30 research outputs found

    キョウギ スポーツ センシュ ノ ナイシン ト ハツゲン オヨビ ゲンイン キゾク ト ジコ テイジ ノ カンレン ニツイテ

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    本研究は社会心理学的観点より、競技スポーツ選手の自己呈示について検討するものであった。自己呈示の起因に原因帰属があることを想定し、原因帰属と自己呈示方略の関連性について検討した。思わしくないプレーに対する原因帰属からみた内心と発言には不一致がみられた。因子分析の結果得られた原因帰属得点と、セルフ・ハンディキャッピング得点および原因呈示得点との関連について検討した。原因帰属の下位尺度の能力・素質得点とセルフ・ハンディキャッピング得点の関連は認められなかったが、人的・物的環境および心身コンディションとの関連が認められた。国際レベルの選手は、全国大会レベルおよび地区大会レベルの選手と比べて、能力・素質への原因帰属得点が低いことが明らかになった。そして、地区大会レベルの選手は、セルフ・ハンディキャッピングと原因呈示のどちらかの傾向があることが明らかとなった。This paper deals with self-presentation by the athletes on the level of competitive sports from the viewpoints of social psychology. This paper examines the relevance between causal attribution and self-presentation on the assumption that the latter is caused by the former. Our research identified the incompatibility between real intention by causal attribution and actual expression when athletes had unsatisfactory performance. This paper also examined the relevance between casual attribution scores and the selfhandicapping (SH) scores, and between causal attribution scores and causal presentation scores, after conducting factor analysis. The result could not identify the relevance between capability and talent, which is the sub-scale of causal attribution, and the SH scores. Instead, our research indicated that the SH scores have been rather influenced by the personal and material circumstances and psychological and physical conditions of the athletes. This paper also demonstrated that the athletes on the international level tend to have low scores on causal attribution on their capability and talent, compared with those on the national and local levels. The higher scores the athletes on the local level get for causal attribution, the higher scores they get for causal presentation, and the lower scores they get for SH

    Brown adipose tissue dysfunction promotes heart failure via a trimethylamine N-oxide-dependent mechanism.

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    Low body temperature predicts a poor outcome in patients with heart failure, but the underlying pathological mechanisms and implications are largely unknown. Brown adipose tissue (BAT) was initially characterised as a thermogenic organ, and recent studies have suggested it plays a crucial role in maintaining systemic metabolic health. While these reports suggest a potential link between BAT and heart failure, the potential role of BAT dysfunction in heart failure has not been investigated. Here, we demonstrate that alteration of BAT function contributes to development of heart failure through disorientation in choline metabolism. Thoracic aortic constriction (TAC) or myocardial infarction (MI) reduced the thermogenic capacity of BAT in mice, leading to significant reduction of body temperature with cold exposure. BAT became hypoxic with TAC or MI, and hypoxic stress induced apoptosis of brown adipocytes. Enhancement of BAT function improved thermogenesis and cardiac function in TAC mice. Conversely, systolic function was impaired in a mouse model of genetic BAT dysfunction, in association with a low survival rate after TAC. Metabolomic analysis showed that reduced BAT thermogenesis was associated with elevation of plasma trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) levels. Administration of TMAO to mice led to significant reduction of phosphocreatine and ATP levels in cardiac tissue via suppression of mitochondrial complex IV activity. Genetic or pharmacological inhibition of flavin-containing monooxygenase reduced the plasma TMAO level in mice, and improved cardiac dysfunction in animals with left ventricular pressure overload. In patients with dilated cardiomyopathy, body temperature was low along with elevation of plasma choline and TMAO levels. These results suggest that maintenance of BAT homeostasis and reducing TMAO production could be potential next-generation therapies for heart failure.We thank Kaori Yoshida, Keiko Uchiyama, Satomi Kawai, Naomi Hatanaka, Yoko Sawaguchi, Runa Washio, Takako Ichihashi, Nanako Koike, Keiko Uchiyama, Masaaki Nameta (Niigata University), Kaori Igarashi, Kaori Saitoh, Keiko Endo, Hiroko Maki, Ayano Ueno, Maki Ohishi, Sanae Yamanaka, Noriko Kagata (Keio University) for their excellent technical assistance, C. Ronald Kahn (Joslin Diabetes Center and Harvard Medical School) for providing the BAT cell line, Evan Rosen (Harvard Medical School) for providing us Ucp-Cre mice, Kosuke Morikawa (Kyoto University), Tomitake Tsukihara (University of Hyogo) and Shinya Yoshikawa (University of Hyogo) for their professional opinions and suggestions. Tis work was supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientifc Research (A) (20H00533) from MEXT, AMED under Grant Numbers JP20ek0210114, and AMED-CREST under Grant Number JP20gm1110012, and Moonshot Research and Development Program (21zf0127003s0201), MEXT Supported Program for the Strategic Research Foundation at Private Universities Japan, Private University Research Branding Project, and Leading Initiative for Excellent Young Researchers, and grants from the Takeda Medical Research Foundation, the Vehicle Racing Commemorative Foundation, Ono Medical Research Foundation, and the Suzuken Memorial Foundation (to T.M.). Support was also provided by a Grants-in-Aid for Young Scientists (Start-up) (26893080), and grants from the Uehara Memorial Foundation, Kowa Life Science Foundation, Manpei Suzuki Diabetes Foundation, SENSHIN Medical Research Foundation, ONO Medical Research Foundation, Tsukada Grant for Niigata University Medical Research, Te Nakajima Foundation, SUZUKEN memorial foundation, HOKUTO Corporation, Mochida Memorial Foundation for Medical & Pharmaceutical Research, Grants-in-Aid for Encouragement of Young Scientists (A) (16H06244), Daiichi Sankyo Foundation of Life Science, AMED Project for Elucidating and Controlling Mechanisms of Aging and Longevity under Grant Number JP17gm5010002, JP18gm5010002, JP19gm5010002, JP20gm5010002, JP21gm5010002, Astellas Foundation for Research on Metabolic Disorders, Research grant from Naito Foundation, Te Japan Geriatrics Society (to I.S.); by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientifc Research (C) (19K08974), Yujin Memorial Grant, Sakakibara Memorial Research Grant from Te Japan Research Promotion Society for Cardiovascular Diseases, TERUMO Life Science Foundation, Kanae Foundation (to Y.Y.), JST ERATO (JPMJER1902), AMED-CREST (JP20gm1010009), the Takeda Science Foundation, the Food Science Institute Foundation (to S.F.), and by a grant from Bourbon (to T.M., I.S. and Y.Y.).S

    血管内皮細胞老化について

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    Boysenberry polyphenol inhibits endothelial dysfunction and improves vascular health.

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    Endothelial cells have an important role in maintaining vascular homeostasis. Age-related disorders (including obesity, diabetes, and hypertension) or aging per se induce endothelial dysfunction that predisposes to the development of atherosclerosis. Polyphenols have been reported to suppress age-related endothelial cell disorders, but their role in vascular function is yet to be determined. We investigated the influence of boysenberry polyphenol on vascular health under metabolic stress in a murine model of dietary obesity. We found that administration of boysenberry polyphenol suppressed production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and increased production of nitric oxide (NO) in the aorta. It has been reported that p53 induces cellular senescence and has a crucial role in age-related disorders, including heart failure and diabetes. Administration of boysenberry polyphenol significantly reduced the endothelial p53 level in the aorta and ameliorated endothelial cell dysfunction in iliac arteries under metabolic stress. Boysenberry polyphenol also reduced ROS and p53 levels in cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs), while increasing NO production. Uncoupled endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS monomer) is known to promote ROS production. We found that boysenberry polyphenol reduced eNOS monomer levels both in vivo and in vitro, along with an increase of eNOS dimerization. To investigate the components of boysenberry polyphenol mediating these favorable biological effects, we extracted the anthocyanin fractions. We found that anthocyanins contributed to suppression of ROS and p53, in association with increased NO production and eNOS dimerization. In an ex vivo study, anthocyanins promoted relaxation of iliac arteries from mice with dietary obesity. These findings indicate that boysenberry polyphenol and anthocyanins, a major component of this polyphenol, inhibit endothelial dysfunction and contribute to maintenance of vascular homeostasis

    Senescent Cells: A Therapeutic Target in Cardiovascular Diseases

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    Senescent cell accumulation has been observed in age-associated diseases including cardiovascular diseases. Senescent cells lack proliferative capacity and secrete senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP) factors that may cause or worsen many cardiovascular diseases. Therapies targeting senescent cells, especially senolytic drugs that selectively induce senescent cell removal, have been shown to delay, prevent, alleviate, or treat multiple age-associated diseases in preclinical models. Some senolytic clinical trials have already been completed or are underway for a number of diseases and geriatric syndromes. Understanding how cellular senescence affects the various cell types in the cardiovascular system, such as endothelial cells, vascular smooth muscle cells, fibroblasts, immune cells, progenitor cells, and cardiomyocytes, is important to facilitate translation of senotherapeutics into clinical interventions. This review highlights: (1) the characteristics of senescent cells and their involvement in cardiovascular diseases, focusing on the aforementioned cardiovascular cell types, (2) evidence about senolytic drugs and other senotherapeutics, and (3) the future path and clinical potential of senotherapeutics for cardiovascular diseases

    Role of smooth muscle cell p53 in pulmonary arterial hypertension.

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    Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is characterized by remodeling and narrowing of the pulmonary arteries, which lead to elevation of right ventricular pressure, heart failure, and death. Proliferation of pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (PASMCs) is thought to be central to the pathogenesis of PAH, although the underlying mechanisms are still being explored. The protein p53 is involved in cell cycle coordination, DNA repair, apoptosis, and cellular senescence, but its role in pulmonary hypertension (PH) is not fully known. We developed a mouse model of hypoxia-induced pulmonary hypertension (PH) and found significant reduction of p53 expression in the lungs. Our in vitro experiments with metabolomic analyses and the Seahorse XF extracellular flux analyzer indicated that suppression of p53 expression in PASMCs led to upregulation of glycolysis and downregulation of mitochondrial respiration, suggesting a proliferative phenotype resembling that of cancer cells. It was previously shown that systemic genetic depletion of p53 in a murine PH model led to more severe lung manifestations. Lack of information about the role of cell-specific p53 signaling promoted us to investigate it in our mouse PH model with the inducible Cre-loxP system. We generated a mouse model with SMC-specific gain or loss of p53 function by crossing Myh11-Cre/ERT2 mice with floxed Mdm4 mice or floxed Trp53 mice. After these animals were exposed to hypoxia for 4 weeks, we conducted hemodynamic and echocardiographic studies. Surprisingly, the severity of PH was similar in both groups of mice and there were no differences between the genotypes. Our findings in these mice indicate that activation or suppression of p53 signaling in SMCs has a minor role in the pathogenesis of PH and suggest that p53 signaling in other cells (endothelial cells, immune cells, or fibroblasts) may be involved in the progression of this condition
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