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Dive into the research topics where Kazuyuki Machida is active.

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Featured researches published by Kazuyuki Machida.


Lipids in Health and Disease | 2010

NPC1L1 inhibitor ezetimibe is a reliable therapeutic agent for non-obese patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease

Munechika Enjoji; Kazuyuki Machida; Motoyuki Kohjima; Masaki Kato; Kazuhiro Kotoh; Kazuhisa Matsunaga; Manabu Nakashima; Makoto Nakamuta

BackgroundWe recently examined the distribution of abdominal fat, dietary intake and biochemical data in patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and found that non-obese NAFLD patients did not necessarily exhibit insulin resistance and/or dysregulated secretion of adipocytokines. However, dietary cholesterol intake was superabundant in non-obese patients compared with obese patients, although total energy and carbohydrate intake was not excessive. Therefore, excess cholesterol intake appears to be one of the main factors associated with NAFLD development and liver injury.MethodsWe reviewed a year of follow-up data of non-obese NAFLD patients treated with Niemann-Pick C1 like 1 inhibitor ezetimibe to evaluate its therapeutic effect on clinical parameters related to NAFLD. Without any dietary or exercise modification, 10 mg/day of ezetimibe was given to 8 patients. In 4 of 8 patients, ezetimibe was administered initially. In the remaining 4 patients, medication was switched from ursodeoxycholic acid to ezetimibe.ResultsIn each patient, body mass index was maintained under 25 kg/m2 during the observation period. Serum ALT levels significantly decreased within 6 months and in 4 patients levels reached the normal range (<30 U/L), which was accompanied with at least a 10% decrease in serum total cholesterol and LDL-cholesterol. However, ultrasonographic findings of fatty liver did not show obvious improvement for a year.ConclusionWe conclude that the cholesterol absorption inhibitor ezetimibe can suppress hepatic injury in non-obese patients with NAFLD and that ezetimibe may offer a novel treatment for NAFLD.


principles and practice of constraint programming | 2010

Therapeutic effect of bezafibrate against biliary damage: a study of phospholipid secretion via the PPARalpha-MDR3 pathway.

Makoto Nakamuta; Tatsuya Fujino; Ryoko Yada; Kenichiro Yasutake; Tsuyoshi Yoshimoto; Noboru Harada; Masayoshi Yada; Nobito Higuchi; Masaki Kato; Motoyuki Kohjima; Akinobu Taketomi; Yoshihiko Maehara; Takuya Nishinakagawa; Kazuyuki Machida; Kazuhisa Matsunaga; Manabu Nakashima; Kazuhiro Kotoh; Munechika Enjoji

OBJECTIVE Bezafibrate (BF) has been used to treat biliary damage, particularly in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC), and its clinical efficacy has been demonstrated. The mechanism of action is thought to involve activation of the PPARalpha-MDR3-phospholipid (PL) secretion pathway. We tried to confirm this hypothesis in patients with hepatobiliary disease. METHODS The levels of serum gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase and alkaline phosphatase, and those of bile components were examined before and after BF administration in patients with obstructive jaundice undergoing percutaneous transhepatic biliary drainage (PTBD). Hepatic expression of PPARalpha and MDR3 was quantified by real-time PCR in patients with PBC or non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). RESULTS In patients with obstructive jaundice, BF decreased the serum levels of biliary enzymes and increased the bile concentration of PL. In patients with PBC or NAFLD, the expression levels of MDR3 were already up-regulated before starting the BF treatment. Although BF treatment did not further up-regulate MDR3 expression in NAFLD patients, PPARalpha expression was significantly increased. CONCLUSIONS BF enhanced the secretion of PL into bile in cholestatic patients undergoing PTBD. However, in patients with PBC or NAFLD, diseases that represent cholesterol overload, MDR3 was already expressed at a high level to compensate for bile acids overproduction, and its expression was hardly affected by BF. In patients with chronic liver diseases such as PBC, BF may induce clinical effects via mechanisms independent of PL secretion.


International Journal of Molecular Medicine | 2011

Association between lipid accumulation and the cannabinoid system in Huh7 cells expressing HCV genes.

Mako Toyoda; Akira Kitaoka; Kazuyuki Machida; Takuya Nishinakagawa; Ryoko Yada; Motoyuki Kohjima; Masaki Kato; Kazuhiro Kotoh; Naoya Sakamoto; Goshi Shiota; Makoto Nakamuta; Manabu Nakashima; Munechika Enjoji

Evidence from clinical and laboratory studies has accumulated indicating that the activation of the cannabinoid system is crucial for steatosis, especially in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. However, the association between hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection and the cannabinoid system has not been well investigated and it is unclear whether steatosis in chronic hepatitis C develops via activation of the endocannabinoid/cannabinoid receptor signaling pathway. In this study, we examined the expression of a cannabinoid receptor (CB1) and the lipid accumulation in the hepatic Huh7 cell line, expressing HCV genes. We utilized Huh7/Rep-Feo-1b cells stably expressing HCV non-structural proteins (NS) 3, NS4, NS5A, and NS5B, as well as Tet-On Core-2 cells, in which the HCV core protein expression is inducible. Significantly higher levels of stored triglycerides were found in Huh7/Rep-Feo-1b cells compared to Huh7 cells. Also, triglyceride accumulation and CB1 receptor expression were down-regulated in Huh7/Rep-Feo-1b cells after HCV reduction by IFNα. Moreover, lipid accumulation appeared to increase after CB1 agonist treatment, while it decreased after CB1 antagonist treatment, although significant differences were not found compared to untreated cells. In Tet-On Core-2 cells, induction of HCV core protein expression did not affect CB1 expression or triglyceride accumulation. The results of this study in cultured cells suggest that HCV infection may activate the cannabinoid system and precede steatosis, but the core protein by itself may not have any effect on the cannabinoid system.


Neuroscience Letters | 2008

Detection of amyloid β protein in the urine of Alzheimer's disease patients and healthy individuals

Manabu Takata; Manabu Nakashima; Taro Takehara; Hideyo Baba; Kazuyuki Machida; Yoshiharu Akitake; Kazuhiko Ono; Masato Hosokawa; Mitsuo Takahashi

To seek for a new valid biomarker using non-invasive specimens for the diagnosis of Alzheimers disease (AD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI), we carried out the detection of amyloid beta (Abeta) protein in urine. Ten-millilitre urine samples were first sedimented with trichloroacetic acid, and the pellets were resuspended for further analysis by Western blotting with anti-Abeta antibody. The detection sensitivity of the method was 40pg/ml. Rates of subjects positive for monomeric Abeta according to their clinical dementia rating (CDR) were 11.1% for CDR 0, 62.5% for CDR 0.5, 83.3% for CDR 1, 54.5% for CDR 2 and 0% for CDR 3. A single Abeta band relative to the CDR score reflects an alteration in the production, solubility and clearance of Abeta in the brain. Thus, the method could be used as both a diagnostic and monitoring tool in assessing AD and MCI patients during disease-modifying therapies.


Journal of Separation Science | 2013

Fully automated reagent peak-free liquid chromatography fluorescence analysis of highly polar carboxylic acids using a column-switching system and fluorous scavenging derivatization.

Kenichiro Todoroki; Hiroki Hashimoto; Kazuyuki Machida; Miki Itoyama; Tadashi Hayama; Hideyuki Yoshida; Hitoshi Nohta; Manabu Nakashima; Masatoshi Yamaguchi

In this study, we combined a column-switching system with a fluorous scavenging derivatization method to develop a fully automated reagent peak-free LC fluorescence detection protocol for the analysis of highly polar carboxylic acids. In this method, highly polar carboxylic acids were derivatized with fluorescent 1-pyrenemethylamine in the presence of 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide and 1-hydroxy-1H-benzotriazole. Residual excess of the unreacted reagent was tagged with 2-(perfluorooctyl)ethyl isocyanate and then removed selectively using a fluorous column-switching system placed in front of an analytical reversed-phase column. The signal of the fluorous-tagged unreacted reagent was completely absent in the resulting chromatograms; therefore, it did not interfere with the quantification of each acid especially those eluted before 20 min. The detection limits (S/N = 3) for the examined acids were in the range from 4.0 to 22 fmol per injection. We have applied this method to comparative analysis of highly polar carboxylic acids in urine samples obtained from diabetes mellitus type-II model mice and their control.


Medical Molecular Morphology | 2011

Accuracy of differential diagnosis for pancreatic cancer is improved in the combination of RCAS1 and CEA measurements and cytology in pancreatic juice

Yoshiki Naito; Yoshinobu Okabe; Masakatsu Nagayama; Takuya Nishinakagawa; Tomoki Taira; Akihiko Kawahara; Satoshi Hattori; Kazuyuki Machida; Yusuke Ishida; Ryohei Kaji; Kazuhiro Mikagi; Hisafumi Kinoshita; Makiko Yasumoto; Jun Akiba; Masayoshi Kage; Manabu Nakashima; Koichi Ohshima; Hirohisa Yano

Improvement of diagnostic accuracy for pancreatic cancer in pancreatic disease patients was investigated by examining the combination of three diagnostic methods, i.e., measurements of RCAS1 and CEA levels in pancreatic juice and pancreatic juice cytology. Pancreatic juice was collected from 12 pancreatic cancer (PC) and 26 non-PC patients. RCAS1 and CEA levels were measured by using ELISA. RCAS1 expression on surgically resected tissue was immunohistochemically examined for 2 PC patients. By setting the cutoff level of RCAS1 at 10 U/ml and that of CEA at 18.5 μg/ml, sensitivity of RCAS1 was 42% and that of CEA was 50%. On the other hand, sensitivity and specificity increased from 42% and 85% of RCAS1 alone to 75% and 85% in the examination of RCAS1 + CEA + cytology, and the false-negative rate was also reduced to 25% in this combination. Immunohistochemically, a patient with a high RCAS1 level in pancreatic juice had numerous RCAS1-positive tumor cells in the pancreatic juice. We concluded that RCAS1 and CEA measurements together with cytology in pancreatic juice would be a useful combination method for making a differential diagnosis of PC from non-PC.


International Journal of Molecular Medicine | 2010

Analysis of cell cycle arrest and apoptosis induced by RCAS1

Takuya Nishinakagawa; Sho Fujii; Tetsuya Nozaki; Tatsuhiro Maeda; Kazuyuki Machida; Munechika Enjoji; Manabu Nakashima


Analytical Sciences | 2014

Assessment of the Efficacy of Anticancer Drugs by Amino Acid Metabolomics Using Fluorescence Derivatization-HPLC

Ryoko Tomita; Kenichiro Todoroki; Kazuyuki Machida; Sho Nishida; Hiroshi Maruoka; Hideyuki Yoshida; Toshihiro Fujioka; Manabu Nakashima; Masatoshi Yamaguchi; Hitoshi Nohta


American Journal of Case Reports | 2009

Clinical effectiveness of ezetimibe for a non-obese patient with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease

Munechika Enjoji; Masatake Tanaka; Masayuki Miyazaki; Nobito Higuchi; Masaki Kato; Kazuhiro Kotoh; Kazuhisa Matsunaga; Takuya Nishinakagawa; Kazuyuki Machida; Manabu Nakashima; Makoto Nakamuta


Alzheimers & Dementia | 2006

P4-094: Time-dependent morphological alterations of dissolved synthesized amyloid-beta peptide

Kazuyuki Machida; Atsuko Matsunaga; M. Takumi; Yoshiharu Akitake; Kazuhiko Ono; Manabu Nakashima; Ikuo Tooyama; Mitsuo Takahashi

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