Publications by authors named "Takatsugu Oishi"

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigated the health and meat production of cloned sows and their offspring to assess the viability of somatic cell cloning in the pig industry.
  • It found that cloned sows and their F1 and F2 progenies exhibited normal growth, reproductive performance, and carcass quality, comparable to conventional pigs.
  • Pathological analysis revealed no significant abnormalities, except for a minor issue in the F1 progenies, indicating that cloning could effectively help preserve superior pig breeds for meat production.
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For long-term xenograft survival, coagulation control is one of the remaining critical issues. Our attention has been directed toward human thrombomodulin (hTM), because it is expected to exhibit the following beneficial effects on coagulation control and cytoprotection: (i) to solve the problem of molecular incompatibility in protein C activation; (ii) to exert a role as a physiological regulator, only when thrombin is formed; (iii) to suppress direct prothrombinase activity; and (iv) to have anti-inflammatory properties. hTM gene was transfected into pig (Landrace/Yorkshire) fibroblasts using pCAGGS expression vector and pPGK-puro vector.

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Background: For successful organ xenotransplantation, genetically engineered pigs have been actively produced. Our attention has focused on (i) reduction of alphaGal expression by its digestion enzyme, endo-beta-galactosidase C (EndoGalC), and (ii) inhibition of complement activation by human decay accelerating factor (hDAF). Cell sorting and nuclear transfer enabled the effective production of cloned pigs expressing transgene at high levels.

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