31 research outputs found

    Is anyone looking at me? Direct gaze detection in children with and without autism

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    Atypical processing of eye contact is one of the significant characteristics of individuals with autism, but the mechanism underlying atypical direct gaze processing is still unclear. This study used a visual search paradigm to examine whether the facial context would affect direct gaze detection in children with autism. Participants were asked to detect target gazes presented among distracters with different gaze directions. The target gazes were either direct gaze or averted gaze, which were either presented alone (Experiment 1) or within facial context (Experiment 2). As with the typically developing children, the children with autism, were faster and more efficient to detect direct gaze than averted gaze, whether or not the eyes were presented alone or within faces. In addition, face inversion distorted efficient direct gaze detection in typically developing children, but not in children with autism. These results suggest that children with autism use featural information to detect direct gaze, whereas typically developing children use configural information to detect direct gaze

    Prediction of Indocyanine Green Retention Rate at 15 Minutes by Correlated Liver Function Parameters before Hepatectomy.

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    Indocyanine green retention rate at 15 min (ICGR15) is a useful marker of liver function in deciding on the extent of hepatectomy. To determine ICGR15 regardless of liver condition, we sought to establish a formula for converted ICGR15 based on conventional blood tests and technetium-99 m galactosyl human serum albumin ((99m)Tc-GSA) scintigraphy

    Establishment of Proliferative Tetraploid Cells from Normal Human Fibroblasts

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    The chromosomal instability of polyploid cells, which leads to the formation of aneuploid cells, is causally related to carcinogenesis in human tissues. However, the precise link between the chromosomal instability of polyploid cells and oncogenic transformation of them remains elusive. This is partly because we lack an experimental model in which non-transformed polyploid human cells can propagate in vitro. In a previous report, we demonstrated that proliferative tetraploid cells can be established from TIG-1 human fibroblasts by treatment with the spindle poison demecolcine (DC, colcemid) for 4 days. However, this procedure could not be applied to other human fibroblast strains because the resulting cells proliferated as a mixture of diploid and tetraploid populations. Here, we report a modified procedure to establish proliferative tetraploid cells from human fibroblasts of the BJ strain with minimum contamination by diploid cells. In the modified procedure, DC-arrested mitotic cells were collected by mitotic shake-off and treated with DC for an additional 3 days. DC-treated cells restarted proliferation as tetraploid cells after several days of growth arrest and showed similar growth to that of untreated diploid cells. The MDM2 antagonist Nutlin-3a activated p53 in established tetraploid cells and suppressed their growth, indicating that these cells have functional p53. These results contradicted the hypothesis that p53 functions as the tetraploidy checkpoint and prevents proliferation of tetraploid cells. Tetraploid cells established by our method could be a valuable model for the study of chromosomal instability and the oncogenic potential of polyploid cells

    Characterization of the Inactivation Process of the Sodium Channel in Frog Ventricular Cells

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    The voltage clamp experiments were conducted on single frog ventricular cells with the oil gap method for characterization of the sodium current (INa). The results obtained can be summarized as follows: 1. The falling phase of INa could be fitted by a single-exponential function when the series resistance was small (0.81-2.25 MO) and compensated. 2. Normalized steady-state inactivation (h∞) curve could be fitted by the equation h∞ = 1/(1 + exp(V-Vh)/k), where the half-inactivation voltage (Vh) was -59.8 mV and the slope factor (k) was 5.64 m V. No shift of this curve was observed throughout the experiment. 3. There was a delay of onset of inactivation development. 4. The time course for recovery of INa from inactivation exhibited a single time constant. 5. Almost all properties of the inactivation process of Na channel can be described by the original Hodgkin-Huxley's (H-H) kinetic model, except the presence of the delayed onset of inactivation. In order to incorporate this discrepancy, modification of H-H model is required, that the transition rate constant from the open state to the inactivated state may well be larger than that from the closed state to the inactivated state.This work was supported in part by a grant-in-aid from the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture of Japan (to I. S) and Tsuchiya Foundation (to M. Y)

    Source Identification Analysis of Lead in the Blood of Japanese Children by Stable Isotope Analysis

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    Considering the negative effect of lead (Pb) on children’s neurodevelopment, Pb exposure should be minimized to the lowest extent possible, though the blood Pb (BPb) concentrations in Japanese children are among the lowest in the world. To identify the sources of Pb in blood, isotope ratios (IRs: 207Pb/206Pb and 208Pb/206Pb) of Pb (PbIR) in whole blood from eight Japanese children were measured by multi-collector ICP mass spectrometry. Further, samples of house dust, soil, duplicate diet, and tobacco, collected from home environments, were also measured and were compared with PbIR of blood case by case. The relative contribution of Pb in the home environment to BPb were estimated by linear programming (finding an optimal solution which satisfy the combination of IRs and intakes from various sources) when appropriate. Source apportionment for three children could be estimated, and contributions of diet, soil, and house dust were 19–34%, 0–55%, and 20–76%, respectively. PbIR for the remaining five children also suggested that non-dietary sources also contributed to Pb exposure, though quantitative contributions could not be estimated. Non-dietary sources such as soil, house dust, and passive tobacco smoke are also important contributors to Pb exposure for Japanese children based on PbIR results
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