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Institution

University of Tsukuba

EducationTsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan
About: University of Tsukuba is a education organization based out in Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Gene. The organization has 36352 authors who have published 79483 publications receiving 1934752 citations. The organization is also known as: Tsukuba daigaku & Tsukuba University.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A mouse Fc receptor, designated Fcα/μR, and its human homolog, that bind both IgM and IgA with intermediate or high affinity are described that are involved in the primary stages of the immune response to microbes.
Abstract: IgM is the first antibody to be produced in a humoral immune response and plays an important role in the primary stages of immunity Here we describe a mouse Fc receptor, designated Fc alpha/microR, and its human homolog, that bind both IgM and IgA with intermediate or high affinity Fc alpha/microR is constitutively expressed on the majority of B lymphocytes and macrophages Cross-linking Fc alpha/microR expressed on a pro-B cell line Ba/F3 transfectant with soluble IgM or IgM-coated microparticles induced internalization of the receptor Fc alpha/microR also mediated primary B lymphocyte endocytosis of IgM-coated Staphylococcus aureus Thus, Fc alpha/microR is involved in the primary stages of the immune response to microbes

360 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Different specificity and affinity of nuclear SREBP-1 and -2 for different target DNAs are demonstrated, explaining a part of the mechanism behind the differential in vivo regulation of cholesterogenic and lipogenic enzymes by SRE BP -2, respectively.

359 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, an integrated water resources model was developed to assess global water resources from the perspective of subannual variation in water availability and water use, and the results indicate the validity of the model and the input meteorological forcing because site-specific parameter tuning was not used in the series of simulations.
Abstract: . To assess global water resources from the perspective of subannual variation in water availability and water use, an integrated water resources model was developed. In a companion report, we presented the global meteorological forcing input used to drive the model and six modules, namely, the land surface hydrology module, the river routing module, the crop growth module, the reservoir operation module, the environmental flow requirement module, and the anthropogenic withdrawal module. Here, we present the results of the model application and global water resources assessments. First, the timing and volume of simulated agriculture water use were examined because agricultural use composes approximately 85% of total consumptive water withdrawal in the world. The estimated crop calendar showed good agreement with earlier reports for wheat, maize, and rice in major countries of production. In major countries, the error in the planting date was ±1 mo, but there were some exceptional cases. The estimated irrigation water withdrawal also showed fair agreement with country statistics, but tended to be underestimated in countries in the Asian monsoon region. The results indicate the validity of the model and the input meteorological forcing because site-specific parameter tuning was not used in the series of simulations. Finally, global water resources were assessed on a subannual basis using a newly devised index. This index located water-stressed regions that were undetected in earlier studies. These regions, which are indicated by a gap in the subannual distribution of water availability and water use, include the Sahel, the Asian monsoon region, and southern Africa. The simulation results show that the reservoir operations of major reservoirs (>1 km3) and the allocation of environmental flow requirements can alter the population under high water stress by approximately −11% to +5% globally. The integrated model is applicable to assessments of various global environmental projections such as climate change.

359 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: SREBP-1 regulation of lipogenesis is highly involved in the development of fatty livers but does not seem to be a determinant of obesity in Lep ob /Lep ob mice.

359 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: NRF2 has a critical role in protection against pulmonary fibrosis, presumably through enhancement of cellular antioxidant capacity, and this study has important implications for the development of intervention strategies against fibrosis.
Abstract: The molecular mechanisms of pulmonary fibrosis are poorly understood, although reactive oxygen species are thought to have an important role. NRF2 is a transcription factor that protects cells and tissues from oxidative stress by activating protective antioxidant and detoxifying enzymes. We hypothesized that NRF2 protects lungs from injury and fibrosis induced by bleomycin, an anti-neoplastic agent that causes pulmonary fibrosis in susceptible patients. To test this hypothesis, mice with targeted deletion of Nrf2 (Nrf2-/-) and wild-type (Nrf2+/+) mice were treated with bleomycin or vehicle, and pulmonary injury and fibrotic responses were compared. Bleomycin-induced increases in lung weight, epithelial cell death, and inflammation were significantly greater in Nrf2-/- mice than in Nrf2+/+ mice. Indices of lung fibrosis (hydroxyproline content, collagen accumulation, fibrotic score, cell proliferation) were significantly greater in bleomycin-treated Nrf2-/- mice, compared with Nrf2+/+ mice. NRF2 expression and activity were elevated in Nrf2+/+ mice by bleomycin. Bleomycin caused greater up-regulation of several NRF2-inducible antioxidant enzyme genes and protein products in Nrf2+/+ mice compared with Nrf2-/- mice. Further, bleomycin-induced transcripts and protein levels of lung injury and fibrosis markers were significantly attenuated in Nrf2+/+ mice compared with Nrf2-/- mice. Results demonstrated that NRF2 has a critical role in protection against pulmonary fibrosis, presumably through enhancement of cellular antioxidant capacity. This study has important implications for the development of intervention strategies against fibrosis.

359 citations


Authors

Showing all 36572 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Aaron R. Folsom1811118134044
Kazuo Shinozaki178668128279
Hyun-Chul Kim1764076183227
Masayuki Yamamoto1711576123028
Hua Zhang1631503116769
Lewis L. Lanier15955486677
David Cella1561258106402
Takashi Taniguchi1522141110658
Yoshio Bando147123480883
Kazuhiko Hara1411956107697
Janet Rossant13841671913
Christoph Paus1371585100801
Kohei Miyazono13551568706
Craig Blocker134137994195
Fumihiko Ukegawa133149294465
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023104
2022323
20214,079
20203,887
20193,515
20183,388