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Dive into the research topics where Sachika Adachi is active.

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Featured researches published by Sachika Adachi.


Nature | 2006

Identification of nesfatin-1 as a satiety molecule in the hypothalamus.

Shinsuke Oh-I; Hiroyuki Shimizu; Tetsurou Satoh; Shuichi Okada; Sachika Adachi; Kinji Inoue; Hiroshi Eguchi; Masanori Yamamoto; Toshihiro Imaki; Koushi Hashimoto; Takafumi Tsuchiya; Tsuyoshi Monden; Kazuhiko Horiguchi; Masanobu Yamada; Masatomo Mori

The brain hypothalamus contains certain secreted molecules that are important in regulating feeding behaviour. Here we show that nesfatin, corresponding to NEFA/nucleobindin2 (NUCB2), a secreted protein of unknown function, is expressed in the appetite-control hypothalamic nuclei in rats. Intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) injection of NUCB2 reduces feeding. Rat cerebrospinal fluid contains nesfatin-1, an amino-terminal fragment derived from NUCB2, and its expression is decreased in the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus under starved conditions. I.c.v. injection of nesfatin-1 decreases food intake in a dose-dependent manner, whereas injection of an antibody neutralizing nesfatin-1 stimulates appetite. In contrast, i.c.v. injection of other possible fragments processed from NUCB2 does not promote satiety, and conversion of NUCB2 to nesfatin-1 is necessary to induce feeding suppression. Chronic i.c.v. injection of nesfatin-1 reduces body weight, whereas rats gain body weight after chronic i.c.v. injection of antisense morpholino oligonucleotide against the gene encoding NUCB2. Nesfatin-1-induced anorexia occurs in Zucker rats with a leptin receptor mutation, and an anti-nesfatin-1 antibody does not block leptin-induced anorexia. In contrast, central injection of α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone elevates NUCB2 gene expression in the paraventricular nucleus, and satiety by nesfatin-1 is abolished by an antagonist of the melanocortin-3/4 receptor. We identify nesfatin-1 as a satiety molecule that is associated with melanocortin signalling in the hypothalamus.


Reviews in Endocrine & Metabolic Disorders | 2007

Metastin/kisspeptin and control of estrous cycle in rats.

Kei-ichiro Maeda; Sachika Adachi; Kinji Inoue; Satoshi Ohkura; Hiroko Tsukamura

Estrous cyclicity is controlled by a cascade of neuroendocrine events, involving the activation of the hypothalamo-pituitary-gonadal axis. Two modes of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) are well established to regulate the estrous cycle: one is a tonic or pulse mode of secretion which is responsible for the stimulation of follicular development and steroidogenesis; the other is a surge mode, which is solely responsible for the induction of luteinizing hormone (LH) surges, eventually leading to ovulation. Metastin/kisspeptin-GPR54 signaling has been suggested to control ovarian cyclicity through regulating the two modes of GnRH release. A population of metastin/kisspeptin neurons located in the anteroventral periventricular nucleus (AVPV) is considered to trigger GnRH surge and thus to mediate the estrogen positive feedback action on GnRH release. The other hypothalamic population of metastin/kisspeptin neurons is located in the arcuate nucleus (ARC) and could be involved in generating GnRH pulses and mediating negative feedback action of estrogen on GnRH release. GnRH neurons express mRNA for GPR54, a metastin/kisspeptin receptor, and have a close association with metastin/kisspeptin neurons at the cell body and terminal level, but the precise mechanism by which this peptide regulates the two modes of GnRH release needs to be determined. Metastin/kisspeptin, therefore, is a key hypothalamic neuropeptide, which is placed immediately upstream of GnRH neurons and relays the peripheral steroidal information to GnRH neurons to control estrous cyclicity.


Regulatory Peptides | 2005

Physiological roles of prolactin-releasing peptide

Binggui Sun; Ken Fujiwara; Sachika Adachi; Kinji Inoue

Prolactin-releasing peptide (PrRP) was first isolated from bovine hypothalamus as an orphan G-protein-coupled receptor using the strategy of reverse pharmacology. The initial studies showed that PrRP was a potent and specific prolactin-releasing factor. Morphological and physiological studies, however, indicated that PrRP may play a wide range of roles in neuroendocrinology other than prolactin release, i.e., metabolic homeostasis, stress responses, cardiovascular regulation, gonadotropin secretion, GH secretion and sleep regulation. This review will provide the current knowledge of PrRP, especially its roles in energy metabolism and stress responses.


Neuroscience Letters | 2002

Immunocytochemical localization of a galanin-like peptide (GALP) in pituicytes of the rat posterior pituitary gland.

Ken Fujiwara; Sachika Adachi; Kimie Usui; Minoru Maruyama; Hirokazu Matsumoto; Tetsuya Ohtaki; Chieko Kitada; Haruo Onda; Masahiko Fujino; Kinji Inoue

A galanin-like peptide (GALP) was recently isolated as a ligand of GalR2, a galanin receptor subtype. The GALP mRNA is expressed in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus and the posterior pituitary (PP). In this study, we demonstrated the localization of GALP-immunoreactive (-ir) cells in the rat PP. In normal conditions, a few GALP-ir cells were detected in the PP, and these cells increased on dehydration for 4 days. The GALP-immunopositive reaction was dramatically enhanced by the intraperitoneal injection of colchicine. For the identification of GALP-ir cells in the PP, we performed electron microscopic observation, and also double immunocytochemical staining for GALP and S-100 protein. Both studies clearly indicated that the GALP-ir cells in the PP are pituicytes.


Regulatory Peptides | 2005

Nicotine stimulates prolactin-releasing peptide (PrRP) cells and non-PrRP cells in the solitary nucleus.

Binggui Sun; Haruki Nemoto; Ken Fujiwara; Sachika Adachi; Kinji Inoue

Nicotine has been reported to regulate food intake and body weight. But the mechanisms underlying these roles have not been fully elucidated. In the present study, we showed that acute administration of nicotine (0.5 mg/kg s.c.) could activate prolactin-releasing peptide (PrRP)-bearing neurons in the A2 area of the NTS of rats, suggesting that PrRP may be associated with nicotine-induced effects in the central nervous system (CNS). We next treated rats with nicotine chronically (4 mg/kg/day for 7 days i.p.), and the results showed that the body weight was strongly reduced and food intake was greatly suppressed compared to the vehicle control group (p<0.01). Immunocytochemical studies revealed that PrRP-bearing neurons in the NTS were evidently activated after chronic administration of nicotine, suggesting that PrRP was involved in the regulation of nicotine-mediated body weight loss and food intake suppression in rats. We also found that acute/chronic administration of nicotine activated PrRP-negative neurons in the NTS, and the majority of these neurons were shown to be TH-negative, suggesting that noncatecholaminergic, PrRP-negative neurons in the NTS are associated with the roles of nicotine. Nicotine has also been shown to stimulate the secretion of ACTH, a stress responsive hormone. In the present study, rats received nicotine (0.5 mg/kg s.c.) or saline followed by restraint stress for 30 min. The immunocytochemical results showed that nicotine/stress and saline/stress both activated the majority of the PrRP neurons in the NTS, there being no significant difference between the two treatments (p>0.05). Nicotine/stress also greatly activated PrRP/TH-negative neurons in the NTS. Saline/stress, however, caused much lower effect on the activation of PrRP/TH-negative neurons. In addition, the activation effect of nicotine/stress on PrRP/TH-negative neurons was much stronger than that of nicotine alone (p<0.01). These results indicated that PrRP was associated with stress responses, but it had little effect on nicotine-mediated stress responses. On the other hand, nicotine and restraint stress may synergistically activate PrRP/TH-negative neurons in the NTS. Taken together, our data show that PrRP is involved in the nicotine-induced regulation of body weight and food intake, but may not be involved in the mediation of nicotine on stress responses. PrRP/TH-negative neurons in the NTS are also associated with the roles of nicotine in the CNS.


Neuroscience Letters | 2005

Estrogen suppresses the stress response of prolactin-releasing peptide-producing cells.

Sachika Adachi; Akikazu Mochiduki; Haruki Nemoto; Binggui Sun; Ken Fujiwara; Hirokazu Matsumoto; Kinji Inoue

Prolactin-releasing peptide (PrRP) is known to be produced in A1/A2 noradrenergic neurons and to mediate the stress response. Our preliminary experiment showed that PrRP neurons in the A2 region differed between males and females in terms of c-Fos expression. In addition it has been reported that estrogen receptor alpha is detectable in A2 PrRP neurons. Therefore, we speculated that the stress response of PrRP neurons is modified by estrogen. We, therefore, examined c-Fos expression in A2 PrRP neurons during the estrous cycle and found that c-Fos accumulation in PrRP neurons was significantly decreased in estrus compared with in proestrus, metestrus and diestrus. This suggests that estrogen suppresses the activation of PrRP neurons. We thus administered diethylstilbestrol (DES) to ovariectomized rats and then added restraint stress. The data clearly showed that PrRP cells in DES-administered rats significantly suppressed c-Fos accumulation induced by stress.


Peptides | 2009

Blockade of PrRP attenuates MPTP-induced toxicity in mice

Binggui Sun; Akikazu Mochiduki; Kimie Nakamura; Kotaro Yokoyama; Sachika Adachi; Ken Fujiwara; Hirokazu Matsumoto; Kinji Inoue

Prolactin-releasing peptide (PrRP) was isolated as an endogenous ligand of the orphan G-protein coupled receptor hGR3. PrRP has been shown to be involved in the regulation of food intake, stress responses, prolactin secretion and release, blood pressure, and the opioid system. Here we report that PrRP and its receptor, GPR10, were found in the mouse substantia nigra pars compacta (SNpc), the main location of dopaminergic (DA) neurons of the nigrostriatal system. We generated PrRP knockout (KO) mice, and then treated PrRP KO mice and their wild type (WT) littermates with 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP), a neuron toxin that selectively damages DA neurons in the SNpc. We found that PrRP KO mice were resistant to MPTP-induced lesions of the nigrostriatal system. These effects were further confirmed by the intracerebroventricular injection of P2L-1C, a monoclonal antibody against PrRP into mice. Taken together, our data established a critical role of PrRP in MPTP intoxication in mice.


Journal of Reproduction and Development | 2007

Involvement of Anteroventral Periventricular Metastin/Kisspeptin Neurons in Estrogen Positive Feedback Action on Luteinizing Hormone Release in Female Rats

Sachika Adachi; Shunji Yamada; Yoshihiro Takatsu; Hisanori Matsui; Mika Kinoshita; Kenji Takase; Hitomi Sugiura; Tetsuya Ohtaki; Hirokazu Matsumoto; Yoshihisa Uenoyama; Hiroko Tsukamura; Kinji Inoue; Kei-ichiro Maeda


Endocrinology | 2005

Involvement of Central Metastin in the Regulation of Preovulatory Luteinizing Hormone Surge and Estrous Cyclicity in Female Rats

Mika Kinoshita; Hiroko Tsukamura; Sachika Adachi; Hisanori Matsui; Yoshihisa Uenoyama; Kinuyo Iwata; Shunji Yamada; Kinji Inoue; Tetsuya Ohtaki; Hirokazu Matsumoto; Kei-ichiro Maeda


Endocrinology | 2007

Inhibition of metastin (kisspeptin-54)-GPR54 signaling in the arcuate nucleus-median eminence region during lactation in rats.

Shunji Yamada; Yoshihisa Uenoyama; Mika Kinoshita; Kinuyo Iwata; Kenji Takase; Hisanori Matsui; Sachika Adachi; Kinji Inoue; Kei-ichiro Maeda; Hiroko Tsukamura

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Hirokazu Matsumoto

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

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Tetsuya Ohtaki

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

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Hisanori Matsui

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

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