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Hisashi Aso

Researcher at Tohoku University

Publications -  197
Citations -  4780

Hisashi Aso is an academic researcher from Tohoku University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Immune system & Innate immune system. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 188 publications receiving 4038 citations. Previous affiliations of Hisashi Aso include Agricultural Research Organization, Volcani Center & Osaka University of Pharmaceutical Sciences.

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Adipose tissue extracellular matrix: newly organized by adipocytes during differentiation

TL;DR: In vivo under conditions permissive for adipose conversion, the production and organization of ECM, accompanied by hyperplasia and hypertrophy of precursor cells, gives rise to adipose tissue in skeletal muscle with its own ECM products.
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Immunobiotic Lactobacillus jensenii Elicits Anti-Inflammatory Activity in Porcine Intestinal Epithelial Cells by Modulating Negative Regulators of the Toll-Like Receptor Signaling Pathway

TL;DR: The results indicated that PIE cells can be used to study the mechanisms involved in the protective activity of immunobiotics against intestinal inflammatory damage and may provide useful information for the development of new immunologically functional feeds that help to prevent inflammatory intestinal disorders, including weaning-associated intestinal inflammation.
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Dietary tryptophan alleviates dextran sodium sulfate-induced colitis through aryl hydrocarbon receptor in mice

TL;DR: Data suggest that tryptophan-containing diet might ameliorate DSS-induced acute colitis and regulate epithelial homeostasis through Ahr, which could serve as a promising preventive agent in the treatment of ulcerative colitis.
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Remarkable differences in telomere lengths among cloned cattle derived from different cell types.

TL;DR: The observations indicate that cloning does not necessarily restore the telomere clock but, rather, that nuclear transfer itself may commonly trigger an elongation of telomeres, probably more or less according to donor cell type.
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Toll-like receptor 4 and cytokine expression involved in functional immune response in an originally established porcine intestinal epitheliocyte cell line.

TL;DR: PIE induces inflammatory responses by up-regulating Th1 cytokines and chemokines in response to LPS or ETEC, suggesting that PIE is a useful cell line for studying inflammatory responses via TLR4/MD-2 in intestinal epithelial cells.