years of age or older) Japanese patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus who were free of clinically evident cognitive impairment, we evaluated their cognitive function with the Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE).

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We propose to employ the circular polarization of gravitational waves emitted by core-collapse supernovae as an unequivocal indication of rapid rotation deep in their cores just prior to collapse. It has been demonstrated by three dimensional simulations that nonaxisymmetric accretion flows may develop spontaneously via hydrodynamical instabilities in the postbounce cores. It is not surprising, then, that the gravitational waves emitted by such fluid motions are circularly polarized.

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The major fish allergen is parvalbumin, a sarcoplasmic protein. In this study, a novel lateral flow immunoassay for the detection of fish protein in food products was developed using a polyclonal antibody raised against Pacific mackerel Scomber japonicus parvalbumin. The proposed lateral flow immunoassay showed high reactivity to various fish parvalbumins, but the reactivity to bullfrog parvalbumin was very low.

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Fish is one of the most common causes of food allergy and its major allergen is parvalbumin, a 12 kDa muscular protein. In this study, a sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the determination of fish protein in processed foods was developed using a polyclonal antibody raised against Pacific mackerel parvalbumin. The developed sandwich ELISA showed 22.

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Nine new 26-membered macrolides of the oligomycin subfamily, neomaclafungins A-I, were isolated from the fermentation broth of Actinoalloteichus sp. NPS702, which was isolated from marine sediment collected from Usa Bay, Kochi Prefecture, Japan. Their structures were identified through mass spectrometry and NMR experiments.

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New anthramycin-type analogues, designated usabamycin A-C (1, 2 and 3), have been isolated from cultures of Streptomyces sp. NPS853, a bacterium found in marine sediments. The structures of the new compounds were established on the basis of extensive spectroscopic analyses including 1D- and 2D-NMR ((1)H-(1)H COSY, HSQC, and HMBC) experiments.

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The presence of any Listeria species in food may be an indicator of poor hygiene in food processing facilities. The biochemical identification of Listeria species is laborious and time consuming. Therefore, the development of novel identification methods that are rapid and simple to perform would be an asset.

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Nuclear matter is considered to be inhomogeneous at subnuclear densities that are realized in supernova cores and neutron star crusts, and the structures of nuclear matter change from spheres to cylinders, slabs, cylindrical holes, and spherical holes as the density increases. In this Letter, we discuss other possible structures, that is, gyroid and double-diamond morphologies, which are periodic bicontinuous structures discovered in a block copolymer. Utilizing the compressible liquid drop model, we show that there is a chance of gyroid appearance near the transition point from a cylinder to a slab and the volume fraction at this point is also similar for nuclear and polymer systems.

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A marine-derived actinomyces strain (NPS554) isolated from a marine sediment sample collected from Miyazaki Harbor, Japan, at a depth of 38 m yielded two trialkyl-substituted aromatic acids, lorneic acid A (1) and lorneic acid B (2). The structures of the lorneic acids, which were elucidated by spectroscopic analysis, differed only in the side-chain, which contained either a conjugated double bond or a benzylic alcohol. Their structural differences affected inhibition activities against phosphodiesterase 5.

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Six antitumor antibiotics of a new structure class, indoxamycins A-F (1-6), were isolated from a saline culture group of marine-derived actinomyces whose strains showed approximately 96% sequence homology of 16S rDNA with the family streptomycetaceae. The structures of these indoxamycins, which are unusual polyketides composed of six consecutive chiral centers, were assigned by combined spectral and chemical methods. In feeding experiments using a stable isotope label, indoxamycin A was assembled from propionate units initially forming the "aglycon" pentamethyl indeno furan.

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Background: Chronic kidney disease (CKD) and metabolic syndrome have been recognized as risk factors for cardiovascular disease. However, there is no information comparing their impact on macroangiopathy in diabetic patients. Thus, we studied the prevalence of CKD and metabolic syndrome in Japanese type 2 diabetic patients and then compared their impact on peripheral arterial disease (PAD) in type 2 diabetic patients.

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Trimethylamine-N-oxide (TMAO) is abundant in marine fish. Formaldehyde synthesis by TMAO demethylation during storage markedly deteriorates fish meat. In the present work, we cloned the extremely aspartic acid-rich proteins from skeletal muscle of a commercially important species, walleye pollack, in the course of molecular identification of trimethylamine-N-oxide demethylase (TMAOase).

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