2 results match your criteria: "Kyoto Sangyo Univ.[Affiliation]"
FEBS Lett
September 2015
JST ICORP ATP-Synthesis Regulation Project, 2-3-6 Aomi, Koto-ku, Tokyo 135-0064, Japan; Dep. of Molecular Bioscience, Faculty of Life Sciences, Kyoto Sangyo Univ., Kamigamo-Motoyama, Kyoto 603-8555, Japan. Electronic address:
Mitochondrial ATP synthase is a motor enzyme in which a central shaft rotates in the stator casings fixed with the peripheral stator stalk. When expression of d-subunit, a stator stalk component, was knocked-down, human cells could not form ATP synthase holocomplex and instead accumulated two subcomplexes, one containing a central rotor shaft plus catalytic subunits (F1-c-ring) and the other containing stator stalk components ("b-e-g" complex). F1-c-ring was also formed when expression of mitochondrial DNA-coded a-subunit and A6L was suppressed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurophysiol
December 2010
Faculty of Computer Science and Engineering, Kyoto Sangyo Univ., Kamigamo, Kita-ku, Kyoto 603-8555, Japan.
Precisely synchronized neuronal activity has been commonly observed in the mammalian visual pathway. Spike timing correlations in the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) often take the form of phase synchronized oscillations in the high gamma frequency range. To study the relations between oscillatory activity, synchrony, and their time-dependent properties, we recorded activity from multiple single units in the cat LGN under stimulation by stationary spots of light.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF