Norihito Murayama
Daiichi Sankyo
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Featured researches published by Norihito Murayama.
Brain Research | 2015
Norihito Murayama; Takafumi Noshita; Ryoko Ogino; Toyofumi Masuda; Taisuke Kadoshima; Tetsushi Oka; Nobuhiro Ueno; Naohiro Takemoto; Tetsuya Toba; Shinya Ueno; Wiebke Schulze; Yoshiyuki Igawa; Yasuhiro Morita; Teruyoshi Inoue
Basic fibroblast growth factor (FGF-2/bFGF) possesses neuroprotective activity and promotes cell proliferation. In this study, the novel synthetic compound 4-({4-[[(4-amino-2,3,5,6-tetramethylanilino)acetyl](methyl)amino]-1-piperidinyl}methyl)benzamide (SUN11602) exhibited neuroprotective activities similar to those of FGF-2 without promoting cell proliferation. In primary cultures of hippocampal neurons, stimulation with SUN11602 or FGF-2 increased calbindin D-28k (CalB) gene expression and prevented glutamate-induced neuronal death. These effects were abolished by pretreatment with PD166866 (FGF receptor 1 [FGFR1] tyrosine kinase-specific inhibitor). This indicated that FGFR1 activation and increased CalB expression were involved in SUN11602-mediated neuroprotection. However, receptor-binding assays revealed that unlike FGF-2, SUN11602 did not alter the binding of (125)I-labeled FGF-2 to FGFR1. To investigate the possible proliferative activity of SUN11602, we utilized BHK21 and SKN cells expressing endogenous FGFR1. FGF-2 promoted cell proliferation whereas SUN11602 did not. In in vivo studies, wild-type (WT) and CalB-deficient (CalB(-/-)) mice were injected with aggregated Aβ1-40 and ibotenate (NMDA receptor agonist) to severely damage the hippocampal tissue. Treatment with SUN11602 (orally) or FGF-2 (intraparenchymally) at the midpoint of Aβ1-40 and ibotenate injections prevented the hippocampal damage in WT mice, however this effect was abolished in CalB(-/-) mice. Thus, SUN11602 exerted protective effects on hippocampal neurons through activation of FGFR1 and increased CalB expression. Moreover, the neuroprotective effects of SUN11602 depended upon the various biological activities of FGF-2.
Brain Research | 2014
Ryoko Ogino; Norihito Murayama; Takafumi Noshita; Naohiro Takemoto; Tetsuya Toba; Tetsushi Oka; Nobuhiro Narii; Sayaka Yoshida; Nobuhiro Ueno; Teruyoshi Inoue
Basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF/FGF-2) is known to possess neuroprotective and neurite outgrowth activity properties. In this study, the effects of a novel synthetic compound that mimics the neuroprotective properties of bFGF - SUN11602 - were examined in vitro and in vivo. SUN11602 promoted neurite outgrowth of primarily cultured rat hippocampal neurons. For the in vivo study, an Alzheimers disease (AD) model with severe damage to the hippocampal tissue was constructed by injecting the hippocampi of rats with aggregated Aβ1-40, followed 48 h later by an injection of ibotenate [an agonist for N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor]. Oral administration of SUN11602 at the midpoint of Aβ1-40 and ibotenate injections attenuated short-term memory impairment in the Y-maze test, as well as spatial learning deficits in the water maze task. In addition, the SUN11602 treatment inhibited the increase of peripheral-type benzodiazepine-binding sites (PTBBS), which are a marker for gliosis. A negative correlation was found between PTBBS numbers and learning capacity in the water maze task. These results suggest that SUN111602 improved memory and learning deficits in the hippocampally lesioned rats by preventing neuronal death and/or promotion of neurite outgrowth. Taken together, these results indicate that SUN11602, a bFGF-like compound with neuroprotective and neurite outgrowth activity, may be beneficial for the treatment of progressive neurodegenerative diseases such as AD.
ACS Chemical Neuroscience | 2013
Norihito Murayama; Taisuke Kadoshima; Naohiro Takemoto; Shiho Kodama; Tetsuya Toba; Ryoko Ogino; Takafumi Noshita; Tetsushi Oka; Shinya Ueno; Mariko Kuroda; Yoshiari Shimmyo; Yasuhiro Morita; Teruyoshi Inoue
Basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) offers some measure of protection against excitotoxic neuronal injuries by upregulating the expression of the calcium-binding protein calbindin-D28k (Calb). The newly synthesized small molecule 4-({4-[[(4-amino-2,3,5,6-tetramethylanilino)acetyl](methyl)amino]-1-piperidinyl}methyl)benzamide (SUN11602) mimics the neuroprotective effects of bFGF, and thus, we examined how SUN11602 exerts its actions on neurons in toxic conditions of glutamate. In primary cultures of rat cerebrocortical neurons, SUN11602 and bFGF prevented glutamate-induced neuronal death. This neuroprotection, which occurred in association with the augmented phosphorylation of the bFGF receptor-1 (FGFR-1) and the extracellular signal-regulated kinase-1/2 (ERK-1/2), was abolished by pretreatment with PD166866 (a FGFR-1 tyrosine kinase-specific inhibitor) and PD98059 (a mitogen-activated protein kinase [MAPK]/[ERK-1/2] kinase [MEK] inhibitor). In addition, SUN11602 and bFGF increased the levels of CALB1 gene expression in cerebrocortical neurons. Whether this neuroprotection was linked to Calb was investigated with primary cultures of cerebrocortical neurons from homozygous knockout (Calb(-/-)) and wild-type (WT) mice. In WT mice, SUN11602 and bFGF increased the levels of newly synthesized Calb in cerebrocortical neurons and suppressed the glutamate-induced rise in intracellular Ca(2+). This Ca(2+)-capturing ability of Calb allowed the neurons to survive severe toxic conditions of glutamate. In contrast, Calb levels remained unchanged in Calb(-/-) mice after exposure to SUN11602 or bFGF, and due to a loss of function of the gene, these neurons were no longer resistant to toxic conditions of glutamate. These findings indicated that SUN11602 activated a number of cellular molecules (FGFR-1, MEK/ERK intermediates, and Calb) and consequently contributed to intracellular Ca(2+) homeostasis as observed in the case of bFGF.
Archive | 2001
Naohiro Takemoto; Hirokazu Annoura; Norihito Murayama
Archive | 2008
Naohiro Takemoto; Kenji Murata; Norihito Murayama; Chikaomi Yamada
Archive | 2014
Naohiro Takemoto; Kenji Murata; Norihito Murayama; Chikaomi Yamada
F1000Research | 2014
Tsuyoshi Matsuo; Norihito Murayama; Ryoko Ogino; Norio Inomata; Teruyoshi Inoue; Mayumi Furuya
Archive | 2013
Tsuyoshi Matsuo; Norihito Murayama; Mayumi Furuya
Archive | 2013
Tsuyoshi Matsuo; Norihito Murayama; Mayumi Furuya
香川県立医療短期大学紀要 | 2002
Yasuhiro Morita; Naoko Hosokawa; Yasuhiro Hayashi; Norihito Murayama; Shinzo Oikawa; Shigekazu Yuasa