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Shintaro Sato

Researcher at Osaka University

Publications -  40
Citations -  30979

Shintaro Sato is an academic researcher from Osaka University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Signal transduction. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 27 publications receiving 29429 citations.

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A Toll-like receptor recognizes bacterial DNA.

TL;DR: It is shown that cellular response to CpG DNA is mediated by a Toll-like receptor, TLR9, and vertebrate immune systems appear to have evolved a specific Toll- like receptor that distinguishes bacterial DNA from self-DNA.
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Differential roles of MDA5 and RIG-I helicases in the recognition of RNA viruses

TL;DR: It is found that RIG-I is essential for the production of interferons in response to RNA viruses including paramyxoviruses, influenza virus and Japanese encephalitis virus, whereas MDA5 is critical for picornavirus detection.
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Role of adaptor TRIF in the MyD88-independent toll-like receptor signaling pathway.

TL;DR: It is shown that TRIF is essential for TLR3- and TLR4-mediated signaling pathways facilitating mammalian antiviral host defense and complete loss of nuclear factor kappa B activation in response toTLR4 stimulation is demonstrated.
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Small anti-viral compounds activate immune cells via the TLR7 MyD88-dependent signaling pathway.

TL;DR: It is shown that the imidazoquinolines activate immune cells via the Toll-like receptor 7 (TLR7)-MyD88–dependent signaling pathway, and that neither MyD88- nor TLR7-deficient mice showed any inflammatory cytokine production by macrophages, proliferation of splenocytes or maturation of dendritic cells.
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IPS-1, an adaptor triggering RIG-I- and Mda5-mediated type I interferon induction

TL;DR: IPS-1 contained an N-terminal CARD-like structure that mediated interaction with the CARD of RIG-I and Mda5, which are cytoplasmic RNA helicases that sense viral infection and blocked interferon induction by virus infection.