H
Hiroshi Yoshida
Researcher at Tohoku University
Publications - 222
Citations - 3837
Hiroshi Yoshida is an academic researcher from Tohoku University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Signal & Amplifier. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 219 publications receiving 3698 citations. Previous affiliations of Hiroshi Yoshida include Toshiba.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Construction of a diabody (small recombinant bispecific antibody) using a refolding system.
Shin Ichi Takemura,Ryutaro Asano,Kouhei Tsumoto,Shinji Ebara,Naoki Sakurai,Yu Katayose,Hideaki Kodama,Hiroshi Yoshida,Masanori Suzuki,Kohzoh Imai,Seiki Matsuno,Toshio Kudo,Izumi Kumagai +12 more
TL;DR: Evaluation of the in vitro efficacy of T-LAK with the diabody by growth inhibition assay of cancer cells demonstrated maximum growth inhibition ofcancer cells to reach approximately 98% at an effector:target ratio (E:T ratio) of 10, almost identical with that with anti-MUC1xanti-CD3 chemically synthesized BsAbs (c-BsAbs).
Journal Article
Studies on potassium dependent phosphatase; its distribution and properties.
Journal ArticleDOI
Proposal of a new staging system for mass-forming intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma: a multicenter analysis by the Study Group for Hepatic Surgery of the Japanese Society of Hepato-Biliary-Pancreatic Surgery
Takahiro Uenishi,Shunichi Ariizumi,Taku Aoki,Tomoki Ebata,Masayuki Ohtsuka,Eiichi Tanaka,Hiroshi Yoshida,Satoru Imura,Masaki Ueno,Norihiro Kokudo,Masato Nagino,Satoshi Hirano,Shoji Kubo,Michiaki Unno,Mitsuo Shimada,Hiroki Yamaue,Masakazu Yamamoto,Masaru Miyazaki,Tadahiro Takada +18 more
TL;DR: The present study aimed to assess the accuracy of both systems to predict survival after curative resection for mass‐forming ICC and to establish a new staging system based on survival analysis results.
Patent
Radio receiver and radio receiving method
TL;DR: In this paper, a radio receiver consisting of an LNA which amplifies An RF signal, a quadrature demodulator which directly demodulates the amplified RF signal into a B/B signal, using a LO signal, and a VGA that amplifies the B/b signal, is described.
Journal ArticleDOI
Structure of snake toxins and their affinity to the acetylcholine receptor of fish electric organ
TL;DR: The affinity of sea snake and elapid snake venom components with neurotoxic activity, and their chemically modified derivatives, to the acetylcholine receptor of ray (Torpedo marmorata) electric organ was studied by following the competition in binding with labelled toxin α from Naja nigricollis venom.