311 results on '"Namiki, N."'
Search Results
2. Blind spots of Apollo project and new players of lunar explorations
- Author
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Namiki, N.
- Published
- 2021
3. Critical issues of future lunar explorations : A view of Japanese lunar scientists
- Author
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Kuramoto, K. and Namiki, N.
- Published
- 2021
4. The purpose of Lunar Science Book
- Author
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Namiki, N. and Kuramoto, K.
- Published
- 2021
5. High Porosity Nature of the Top-Shape C-Type Asteroid 162173 Ryugu as Observed by Hayabusa2
- Author
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Watanabe, S, Hirabayashi, M., Hirata, N., Shimaki, Y., Ikeda, H., Tatsumi, E., Yoshikawa, M., Kikuchi, S., Yabuta, H., Nakamura, T., Tachibana, S., Ishihara, Y., Morota, T., Kitazato, K., Sakatani, N., Matsumoto, K., Wada, Koji, Senshu, H., Honda, C., Michikami, T., Takeuchi, H., Kouyama, T., Honda, R., Kameda, S., Fuse, T., Miyamoto, H., Komatsu, G., Sugita, S., Okada, T., Namiki, N., Arakawa, M., Ishiguro, M., Abe, M., Gaskell, R., Palmer, E., Barnouin, O.S., Michel, P., French, A. S.V, McMahon, J. W., Scheeres, D. J., Abell, P. A., Yamamoto, Y., Tanaka, S., Shirai, K., Matsuoka, M., Yamada, M., Yokota, Y., Suzuki, H., Yoshioka, K., Cho, Y., Nishikawa, N., Sugiyama, T., Kikuchi, H., Hemmi, R., Yamaguchi, T., Ogawa, N., Ono, G., Mimasu, Y., Yoshikawa, K., Takahashi, T., Takei, Y., Fujii, A., Hirose, C., Iwata, T., Hayakawa, M., Hosoda, S., Mori, O., Sawada, H., Shimada, T., Soldini, S., Yano, H., Tsukizaki, R., Ozaki, H., Iijima, Y., Ogawa, K., Fujimoto, M., Ho, T.-M., Moussi-Soffys, A., Jaumann, R, Bibring, J-.P., Krause, Christian, Terui, F., Saiki, T., Nakazawa, S., and Tsuda, Y.
- Subjects
Planetengeologie ,Asteroid ,Systementwicklung und Projektbüro ,Ryugu ,Nutzerzentrum für Weltraumexperimente (MUSC) ,Hayabusa2 - Published
- 2019
6. Hayabusa2 Mission Up to Now
- Author
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Tsuda, Y., Yoshikawa, M., Watanabe, S, Terui, F., Saikil, T., Ho, Tra-Mi, Moussi-Soffys, A., Sugita, S., Namiki, N., Kitazato, K., Tanaka, S., Arakawa, Kazuharu, Tachibana, S., Ishiguro, M., Ikeda, H., Okada, T., Demura, H., Abe, M., Fujita, K., Yamamoto, Y., Jaumann, R, Bibring, J., Grott, Matthias, and Glassmeier, K. H.
- Subjects
Planetengeologie ,Planetenphysik ,MASCOT ,Systementwicklung und Projektbüro ,Ryugu ,Hayabusa2 - Published
- 2019
7. Lunar gravity field determination using SELENE same-beam differential VLBI tracking data
- Author
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Goossens, S., 松本, 晃治, Liu, Q., 菊池, 冬彦, Sato, K., 花田, 英夫, 石原, 吉明, 野田, 寛大, 河野, 宣之, 並木, 則行, 岩田, 隆浩, Lemoine, F. G., Rowlands, D. D., 原田, 雄司, Chen, M., Matsumoto, K., Kikuchi, F., Hanada, H., Ishihara, Y., Noda, H., Kawano, N., Namiki, N., Iwata, Takahiro, Harada, Y., Goossens, S., 松本, 晃治, Liu, Q., 菊池, 冬彦, Sato, K., 花田, 英夫, 石原, 吉明, 野田, 寛大, 河野, 宣之, 並木, 則行, 岩田, 隆浩, Lemoine, F. G., Rowlands, D. D., 原田, 雄司, Chen, M., Matsumoto, K., Kikuchi, F., Hanada, H., Ishihara, Y., Noda, H., Kawano, N., Namiki, N., Iwata, Takahiro, and Harada, Y.
- Abstract
著者人数: 15名, Accepted: 2010-11-20
- Published
- 2015
8. Picosecond accuracy VLBI of the two subsatellites of SELENE (KAGUYA) using multifrequency and same beam methods
- Author
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Kikuchi F., Liu Q., Hanada H., Kawano N., Matsumoto K., Iwata T., Goossens S., Asari K., Ishihara Y., Tsuruta S., Ishikawa T., Noda H., Namiki N., Petrova N., Harada Y., Ping J., and Sasaki S.
- Abstract
Same beam very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) observations of the two subsatellites of SELENE (KAGUYA) are demonstrated for purpose of the precise gravimetry of the Moon. Same beam VLBI contributes a great deal to cancel out the tropospheric and ionospheric delays and to determine the absolute value of the cycle ambiguity by using the multifrequency VLBI method. As a result, the differential phase delay of the X-band signal is estimated within an error of below 1 ps. This accuracy is more than 1 order of magnitude smaller than former VLBI results. The preliminary results for the orbit determination of the subsatellites show a decrease of the orbit error from a few hundreds of meters to around 10 m when the differential phase delay data are added to the conventional range and Doppler data. These results reveal the possibility of precise gravimetry. Copyright 2009 by the American Geophysical Union.
- Published
- 2009
9. Differential VLBI observations of two sub-satellites of SELENE (KAGUYA), OKINA and OUNA for lunar gravimetry
- Author
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Hanada, H., Iwata, T., Kikuchi, F., Liu, Q., Matsumoto, K., Asari, K., Ishikawa, T., Ishihara, Y., Noda, H., Tsuruta, S., Natalia Petrova, Goossens, S., Harada, Y., Sasaki, S., Namiki, N., Kono, Y., Iwadate, K., Kameya, O., Jike, T., Shibata, K. M., Tamura, Y., Yahagi, Y., Masui, W., Tanaka, K., Maejima, H., Hong, X., Ping, J., Aili, Y., Ellingsen, S., and Schlüter, W.
- Abstract
The Japanese lunar explorer SELENE (KAGUYA), which has been launched on Sep. 14th, 2007, utilizes VLBI observations in lunar gravimetry investigations. This can particularly improve the accuracy of the low degree gravitational harmonics. Combination of ground based VLBI observations and Doppler measurements of the spacecrafts enable three dimensional orbit determinations and it can improve the knowledge of the gravity field near the limb. Differential VLBI Radio sources called VRAD experiment involves two on-board sub-satellites, Rstar (Okina) and VBtar (Ouna). These will be observed using differential VLBI to measure the trajectories of the satellites with the Japanese network named VERA (VLBI Exploration of Radio Astrometry) and an international VLBI network. Two new techniques, a multi-frequency VLBI method and the same-beam VLBI method, are used to precisely measure the angular distance between the two sub-satellite radio sources Okina and Ouna. The observations are at three frequencies in S-band, 2212, 2218 and 2287 MHz, and one in X-band, 8456 MHz. We have succeeded in making VLBI observations of Okina/Ouna with VERA and the international network, and have also succeeded in correlating of signals from Okina/Ouna, and obtained phase delays with an accuracy of several pico-seconds in S-band.
- Published
- 2009
10. The Rice Annotation Project Database (RAP-DB): 2008 update
- Author
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Tanaka, T., Antonio, B.A., Kikuchi, S., Matsumoto, T., Nagamura, Y., Numa, H., Sakai, H., Wu, J., Itoh, T., Sasaki, T., Aono, R., Fujii, Y., Habara, T., Harada, E., Kanno, M., Kawahara, Y., Kawashima, H., Kubooka, H., Matsuya, A., Nakaoka, H., Saichi, N., Sanbonmatsu, R., Sato, Y., Shinso, Y., Suzuki, M., Takeda, J.-i., Tanino, M., Todokoro, F., Yamaguchi, K., Yamamoto, N., Yamasaki, C., Imanishi, T., Okido, T., Tada, M., Ikeo, K., Tateno, Y., Gojobori, T., Lin, Y-C, Wei, F-J, Hsing, Y-i, Zhao, Q., Bin, H., Kramer, M.R., McCombie, R.W., Lonsdale, D., O’Donovan, C.C., Whitfield, E.J., Apweiler, R., Koyanagi, K.O., Khurana, J.P., Raghuvanshi, S., Singh, N.K., Tyagi, A.K., Haberer, G., Fujisawa, M., Hosokawa, S., Ito, Y., Ikawa, H., Shibata, M., Yamamoto, M., Bruskiewich, R.M., Hoen, D.R., Bureau, T.E., Namiki, N., Ohyanagi, H., Sakai, Y., Nobushima, S., Sakata, K., Barrero, R.A., Souvorov, A., Smith-White, B., Tatusova, T., An, S., An, G., OOta, S., Fuks, G., Messing, J., Christie, K.R., Lieberherr, D., Kim, H-R, Zuccolo, A., Wing, R.A., Nobuta, K., Green, P.J., Lu, C., Meyers, B.C., Chaparro, C., Piegu, B., Panaud, O., Echeverria, M., Tanaka, T., Antonio, B.A., Kikuchi, S., Matsumoto, T., Nagamura, Y., Numa, H., Sakai, H., Wu, J., Itoh, T., Sasaki, T., Aono, R., Fujii, Y., Habara, T., Harada, E., Kanno, M., Kawahara, Y., Kawashima, H., Kubooka, H., Matsuya, A., Nakaoka, H., Saichi, N., Sanbonmatsu, R., Sato, Y., Shinso, Y., Suzuki, M., Takeda, J.-i., Tanino, M., Todokoro, F., Yamaguchi, K., Yamamoto, N., Yamasaki, C., Imanishi, T., Okido, T., Tada, M., Ikeo, K., Tateno, Y., Gojobori, T., Lin, Y-C, Wei, F-J, Hsing, Y-i, Zhao, Q., Bin, H., Kramer, M.R., McCombie, R.W., Lonsdale, D., O’Donovan, C.C., Whitfield, E.J., Apweiler, R., Koyanagi, K.O., Khurana, J.P., Raghuvanshi, S., Singh, N.K., Tyagi, A.K., Haberer, G., Fujisawa, M., Hosokawa, S., Ito, Y., Ikawa, H., Shibata, M., Yamamoto, M., Bruskiewich, R.M., Hoen, D.R., Bureau, T.E., Namiki, N., Ohyanagi, H., Sakai, Y., Nobushima, S., Sakata, K., Barrero, R.A., Souvorov, A., Smith-White, B., Tatusova, T., An, S., An, G., OOta, S., Fuks, G., Messing, J., Christie, K.R., Lieberherr, D., Kim, H-R, Zuccolo, A., Wing, R.A., Nobuta, K., Green, P.J., Lu, C., Meyers, B.C., Chaparro, C., Piegu, B., Panaud, O., and Echeverria, M.
- Abstract
The Rice Annotation Project Database (RAP-DB) was created to provide the genome sequence assembly of the International Rice Genome Sequencing Project (IRGSP), manually curated annotation of the sequence, and other genomics information that could be useful for comprehensive understanding of the rice biology. Since the last publication of the RAP-DB, the IRGSP genome has been revised and reassembled. In addition, a large number of rice-expressed sequence tags have been released, and functional genomics resources have been produced worldwide. Thus, we have thoroughly updated our genome annotation by manual curation of all the functional descriptions of rice genes. The latest version of the RAP-DB contains a variety of annotation data as follows: clone positions, structures and functions of 31 439 genes validated by cDNAs, RNA genes detected by massively parallel signature sequencing (MPSS) technology and sequence similarity, flanking sequences of mutant lines, transposable elements, etc. Other annotation data such as Gnomon can be displayed along with those of RAP for comparison. We have also developed a new keyword search system to allow the user to access useful information. The RAP-DB is available at: http://rapdb.dna.affrc.go.jp/ and http://rapdb.lab.nig.ac.jp/.
- Published
- 2008
11. Curated genome annotation of Oryza sativa ssp. japonica and comparative genome analysis with Arabidopsis thaliana
- Author
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Itoh, T., Tanaka, T., Barrero, R.A., Yamasaki, C., Fujii, Y., Hilton, P.B., Antonio, B.A., Aono, H., Apweiler, R., Bruskiewich, R., Bureau, T., Burr, F., Costa de Oliveira, A., Fuks, G., Habara, T., Haberer, G., Han, B., Harada, E., Hiraki, A.T., Hirochika, H., Hoen, D., Hokari, H., Hosokawa, S., Hsing, Y., Ikawa, H., Ikeo, K., Imanishi, T., Ito, Y., Jaiswal, P., Kanno, M., Kawahara, Y., Kawamura, T., Kawashima, H., Khurana, J.P., Kikuchi, S., Komatsu, S., Koyanagi, K.O., Kubooka, H., Lieberherr, D., Lin, Y-C, Lonsdale, D., Matsumoto, T., Matsuya, A., McCombie, W.R., Messing, J., Miyao, A., Mulder, N., Nagamura, Y., Nam, J., Namiki, N., Numa, H., Nurimoto, S., O'Donovan, C., Ohyanagi, H., Okido, T., OOta, S., Osato, N., Palmer, L.E., Quetier, F., Raghuvanshi, S., Saichi, N., Sakai, H., Sakai, Y., Sakata, K., Sakurai, T., Sato, F., Sato, Y., Schoof, H., Seki, M., Shibata, M., Shimizu, Y., Shinozaki, K., Shinso, Y., Singh, N.K., Smith-White, B., Takeda, J.-i., Tanino, M., Tatusova, T., Thongjuea, S., Todokoro, F., Tsugane, M., Tyagi, A.K., Vanavichit, A., Wang, A., Wing, R.A., Yamaguchi, K., Yamamoto, M., Yamamoto, N., Yu, Y., Zhang, H., Zhao, Q., Higo, K., Burr, B., Gojobori, T., Sasaki, T., Itoh, T., Tanaka, T., Barrero, R.A., Yamasaki, C., Fujii, Y., Hilton, P.B., Antonio, B.A., Aono, H., Apweiler, R., Bruskiewich, R., Bureau, T., Burr, F., Costa de Oliveira, A., Fuks, G., Habara, T., Haberer, G., Han, B., Harada, E., Hiraki, A.T., Hirochika, H., Hoen, D., Hokari, H., Hosokawa, S., Hsing, Y., Ikawa, H., Ikeo, K., Imanishi, T., Ito, Y., Jaiswal, P., Kanno, M., Kawahara, Y., Kawamura, T., Kawashima, H., Khurana, J.P., Kikuchi, S., Komatsu, S., Koyanagi, K.O., Kubooka, H., Lieberherr, D., Lin, Y-C, Lonsdale, D., Matsumoto, T., Matsuya, A., McCombie, W.R., Messing, J., Miyao, A., Mulder, N., Nagamura, Y., Nam, J., Namiki, N., Numa, H., Nurimoto, S., O'Donovan, C., Ohyanagi, H., Okido, T., OOta, S., Osato, N., Palmer, L.E., Quetier, F., Raghuvanshi, S., Saichi, N., Sakai, H., Sakai, Y., Sakata, K., Sakurai, T., Sato, F., Sato, Y., Schoof, H., Seki, M., Shibata, M., Shimizu, Y., Shinozaki, K., Shinso, Y., Singh, N.K., Smith-White, B., Takeda, J.-i., Tanino, M., Tatusova, T., Thongjuea, S., Todokoro, F., Tsugane, M., Tyagi, A.K., Vanavichit, A., Wang, A., Wing, R.A., Yamaguchi, K., Yamamoto, M., Yamamoto, N., Yu, Y., Zhang, H., Zhao, Q., Higo, K., Burr, B., Gojobori, T., and Sasaki, T.
- Abstract
We present here the annotation of the complete genome of rice Oryza sativa L. ssp. japonica cultivar Nipponbare. All functional annotations for proteins and non-protein-coding RNA (npRNA) candidates were manually curated. Functions were identified or inferred in 19,969 (70%) of the proteins, and 131 possible npRNAs (including 58 antisense transcripts) were found. Almost 5000 annotated protein-coding genes were found to be disrupted in insertional mutant lines, which will accelerate future experimental validation of the annotations. The rice loci were determined by using cDNA sequences obtained from rice and other representative cereals. Our conservative estimate based on these loci and an extrapolation suggested that the gene number of rice is ∼32,000, which is smaller than previous estimates. We conducted comparative analyses between rice and Arabidopsis thaliana and found that both genomes possessed several lineage-specific genes, which might account for the observed differences between these species, while they had similar sets of predicted functional domains among the protein sequences. A system to control translational efficiency seems to be conserved across large evolutionary distances. Moreover, the evolutionary process of protein-coding genes was examined. Our results suggest that natural selection may have played a role for duplicated genes in both species, so that duplication was suppressed or favored in a manner that depended on the function of a gene.
- Published
- 2007
12. RiceXPro: a platform for monitoring gene expression in japonica rice grown under natural field conditions
- Author
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Sato, Y., primary, Antonio, B. A., additional, Namiki, N., additional, Takehisa, H., additional, Minami, H., additional, Kamatsuki, K., additional, Sugimoto, K., additional, Shimizu, Y., additional, Hirochika, H., additional, and Nagamura, Y., additional
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. VLBI for better gravimetry in SELENE
- Author
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Hanada, H., primary, Iwata, T., additional, Namiki, N., additional, Kawano, N., additional, Asari, K., additional, Ishikawa, T., additional, Kikuchi, F., additional, Liu, Q., additional, Matsumoto, K., additional, Noda, H., additional, Tsuruta, S., additional, Goossens, S., additional, Iwadate, K., additional, Kameya, O., additional, Tamura, Y., additional, Hong, X., additional, Ping, J., additional, Aili, Y., additional, Ellingsen, S., additional, and Schlüter, W., additional
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Initial Collection Performance of Resin Wool Filters and Estimation of Charge Density
- Author
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Kim, J. C., primary, Otani, Y., additional, Noto, D., additional, Namiki, N., additional, and Kimura, K., additional
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Impact of punctual mutations in the cap gene of Junonia coenia densovirus (JcDNV) on virus assembly and infectivity to Ld 652 cells and Spodoptera littoralis larvae
- Author
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Iatrou, Kostas, Couble, Pierre, Abd-Alla, A., Jousset, F-X., Cousserans, F., Bergoin, M., Abe, H., Fujii, T., Mita, K., Ajimura, M., Shimada, T., Sahara, K., Tamura, T., Altstein, M., Hariton, A., Davidovitch, M., Ben-Aziz, O., Barat-Houari, M., Hilliou, F., Jousset, F.-X., Sofer, L., Deleury, E., Rocher, J., Ravallec, M., Galibert, L., Feyereisen, R., Fournier, P., Volkoff, A-N., Baxter, Simon W., Chamberlain, Nicola, Papa, Riccardo, Humphray, Sean J., ffrench-Constant, Richard H., McMillan, W. Owen, Jiggins, Chris D., Behere, G.T., Russell, D., Batterham, P., Tay, W. T., Beldade, P., Rudd, S., Gruber, J.D., Long, A.D., Breugelmans, B., Simonet, G., de Velde, S. Van, Soest, S. Van, Smagghe, G., Broeck, J. Vanden, Clark, R., Brown, S., Heckel, D., Jiggins, C. D., Collins, S., Vogler, A. P, Chamberlain, N., Baxter, S., Jiggins, C., ffrench-Constant, R.H., Chortyk, O., Friz, J., Thompson, C., Kumar, P., Tice, C., Vertin, B., Palli, R., Kumar, M., Meyer, A., Meteyer, T., Smith, H., Cress, D., Li, B., Hormann, R., Collinge, Derek, Gordon, Karl, Behm, Carolyn, Whyard, Steve, Alençon, d', Audant, E., Bernard-Samain, P., Bidegainberry, S., Brehélin, V., Brun-Barale, M., Cousserans, A., Duvic, C., Escoubas, B., Feyereisen, J-M., Fournier, R., Gagneur, Ph., Gordon, C., Gimenez, K., Heckel, S., Hotelier, D., Hilliou, Th., Mita, F., Negre, K., Sabourault, V., Suraporn, C., Volkoff, S., Weissenbach, N., Maria, De Simone Anna, Angela, Sorrentino, Francesca, Di Cara, Polito, Lino, Anna, Digilio F., Drezen, J-M, Bezier, A., Lesobre, J., Huguet, E., Dupuy, C., Eleftherianos, I., Millichap, P. J., Felföldi, G., Gökcen, F., Waterfield, N., Clarke, D. J., ffrench-Constant, R. H., Reynolds, S. E., Elias, M., Joron, M., Willmott, K., Kaiser, V., Silva-Brandão, K. L., Freitas, A.V.L., Arias Mejía, C., Gomez Pineres, L.M., Brower, A.V.Z., Escoubas, J.-M., Girard, P.-A., Volkoff, N., Boublik, Y., D'Alençon, E., Taillez, P., Brehélin, M., Venekei, I., Fischer, H. M., Wheat, C. W., Wittstock, U., Heckel, D. G., Vogel, H., Freitak, D., Katsuma, S., Futahashi, R., Fujiwara, H., Garel, Annie, Briolay, Jérôme, Brouilly, Patrick, Royer, Corinne, Sasanuma, Shun-ichi, Sasanuma, Motoe, Keime, Céline, Gandrillon, Olivier, Chavancy, Gérard, Mita, Kasuei, Geber, M., Faye, I., Terenius, O., Goldsmith, M., Proestou, D., Carter, D., Nicholson, E., Wu, C., Zhang, H., Gopinathan, K. P., Parthasarathy, R., Dhawan, S., Gordon, K., Colebatch, G., Campbell, P.M., Horne, I., East, P.D., Hughes, T.M., Marcus, J.M., Serbielle, C., Douris, V., Lalmanach, G., Iatrou, K., Iga, Masatoshi, Sekimoto, Takayuki, Elmogy, Mohamed, Iwami, Masafumi, Sakurai, Sho, Jacquin-Joly, E., Merlin, C., Malpel, S., Pelletier, J., Brigaud, I., François, M-C., Maïbèche, M., Jarvis, D.L., Aumiller, J.J., Geisler, C., Hensley, J., Hollister, J.R., Shi, X., Jiggins, Chris D, Joron, Mathieu, Mallet, James, Jostova, P., Svatos, A., Pichova, Iva, Kadono-Okuda, K., Ito, K., Nohata, J., Yamamoto, K., Sasanuma, M., Sasanuma, S., Eguchi, R., Hara, W., Kiyokawa, I., Kobayashi, I., Uchino, K., Sezutsu, H., Kanda, T., Miura, T., Ohashi, T., Katayama, K., Kourti, A., Gkouvitsas, T., Kusakabe, T., Mon, H., Takahashi, M., Lee, J.M., Kawaguchi, Y., Labropoulou, V., Stefanou, D., Magkrioti, C., Andronopoulou, E., Swevers, L., Lapointe, R., Tanaka, K., Barney, W., Whitfield, J., Banks, J., Béliveau, C., Stoltz, D., Webb, B.A., Cusson, M., Lee, Siu Fai, Heckel, David G., Li, Yi, Guarino, Linda A., Li, Muwang, Li, Minhui, Guo, Qiuhong, Miao, Xuexia, Hou, Chengxiang, Lin, Hongxuan, Huang, Yongping, Li, Lan, Zheng, Sichun, Ladd, Tim, Zhang, Dayu, Buhlers, Deborah, Krell, Peter J., Arif, Basil M., Retnakaran, Arthur, Feng, Qili, Doucet, Daniel, Machado, Ednildo, Swevers, Luc, Makhijani, Kalpana, Bharathi, V, Kannan, Ramakrishnan, Shashidhara, L S, Mauchamp, Bernard, Jalabert, Audrey, Rocha, Martine Da, Grenier, Anne-Marie, Labas, Valérie, Vinh, Joëlle, Mita, Kazuei, Kadono-Okuda, Keiko, Miao, Yungen, Yue, Wanfu, Li, Xinghua, Wu, Xiaofeng, Miller, T.A., Park, Y., Ren, X., Kasahara, M., Sasaki, S., Nagayasu, Y., Yamada, T., Kanamori, H., Namiki, N., Kitagawa, M., Yamashita, H., Yasukochi, Y., Rvikumar, G., Shimomura, M., Nagamura, Y., Shin-I, T., Morishita, S., Sasaki, T., Sugahara, R., Monteiro, Antónia, Chen, Bin, Ramos, Diane, Kamal, Firdous, Glaser, Gary, Stockslager, Steven, Nieberding, C., Schneider, V., Vos, H. De, Lassance, J.M., Lofstedt, C., Brakefield, P.M., Nighorn, A., Papanicolaou, A., Blaxter, M.L., Jiggins, C.D., Papantonis, A., Sourmeli, S., Lecanidou, R., Rocha, M. Da, Royer, C., Pennacchio, F., Falabella, P., Varricchio, P., Malva, C., Pohl, Nelida, Sison-Mangus, Marilou, Briscoe, Adriana D., Saenko, S.V., Satish, V., Shukla, J.N., Nagaraju, J., Frank, Scholz, Tine, Lesch, Susann, Beez, Traute, Holthusen, Ines, Anderl, Geuenich, Silvia, Tina, Trenczek, Kojima, K., Niimi, T., Hatakeyama, M., Shiotsuki, Takahiro, Tan, An-Jiang, Tamura, Toshiki, Simpson, Robert, Newcomb, Richard, Beuning, Lesley, Yauk, Yah-Khing, Crowhurst, Ross, Gatehouse, Heather, Gatehouse, Laurence, Markwick, Ngaire, Chagne, Dave, Gleave, Andrew, Christeller, John, Strand, M. R., Soin, T., Loocke, K. Van, Wheelock, C., Harada, T., Akamatsu, M., Nakagawa, Y., Truman, JW, Hiruma, K, Allee, JP, MacWhinnie, SGB, Champlin, D, Riddiford, LM, Turnbull, M.W., Vitkova, M., Kubickova, S., Marec, F., Kroymann, J., Mithöfer, A., Boland, W., Vogt, R.G., Franco, M-d., Bohbot, J, Fernandez, K., Kobres, P., Hanna, J., Poppy, J., Webb, Bruce A., Gill, Torrence A., Fath-Goodin, Angelika, Kroemer, Jeremy, Wedde, M., Altincicek, B., Vilcinskas, A., Wee, Choon Wei, Robin, Charles, Heckel, David G, Wheat, Christopher W., Labandeira, Conrad, Andolfatto, P., Feng, Q., Simpson, R., Vogel, Heiko, Williams, A. K., Xia, Qingyou, Zhou, Zeyang, Lu, Cheng, Xiang, Zhonghuai, Zhang, Liang, Yamamoto, Kimiko, Narukawa, Junko, Nohata, Junko, Suetsugu, Yoshitaka, Minami, Hiroshi, Shimomura, Michihiko, Yukuhiro, K., Itoh, M., Banno, Y., Kômoto, N., Kosegawa, E., Hirokawa, M., Tatematsu, K., Nishimura, M., Maekawa, H., Kawanishi, Y., Nakajima, Y., and Krell, Peter J
- Subjects
Article - Published
- 2007
16. Rice Bioinformatics: From Sequences to Applications
- Author
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Antonio, B. A., primary, Namiki, N., additional, Matsumoto, T., additional, and Sasaki, T., additional
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
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17. Deposition of ions from laminar flow in circular tubes made of various materials
- Author
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Otani, Y, primary, Yun, C.-M, additional, Tanaka, T, additional, Emi, H, additional, and Namiki, N, additional
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The Public Backlash Against PACs
- Author
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Sethi, S.P. and Namiki, N.
- Subjects
Political action committees -- Public opinion ,Business ,Business, general - Published
- 1983
19. Rice Bioinformatics:
- Author
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Antonio, B. A., Namiki, N., Matsumoto, T., and Sasaki, T.
- Abstract
Rice genomics data are rapidly expanding in number and complexity. This is further intensified as the international collaboration aimed at sequencing the entire genome accelerates the release of sequence data to the public domain. An overview of available resources for processing, elucidating and propagating genomic information in rice is described here. As the genome sequencing nears its completion, the future challenges in rice bioinformatics lies in developing an informatics infrastructure that would facilitate integration across various data types and sources, and eventually lead to the development of viable strategies for improvement of rice and other major cereal crops.
- Published
- 2002
20. Selenodetic experiments of SELENE: relay subsatellite, differential VLBI, and laser altimeter
- Author
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Namiki, N., Hanada, H., Tsubokawa, T., Kawano, N., Ooe, M., Heki, K., Iwata, T., Ogawa, M., and Takano, T.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Differential VLBI observations of two sub-satellites of SELENE (KAGUYA), OKINA and OUNA for lunar gravimetry
- Author
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Hanada H., Iwata T., Kikuchi F., Liu Q., Matsumoto K., Asari K., Ishikawa T., Ishihara Y., Noda H., Tsuruta S., Petrova N., Goossens S., Harada Y., Sasaki S., Namiki N., Kono Y., Iwadate K., Kameya O., Jike T., Shibata K., Tamura Y., Yahagi Y., Masui W., Tanaka K., Maejima H., Hong X., Ping J., Aili Y., Ellingsen S., Schlüter W., Hanada H., Iwata T., Kikuchi F., Liu Q., Matsumoto K., Asari K., Ishikawa T., Ishihara Y., Noda H., Tsuruta S., Petrova N., Goossens S., Harada Y., Sasaki S., Namiki N., Kono Y., Iwadate K., Kameya O., Jike T., Shibata K., Tamura Y., Yahagi Y., Masui W., Tanaka K., Maejima H., Hong X., Ping J., Aili Y., Ellingsen S., and Schlüter W.
- Abstract
The Japanese lunar explorer SELENE (KAGUYA), which has been launched on Sep. 14th, 2007, utilizes VLBI observations in lunar gravimetry investigations. This can particularly improve the accuracy of the low degree gravitational harmonics. Combination of ground based VLBI observations and Doppler measurements of the spacecrafts enable three dimensional orbit determinations and it can improve the knowledge of the gravity field near the limb. Differential VLBI Radio sources called VRAD experiment involves two on-board sub-satellites, Rstar (Okina) and VBtar (Ouna). These will be observed using differential VLBI to measure the trajectories of the satellites with the Japanese network named VERA (VLBI Exploration of Radio Astrometry) and an international VLBI network. Two new techniques, a multi-frequency VLBI method and the same-beam VLBI method, are used to precisely measure the angular distance between the two sub-satellite radio sources Okina and Ouna. The observations are at three frequencies in S-band, 2212, 2218 and 2287 MHz, and one in X-band, 8456 MHz. We have succeeded in making VLBI observations of Okina/Ouna with VERA and the international network, and have also succeeded in correlating of signals from Okina/Ouna, and obtained phase delays with an accuracy of several pico-seconds in S-band.
22. Picosecond accuracy VLBI of the two subsatellites of SELENE (KAGUYA) using multifrequency and same beam methods
- Author
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Kikuchi F., Liu Q., Hanada H., Kawano N., Matsumoto K., Iwata T., Goossens S., Asari K., Ishihara Y., Tsuruta S., Ishikawa T., Noda H., Namiki N., Petrova N., Harada Y., Ping J., Sasaki S., Kikuchi F., Liu Q., Hanada H., Kawano N., Matsumoto K., Iwata T., Goossens S., Asari K., Ishihara Y., Tsuruta S., Ishikawa T., Noda H., Namiki N., Petrova N., Harada Y., Ping J., and Sasaki S.
- Abstract
Same beam very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) observations of the two subsatellites of SELENE (KAGUYA) are demonstrated for purpose of the precise gravimetry of the Moon. Same beam VLBI contributes a great deal to cancel out the tropospheric and ionospheric delays and to determine the absolute value of the cycle ambiguity by using the multifrequency VLBI method. As a result, the differential phase delay of the X-band signal is estimated within an error of below 1 ps. This accuracy is more than 1 order of magnitude smaller than former VLBI results. The preliminary results for the orbit determination of the subsatellites show a decrease of the orbit error from a few hundreds of meters to around 10 m when the differential phase delay data are added to the conventional range and Doppler data. These results reveal the possibility of precise gravimetry. Copyright 2009 by the American Geophysical Union.
23. Overview of differential VLBI observations of lunar orbiters in SELENE (Kaguya) for precise orbit determination and lunar gravity field study
- Author
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Hanada H., Iwata T., Liu Q., Kikuchi F., Matsumoto K., Goossens S., Harada Y., Asari K., Ishikawa T., Ishihara Y., Noda H., Tsuruta S., Petrova N., Kawano N., Sasaki S., Sato K., Namiki N., Kono Y., Iwadate K., Kameya O., Shibata K., Tamura Y., Kamata S., Yahagi Y., Masui W., Tanaka K., Maejima H., Hong X., Ping J., Shi X., Huang Q., Aili Y., Ellingsen S., Schlüter W., Hanada H., Iwata T., Liu Q., Kikuchi F., Matsumoto K., Goossens S., Harada Y., Asari K., Ishikawa T., Ishihara Y., Noda H., Tsuruta S., Petrova N., Kawano N., Sasaki S., Sato K., Namiki N., Kono Y., Iwadate K., Kameya O., Shibata K., Tamura Y., Kamata S., Yahagi Y., Masui W., Tanaka K., Maejima H., Hong X., Ping J., Shi X., Huang Q., Aili Y., Ellingsen S., and Schlüter W.
- Abstract
The Japanese lunar explorer SELENE (Kaguya), which was launched on September 14th, 2007, was the target of VLBI observations over the period November 2007 to June 2009. These observations were made in order to improve the lunar gravity field model, in particular the lower degree coefficients and the model near the limb. Differential VLBI Radio sources, called VRAD instruments, were on-board the subsatellites, Rstar (Okina) and Vstar (Ouna), and the radio signals were observed by the Japanese VERA (VLBI Exploration of Radio Astrometry) network, and an international VLBI network. Multi-frequency and same-beam VLBI techniques were utilized and were essential aspects of the successful observing program. Multi-frequency VLBI was employed in order to improve the accuracy of the orbit determination obtained from the phase delay from the narrow-band satellite signals, while the same-beam VLBI method was used to resolve the cycle ambiguity which is inherent in the multi-frequency VLBI method. The observations were made at three S-band frequencies (2212, 2218 and 2287 MHz), and one X-band frequency (8456 MHz). We have succeeded in correlating the recorded signals from Okina/Ouna, and we obtained phase delays with an accuracy of several pico-seconds at S-band. © 2010 Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
24. Picosecond accuracy VLBI of the two subsatellites of SELENE (KAGUYA) using multifrequency and same beam methods
- Author
-
Kikuchi F., Liu Q., Hanada H., Kawano N., Matsumoto K., Iwata T., Goossens S., Asari K., Ishihara Y., Tsuruta S., Ishikawa T., Noda H., Namiki N., Petrova N., Harada Y., Ping J., Sasaki S., Kikuchi F., Liu Q., Hanada H., Kawano N., Matsumoto K., Iwata T., Goossens S., Asari K., Ishihara Y., Tsuruta S., Ishikawa T., Noda H., Namiki N., Petrova N., Harada Y., Ping J., and Sasaki S.
- Abstract
Same beam very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) observations of the two subsatellites of SELENE (KAGUYA) are demonstrated for purpose of the precise gravimetry of the Moon. Same beam VLBI contributes a great deal to cancel out the tropospheric and ionospheric delays and to determine the absolute value of the cycle ambiguity by using the multifrequency VLBI method. As a result, the differential phase delay of the X-band signal is estimated within an error of below 1 ps. This accuracy is more than 1 order of magnitude smaller than former VLBI results. The preliminary results for the orbit determination of the subsatellites show a decrease of the orbit error from a few hundreds of meters to around 10 m when the differential phase delay data are added to the conventional range and Doppler data. These results reveal the possibility of precise gravimetry. Copyright 2009 by the American Geophysical Union.
25. Differential VLBI observations of two sub-satellites of SELENE (KAGUYA), OKINA and OUNA for lunar gravimetry
- Author
-
Hanada H., Iwata T., Kikuchi F., Liu Q., Matsumoto K., Asari K., Ishikawa T., Ishihara Y., Noda H., Tsuruta S., Petrova N., Goossens S., Harada Y., Sasaki S., Namiki N., Kono Y., Iwadate K., Kameya O., Jike T., Shibata K., Tamura Y., Yahagi Y., Masui W., Tanaka K., Maejima H., Hong X., Ping J., Aili Y., Ellingsen S., Schlüter W., Hanada H., Iwata T., Kikuchi F., Liu Q., Matsumoto K., Asari K., Ishikawa T., Ishihara Y., Noda H., Tsuruta S., Petrova N., Goossens S., Harada Y., Sasaki S., Namiki N., Kono Y., Iwadate K., Kameya O., Jike T., Shibata K., Tamura Y., Yahagi Y., Masui W., Tanaka K., Maejima H., Hong X., Ping J., Aili Y., Ellingsen S., and Schlüter W.
- Abstract
The Japanese lunar explorer SELENE (KAGUYA), which has been launched on Sep. 14th, 2007, utilizes VLBI observations in lunar gravimetry investigations. This can particularly improve the accuracy of the low degree gravitational harmonics. Combination of ground based VLBI observations and Doppler measurements of the spacecrafts enable three dimensional orbit determinations and it can improve the knowledge of the gravity field near the limb. Differential VLBI Radio sources called VRAD experiment involves two on-board sub-satellites, Rstar (Okina) and VBtar (Ouna). These will be observed using differential VLBI to measure the trajectories of the satellites with the Japanese network named VERA (VLBI Exploration of Radio Astrometry) and an international VLBI network. Two new techniques, a multi-frequency VLBI method and the same-beam VLBI method, are used to precisely measure the angular distance between the two sub-satellite radio sources Okina and Ouna. The observations are at three frequencies in S-band, 2212, 2218 and 2287 MHz, and one in X-band, 8456 MHz. We have succeeded in making VLBI observations of Okina/Ouna with VERA and the international network, and have also succeeded in correlating of signals from Okina/Ouna, and obtained phase delays with an accuracy of several pico-seconds in S-band.
26. Measurement of the ions mobility distribution at a new ion mobility analyzer with separation in axial direction to the flow
- Author
-
Emi, H., Shintani, E., Namiki, N., and Otani, Y.
- Published
- 1998
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Letter: Filling the Gaps-Enhancing MASLD Prognosis With Imaging, Diverse Populations and Extended Follow-Up. Authors' Reply.
- Author
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Tamaki N, Kimura T, Wakabayashi SI, Umemura T, Izumi N, Loomba R, and Kurosaki M
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Editorial: Cardiometabolic criteria matters in MASLD-Authors' reply.
- Author
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Tamaki N, Kimura T, Wakabayashi SI, Umemura T, Izumi N, Loomba R, and Kurosaki M
- Subjects
- Humans, Metabolic Syndrome, Cardiovascular Diseases
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Cardiometabolic criteria as predictors and treatment targets of liver-related events and cardiovascular events in metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease.
- Author
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Tamaki N, Kimura T, Wakabayashi SI, Umemura T, Izumi N, Loomba R, and Kurosaki M
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Longitudinal Studies, Aged, Incidence, Adult, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease complications, Risk Factors, Fatty Liver complications, Republic of Korea epidemiology, Cardiometabolic Risk Factors, Cardiovascular Diseases etiology
- Abstract
Background: The diagnosis of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) requires at least one of five cardiometabolic criteria. It is unclear whether these criteria can be used as predictors and treatment targets for complications including liver-related events and major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE)., Aims: To investigate the relationship between cardiometabolic criteria and complications., Methods: We conducted a nationwide, population-based study of 979,352 patients with MASLD. We investigated relationships between a number of criteria at baseline and liver-related events or MACE risks. In a separate longitudinal analysis, we included patients with five criteria at baseline and investigated the relationship between improving the criteria and the incidence of complications after 1 year., Results: The cumulative incidence of MACE, but not liver-related events, increased with increasing baseline cardiometabolic criteria. In the longitudinal study, multivariable analysis using patients with five criteria (no improvement) as the reference, adjusted hazard ratios (95% confidence interval) of MACE in patients with 4, 3, 2, and 0-1 criteria (1 to 4-5 criteria improvement) were 0.55 (0.52-0.58, p < 0.001), 0.20 (0.17-0.22, p < 0.001), 0.13 (0.11-0.16, p < 0.001), and 0.06 (0.02-0.3, p < 0.001), respectively. The risk of MACE decreased as the cardiometabolic criteria improved. There was no significant association between improvement of the criteria and liver-related events., Conclusions: Cardiometabolic criteria can be used as predictors and treatment targets for cardiovascular event risk in MASLD. Developing predictors and therapeutic targets for liver-related events is a future challenge., (© 2024 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Eight-year efficacy and safety of tenofovir alafenamide for treatment of chronic hepatitis B virus infection: Final results from two randomised phase 3 trials.
- Author
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Buti M, Lim YS, Chan HLY, Agarwal K, Marcellin P, Brunetto MR, Chuang WL, Janssen HLA, Fung SK, Izumi N, Jablkowski MS, Abdurakhmanov D, Abramov F, Wang H, Botros I, Yee LJ, Mateo R, Flaherty JF, Osinusi A, Pan CQ, Shalimar X, Seto WK, and Gane EJ
- Abstract
Background: In two phase 3 studies, tenofovir alafenamide (TAF) showed non-inferior efficacy versus tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF), with more favourable renal and bone safety in patients with chronic hepatitis B (CHB)., Aims: Here, we report the studies' final 8-year results., Methods: CHB patients (hepatitis B e antigen [HBeAg]-negative and HBeAg-positive) were randomised (2:1) to double-blind TAF 25 mg/day or TDF 300 mg/day for up to 3 years, followed by open-label (OL) TAF through year 8. Virological, biochemical, serological and fibrosis responses, and safety, including bone and renal parameters, were evaluated. Resistance to TAF was assessed annually by deep sequencing of polymerase/reverse transcriptase and by phenotyping., Results: Among 1298 patients randomised to double-blind TAF (n = 866) or double-blind TDF (n = 432), 775 in the TAF group and 382 in the TDF group received OL TAF, including 180 and 202 who switched from TDF to TAF at year 2 (TDF2y → TAF6y) or year 3 (TDF3y → TAF5y), respectively. At year 8, among patients in the TAF8y, TDF2y → TAF6y and TDF3y → TAF5y groups, 69%, 66% and 73% (missing-equals-failure analysis) and 95%, 94% and 97% (missing-equals-excluded) of patients, respectively, achieved HBV DNA <29 IU/mL. Estimated glomerular filtration rate (Cockcroft-Gault method; eGFR
CG ) and hip/spine bone mineral density (BMD) remained stable in patients receiving double-blind/OL TAF, with only small declines at year 8. Decreases in eGFRCG and hip/spine BMD observed during double-blind TDF improved after switching to OL TAF. No patients developed resistance to TAF., Conclusion: Long-term TAF treatment exhibited favourable safety and tolerability with high rates of viral suppression and no development of resistance., Clinicaltrials: gov numbers NCT01940341 and NCT01940471., (© 2024 The Author(s). Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Enhanced TiO 2 -Based Photocatalytic Volatile Organic Compound Decomposition Combined with Ultrasonic Atomization in the Co-Presence of Carbon Black and Heavy Metal Nanoparticles.
- Author
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Maeno Z, Nishitani M, Saito T, Sekiguchi K, Kagi N, and Namiki N
- Abstract
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are representative indoor air pollutants that negatively affect the human body owing to their toxicity. One of the most promising methods for VOC removal is photocatalytic degradation using TiO
2 . In this study, the addition of carbon black (CB) and heavy metal nanoparticles (NPs) was investigated to improve the efficiency of a TiO2 -based photocatalytic VOC decomposition system combined with ultrasonic atomization and ultraviolet irradiation, as described previously. The addition of CB and Ag NPs significantly improved the degradation efficiency. A comparison with other heavy metal nanoparticles and their respective roles are discussed.- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Propane dehydrogenation catalysis of group IIIB and IVB metal hydrides.
- Author
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Hu X, Huang M, Kinjyo T, Mine S, Toyao T, Hinuma Y, Kitano M, Sato T, Namiki N, Shimizu KI, and Maeno Z
- Abstract
Catalytic propane dehydrogenation (PDH) has mainly been studied using metal- and metal oxide-based catalysts. Studies on dehydrogenation catalysis by metal hydrides, however, have rarely been reported. In this study, PDH reactions using group IIIB and IVB metal hydride catalysts were investigated under relatively low-temperature conditions of 450 °C. Lanthanum hydride exhibited the lowest activation energy for dehydrogenation and the highest propylene yield. Based on kinetics studies, a comparison between the reported calculation results and isotope experiments, the hydrogen vacancies of metal hydrides were involved in low-temperature PDH reactions., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interest., (This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Editorial: Has MetALD met the presumption? Authors' reply.
- Author
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Tamaki N, Kimura T, Wakabayashi SI, Umemura T, Izumi N, Loomba R, and Kurosaki M
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Long-term clinical outcomes in steatotic liver disease and incidence of liver-related events, cardiovascular events and all-cause mortality.
- Author
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Tamaki N, Kimura T, Wakabayashi SI, Umemura T, Kurosaki M, Loomba R, and Izumi N
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Incidence, Aged, Adult, Risk Factors, Cause of Death, Cardiovascular Diseases mortality, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Cardiovascular Diseases etiology, Fatty Liver mortality, Fatty Liver complications, Fatty Liver epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: A multi-society consensus group proposed a new nomenclature for steatotic liver disease (SLD) including metabolic-dysfunction associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), MASLD and increased alcohol intake (MetALD) and alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD). However, the risk of liver-related events, major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) and all-cause mortality among various sub-groups is unknown., Aims: To evaluate the risk of liver-related events, MACE and death among patients with SLD., Methods: We conducted a nationwide, population-based study and enrolled 761,400 patients diagnosed with MASLD, MetALD or ALD. The primary endpoint was the occurrence of liver-related events, MACE and death in patients with MASLD, MetALD and ALD., Results: The cumulative incidence of liver-related events and death were highest in ALD, followed by MetALD and MASLD (p < 0.001 for both liver-related events and death), while the incidence of MACE was highest in MASLD, followed by MetALD and ALD (p < 0.001). Using MASLD as the reference and adjusting for age, sex, smoking, diabetes mellitus, dyslipidaemia and hypertension, the adjusted hazard ratios (95% confidence intervals) for liver-related events, MACE and death in MetALD were 1.42 (1.1-1.8), 0.68 (0.63-0.73) and 1.13 (0.98-1.3), respectively. In ALD, they were 3.42 (2.6-4.6), 0.58 (0.49-0.67) and 1.60 (1.3-2.0), respectively, for liver-related events, MACE and death., Conclusions: The new consensus nomenclature can be used to stratify the risk of complications and prognosis. The nomenclature is beneficial for risk stratification and identifying new mechanisms for disease-specific therapeutic implications., (© 2024 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Enhanced Liver Fibrosis Score for Diagnosing Liver Fibrosis in Chronic Hepatitis.
- Author
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Tamaki N, Takaura K, Higuchi M, Yasui Y, Itakura J, Tsuchiya K, Nakanishi H, Izumi N, and Kurosaki M
- Abstract
Background and aims: The enhanced liver fibrosis (ELF) score is a blood test that combines three markers linked to liver fibrosis. The utility of the ELF score has been demonstrated primarily in Western countries, but whether it is useful in areas with a high number of elderly people suffering from chronic liver disease has yet to be determined. Methods: This is a prospective study that included 373 consecutive patients who underwent a liver biopsy and had their ELF score measured on the same day. The diagnostic accuracy of the ELF score for liver fibrosis and the effect of age on the ELF score were investigated. Results: The median (interquartile) ELF scores in F0, F1, F2, F3, and F4 are 8.7 (8.2-9.2), 9.3 (8.8-10.0), 10.1 (9.4-10.7), 10.7 (9.9-11.2), and 12.0 (11.2-12.7), respectively. ELF scores increased with increasing liver fibrosis stage ( p < 0.001). The diagnostic accuracy of the ELF score and FIB-4 for significant fibrosis (F2-4) and advanced fibrosis (F3-4) was comparable, but the ELF score had a higher diagnostic accuracy for cirrhosis (F4) than FIB-4. When patients were stratified by age of 60 years, the median ELF score did not differ by age in F2, F3, and F4. However, the median FIB-4 increased in patients with ≥60 years compared to those with <60 years in all fibrosis stages. Conclusions : ELF score has high diagnostic accuracy for liver fibrosis, regardless of age, and it could be used as a primary screening method.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Natural history of clinical outcomes and hepatic decompensation in metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease.
- Author
-
Noureddin N, Huang DQ, Bettencourt R, Siddiqi H, Majzoub AM, Nayfeh T, Tamaki N, Izumi N, Nakajima A, Idilman R, Gumussoy M, Oz DK, Erden A, Gidener T, Allen AM, Ajmera V, and Loomba R
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Retrospective Studies, Middle Aged, Longitudinal Studies, Adult, Aged, Liver Transplantation, Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage etiology, Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage mortality, Metabolic Diseases complications, Disease Progression, Hepatic Encephalopathy etiology, Ascites etiology, Fatty Liver complications
- Abstract
Background & Aims: The natural progression of hepatic decompensation in metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) is not well-characterised. We aimed to describe it by conducting a retrospective analysis., Methods: This longitudinal, retrospective analysis of well-characterised MASLD cohorts followed for hepatic decompensation and death. The sequence of liver-related events was evaluated, and the median time between hepatic decompensation episodes and death versus. transplantation was measured., Results: Of the 2016 patients identified, 220 (11%) developed at least one episode of hepatic decompensation during a median follow-up of 3.2 years. Ascites was the most common first liver-related event [153 (69.5%)], followed by hepatic encephalopathy (HE) [55 (25%)] and variceal haemorrhage (VH) [30 (13.6%)]. Eighteen out of the 220 (8.1%) patients had more than one liver-related event as their first hepatic decompensation. Among the patients who had the first episode, 87 (39.5%) had a second episode [44 (50.5%) HE, 31 (35.6%) ascites, and 12 (13.7%) VH]. Eighteen out of 220 (8.1%) had a third episode [10 (55.5%) HE, 6 (33.3%) VH, and 2 (11.1%) ascites]. Seventy-three out of 220 (33.1%) died, and 31 (14%) received liver transplantation. The median time from the first episode to the second was 0.7 years and 1.3 years from the second episode to the third. The median survival time from the first episode to death or transplantation was 2.0 years., Conclusion: The most common first liver-related event in MASLD patients is ascites. The median survival from the first hepatic decompensation to either death or transplantation is 2 years., (© 2024 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Comprehensive analysis of silicon impact on defense and metabolic responses in rice exposed to herbivory stress.
- Author
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Osibe DA, Hojo Y, Shinya T, Mitani-Ueno N, and Galis I
- Abstract
Silicon (Si) uptake is generally beneficial for plants that need protection from insect herbivores. In pursue of mechanisms involved in Si-mediated defense, we comprehensively explored the impact of Si on several defensive and metabolic traits in rice exposed to simulated and real herbivory of Mythimna loreyi Duponchel larvae. Hydroponic experiments showed that Si-deprived rice supplemented with Si 72 h prior to insect infestation were similarly resistant to larvae as plants continuously grown in Si-containing media. Both Si and herbivory altered primary metabolism in rice, including the levels of several sugars, amino acids, and organic acids. While the accumulation of sugars was generally positively correlated with Si presence, multiple amino acids showed a negative correlation trend with Si supplementation. The levels of secondary metabolites, including isopentylamine, p -coumaroylputrescine and feruloylputrescine, were typically higher in the leaves of Si-supplemented plants exposed to herbivory stress compared to Si-deprived plants. In addition, simulated herbivory treatment in Si-supplemented plants induced more volatile emissions relative to Si-deprived plants, which was consistent with the increased transcripts of key genes involved in volatile biosynthesis. In ecological interactions, Si alone did not affect the oviposition choice of M. loreyi but gravid females showed a significant preference for simulated herbivory-treated/Si-deprived compared to Si-supplemented plants. Our data suggest that apart from mechanical defense, Si may affect rice metabolism in multiple ways that might enhance/modulate defense responses of rice under herbivory stress., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Osibe, Hojo, Shinya, Mitani-Ueno and Galis.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Characteristic craniofacial defects associated with a novel USP9X truncation mutation.
- Author
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Nagata N, Kurosaka H, Higashi K, Yamaguchi M, Yamamoto S, Inubushi T, Nagata M, Ishihara Y, Yonei A, Miyashita Y, Asano Y, Sakai N, Sakata Y, Kawabata S, and Yamashiro T
- Abstract
Germline loss-of-function mutations in USP9X have been reported to cause a wide spectrum of congenital anomalies. Here, we report a Japanese girl with a novel heterozygous nonsense mutation in USP9X who exhibited intellectual disability with characteristic craniofacial abnormalities, including hypotelorism, brachycephaly, hypodontia, micrognathia, severe dental crowding, and an isolated submucous cleft palate. Our findings provide further evidence that disruptions in USP9X contribute to a broad range of congenital craniofacial abnormalities., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. A Comparison of Alanine Aminotransferase Normalization between Pemafibrate and Bezafibrate in Patients with Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease.
- Author
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Yamada-Shimizu M, Tamaki N, Kurosaki M, Uchihara N, Suzuki K, Tanaka Y, Miyamoto H, Ishido S, Nobusawa T, Matsumoto H, Keitoku T, Higuchi M, Takaura K, Tanaka S, Maeyashiki C, Yasui Y, Takahashi Y, Tsuchiya K, Nakanishi H, and Izumi N
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Aged, Adult, Treatment Outcome, Hypolipidemic Agents therapeutic use, Bezafibrate therapeutic use, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease drug therapy, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease blood, Alanine Transaminase blood, Benzoxazoles therapeutic use, Butyrates therapeutic use
- Abstract
Objective Pemafibrate is a recently developed selective peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha modulator that can improve alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels in patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). However, the effectiveness of ALT normalization with pemafibrate and bezafibrate, a traditional fibrate, has not been compared. Methods In this retrospective study, we compared the effects of pemafibrate and bezafibrate on ALT normalization in patients with NAFLD. The primary endpoint was the ALT normalization rate at 12 months after administration. Patients Twenty and 14 patients with NAFLD receiving pemafibrate and bezafibrate, respectively, were included in this retrospective analysis. All patients had elevated ALT levels and dyslipidemia at entry. Results The ALT normalization rates at 3, 6, and 12 months were 40%, 55%, and 60% for pemafibrate and 14.3%, 28.6%, and 14.3% for bezafibrate, respectively. The ALT normalization rate at 12 months was significantly higher in patients treated with pemafibrate than in those treated with bezafibrate (p=0.01). Pemafibrate, when compared with bezafibrate, was shown to be a significant factor for ALT normalization in a multivariable analysis with an adjusted odds ratio (95% confidence interval) of 13.8 (1.6-115, p=0.01). Conclusion Pemafibrate is effective in ALT normalization in patients with NAFLD and may be used as a treatment for NAFLD.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Development of an on-site therapeutic drug monitoring method using a portable spectrometer.
- Author
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Todoroki K, Fukudo N, Kudoh Y, Mizuno H, Min JZ, Tanaka S, Uchida S, Namiki N, and Toyo'oka T
- Subjects
- Humans, Spectrum Analysis methods, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Drug Monitoring methods, Drug Monitoring instrumentation, Vancomycin blood, Vancomycin analysis
- Abstract
We report on the development of an on-site therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) method for vancomycin (VCM) utilizing a portable spectrometer and commercially available immunoturbidimetric assay reagents designed for automated clinical chemistry analyzers. The method enables the quantification of VCM in plasma samples within 10 min, with a good correlation between the measured values and the theoretical values (r
2 = 0.995). The intra and inter-day precisions were found to be below 12.5% and 17.7%, respectively. Moreover, we established a correlation between the quantitative values using this method and those measured through HPLC-UV and automated clinical chemistry analyzers, showing good reliability (R2 = 0.970 and 0.951, respectively). This method allows anyone to rapidly perform TDM at the bedside and is expected to be used to evaluate appropriate drug therapy., (© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to The Japan Society for Analytical Chemistry.)- Published
- 2024
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41. Magnetic resonance elastography for the prediction of hepatocellular carcinoma in chronic hepatitis B.
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Tamaki N, Higuchi M, Keitoku T, Yamazaki Y, Uchihara N, Suzuki K, Tanaka Y, Miyamoto H, Yamada M, Okada R, Takaura K, Tanaka S, Maeyashiki C, Yasui Y, Tsuchiya K, Nakanishi H, Kanto T, Kurosaki M, and Izumi N
- Abstract
Background and Aim: Magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) is used for the evaluation of liver fibrosis; however, it remains unclear whether MRE-based liver stiffness is associated with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) development, particularly in patients with chronic hepatitis B., Methods: A total of 504 patients with chronic hepatitis B receiving MRE were enrolled. The primary endpoint was the association between MRE-based liver stiffness and HCC., Results: In a cross-sectional analysis at the time of MRE measurement, the median (interquartile range) liver stiffness values in patients with presence or history of HCC and those without HCC were 3.68 (2.89-4.96) and 2.60 (2.22-3.45) kPa, respectively, and liver stiffness was significantly higher in patients with presence or history of HCC than in those without HCC ( P < 0.001). In a longitudinal analysis of patients without HCC, the 1-, 3-, and 5-year cumulative incidence of HCC in patients with liver stiffness ≥3.6 kPa and those with liver stiffness <3.6 kPa were 3.8%, 7.0%, and 22.9%, and 0%, 0.9%, and 1.5%, respectively ( P < 0.001). In the multivariable analysis, MRE-based liver stiffness (per 1 kPa) or liver stiffness ≥3.6 kPa was an independent factor for HCC development with an adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) of 1.61 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.3-2.0) or aHR of 8.22 (95% CI, 2.1-31)., Conclusion: MRE-based liver stiffness is associated with HCC risk in patients with chronic hepatitis B and may be used for the early prediction of HCC development and determination of indications for treatment., (© 2024 The Authors. JGH Open published by Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Foundation and John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
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42. Effect of treatment periods on efficacy of glecaprevir and pibrentasvir in chronic hepatitis C: A nationwide, prospective, multicenter study.
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Morita A, Tamaki N, Kobashi H, Mori N, Tsuji K, Takaki S, Hasebe C, Akahane T, Ochi H, Mashiba T, Urawa N, Fujii H, Mitsuda A, Kondo M, Ogawa C, Uchida Y, Narita R, Marusawa H, Kubotsu Y, Matsushita T, Shigeno M, Yoshida H, Tanaka K, Okamoto E, Kasai T, Ishii T, Okada K, Kurosaki M, and Izumi N
- Abstract
Background and Aim: In patients with chronic hepatitis C, 8 weeks of glecaprevir and pibrentasvir (GLE/PIB) treatment for chronic hepatitis (non-cirrhosis) and 12 weeks for cirrhosis have been approved in Japan. However, whether 8 weeks of treatment for cirrhosis may reduce treatment efficacy has not been adequately investigated., Methods: This prospective, nationwide, multicenter cohort study enrolled 1275 patients with chronic hepatitis C who received GLE/PIB therapy. The effect of liver fibrosis and treatment periods on the efficiency of GLE/PIB therapy was investigated. The primary endpoint was the sustained virological response (SVR) rate in patients with chronic hepatitis (non-cirrhosis) and cirrhosis. The association between treatment periods and liver fibrosis on the SVR after 12 weeks of treatment rate was investigated., Results: The SVR rates in patients with chronic hepatitis with 8 weeks of treatment, chronic hepatitis with 12 weeks of treatment, cirrhosis with 8 weeks of treatment, and cirrhosis with 12 weeks of treatment were 98.9% (800/809), 100% (87/87), 100% (166/166), and 99.1% (211/213), respectively, and were was not different among these groups ( P = 0.4)., Conclusion: GLE/PIB therapy for chronic hepatitis C had high efficacy regardless of liver fibrosis status and treatment periods. Periods of GLE/PIB therapy could be chosen with available modalities, and high SVR rates could be achieved regardless of the decision., (© 2024 The Authors. JGH Open published by Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Foundation and John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.)
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- 2024
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43. Advanced fibrosis leads to overestimation of steatosis with quantitative ultrasound in individuals without hepatic steatosis.
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Kumada T, Toyoda H, Ogawa S, Gotoh T, Suzuki Y, Imajo K, Sugimoto K, Kakegawa T, Kuroda H, Yasui Y, Tamaki N, Kurosaki M, Izumi N, Akita T, Tanaka J, and Nakajima A
- Abstract
Purpose: The effect of hepatic fibrosis stage on quantitative ultrasound based on the attenuation coefficient (AC) for liver lipid quantification is controversial. The objective of this study was to determine how the degree of fibrosis assessed by magnetic resonance (MR) elastography affects AC based on the ultrasound-guided attenuation parameter according to the grade of hepatic steatosis, using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-derived proton density fat fraction (MRIderived PDFF) as the reference standard., Methods: Between February 2020 and April 2021, 982 patients with chronic liver disease who underwent AC and MRI-derived PDFF measurement as well as MR elastography were enrolled. Multiple regression was used to investigate whether AC was affected by the degree of liver stiffness., Results: AC increased as liver stiffness progressed in 344 patients without hepatic steatosis (P=0.009). In multivariable analysis, AC was positively correlated with skin-capsule distance (P<0.001), MR elastography value (P=0.037), and MRI-derived PDFF (P<0.001) in patients without hepatic steatosis. In 52 of 982 patients (5%), the correlation between AC and MRIderived PDFF fell outside the 95% confidence interval for the regression line slope. Patients with MRI-derived PDFF lower than their AC (n=36) had higher fibrosis-4 scores, albumin-bilirubin scores, and MR elastography values than patients with MRI-derived PDFF greater than their AC (n=16; P=0.018, P=0.001, and P=0.011, respectively)., Conclusion: AC is affected by liver fibrosis (MR elastography value ≥6.7 kPa) only in patients without hepatic steatosis (MRI-derived PDFF <5.2%). These values should be interpreted with caution in patients with advanced liver fibrosis.
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- 2024
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44. The impact of COVID-19 on the diagnosis and treatment of HCC: analysis of a nationwide registry for advanced liver diseases (REAL).
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Okushin K, Tateishi R, Hirakawa S, Tachimori H, Uchino K, Nakagomi R, Yamada T, Nakatsuka T, Minami T, Sato M, Fujishiro M, Hasegawa K, Eguchi Y, Kanto T, Yoshiji H, Izumi N, Kudo M, and Koike K
- Subjects
- Humans, Pandemics, Registries, COVID-19 Testing, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular diagnosis, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular epidemiology, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular therapy, Liver Neoplasms diagnosis, Liver Neoplasms epidemiology, Liver Neoplasms therapy, COVID-19 diagnosis, COVID-19 epidemiology, COVID-19 complications
- Abstract
The number of cancer cases diagnosed during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has decreased. This study investigated the impact of the pandemic on the clinical practice of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) using a novel nationwide REgistry for Advanced Liver diseases (REAL) in Japan. We retrieved data of patients initially diagnosed with HCC between January 2018 and December 2021. We adopted tumor size as the primary outcome measure and compared it between the pre-COVID-19 (2018 and 2019) and COVID-19 eras (2020 and 2021). We analyzed 13,777 patients initially diagnosed with HCC (8074 in the pre-COVID-19 era and 5703 in the COVID-19 era). The size of the maximal intrahepatic tumor did not change between the two periods (mean [SD] = 4.3 [3.6] cm and 4.4 [3.6] cm), whereas the proportion of patients with a single tumor increased slightly from 72.0 to 74.3%. HCC was diagnosed at a similar Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer stage. However, the proportion of patients treated with systemic therapy has increased from 5.4 to 8.9%. The proportion of patients with a non-viral etiology significantly increased from 55.3 to 60.4%. Although the tumor size was significantly different among the etiologies, the subgroup analysis showed that the tumor size did not change after stratification by etiology. In conclusion, the characteristics of initially diagnosed HCC remained unchanged during the COVID-19 pandemic in Japan, regardless of differences in etiology. A robust surveillance system should be established particularly for non-B, non-C etiology to detect HCC in earlier stages., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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45. Knockout of a rice K5.2 gene increases Ca accumulation in the grain.
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Wang P, Yamaji N, Mitani-Ueno N, Ge J, and Ma JF
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- Calcium metabolism, Plant Roots genetics, Plant Roots metabolism, Edible Grain genetics, Edible Grain metabolism, Oryza genetics, Oryza metabolism
- Abstract
Rice is a staple food for half of the world's population, but it is a poor dietary source of calcium (Ca) due to the low concentration. It is an important issue to boost Ca concentration in this grain to improve Ca deficiency risk, but the mechanisms underlying Ca accumulation are poorly understood. Here, we obtained a rice (Oryza sativa) mutant with high shoot Ca accumulation. The mutant exhibited 26%-53% higher Ca in shoots than did wild-type rice (WT) at different Ca supplies. Ca concentration in the xylem sap was 36% higher in the mutant than in the WT. There was no difference in agronomic traits between the WT and mutant, but the mutant showed 25% higher Ca in the polished grain compared with the WT. Map-based cloning combined with a complementation test revealed that the mutant phenotype was caused by an 18-bp deletion of a gene, OsK5.2, belonging to the Shaker-like K
+ channel family. OsK5.2 was highly expressed in the mature region of the roots and its expression in the roots was not affected by Ca levels, but upregulated by low K. Immunostaining showed that OsK5.2 was mainly expressed in the pericycle of the roots. Taken together, our results revealed a novel role for OsK5.2 in Ca translocation in rice, and will be a good target for Ca biofortification in rice., (© 2023 Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences.)- Published
- 2024
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46. Effects of Flavors on Taste Sensation of Pioglitazone Orally Disintegrating Tablets.
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Nakano Y, Miura M, Namiki N, and Uchida S
- Subjects
- Humans, Administration, Oral, Adult, Male, Single-Blind Method, Female, Young Adult, Healthy Volunteers, Pioglitazone pharmacology, Pioglitazone administration & dosage, Taste drug effects, Tablets, Flavoring Agents chemistry, Flavoring Agents administration & dosage
- Abstract
Orally disintegrating tablets (ODTs) can be easily swallowed without drinking water and are a convenient dosage form for the elderly and infirmed patients, as well as other patients, such as businesspeople. A major challenge in the development of ODTs is masking the unpleasant taste of the drug, which can make ODTs palatable. Flavors are often used for taste-masking. A few comprehensive studies have been conducted on the selection of suitable flavors for ODTs. This study aimed to evaluate the effects of different flavors on the taste sensation of ODTs using a visual analog scale (VAS). Sixteen flavors were studied for their effects on the taste sensation of pioglitazone ODTs in a randomized single-blind study involving the gustatory sensation testing of ODTs. Healthy volunteers were enrolled and asked to periodically evaluate the bitterness, sweetness, astringency, sourness, and overall palatability of ODTs, both during and after disintegration in the oral cavity, using the VAS. Most flavors improved the sweetness of ODTs without the addition of a sweetener, and some suppressed bitterness, astringency, and sourness. In particular, blueberry, and yoghurt flavors significantly improved sweetness and overall palatability during disintegration of the pioglitazone ODT. The approach of using VAS score analysis was effective in selecting the most suitable flavor for improving the overall palatability of ODT. Furthermore, the addition of a suitable flavor can successfully mask the unpleasant taste of the drug and effectively improve the overall palatability of ODT.
- Published
- 2024
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47. Low liver fat in non-alcoholic steatohepatitis-related significant fibrosis and cirrhosis is associated with hepatocellular carcinoma, decompensation and mortality.
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Lee SW, Huang DQ, Bettencourt R, Ajmera V, Tincopa M, Noureddin N, Amangurbanova M, Siddiqi H, Madamba E, Majzoub AM, Nayfeh T, Tamaki N, Izumi N, Nakajima A, Yoneda M, Idilman R, Gumussoy M, Oz DK, Erden A, and Loomba R
- Subjects
- Humans, Liver diagnostic imaging, Liver pathology, Liver Cirrhosis complications, Liver Cirrhosis pathology, Fibrosis, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease complications, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease pathology, Carcinoma, Hepatocellular pathology, Liver Neoplasms diagnostic imaging, Liver Neoplasms pathology, Elasticity Imaging Techniques
- Abstract
Background: Progression to cirrhosis in non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is associated with a decrease in liver fat. However, the prognostic significance of liver fat content in NASH-related significant fibrosis and cirrhosis is unclear., Aim: To investigate the risk of decompensation, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) and mortality stratified by liver fat content in NASH-related significant fibrosis and cirrhosis., Methods: In this meta-analysis of individual participant data, 456 patients with both magnetic resonance elastography (MRE) and MRI-derived protein density fat fraction (MRI-PDFF) were enrolled, and 296 patients with longitudinal follow-up were analysed. MRE combined with fibrosis-4 (MEFIB-index), and MRI-PDFF were used to measure liver fibrosis and fat, respectively. MEFIB-negative, MEFIB-positive+ MRI-PDFF ≥5% and MEFIB-positive+ MRI-PDFF <5% were defined as no significant liver fibrosis, NASH with significant fibrosis and higher liver fat content, and NASH with significant fibrosis and low liver fat content groups, respectively. The primary outcome was hepatic decompensation, HCC and death., Results: The rates of decompensation, HCC and mortality were highest in the NASH with significant fibrosis and low liver fat group (33%, 17% and 17%, respectively), followed by the NASH with significant fibrosis and higher liver fat group (18%, 13% and 13% respectively), and lowest in the no significant fibrosis (MEFIB-negative) group (0%, 1% and 2% respectively). In multivariable-adjusted analysis, low liver fat content was strongly associated (HR = 42.2 [95% CI: 7.5-235.5, p < 0.0001]) with HCC, decompensation and death. Sensitivity analyses for patients with cirrhosis (MRE ≥5 kPa) determined consistent findings., Conclusions: Low liver fat content in patients with burnt-out NASH-related significant fibrosis and cirrhosis is associated with an increase in hepatic decompensation, HCC and mortality., (© 2023 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2024
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48. MEFIB-Index and MAST-Score in the assessment of hepatic decompensation in metabolic dysfunction-associated steatosis liver disease-Individual participant data meta-analyses.
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Noureddin N, Ajmera V, Bergstrom J, Bettencourt R, Huang DQ, Siddiqi H, Majzoub AM, Nayfeh T, Tamaki N, Izumi N, Nakajima A, Idilman R, Gumussoy M, Oz DK, Erden A, and Loomba R
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Adult, Middle Aged, Aged, Male, Retrospective Studies, Liver Cirrhosis complications, Esophageal and Gastric Varices complications, Hepatic Encephalopathy complications, Fatty Liver diagnostic imaging, Fatty Liver complications
- Abstract
Background: There are limited data regarding the longitudinal association between MEFIB-Index (MRE combined with FIB-4) versus MAST-Score (MRI-aspartate aminotransferase) and hepatic decompensation., Aim: To examine the longitudinal association between MEFIB-Index versus MAST-Score in predicting hepatic decompensation in patients with metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD)., Methods: This was a longitudinal, retrospective analysis of subjects from United States, Japan, and Turkey who underwent a baseline MRE and MRI-PDFF and were followed for hepatic decompensation. Cox-proportional hazard analyses were used to assess the association between MEFIB-Index versus MAST-Score with a composite primary outcome (hepatic decompensation) defined as ascites, hepatic encephalopathy, and varices needing treatment., Results: This meta-analysis of individual participants (IPDMA) included 454 patients (58% women) with a mean (±SD) age of 56.0 (±13.5) years. The MEFIB-Index (MRE ≥3.3 kPa + FIB 4 ≥1.6) and MAST-Score (>0.242) were positive for 34% and 9% of the sample, respectively. At baseline, 23 patients met criteria for hepatic decompensation. Among 297 patients with available longitudinal data with a median (IQR) of 4.2 (5.0) years of follow-up, 25 incident cases met criteria for hepatic decompensation. A positive MEFIB-Index [HR = 49.22 (95% CI: 6.23-388.64, p < 0.001)] and a positive MAST-Score [HR = 3.86 (95% CI: 1.46-10.17, p < 0.001)] were statistically significant predictors of the incident hepatic decompensation. MEFIB-Index (c-statistic: 0.89, standard error (SE) = 0.02) was statistically superior to the MAST-Score (c-statistic: 0.81, SE = 0.03) (p < 0.0001) in predicting hepatic decompensation., Conclusion: A combination of MRI-based biomarker and blood tests, MEFIB-Index and MAST-Score can predict the risk of hepatic decompensation in patients with MASLD., (© 2023 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2023
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49. A silicon transporter gene required for healthy growth of rice on land.
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Mitani-Ueno N, Yamaji N, Huang S, Yoshioka Y, Miyaji T, and Ma JF
- Subjects
- Membrane Transport Proteins genetics, Silicon Dioxide, Plants metabolism, Silicon metabolism, Oryza metabolism
- Abstract
Silicon (Si) is the most abundant mineral element in the earth's crust. Some plants actively accumulate Si as amorphous silica (phytoliths), which can protect plants from stresses. Here, we report a gene (SIET4) that is required for the proper accumulation and cell-specific deposition of Si in rice and show that it is essential for normal growth. SIET4 is constitutively expressed in leaves and encodes a Si transporter. SlET4 polarly localizes at the distal side of epidermal cells and cells surrounding the bulliform cells (motor cells) of the leaf blade, where Si is deposited. Knockout of SIET4 leads to the death of rice in the presence but not absence of Si. Further analysis shows that SIET4 knockout induces abnormal Si deposition in mesophyll cells and the induction of hundreds of genes related to various stress responses. These results indicate that SIET4 is required for the proper export of Si from leaf cells to the leaf surface and for the healthy growth of rice on land., (© 2023. Springer Nature Limited.)
- Published
- 2023
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50. Multivariable Quantitative US Parameters for Assessing Hepatic Steatosis.
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Kuroda H, Oguri T, Kamiyama N, Toyoda H, Yasuda S, Imajo K, Suzuki Y, Sugimoto K, Akita T, Tanaka J, Yasui Y, Kurosaki M, Izumi N, Nakajima A, Fujiwara Y, Abe T, Kakisaka K, Matsumoto T, and Kumada T
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, ROC Curve, Signal-To-Noise Ratio, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Protons, Liver, Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Background Because of the global increase in the incidence of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, the development of noninvasive, widely available, and highly accurate methods for assessing hepatic steatosis is necessary. Purpose To evaluate the performance of models with different combinations of quantitative US parameters for their ability to predict at least 5% steatosis in patients with chronic liver disease (CLD) as defined using MRI proton density fat fraction (PDFF). Materials and Methods Patients with CLD were enrolled in this prospective multicenter study between February 2020 and April 2021. Integrated backscatter coefficient (IBSC), signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), and US-guided attenuation parameter (UGAP) were measured in all participants. Participant MRI PDFF value was used to define at least 5% steatosis. Four models based on different combinations of US parameters were created: model 1 (UGAP alone), model 2 (UGAP with IBSC), model 3 (UGAP with SNR), and model 4 (UGAP with IBSC and SNR). Diagnostic performance of all models was assessed using area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC). The model was internally validated using 1000 bootstrap samples. Results A total of 582 participants were included in this study (median age, 64 years; IQR, 52-72 years; 274 female participants). There were 364 participants in the steatosis group and 218 in the nonsteatosis group. The AUC values for steatosis diagnosis in models 1-4 were 0.92, 0.93, 0.95, and 0.96, respectively. The C-indexes of models adjusted by the bootstrap method were 0.92, 0.93, 0.95, and 0.96, respectively. Compared with other models, models 3 and 4 demonstrated improved discrimination of at least 5% steatosis ( P < .01). Conclusion A model built using the quantitative US parameters UGAP, IBSC, and SNR could accurately discriminate at least 5% steatosis in patients with CLD. © RSNA, 2023 Supplemental material is available for this article. See also the editorial by Han in this issue.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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