Publications by authors named "Tamami Namiki"

Decontamination of the radioactive cesium that is widely dispersed owing to a nuclear power station accident and concentrated in fly ash requires an effective elimination system. Radioactive fly ash contains large amounts of water-soluble cesium that can cause severe secondary contamination and represents a serious health risk, yet its complete removal is complicated and difficult. Here it is shown that a new fine-powder formulation can be magnetically guided to eliminate cesium after being mixed with the ash slurry.

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Purpose: To investigate the potential use of Prussian blue-coated magnetic nanoparticles, termed "Prussian blueberry", to bring about the magnetic elimination of cesium.

Methods: Prussian blueberry were prepared by a layer-by-layer assembly method. The morphology, structure and physical properties of the Prussian blueberry were investigated as was their ability to magnetically eliminate cesium.

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Cancer gene therapy requires a safe and effective gene delivery system. Polymer- and lipid-coated magnetic nanocrystals have been used to deliver silencing RNA, but synthesizing these magnetic vectors is difficult. Here, we show that a new nanoparticle formulation can be magnetically guided to deliver and silence genes in cells and tumours in mice.

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We evaluated the effect of a "tailor-made" chemo-gene therapy in scirrhous gastric cancer (SGC)-bearing nude mice. For this tailor-made approach, we first selected gefitinib (epidermal growth factor receptor-tyrosine kinase inhibitor)-sensitive SGC cell lines, and 5/8 cell lines demonstrated various degrees of gefitinib-sensitivity. In the highly gefitinib-sensitive NUGC-4, the biological response to NK4 (HGF antagonist/angiogenesis inhibitor) was examined.

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Lipophilic photosensitizers hold potential for cancer photodynamic therapy. We sought to develop a novel photosensitive stealth liposome (PSSL) which incorporating a lipophilic photosensitizer into its lipid bilayer and to examine its photoactivity. We prepared PSSL composed of lipophilic chlorin e6 (Ce6) ester, dilauroylphosphatidylcholine, dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine and distearoyl-phosphoethanolamine-N-[poly (ethylene glycol) 2000] and evaluated its photodynamic effect against gastric cancer cell lines and tumor-bearing nude mice models.

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