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Showing papers by "University of Tokyo published in 1988"


Journal ArticleDOI
31 Mar 1988-Nature
TL;DR: Cloning and sequencing of preproendothelin complementary DNA shows that mature endothelin is generated through an unusual proteolytic processing, and regional homologies to a group of neurotoxins suggest that endothelins is an endogenous modulator of voltage-dependent ion channels.
Abstract: An endothelium-derived 21-residue vasoconstrictor peptide, endothelin, has been isolated, and shown to be one of the most potent vasoconstrictors known. Cloning and sequencing of preproendothelin complementary DNA shows that mature endothelin is generated through an unusual proteolytic processing, and regional homologies to a group of neurotoxins suggest that endothelin is an endogenous modulator of voltage-dependent ion channels. Expression of the endothelin gene is regulated by several vasoactive agents, indicating the existence of a novel cardiovascular control system.

10,651 citations


Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: Progress in the biochemistry of microorganisms have revealed that cell-component analysis can be effectively applied to bacterial systematics, providing the basis of chemotaxonomy, and DNA homology data contribute to the clarification, not only of the relatedness of two organisms, but also of the evaluation of phenotypic characteristics.
Abstract: Publisher Summary Recent advances in the biochemistry of microorganisms have revealed that cell-component analysis can be effectively applied to bacterial systematics, providing the basis of chemotaxonomy. Analyses of cell components are coming to be essential tools not only for bacterial classification but also for identification. The sequence of chromosomal DNA holds the essential genetic information for an organism. Phylogenetic relationships are often examined using data on nucleotide sequences of ribosomal RNA. However, it is still impossible to determine the sequences of large polynucleotides for the number of organisms sufficient for taxonomic purposes. DNA (RNA) homologies, which have been applied to various kinds of bacteria, present useful information on bacterial systematics. Homology indices are values used in comparing microorganisms. DNA homology data contribute to the clarification, not only of the relatedness of two organisms, but also of the evaluation of phenotypic characteristics.

2,862 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the fractal dimension of the set of points (t, f(t)) forming the graph of a function f defined on the unit interval was measured using a self-similarity property.

1,825 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider scale invariant theories which couple gravity to Maxwell fields and antisymmetric tensor fields with a dilaton field, and they exhibit in a unified way solutions representing black hole, space-time membrane, vortex and cosmological solutions.

1,260 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
07 Jan 1988-Nature
TL;DR: A group of shape-selective neurons in an anterior ventral part of the temporal cortex of monkeys that exhibited sustained activity during the delay period of a visual short-term memory task are reported.
Abstract: It has been proposed that visual-memory traces are located in the temporal lobes of the cerebral cortex, as electric stimulation of this area in humans results in recall of imagery. Lesions in this area also affect recognition of an object after a delay in both humans and monkeys, indicating a role in short-term memory of images. Single-unit recordings from the temporal cortex have shown that some neurons continue to fire when one of two or four colours are to be remembered temporarily. But neuronal responses selective to specific complex objects, including hands and faces, cease soon after the offset of stimulus presentation. These results led to the question of whether any of these neurons could serve the memory of complex objects. We report here a group of shape-selective neurons in an anterior ventral part of the temporal cortex of monkeys that exhibited sustained activity during the delay period of a visual short-term memory task. The activity was highly selective for the pictorial information to be memorized and was independent of the physical attributes such as size, orientation, colour or position of the object. These observations show that the delay activity represents the short-term memory of the categorized percept of a picture.

808 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results indicate that both VT2 and Shiga toxin inactivate 60S ribosomal subunits by cleaving the N-glycosidic bond at A-4324 in 28S ribOSomal RNA.
Abstract: The site of action of a Vero toxin (VT2 or Shiga-like toxin II) from enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli and Shiga toxin from Shigella dysenteriae 1 on eukaryotic ribosomes was studied. Treatment of eukaryotic ribosomes with either toxin caused the release of a fragment of 400 nucleotides from 28S ribosomal RNA when the isolated ribosomal RNA was treated with aniline. Release of this fragment with aniline treatment was accompanied by inhibition of protein synthesis and of elongation-factor-1-dependent aminoacyl-tRNA binding to ribosomes. Analysis of the nucleotide sequence of the 3'-terminal fragment of 553 nucleotides of 28S rRNA of rat liver 60S ribosomal subunits suggested that an adenine base at position 4324 (A-4324) was absent in toxin-treated 28S rRNA. Further analysis by thin-layer chromatography demonstrated quantitative release of adenine from rat liver ribosomes on treatment with the toxins. These results indicate that both VT2 and Shiga toxin inactivate 60S ribosomal subunits by cleaving the N-glycosidic bond at A-4324 in 28S ribosomal RNA.

779 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work has shown that a potent vasoconstrictor peptide, endothelin (EDT), was isolated from vascular endothelial cells and stimulated the DNA synthesis of VSMCs in a dose‐dependent manner, which might be related to the development of atherosclerosis.

752 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
27 Oct 1988-Nature
TL;DR: The results indicate that the selectivity acquired by cells in the anterior ventral temporal cortex of monkeys represents a neuronal correlate of the associative long-term memory of pictures.
Abstract: In human long-term memory, ideas and concepts become associated in the learning process. No neuronal correlate for this cognitive function has so far been described, except that memory traces are thought to be localized in the cerebral cortex; the temporal lobe has been assigned as the site for visual experience because electric stimulation of this area results in imagery recall and lesions produce deficits in visual recognition of objects. We previously reported that in the anterior ventral temporal cortex of monkeys, individual neurons have a sustained activity that is highly selective for a few of the 100 coloured fractal patterns used in a visual working-memory task. Here I report the development of this selectivity through repeated trials involving the working memory. The few patterns for which a neuron was conjointly selective were frequently related to each other through stimulus-stimulus association imposed during training. The results indicate that the selectivity acquired by these cells represents a neuronal correlate of the associative long-term memory of pictures.

715 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The nonlinear optical polarizability is shown to be greatly enhanced for an assembly of such microcrystallites as the exciton is quantized due to the confinement effect and the excitons in a single microCrystallite interact strongly enough to make theexcitons deviate from ideal harmonic oscillators.
Abstract: We analyze theoretically the oscillator strength and the third-order optical polarizability X 13, due to excitons in semiconductor microcrystallites. The nonlinear optical polarizability is shown to be greatly enhanced for an assembly of such microcrystallites as the exciton is quantized due to the confinement effect and the excitons in a single microcrystallite interact strongly enough to make the excitons deviate from ideal harmonic oscillators.

540 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new method to provide interatomic pair potentials from ab initio Hartree-Fock self-consistent-field calculations is proposed; potentials are calculated for model clusters of silica and tested in the molecular-dynamics simulation of crystalline states.
Abstract: A new method to provide interatomic pair potentials from ab initio Hartree-Fock self-consistent-field calculations is proposed; potentials are calculated for model clusters of silica (Si${\mathrm{O}}_{2}$). They are tested in the molecular-dynamics simulation of crystalline states, in which four known polymorphs of silica are shown to be dynamically stable.

511 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effective root-mean-square (RMS) radii of nucleon distribution of these nuclei have been deduced using a Glauber-model calculation.

Book
Alan Roland1
01 Jan 1988
TL;DR: In this paper, a condition is the on that will make you feel that you must read, which is the condition that makes reading a need and a hobby at the same time.
Abstract: Some people may be laughing when looking at you reading in your spare time. Some may be admired of you. And some may want be like you who have reading hobby. What about your own feel? Have you felt right? Reading is a need and a hobby at once. This condition is the on that will make you feel that you must read. If you know are looking for the book enPDFd in search of self in india and japan toward a cross cultural psychology as the choice of reading, you can find here.

Journal Article
TL;DR: The results imply that the presence of the glycoprotein may be useful as a marker for in vitro studies of multidrug resistance in various malignancies and as an indicator of therapeutic efficacy of ex vivo eradication of multi-drug-resistant cancer cells.
Abstract: A monoclonal antibody, MRK 16, specific to a human myelogenous leukemia cell line, K-562, and resistant to Adriamycin, was used to determine the localization of the antigen molecules (P-glycoprotein) recognized by the monoclonal antibody. P-glycoprotein was found to be expressed very strongly in the adrenal cortex and medulla of adults and strongly in the renal tubules of the kidney and the placenta. Interestingly, P-glycoprotein was not distributed in fetal and neonatal adrenals, and thus may be closely related to adrenal maturation. A high level of P-glycoprotein expression was also seen in one case each of untreated lung cancer (one of ten) and breast cancer (one of nine). Immunoelectron microscopically, the P-glycoprotein was distributed evenly on the membranes of K-562/ADM and 2780 cells. These results imply that the presence of the glycoprotein may be useful as a marker for in vitro studies of multidrug resistance in various malignancies and as an indicator of therapeutic efficacy of ex vivo eradication of multidrug-resistant cancer cells, although other mechanisms of drug resistance may exist, and there is a possibility that this MRK 16 monoclonal antibody may not recognize all P-glycoprotein.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The function of BSF-2 is studied on pheochromocytoma PC12 cells, a model system for induction of neuronal differentiation, which began to change morphologically to neurite-extending cells after several days.
Abstract: B-cell stimulatory factor 2 (BSF-2) is a lymphokine which induces the final maturation of B cells. BSF-2 acts on a variety of cells other than B cells, and moreover, expression of BSF-2 mRNA is detected in interleukin-1 beta-stimulated glioblastoma and astrocytoma cell lines. Here, we studied the function of BSF-2 on pheochromocytoma PC12 cells, a model system for induction of neuronal differentiation. PC12 cells possess specific receptors for BSF-2. The BSF-2-stimulated PC12 cells expressed the c-fos proto-oncogene transiently, and they began to change morphologically to neurite-extending cells after several days. The number of voltage-dependent Na+ channels was also increased.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An ambient pressure superconductivity of (BEDT-TTF)2Cu(SCN)2 was observed by d.c. magnetic susceptibility and electrical conductivity measurements as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: An ambient pressure superconductivity of (BEDT-TTF)2Cu(SCN)2 was observed by d.c. magnetic susceptibility and electrical conductivity measurements. The superconducting critical temperature is the highest (TC=10.4 K) among the organic superconductors so far obtained, even though the anion has a positional disorder in the crystal.

Journal ArticleDOI
10 Nov 1988-Nature
TL;DR: Both the codon and amino-acid specificity of this tRNA are converted by a single post-transcriptional modification of the first position of the anticodon during tRNA maturation.
Abstract: An Escherichia coli isoleucine transfer RNA specific for the codon AUA (tRNA2Ile or tRNAminorIle (ref. 1) has a novel modified nucleo-side, lysidine (L; ref. 2) (Fig. la) in the first position of the anticodon (position 34), which is essential for the specific recognition of the codon AUA (ref. 1). We isolated the gene for tRNA2Ile (ileX) and found that the anticodon is CAT, which is characteristic of the methionine tRNA gene. Replacement of L(34) of tRNA2Ile molecule enzymatically with unmodified C(34) resulted in a marked reduction of the isoleucine-accepting activity and, surprisingly, in the appearance of methionine-accepting activity. Thus, both the codon and amino-acid specificity of this tRNA are converted by a single post-transcriptional modification of the first position of the anticodon during tRNA maturation.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The mass dependence of the spherical harmonic moments provided clear evidence for the production of the complete leading orbitally excited K∗ series up through JP = 5− as discussed by the authors, and also provided new evidence for underlying states.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A new statistical neurodynamical method is proposed for analyzing the non-equilibrium dynamical behaviors of an autocorrelation associative memory model and explains the strange behaviors due to strange shapes of the basins of attractors.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The present method was applied to the identification of the structures of oligosaccharides in hen ovalbumin and it was found that two unusual oligosACcharides that have not yet been reported exist in ovalbumIn.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Competitive binding studies demonstrated that the binding sites of tau and MAP1A on the microtubule surfaces are most distinct, although they may partially overlap.
Abstract: Tau is a family of closely related proteins (55,000-62,000 mol wt) which are contained in the nerve cells and copolymerize with tubulin to induce the formation of microtubules in vitro. All information so far has indicated that tau is closely apposed to the microtubule lattice, and there was no indication of domains projecting from the microtubule polymer lattice. We have studied the molecular structure of the tau factor and its mode of binding on microtubules using the quick-freeze, deep-etch method (QF.DE) and low angle rotary shadowing technique. Phosphocellulose column-purified tubulin from porcine brain was polymerized with tau and the centrifuged pellets were processed by QF.DE. We observed periodic armlike elements (18.7 +/- 4.8 nm long) projecting from the microtubule surface. Most of the projections appeared to cross-link adjacent microtubules. We measured the longitudinal periodicity of tau projections on the microtubules and found it to match the 6-dimer pattern better than the 12-dimer pattern. The stoichiometry of tau versus tubulin in preparations of tau saturated microtubules was 1:approximately 5.0 (molar ratio). Tau molecules adsorbed on mica took on rodlike forms (56.1 +/- 14.1 nm long). Although both tau and MAP1 are contained in axons, competitive binding studies demonstrated that the binding sites of tau and MAP1A on the microtubule surfaces are most distinct, although they may partially overlap.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the number of electron-like single-prong events is in good agreement with the predictions of a Monte Carlo calculation based on atmospheric neutrino interactions in the KAMIOKANDE detector.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the tracer diffusion coefficient of oxide ions, D∗ O, in La 1− x Sr x CoO 3− δ ( x = 0.1) and La 1 − x Srs x M O 3−δ ( M = Co, Fe) was determined.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Genomic Southern blot analysis suggests that the human haploid genome contains a single Gs alpha gene and nuclease mapping analysis of human Gsalpha mRNA identified multiple transcriptional initiation sites.
Abstract: The gene for Gs alpha (the alpha subunit of the guanine nucleotide-binding protein Gs) was isolated from human genomic libraries using rat Gs alpha cDNA as a probe. Comparison of the nucleotide sequence of the human gene with that of the rat cDNA revealed that the human Gs alpha gene spans approximately equal to 20 kilobases and is composed of 13 exons and 12 introns. Genomic Southern blot analysis suggests that the human haploid genome contains a single Gs alpha gene. Previous reports indicated the presence of multiple species of Gs alpha cDNA. The structure of the human Gs alpha gene suggests that four types of Gs alpha mRNAs may be generated from a single Gs alpha gene by alternate use of exon 3 and/or of two 3' splice sites of intron 3, where an unusual splice junction sequence (TG) instead of the consensus (AG) is used. S1 nuclease mapping analysis of human Gs alpha mRNA identified multiple transcriptional initiation sites. The promoter region of the human Gs alpha gene has extremely high G + C content (85%). It contains 4 "GC" boxes, but no typical "TATA" or "CAAT" box sequence. In the 5' flanking region, there are several blocks of sequences that are similar to the sequences of the 5' flanking region of the human c-Ki-ras2 gene.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a presupernova evolutionary model of massive stars is presented, which includes Coulomb interaction in the equation of state, electron capture from the beginning of oxygen burning and many links between the silicon and iron quasi-equilibrium clusters during silicon burning.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A synchronous multiple-user spread-spectrum multiple system is proposed that uses N-shift cross-orthogonal sequences and a complete complementary code derived from them are defined and discussed.
Abstract: N-shift cross-orthogonal sequences and a complete complementary code derived from them are defined and discussed. A general method for generating this code is also discussed. A synchronous multiple-user spread-spectrum multiple system is proposed that uses N-shift cross-orthogonal sequences. >

Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 1988
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that there exists an infinite number of exactly solvable models in 2-dimen-sional statistical mechanics and a brief summary of the quantum inverse scattering method is given to emphasize the soliton theoretic aspect of the theory.
Abstract: Recent studies on exactly solvable models in statistical mechanics are reviewed. A brief summary of the quantum inverse scattering method is given to emphasize the soliton theoretic aspect of the theory. Introducing a class of lattice models called the IRF models, it is shown that there exists an infinite number of exactly solvable models in 2-dimen-sional statistical mechanics. Significances both in physics and mathematics are discussed.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proved, for the first time, that recombinant technique can produce glycoprotein hormone whose carbohydrate structures are common to the major sugar chains of the native one.

Journal ArticleDOI
02 Jun 1988-Nature
TL;DR: Comparison of the genome of SIVAGM with those of known HIV/SIVs indicates that the virus is a new simian lentivirus that is approximately equally distantly related to HIV-1 and HIV-2 in contrast to SIVMAC, which is much closer to HIV
Abstract: Some wild African green monkeys are known to be naturally infected with a retrovirus related to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) without having any apparent symptoms of an AIDS-like disease. This simian immunodeficiency virus, designated SIVAGM, may be helpful in clarifying the evolution and pathogenicity of HIV. Some virus strains that were previously reported to be isolated from African green monkeys were shown to be laboratory contaminations of SIVMAC (SIV from a rhesus macaque) Here we report the complete DNA sequence of authentic SIVAGM, which was isolated from a naturally infected African green monkey of Kenyan origin. Comparison of the genome of SIVAGM with those of known HIV/SIVs indicates that the virus is a new simian lentivirus that is approximately equally distantly related to HIV-1 and HIV-2 in contrast to SIVMAC, which is much closer to HIV-2 than to HIV-1 (refs 5, 9).

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The nonlinear optical phenomena are expected to have a fast response time of a picosecond in GaAs quantum wells and a subpicose Cond in CdS quantum wells through the short lifetime of excitons.
Abstract: An exciton has a macroscopic transition dipole moment because it is a coherent excitation over the whole crystal. The interaction of this exciton with a radiation field, which results in a polariton in a bulk crystal, brings about the rapid radiative decay of the exciton in low-dimensional systems due to breakdown of the translational symmetry. This large decay constant at the same time makes the excitons deviate from ideal bosons so that we have a large third-order optical susceptibility enhanced by the macroscopic transition dipole moment under near-resonant excitation. The nonlinear optical phenomena are expected to have a fast response time of a picosecond in GaAs quantum wells and a subpicosecond in CdS quantum wells through the short lifetime of excitons.

Journal Article
TL;DR: The results indicate that vasoconstrictors and vasodilators may modulate smooth muscle contraction by changing the cytosolic Ca++ concentrations and also byChanging the sensitivity of contractile elements to Ca++.
Abstract: In rat aortic strips, muscle contraction was recorded simultaneously with cytosolic Ca++ level, which was indicated by the 500 nm fluorescence of Ca++ indicator, fura 2, due to excitation at either 340 nm (F340) or 380 nm (F380) and the ratio of F340 to F380 (R340/380). On the addition of 72.7 nM K+ or 1 microM norepinephrine, muscle contraction followed the increase in R340/380 (resulted from the increased F340 and the decreased F380). Cytosolic Ca++ concentrations of resting, 72.7 mM K+-stimulated and 1 microM norepinephrine-stimulated aortas were tentatively calculated as 228 +/- 25, 1784 +/- 154 and 1528 +/- 180 nM, respectively. Cumulative addition of K+ or norepinephrine induced concentration-dependent increase in both muscle tension and R340/380. However, norepinephrine induced greater contraction than K+ when both of these stimulants induced similar increase in R340/380. Addition of 10 mM tetraethylammonium and 1 microM Bay k8644 caused rhythmic contractions which followed the rhythmic changes in R340/380. EGTA decreased the muscle contraction and decreased R340/380. In Ca++-free solution, addition of 10 microM norepinephrine or 20 mM caffeine induced transient increase in both muscle tension and R340/380. Tension changes always were preceded by the fluorescent changes. Verapamil (10 microM) decreased both tension development and R340/380 in high K+- and norepinephrine-stimulated tissues. Sodium nitroprusside (1 microM) also decreased both tension and R340/380 in norepinephrine-stimulated tissues, whereas it decreased tension more strongly than R340/380 in high K+-stimulated tissues. These results indicate that vasoconstrictors and vasodilators may modulate smooth muscle contraction by changing the cytosolic Ca++ concentrations and also by changing the sensitivity of contractile elements to Ca++.