Publications by authors named "Tetsuya Hayashi"

Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a progressive condition that frequently leads to right ventricular (RV) remodeling. Aldosterone promotes vascular and RV remodeling. The upregulation of steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (StAR) stimulates aldosterone synthesis.

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Unlabelled: We investigated the impact of intracellular hydrogen sulfide (HS) hyperaccumulation on the transcriptome of . The wild-type (WT) strain overexpressing , encoding 3-mercaptopyruvate sulfur transferase, produced significantly higher HS levels than the control WT strain. The -overexpressing strain exhibited increased resistance to antibiotics, supporting the prior hypothesis that intracellular HS contributes to oxidative stress responses and antibiotic resistance.

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  • * The study evaluated the degradation behaviors of several anti-influenza drugs in urban rivers and a wastewater treatment plant, finding that newer drugs like BALM degrade quickly while older drugs persist in the environment.
  • * Ozonation after biological treatment was highly effective (over 90% removal) in eliminating anti-influenza drugs, highlighting its importance in managing pollution and reducing the risk of drug resistance in aquatic settings.
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The problem of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is not limited to the medical field but is also becoming prevalent on a global scale in the environmental field. Environmental water pollution caused by the discharge of wastewater into aquatic environments has caused concern in the context of the sustainable development of modern society. However, there have been few studies focused on the treatment of hospital wastewater, and the potential consequences of this remain unknown.

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  • Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (STEC) causes severe gastrointestinal issues, particularly linked to Stx2, which poses greater risks than Stx1.
  • A study of 71 strains in the O145:H28 lineage reveals the dynamic nature of Stx phages, including their acquisition, transfer, and variations affecting Stx2 production levels.
  • Short-tailed Stx2 phages are associated with higher production levels of Stx2 than long-tailed variants, highlighting genetic differences that influence these levels.
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  • * A study examined immune cell types and immunoglobulin levels in 39 patients who survived more than a year post-transplant, revealing significant differences based on the type of GVHD prophylaxis used.
  • * Results indicated that patients receiving posttransplantation cyclophosphamide (PTCy) had better B-cell recovery and higher serum IgG levels compared to those treated conventionally, suggesting PTCy could help mitigate cGVHD.
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  • - Community-associated methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) infections are rising as a public health concern, particularly in community settings like maternity clinics, with a specific outbreak in Japan identified through analysis techniques.
  • - A study analyzed 151 CA-MRSA isolates, identifying 133 related to the outbreak, which belonged to a lineage called the TDC clone, part of the clonal complex 30 (SWP clone).
  • - The research highlighted that the TDC clone had been present before the outbreak, showing long persistence in carriers, high transmission within households, and significant genetic changes tied to mobile genetic elements that affected antibiotic resistance.
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  • * Research found that E. faecalis avoids elimination and proliferates in the intestines by forming biofilms instead of gaining drug-resistance genes, complicating treatment options.
  • * An enzyme derived from E. faecalis-specific bacteriophages demonstrated effectiveness against biofilm-forming E. faecalis, leading to reduced pathogen levels and improved survival in gnotobiotic mice with aGVHD, suggesting
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In gram-negative bacteria, IS26 often exists in multidrug resistance (MDR) regions, forming a pseudocompound transposon (PCTn) that can be tandemly amplified. It also generates a circular intermediate called the "translocatable unit (TU)", but the TU has been detected only by PCR. Here, we demonstrate that in a Klebsiella pneumoniae MDR clone, mono- and multimeric forms of the TU were generated from the PCTn in a preexisting MDR plasmid where the inserted form of the TU was also tandemly amplified.

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How bifidobacteria colonize and survive in the intestine is not fully understood. The administration of bifidobacteria to conventional mice can be used to evaluate their ability to colonize the intestine in the presence of endogenous gut microbiota. However, human-derived bifidobacteria do not readily colonize the intestines of conventional mice, and although colonization by UCC2003 has been achieved, the viability of such populations requires improvement.

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Heart rate variability analyses using Poincaré plots can be useful for evaluating the autonomic nervous system function. However, the interpretation of the quantitative indicators of Poincaré plots remains controversial. Thus, few studies have verified the effectiveness of the quantitative indicators in veterinary medicine.

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Quantum key distribution (QKD) is a secure communication scheme for sharing symmetric cryptographic keys based on the laws of quantum physics, and is considered a key player in the realm of cyber-security. A critical challenge for QKD systems comes from the fact that the ever-increasing rates at which digital data are transmitted require more and more performing sources of quantum keys, primarily in terms of secret key generation rate. High-dimensional QKD based on path encoding has been proposed as a candidate approach to address this challenge.

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Tailocins are headless phage tail structures that mediate interbacterial antagonism. Although the prototypical tailocins, R- and F-pyocins, in Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and other predominantly R-type tailocins have been studied, their presence in Alphaproteobacteria remains unexplored. Here, we report the first alphaproteobacterial F-type tailocin, named rhizoviticin, as a determinant of the biocontrol activity of Allorhizobium vitis VAR03-1 against crown gall.

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While conjugation-related genes have been identified in many plasmids by genome sequencing, functional analyses have not yet been performed in most cases, and a full set of conjugation genes has been identified for only a few plasmids. Rts1, a prototype IncT plasmid, is a conjugative plasmid that was originally isolated from Proteus vulgaris. Here, we conducted a systematic deletion analysis of Rts1 to fully understand its conjugation system.

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Microbiota consisting of various fungi and bacteria have a significant impact on the physiological functions of the host. However, it is unclear which species are essential to this impact and how they affect the host. This study analyzed and isolated microbes from natural food sources of larvae, and investigated their functions.

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The complete genome sequences of 11 Japanese isolates were determined by hybrid assembly of long and short reads, including two strains isolated from patients with acute infectious purpura fulminans, six strains from patients with sepsis, and three strains from patients with pneumonia.

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We propose a method for shape sensing that employs Rayleigh-signature domain multiplexing to simultaneously probe the fibers or cores of a shape sensing setup with a single optical frequency-domain reflectometry scan. The technique enables incrementing the measurement speed by a factor equal to the number of multiplexed fibers at the expense of an increased noise floor in accordance with the Cramér-Rao lower bound. Nonetheless, we verify that the shape reconstruction performance of the proposed method is in very good agreement with that of conventional sequential core interrogation.

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  • Plasmids contribute significantly to the genetic diversity of bacteria, as evidenced by the study analyzing 142 closed genomes, which identified 132 plasmids in various strains, highlighting their role in genome evolution.
  • The research found that while there was no significant difference in plasmid numbers between clinical and non-clinical strains, certain hospital-adapted lineages (like clade 2) contained more plasmids, with a notable proportion being associated with antimicrobial and heavy metal resistance.
  • Clustering analysis revealed distinct groups of plasmids with varied GC content and highlighted their potential for interclade transmission and wider host-range capabilities, suggesting a complex ecological relationship among strains in different environments. *
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The emergence and spread of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) continue on a global scale. The impacts of wastewater on the environment and human health have been identified, and understanding the environmental impacts of hospital wastewater and exploring appropriate forms of treatment are major societal challenges. In the present research, we evaluated the efficacy of ozone (O)-based advanced wastewater treatment systems (O, O/HO, O/UV, and O/UV/HO) for the treatment of antimicrobials, antimicrobial-resistant bacteria (AMRB), and antimicrobial resistance genes (AMRGs) in wastewater from medical facilities.

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A 1-month-old crossbred calf was referred for examination due to marked systolic heart murmurs and poor growth. The heart murmur was most audible on the right side of the cranial thorax. Cardiomegaly was evident on chest radiography, and echocardiography demonstrated aortic regurgitation and decreased fractional shortening.

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  • - The study investigates the virulence of various strains of Shigatoxigenic and enteropathogenic E. coli (STEC and EPEC) O80:H2 and other strains in moth larvae using a ColV conjugative plasmid model.
  • - Results showed that STEC and EPEC O80:H2, as well as some O80:non-H2 strains, can be lethal to the larvae at high concentrations, primarily due to the Stx2d toxin and components of the pS88 plasmid.
  • - While moth larvae serve as a useful initial model for studying bacterial pathogen virulence, they have limitations in identifying specific virulence factors of certain strains.
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Escherichia fergusonii strains have been isolated from patients with diarrhea, but their virulence determinant has not been well elucidated. Here, we report the first isolation of a heat-labile enterotoxin 1 (LT1)-producing E. fergusonii strain (strain 30038) from a patient in Japan.

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In floral thermogenesis, sugars play an important role not only as energy providers but also as growth and development facilitators. Yet, the mechanisms underlying sugar translocation and transport in thermogenic plants remain to be studied. Asian skunk cabbage (Symplocarpus renifolius) is a species that can produce durable and intense heat in its reproductive organ, the spadix.

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Rad51 maintains genome integrity, whereas Rad52 causes non-canonical homologous recombination leading to gross chromosomal rearrangements (GCRs). Here we find that fission yeast Srr1/Ber1 and Skb1/PRMT5 promote GCRs at centromeres. Genetic and physical analyses show that srr1 and skb1 mutations reduce isochromosome formation mediated by centromere inverted repeats.

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