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Yukihiro Noda

Yukihiro Noda

D-Index & Metrics

Neuroscience

D-Index
67
Citations
12910
World Ranking
2930
National Ranking
74

Overview

Yukihiro Noda is affiliated with Meijo University in Japan and has contributed extensively to research in medicine and neuroscience. Their work spans multiple subfields, including molecular biology, biological psychiatry, cellular and molecular neuroscience, psychiatry and mental health, and physiology.

The primary topics explored by Noda cover a range of neuroscience and psychiatric themes such as tryptophan and brain disorders, nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, receptor mechanisms and signaling, stress responses and cortisol, neurotransmitter receptor influence on behavior, neuroscience and neuropharmacology research, and schizophrenia research and treatment.

Recent publications by Noda and collaborators include the following:

  • Astrotactin 2 (ASTN2) regulates emotional and cognitive functions by affecting neuronal morphogenesis and monoaminergic systems (2023, Journal of Neurochemistry)
  • Involvement of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors in behavioral abnormalities and psychological dependence in schizophrenia-like model mice (2020, European Neuropsychopharmacology)
  • Duloxetine attenuates pain in association with downregulation of platelet serotonin transporter in patients with burning mouth syndrome and atypical odontalgia (2021, Human Psychopharmacology Clinical and Experimental)
  • Involvement of protein kinase C beta1-serotonin transporter system dysfunction in emotional behaviors in stressed mice (2020, Neurochemistry International)
  • Memantine ameliorates the impairment of social behaviors induced by a single social defeat stress as juveniles (2022, Neuropharmacology)

Frequent publishing venues for Noda's research include proceedings for the Annual Meeting of The Japanese Pharmacological Society, Iryo Yakugaku (Japanese Journal of Pharmaceutical Health Care and Sciences), The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology, Neurochemistry International, and Asian Cardiovascular and Thoracic Annals.

Noda has collaborated with various researchers frequently, among whom are Akira Yoshimi, Norio Ozaki, Akihiro Mouri, Mizuki Uchida, and Kiyofumi Yamada.

Best Publications

  • Truncated CBP Protein Leads to Classical Rubinstein—Taybi Syndrome Phenotypes in Mice: Implications for a Dominant-Negative Mechanism

    Yuichi Oike;Akira Hata;Takayoshi Mamiya;Tadashi Kaname

  • Cognition impairment in the genetic model of aging klotho gene mutant mice: a role of oxidative stress

    Taku Nagai;Kiyofumi Yamada;Kiyofumi Yamada;Hyoung Chun Kim;Yong Sun Kim

  • Facilitation of long-term potentiation and memory in mice lacking nociceptin receptors

    Toshiya Manabe;Yukihiro Noda;Takayoshi Mamiya;Hiroyuki Katagiri

  • Unrestrained nociceptive response and disregulation of hearing ability in mice lacking the nociceptin/orphaninFQ receptor

    Miyuki Nishi;Takeshi Houtani;Yukihiro Noda;Takayoshi Mamiya

  • Phencyclidine animal models of schizophrenia: approaches from abnormality of glutamatergic neurotransmission and neurodevelopment.

    Akihiro Mouri;Yukihiro Noda;Yukihiro Noda;Takeshi Enomoto;Takeshi Enomoto;Toshitaka Nabeshima;Toshitaka Nabeshima

  • Knockdown of DISC1 by In Utero Gene Transfer Disturbs Postnatal Dopaminergic Maturation in the Frontal Cortex and Leads to Adult Behavioral Deficits

    Minae Niwa;Atsushi Kamiya;Rina Murai;Rina Murai;Ken ichiro Kubo

  • Enhancement of immobility in a forced swimming test by subacute or repeated treatment with phencyclidine: a new model of schizophrenia

    Y. Noda;K. Yamada;H. Furukawa;H. Furukawa;T. Nabeshima

  • Neuroactive Neurosteroids as Endogenous Effectors for the Sigma1 (σ1) Receptor: Pharmacological Evidence and Therapeutic Opportunities

    Tangui Maurice;Vân-Ly Phan;Alexandre Urani;Hiroyuki Kamei

  • Hyperfunction of Dopaminergic and Serotonergic Neuronal Systems in Mice Lacking the NMDA Receptor ε1 Subunit

    Yoshiaki Miyamoto;Kiyofumi Yamada;Yukihiro Noda;Hisashi Mori

  • Neprilysin-sensitive Synapse-associated Amyloid-β Peptide Oligomers Impair Neuronal Plasticity and Cognitive Function *

    Shu Ming Huang;Akihiro Mouri;Hideko Kokubo;Hideko Kokubo;Ryuichi Nakajima

  • Role of nitric oxide in learning and memory and in monoamine metabolism in the rat brain

    Kiyofumi Yamada;Yukihiro Noda;Shinobu Nakayama;Yumiko Komori

  • The effect of the loss of molar teeth on spatial memory and acetylcholine release from the parietal cortex in aged rats

    Takeshi Kato;Takeshi Usami;Yukihiro Noda;Masaya Hasegawa

  • Aripiprazole ameliorates phencyclidine-induced impairment of recognition memory through dopamine D1 and serotonin 5-HT1A receptors.

    Taku Nagai;Rina Murai;Kanae Matsui;Hiroyuki Kamei

  • The Allosteric Potentiation of Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors by Galantamine Ameliorates the Cognitive Dysfunction in Beta Amyloid25–35 I.c.v.-Injected Mice: Involvement of Dopaminergic Systems

    Dayong Wang;Yukihiro Noda;Yukihiro Noda;Yuan Zhou;Yuan Zhou;Akihiro Mouri

  • Enhancement of spatial attention in nociceptin/orphanin FQ receptor-knockout mice

    Takayoshi Mamiya;Yukihiro Noda;Miyuki Nishi;Hiroshi Takeshima

  • Mice with neuron-specific accumulation of mitochondrial DNA mutations show mood disorder-like phenotypes.

    T Kasahara;M Kubota;T Miyauchi;Y Noda

  • Clozapine, but not haloperidol, reverses social behavior deficit in mice during withdrawal from chronic phencyclidine treatment.

    H Qiao;Y Noda;H Kamei;T Nagai

  • Oral vaccination with a viral vector containing Aβ cDNA attenuates age-related Aβ accumulation and memory deficits without causing inflammation in a mouse Alzheimer model

    Akihiro Mouri;Yukihiro Noda;Hideo Hara;Hiroyuki Mizoguchi

  • THE ROLE OF NITRIC OXIDE IN DIZOCILPINE-INDUCED IMPAIRMENT OF SPONTANEOUS ALTERNATION BEHAVIOR IN MICE

    K Yamada;Y Noda;T Hasegawa;Y Komori

  • Role of nitric oxide and cyclic GMP in the dizocilpine-induced impairment of spontaneous alternation behavior in mice.

    K Yamada;M Hiramatsu;Y Noda;T Mamiya

  • Blonanserin Ameliorates Phencyclidine-Induced Visual-Recognition Memory Deficits: the Complex Mechanism of Blonanserin Action Involving D3-5-HT2A and D1-NMDA Receptors in the mPFC

    Hirotake Hida;Akihiro Mouri;Kentaro Mori;Yurie Matsumoto

Frequent Co-Authors

Taku Nagai
Taku Nagai Nagoya University
Atsumi Nitta
Atsumi Nitta University of Toyama
Masayoshi Mishina
Masayoshi Mishina Ritsumeikan University
Tetsuya Iidaka
Tetsuya Iidaka Nagoya University
Nakao Iwata
Nakao Iwata Fujita Health University
Kazuhiro Takuma
Kazuhiro Takuma Osaka University
Takaomi C. Saido
Takaomi C. Saido RIKEN Center for Brain Science
Ken Ichi Yamamura
Ken Ichi Yamamura Kumamoto University
Tadafumi Kato
Tadafumi Kato Juntendo University
Kohichi Tanaka
Kohichi Tanaka Tokyo Medical and Dental University

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