Session Details
[1S08a]75th anniversary symposium of the Journal of Physiological Sciences
Mon. Mar 17, 2025 1:40 PM - 3:30 PM JST
Mon. Mar 17, 2025 4:40 AM - 6:30 AM UTC
Mon. Mar 17, 2025 4:40 AM - 6:30 AM UTC
Room 8
Oranizers :Hotta Harumi (TOKYO METROPOLITAN INSTITUTE FOR GERIATRICS AND GERONTOLOGY, DEPARTMENT OF AUTONOMIC NEUROSCIENCE) and Tominaga Makoto (Nagoya Advanced Research and Development Center)
PSJ : Editorial Board of the Journal of Physiological Sciences
The Journal of Physiological Sciences (JPS), the official journal of the Physiological Society of Japan, has been disseminating academic achievement of physiological research from Japan. In 2025, it will be the 75th anniversary of JPS started as JJP in 1950. In this symposium, the history of JPS will be introduced, and the current status of JPS will be reported. Each year, the outstanding papers published in JPS are awarded as Hiroshi and Aya Irisawa Memorial Award for Excellent Papers in The Journal of Physiological Sciences" by the Physiological Society of Japan. Recent recipients will make presentation on their excellent papers. Through this symposium, the achievements of JPS are celebrated, and discuss the further potential of this journal.
[[OD]1S08a-1]The history and current status of Journal of Physiological Sciences
○Motohiko Sato (Physiology, Aichi Medical University)
[[OD]1S08a-2]The physiological role of gentle mechanical skin stimulation in nociceptive inhibition: from basic research to clinical application
○Nobuhiro Watanabe, Harumi Hotta (Department of Autonomic Neuroscience, Tokyo Metropolitan Institute for Geriatrics and Gerontology)
[1S08a-3]Early phase events during endothelial barrier disruption; Critical roles of Rho-Rho kinase and myosin light chain di-phosphorylation in cell periphery
○Mayumi Hirano, Katsuya Hirano (Department of Cardiovascular Physiology Faculty of Medicine, Kagawa University)
[[OD]1S08a-4]Chemogenetic activation of endogenous arginine vasopressin exerts anorexigenic effects via central nesfatin-1/NucB2 pathway
○Takashi MARUYAMA, Kenya Sanada, Yoichi Ueta (University of Occupational and Environmental Health, Japan)
[1S08a-5]TMC4 is a novel chloride channel involved in high-concentration salt taste sensation
○Yoichi Kasahara1, Masataka Narukawa2,1, Tomiko Asakura1,3 (1.The university of Tokyo, 2.Kyoto Women's University, 3.The Open University)