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Dive into the research topics where Shuji Hinuma is active.

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Featured researches published by Shuji Hinuma.


Nature | 2003

Free fatty acids regulate insulin secretion from pancreatic beta cells through GPR40.

Yasuaki Itoh; Yuji Kawamata; Masataka Harada; Makoto Kobayashi; Ryo Fujii; Shoji Fukusumi; Kazuhiro Ogi; Masaki Hosoya; Yasuhiro Tanaka; Hiroshi Uejima; Minoru Maruyama; Rie Satoh; Shoichi Okubo; Hideki Kizawa; Hidetoshi Komatsu; Fumika Matsumura; Yuko Noguchi; Tokuyuki Shinohara; Shuji Hinuma; Yukio Fujisawa; Masahiko Fujino

Diabetes, a disease in which carbohydrate and lipid metabolism are regulated improperly by insulin, is a serious worldwide health issue. Insulin is secreted from pancreatic β cells in response to elevated plasma glucose, with various factors modifying its secretion. Free fatty acids (FFAs) provide an important energy source as nutrients, and they also act as signalling molecules in various cellular processes, including insulin secretion. Although FFAs are thought to promote insulin secretion in an acute phase, this mechanism is not clearly understood. Here we show that a G-protein-coupled receptor, GPR40, which is abundantly expressed in the pancreas, functions as a receptor for long-chain FFAs. Furthermore, we show that long-chain FFAs amplify glucose-stimulated insulin secretion from pancreatic β cells by activating GPR40. Our results indicate that GPR40 agonists and/or antagonists show potential for the development of new anti-diabetic drugs.


Nature | 1998

A prolactin-releasing peptide in the brain

Shuji Hinuma; Yugo Habata; Ryo Fujii; Yuji Kawamata; Masaki Hosoya; Shoji Fukusumi; Chieko Kitada; Yoshinori Masuo; Tsuneo Asano; Hirokazu Matsumoto; Masahiro Sekiguchi; Tsutomu Kurokawa; Osamu Nishimura; Haruo Onda; Masahiko Fujino

Hypothalamic peptide hormones regulate the secretion of most ofthe anterior pituitary hormones, that is, growth hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone, luteinizing hormone, thyroid-stimulating hormone and adrenocorticotropin,. These peptides do not regulate the secretion of prolactin,, at least in a specific manner, however. The peptides act through specific receptors, which are referred to as seven-transmembrane-domain receptors or G-protein-coupled receptors. Although prolactin is important in pregnancy and lactation in mammals, and is involved in the development of the mammary glands and the promotion of milk synthesis,, a specific prolactin-releasing hormone has remained unknown. Here we identify a potent candidate for such a hormone. We first proposed that there may still be unknown peptide hormone factors that control pituitary function through seven-transmembrane-domain receptors. We isolated the complementary DNA encoding an ‘orphan’ receptor (that is, one for which the ligand is unknown). This receptor, hGR3, is specifically expressed in the human pituitary. We then searched for the hGR3 ligand in the hypothalamus and identified a new peptide, which shares no sequence similarity with known peptides and proteins, as an endogenous ligand. We show that this ligand is a potent prolactin-releasing factor for rat anterior pituitary cells; we have therefore named this peptide prolactin-releasing peptide.


Nature Cell Biology | 2000

New neuropeptides containing carboxy-terminal RFamide and their receptor in mammals.

Shuji Hinuma; Yasushi Shintani; Shoji Fukusumi; Norio Iijima; Yoshio Matsumoto; Masaki Hosoya; Ryo Fujii; Takuya Watanabe; Kuniko Kikuchi; Yasuko Terao; Takahiko Yano; Takanori Yamamoto; Yuji Kawamata; Yugo Habata; Mari Asada; Chieko Kitada; Tsutomu Kurokawa; Haruo Onda; Osamu Nishimura; Masaki Tanaka; Yasuhiko Ibata; Masahiko Fujino

Only a few RFamide peptides have been identified in mammals, although they have been abundantly found in invertebrates. Here we report the identification of a human gene that encodes at least three RFamide-related peptides, hRFRP-1–3. Cells transfected with a seven-transmembrane-domain receptor, OT7T022, specifically respond to synthetic hRFRP-1 and hRFRP-3 but not to hRFRP-2. RFRP and OT7T022 mRNAs are expressed in particular regions of the rat hypothalamus, and intracerebroventricular administration of hRFRP-1 increases prolactin secretion in rats. Our results indicate that a variety of RFamide-related peptides may exist and function in mammals.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2001

Molecular properties of apelin: tissue distribution and receptor binding

Yuji Kawamata; Yugo Habata; Shoji Fukusumi; Masaki Hosoya; Ryo Fujii; Shuji Hinuma; Naoki Nishizawa; Chieko Kitada; Haruo Onda; Osamu Nishimura; Masahiko Fujino

We analyzed the tissue distribution of apelin mRNA in rats by a quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction and that of immunoreactive apelin (ir-apelin) by an enzyme immunoassay (EIA) using a monoclonal antibody. The expression levels of apelin mRNA and ir-apelin seemed to be consistent among tissues: they were highly expressed in the lung and mammary gland. By the combination of gel filtration and EIA, we found that the molecular forms of apelin differ among respective tissues: apelin molecules with sizes close to apelin-36 (long forms) were major components in the lung, testis, and uterus, but both long and short (whose sizes were close to [<Glu(65)]apelin-13) forms were detected in the mammary gland. In Scatchard analyses, the radioiodinated apelin-36 analogue bound to the receptor, APJ, with high affinity. In competitive binding assays, apelin-36 and apelin-19 far more efficiently inhibited the binding of the labeled apelin-36 analogue with APJ than [<Glu(65)]apelin-13. In analyses for the dissociation of apelin from APJ, unlabeled apelin-36 replaced more rapidly the labeled apelin-36 analogue bound with APJ than [<Glu(65)]apelin-13. Our results demonstrate that the long and short forms of apelin differently interact with APJ.


Neuropharmacology | 2005

Neurochemical properties of ramelteon (TAK-375), a selective MT1/MT2 receptor agonist.

Koki Kato; Keisuke Hirai; Keiji Nishiyama; Osamu Uchikawa; Kohji Fukatsu; Shigenori Ohkawa; Yuji Kawamata; Shuji Hinuma; Masaomi Miyamoto

Ramelteon (TAK-375) is a novel melatonin receptor agonist currently under investigation for the treatment of insomnia. This study describes the neurochemical and receptor binding characteristics of ramelteon in vitro. Ramelteon showed very high affinity for human MT1 (Mel1a) and MT2 (Mel1b) receptors (expressed in Chinese hamster ovary [CHO] cells), and chick forebrain melatonin receptors (consisting of Mel1a and Mel1c receptors) with Ki values of 14.0, 112, and 23.1 pM, respectively, making the affinities of ramelteon for these receptors 3-16 times higher than those of melatonin. The affinity of ramelteon for hamster brain MT3 binding sites was extremely weak (Ki: 2.65 microM) compared to melatonins affinity for the MT3 binding site (Ki: 24.1 nM). In addition, ramelteon showed no measurable affinity for a large number of ligand binding sites (including benzodiazepine receptors, dopamine receptors, opiate receptors, ion channels, and transporters) and no effect on the activity of various enzymes. Ramelteon inhibited forskolin-stimulated cAMP production in the CHO cells that express the human MT1 or MT2 receptors. Taken together, these results indicate that ramelteon is a potent and highly selective agonist of MT1/MT2 melatonin receptors.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1999

Apelin, the natural ligand of the orphan receptor APJ, is abundantly secreted in the colostrum

Yugo Habata; Ryo Fujii; Masaki Hosoya; Shoji Fukusumi; Yuji Kawamata; Shuji Hinuma; Chieko Kitada; Naoki Nishizawa; Shinji Murosaki; Tsutomu Kurokawa; Haruo Onda; Kazuhiko Tatemoto; Masahiko Fujino

By using a strategy that we have developed to search for the ligands of orphan seven-transmembrane-domain receptors [S. Hinuma et al., Nature 393 (1998) 272-276], we have recently identified a natural ligand, apelin, for the orphan 7TMR, APJ [K. Tatemoto et al., Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 251 (1998) 471-476]. In this paper, we isolated rat and mouse apelin cDNAs, and analyzed the tissue distribution of apelin mRNA in rats. Although apelin mRNA was widely detected in a variety of tissues, the highest expression of apelin mRNA was detected in the mammary gland of pregnant rats. In the mammary gland, biologically active apelin and its mRNA considerably increased during pregnancy and lactation, and reached a maximal level around parturition. Moreover, a large amount of apelin (14-93 pmol/ml) was found to be secreted in the bovine colostrum, and it was still detectable even in commercial bovine milk. Since apelin partially suppressed cytokine production by mouse spleen cells in response to T cell receptor/CD3 cross-linking, the oral intake of apelin in the colostrum and milk might modulate immune responses in neonates.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2002

Isolation and identification of EG-VEGF/prokineticins as cognate ligands for two orphan G-protein-coupled receptors

Yasushi Masuda; Yoshihiro Takatsu; Yasuko Terao; Satoshi Kumano; Yoshihiro Ishibashi; Masato Suenaga; Michiko Abe; Shoji Fukusumi; Takuya Watanabe; Yasushi Shintani; Takao Yamada; Shuji Hinuma; Nobuhiro Inatomi; Tetsuya Ohtaki; Haruo Onda; Masahiko Fujino

Endocrine gland-derived vascular endothelial growth factor (EG-VEGF, identical to prokineticin 1) is a novel peptide recently identified as a selective mitogen for endocrine gland endothelial cells. The present study demonstrates that EG-VEGF/prokineticin 1 and a peptide closely related to EG-VEGF, prokineticin 2, are cognate ligands of two orphan G-protein-coupled receptors designated ZAQ (=EG-VEGF/PK-R1) and I5E (=EG-VEGF/PK-R2). EG-VEGF/prokineticin 1 and prokineticin 2 induced a transient increase in intracellular calcium ion concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) with nanomolar potency in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells expressing EG-VEGF/PK-R1 and -R2 and bind to these cells with high affinity and with different receptor selectivity. EG-VEGF/prokineticins provoke rapid phosphorylation of p44/42 MAP kinase and DNA synthesis in the bovine adrenal capillary endothelial cells (BACE). The mRNAs of both EG-VEGF/PK-R1 and -R2 were expressed in BACE. The identification of the receptors for EG-VEGF/prokineticins may provide a novel molecular basis for the regulation of angiogenesis in endocrine glands.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2001

Characteristics and distribution of endogenous RFamide-related peptide-1.

Shoji Fukusumi; Yugo Habata; Hiromi Yoshida; Norio Iijima; Yuji Kawamata; Masaki Hosoya; Ryo Fujii; Shuji Hinuma; Chieko Kitada; Yasushi Shintani; Masato Suenaga; Haruo Onda; Osamu Nishimura; Masaki Tanaka; Yasuhiko Ibata; Masahiko Fujino

We have recently identified RFamide-related peptide (RFRP) gene that would encode three peptides (i.e., RFRP-1, -2, and -3) in human and bovine, and demonstrated that synthetic RFRP-1 and -3 act as specific agonists for a G protein-coupled receptor OT7T022. However, molecular characteristics and tissue distribution of endogenous RFRPs have not been determined yet. In this study, we prepared a monoclonal antibody for the C-terminal portion of rat RFRP-1. As this antibody could recognize a consensus sequence among the C-terminal portions of rat, human, and bovine RFRP-1, we purified endogenous RFRP-1 from bovine hypothalamus on the basis of immunoreactivity to the antibody. The purified bovine endogenous RFRP-1 was found to have 35-amino-acid length that corresponds to 37-amino-acid length in human and rat. We subsequently constructed a sandwich enzyme immunoassay using the monoclonal antibody and a polyclonal antibody for the N-terminal portion of rat RFRP-1, and analyzed the tissue distribution of endogenous RFRP-1 in rats. Significant levels of RFRP-1 were detected only in the central nervous system, and the highest concentration of RFRP-1 was detected in the hypothalamus. RFRP-1-positive nerve cells were detected in the rat hypothalamus by immunohistochemical analyses using the monoclonal antibody. In culture, RFRP-1 lowered cAMP production in Chinese hamster ovary cells expressing OT7T022 and it was abolished by pre-treatment with pertussis toxin, suggesting that OT7T022 couples G(i)/G(o) in the signal transduction pathway.


Peptides | 2006

Recent advances in mammalian RFamide peptides: the discovery and functional analyses of PrRP, RFRPs and QRFP.

Shoji Fukusumi; Ryo Fujii; Shuji Hinuma

Since the first discovery of a peptide with RFamide structure at its C-terminus (i.e., an RFamide peptide) from an invertebrate in 1977, numerous studies on RFamide peptides have been conducted, and a variety have been identified in various phyla throughout the animal kingdom. The first reported mammalian RFamide peptides were neuropeptide FF (NPFF) and neuropeptide AF (NPAF) in 1985. However, for many years after this, no new novel RFamide peptides were identified in mammals. A breakthrough in discovering mammalian RFamide peptides was made possible by reverse pharmacology on the basis of orphan G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) research. The first report of an RFamide peptide identified from orphan GPCR research was prolactin (PRL)-releasing peptide (PrRP) in 1998. To date, a total of five RFamide peptide genes have been discovered in mammals. Orphan GPCR research has contributed considerably to the identification of these peptides and their receptor genes. This paper examines these mammalian RFamide peptides focusing especially on PrRP, RFamide-related peptides (RFRPs) and, the most recently identified, pyroglutamylated RFamide peptide (QRFP), the discovery of all of which the authors were at least partly involved in. We review here the strategies employed for the identification of these peptides and examine their characteristics, tissue distribution, receptors and functions.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2003

Molecular properties of endogenous RFamide-related peptide-3 and its interaction with receptors

Hiromi Yoshida; Yugo Habata; Masaki Hosoya; Yuji Kawamata; Chieko Kitada; Shuji Hinuma

Based on database searches of DNA sequences, we previously reported a gene encoding peptides possessing Arg-Phe-NH(2) (RFamide) at their C termini. This gene, RFamide-related peptide (RFRP), was expected to encode several different peptides (i.e., RFRP-1, -2, and -3). In the present study, we purified endogenous RFRP-3 from bovine hypothalamus, and demonstrated that it consisted of 28 amino acid residues. After constructing a sandwich enzyme immunoassay for RFRP-3, we analyzed the tissue distribution of endogenous RFRP-3 in rats and found its concentration to be highest in the hypothalamus. In binding assays, [125I]-labeled RFRP-3 bound to OT7T022 with high affinity, but its binding affinity to HLWAR77 was low. On the other hand, [125I]-labeled neuropeptide FF (NPFF) bound to both OT7T022 and HLWAR77 with high affinity. By serial deletion in the N-terminal portions of RFRP-3 and NPFF, we found that four C-terminal amino acid residues (i.e., PQRFamide), which were common between the two peptides, comprised a core sequence responsible for binding with the receptors, whereas three amino acid residues (i.e., PNL in RFRP-3 and LFQ in NPFF) added to the N terminus of PQRFamide played crucial roles in the agonistic activities of RFRP-3 and NPFF for OT7T022 and HLWAR77, respectively.

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Masaki Hosoya

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

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Ryo Fujii

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

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Shoji Fukusumi

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

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Chieko Kitada

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

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Yugo Habata

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

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Haruo Onda

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

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Yuji Kawamata

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

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Masahiko Fujino

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

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Hirokazu Matsumoto

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

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Masataka Harada

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

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