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Showing papers by "Mineshi Sakamoto published in 2002"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Although offspring are subjected to consecutive and moderate dose MeHg exposure throughout both the gestation and suckling periods, the risk is especially high during gestation but may decrease during lactation, and focal cerebellar dysplasia, including the heterotopic location of Purkinje cells and granule cells, was observed.

147 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Examining the changes in MeHg levels in infants who were reared on breast milk to evaluate the risks between fetal and breast-feeding periods based on Hg concentrations in red blood cells found a strong correlation in RBCs-Hg in mothers and umbilical cords, however, all the infants showed declines in HG concentrations throughout the breast- feeding period.

80 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that it is the extrinsic circumstances – rather than the timing of neuron generation – that regulates the expression of these proteins.
Abstract: To understand the effects of methylmercury (MeHg) on neuronal migration in the developing cerebral cortex, we performed double administrations of MeHg and 5-bromo-2-deoxyuridine (BrdU) to pregnant rats on different embryonic days (E11, E13, E16 or E21). Histopathological examination of a proportion of the offspring on postnatal day 28 revealed no apparent cytoarchitectural abnormalities in the primary motor and primary somatosensory cortices of the cerebrum. Morphometric analysis revealed no significant differences in total neuron population in either of these areas, and no differences in subpopulations of cells in any of the cortical layers, between any of the MeHg-exposed groups and the control animals. However, BrdU immunohistochemistry revealed an abnormally widespread distribution of the labeled cells throughout cortical layers II–VI of offspring exposed to MeHg on E16 and E21, indicating disruption of the inside-out pattern of neuronal migration. We examined one aspect of cell-fate determination by applying immunohistochemistry with antibodies against calbindin, parvalbumin, calretinin, and γ-aminobutyric acid, but found no differences in the topographic distributions of the antibody-labeled cells in the cortex between the controls and the MeHg-exposed offspring. These results suggest that it is the extrinsic circumstances – rather than the timing of neuron generation – that regulates the expression of these proteins.

33 citations