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Dive into the research topics where Takeshi Kunimatsu is active.

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Featured researches published by Takeshi Kunimatsu.


Journal of Applied Toxicology | 2011

GC‐MS‐based metabolomics reveals mechanism of action for hydrazine induced hepatotoxicity in rats

Kiyoko Bando; Takeshi Kunimatsu; Jun Sakai; Juki Kimura; Hitoshi Funabashi; Takaki Seki; Takeshi Bamba; Eiichiro Fukusaki

Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC‐MS) has great advantages for analyzing organic/amino acids, which are often targets in efficacy and/or toxicity studies. Although GC‐MS has been used for the detection of many metabolic disorders, applications of GC‐MS‐based metabolomics in pharmacology/toxicology are relatively underdeveloped. We intended to investigate applicability of a GC‐MS‐based metabolomics approach for toxicological evaluation, and tried to elucidate the mechanism of hydrazine‐induced hepatotoxicity. Rats were administered hydrazine chloride orally (120 and 240 mg kg−1), and urine, plasma and liver samples were collected at 24 or 48 h post‐dosing. Conventional clinical chemistry and liver histopathology were performed, urine and plasma were analyzed by GC‐MS, and metabolic profiles were assessed using chemometric techniques. Principal component analysis score plots showed clear separation of the groups, indicating dose‐dependent toxicity and recovery. The mechanism of toxicity was investigated based on semi‐quantification data of identified metabolites. Amino acid precursors of glutathione (cystein, glutamate and glycine) and a product of glutathione metabolism (5‐oxoproline) were elevated dose‐dependently, accompanied with elevation of ascorbate levels. In addition, intermediates of the TCA cycle were decreased, whereas participants of the urea cycle and other amino acids were increased. These alterations were associated with histopathological changes such as fatty degeneration and glycogen accumulation. Application of GC‐MS‐based metabolomics revealed that oxidative stress and GSH consumption play important roles in the etiology of hydrazine‐induced hepatotoxicity, demonstrating that this approach is a useful tool in pharmacology and toxicology for screening, elucidating mode of action and biomarker discovery. Copyright


Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering | 2010

Influences of biofluid sample collection and handling procedures on GC-MS based metabolomic studies

Kiyoko Bando; Rui Kawahara; Takeshi Kunimatsu; Jun Sakai; Juki Kimura; Hitoshi Funabashi; Takaki Seki; Takeshi Bamba; Eiichiro Fukusaki

Sample collection procedures of pharmacology and toxicology studies might have a great impact on interpretation of metabolomic study results. Characterization of range variation among sample collection methods is necessary to prevent misinterpretation, as is use of optimal methods in animal experiments to minimize biological/technical variation. Here, we investigated the influence of urine and plasma sample collection and handling procedures on GC-MS based metabolomic studies as follows: for urine, pooling period and tube conditions during collection; for plasma, sampling sites, anesthesia and anticoagulants. Metabolic profiles of urine varied dramatically depending on urine pooling period and tube conditions, underscoring the importance of determining appropriate sampling periods in consideration of diurnal effects and targets of effect/toxicity, and suggesting it would be preferable to keep tubes in metabolic cages under iced conditions for urine sampling. Metabolic profiles of plasma differed depending on blood sampling sites. Anesthesia was not effective in reducing individual variation, although the anesthesia was beneficial in reducing discomfort in rats. In GC-MS based metabolomic studies, we recommend that EDTA be used as anticoagulant in plasma sample preparation, because peaks derived from heparin might overlap with endogenous metabolites, which may induce inter-sample variation. The present study demonstrated that biofluid sample collection and handling procedures provide great impact on metabolic profiles, at the very least for minimizing biological/technical variation, sampling period for urine collection should not be set as a short period, and the use of EDTA is recommended as anticoagulant in preparing plasma for analysis by GC-MS.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2014

Availability of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes in assessment of drug potential for QT prolongation

Yumiko Nozaki; Yayoi Honda; Shinji Tsujimoto; Hitoshi Watanabe; Takeshi Kunimatsu; Hitoshi Funabashi

Field potential duration (FPD) in human-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPS-CMs), which can express QT interval in an electrocardiogram, is reported to be a useful tool to predict K(+) channel and Ca(2+) channel blocker effects on QT interval. However, there is no report showing that this technique can be used to predict multichannel blocker potential for QT prolongation. The aim of this study is to show that FPD from MEA (Multielectrode array) of hiPS-CMs can detect QT prolongation induced by multichannel blockers. hiPS-CMs were seeded onto MEA and FPD was measured for 2min every 10min for 30min after drug exposure for the vehicle and each drug concentration. IKr and IKs blockers concentration-dependently prolonged corrected FPD (FPDc), whereas Ca(2+) channel blockers concentration-dependently shortened FPDc. Also, the multichannel blockers Amiodarone, Paroxetine, Terfenadine and Citalopram prolonged FPDc in a concentration dependent manner. Finally, the IKr blockers, Terfenadine and Citalopram, which are reported to cause Torsade de Pointes (TdP) in clinical practice, produced early afterdepolarization (EAD). hiPS-CMs using MEA system and FPDc can predict the effects of drug candidates on QT interval. This study also shows that this assay can help detect EAD for drugs with TdP potential.


Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology | 2010

The antipsychotics haloperidol and chlorpromazine increase bone metabolism and induce osteopenia in female rats

Takeshi Kunimatsu; Juki Kimura; Hitoshi Funabashi; Tadashi Inoue; Takaki Seki

The main objective of this study was to evaluate the effects of the antipsychotic drugs haloperidol (HAL) and chlorpromazine (CPZ) on bone mineral density (BMD) in female rats and to examine the relationship between the effects on bone and reproductive organs or hormone concentrations. Female rats were orally administered HAL (2 or 10 mg/kg) or CPZ (25 or 50 mg/kg) once daily (7 days/week) for 6 months resulting in a significant increase in prolactin. Hyperprolactinemia resulted in enlarged corpora lutea in the ovary, because prolactin has a luteotropic activity. Thus, atrophy in the uterus, epithelial mucification in the vagina and continuous diestrus stages were observed. These events in the reproductive organs induced a decrease in estradiol, elevation of biochemical markers of bone metabolism, significant reductions of BMD in trabecular bone of the femur and decreased trabecular bone in the femur. The bone loss is associated with an increase in bone resorption due to decreased estradiol derived from the luteotropic activity of prolactin. The mechanism of dopamine blockers to induce bone loss in female rats is considered to be rodent specific because the luteotropic effects of prolactin are confined primarily to rodents. Also, it appears that chronic hyperprolactinemia and maintained corpora lutea leading to bone loss are commonly inducible in female rats receiving long-term treatment with antipsychotic drugs possessing dopamine D2 receptor antagonist activity.


Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology | 2010

Comparison of potential risks of lactic acidosis induction by biguanides in rats

Kiyoko Bando; Shoko Ochiai; Takeshi Kunimatsu; Jiro Deguchi; Juki Kimura; Hitoshi Funabashi; Takaki Seki

Lactic acidosis has been considered to be a side effect of some biguanides, after phenformin was withdrawn from the market because of its association with lactic acidosis. The potential of lactic acidosis induced by biguanides at human therapeutic exposure levels, however, has not been examined. Then, we compared the risk of lactic acid at doses providing exposure levels comparable to human therapeutic doses. Metformin and phenformin were orally administered to rats for up to 28 days, and plasma drug concentrations and blood lactic acid levels were examined. Metformin did not elevate lactic acid levels at the dose corresponding to higher systemic drug exposure than human therapeutic level, even for repeated doses. In contrast, phenformin elevated lactic acid levels at the dose corresponding to lower exposure than human therapeutic level, and sustained high levels were observed up to 24h post-dose; furthermore, these changes were enhanced by repeated doses. Direct comparison at each rat equivalent dose clearly indicated that lactic acid levels of phenformin were higher than those of metformin. These non-clinical findings suggest that metformin dose not increase lactic acid levels like phenformin does, and therefore may not increase the risk for lactic acidosis at human therapeutic exposure level.


Journal of Pharmacological and Toxicological Methods | 2016

Comprehensive in vitro cardiac safety assessment using human stem cell technology: Overview of CSAHi HEART initiative

Kiyoshi Takasuna; Keiichi Asakura; Seiichi Araki; Hiroyuki Ando; Katsuyuki Kazusa; Takashi Kitaguchi; Takeshi Kunimatsu; Shinobu Suzuki; Norimasa Miyamoto

Recent increasing evidence suggests that the currently-used platforms in vitro IKr and APD, and/or in vivo QT assays are not fully predictive for TdP, and do not address potential arrhythmia (VT and/or VF) induced by diverse mechanisms of action. In addition, other cardiac safety liabilities such as functional dysfunction of excitation-contraction coupling (contractility) and structural damage (morphological damage to cardiomyocytes) are also major causes of drug attrition, but current in vitro assays do not cover all these liabilities. We organized the Consortium for Safety Assessment using Human iPS cells (CSAHi; http://csahi.org/en/), based on the Japan Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association (JPMA), to verify the application of human iPS/ES cell-derived cardiomyocytes in drug safety evaluation. The main goal of the CSAHi HEART team has been to propose comprehensive screening strategies to predict a diverse range of cardiotoxicities by using recently introduced platforms (multi-electrode array (MEA), patch clamp, cellular impedance, motion field imaging [MFI], and Ca transient systems) while identifying the strengths and weaknesses of each. Our study shows that hiPS-CMs used in these platforms have pharmacological responses more relevant to humans in comparison with existent hERG, APD or Langendorff (MAPD/contraction) assays, and not only MEA but also other methods such as impedance, MFI, and Ca transient systems would offer paradigm changes of platforms for predicting drug-induced QT risk and/or arrhythmia or contractile dysfunctions. Furthermore, we propose a potential multi-parametric platform in which field potential (MEA)-Ca transient-contraction (MFI) could be evaluated simultaneously as an ideal novel platform for predicting a diversity of cardiac toxicities, namely whole effects on the excitation-contraction cascade.


Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology | 2017

CSAHi study-2: Validation of multi-electrode array systems (MEA60/2100) for prediction of drug-induced proarrhythmia using human iPS cell-derived cardiomyocytes: Assessment of reference compounds and comparison with non-clinical studies and clinical information

Yumiko Nozaki; Yayoi Honda; Hitoshi Watanabe; Shota Saiki; Kiyotaka Koyabu; Tetsuji Itoh; Chiho Nagasawa; Chiaki Nakamori; Chiaki Nakayama; Hiroshi Iwasaki; Shinobu Suzuki; Kohji Tanaka; Etsushi Takahashi; Kaori Miyamoto; Kaoru Morimura; Atsuhiro Yamanishi; Hiroko Endo; Junko Shinozaki; Hisashi Nogawa; Tadahiro Shinozawa; Fumiyo Saito; Takeshi Kunimatsu

ABSTRACT With the aim of reconsidering ICH S7B and E14 guidelines, a new in vitro assay system has been subjected to worldwide validation to establish a better prediction platform for potential drug‐induced QT prolongation and the consequent TdP in clinical practice. In Japan, CSAHi HEART team has been working on hiPS‐CMs in the MEA (hiPS‐CMs/MEA) under a standardized protocol and found no inter‐facility or lot‐to‐lot variability for proarrhythmic risk assessment of 7 reference compounds. In this study, we evaluated the responses of hiPS‐CMs/MEA to another 31 reference compounds associated with cardiac toxicities, and gene expression to further clarify the electrophysiological characteristics over the course of culture period. The hiPS‐CMs/MEA assay accurately predicted reference compounds potential for arrhythmogenesis, and yielded results that showed better correlation with target concentrations of QTc prolongation or TdP in clinical setting than other current in vitro and in vivo assays. Gene expression analyses revealed consistent profiles in all samples within and among the testing facilities. This report would provide CiPA with informative guidance on the use of the hiPS‐CMs/MEA assay, and promote the establishment of a new paradigm, beyond conventional in vitro and in vivo assays for cardiac safety assessment of new drugs. HIGHLIGHTShiPS‐CMs/MEA accurately predicted reference compounds potential for arrhythmia.Gene expressions showed high correlation among the facility and inter‐facility.This system is suitable as a new non‐clinical testing of drugs cardiac liabilities.


Toxicology in Vitro | 2014

Effect of SMP-028 on steroidogenesis in rats; mechanism of toxicological events on endocrine organs of rats

Yohei Nishizato; Satoki Imai; Atsushi Yabunaka; Noriko Okahashi; Takeshi Kunimatsu; Masashi Yabuki

SMP-028 is a new compound for treatment of asthma. Oral administration of SMP-028 to rats was associated with toxicological events in endocrine organs. These events mainly consisted of pathological changes in the adrenal gland, testis, prostate, seminal vesicle, ovaries, and uterus. In this study, we set to clarify whether SMP-028 inhibits steroidogenesis in primary culture cells obtained from rat endocrine organs in vitro. Adrenal cells, testicular cells, and ovarian cells were treated with SMP-028 and the production of steroid hormones, i.e., progesterone, aldosterone, corticosterone, total testosterone, and estradiol from these cells was measured by radioimmunoassay. We found that the production of progesterone from these cells treated with SMP-028 at 1 μM decreased to 16-67% that of the control. These findings indicate that SMP-028 inhibits steroidogenesis in rat endocrine organs in vitro. Considering that free maximum concentration in rats treated with SMP-028 are higher than the IC50 values for the inhibition of steroidogenesis in vitro, it is therefore believed that the toxicological events seen in rats following treatment with SMP-028 are due to inhibition of steroidogenesis in vivo.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2014

Translational research into species differences of endocrine toxicity via steroidogenesis inhibition by SMP-028--for human safety in clinical study.

Yohei Nishizato; Satoki Imai; Noriko Okahashi; Atsushi Yabunaka; Takeshi Kunimatsu; Kaoru Kikuchi; Masashi Yabuki

SMP-028 is a drug candidate developed for the treatment of asthma. In a 13-week repeated dose toxicity study of SMP-028 in rats and monkeys, differences of endocrine toxicological events between rats and monkeys were observed. In rats, these toxicological events mainly consisted of pathological changes in the adrenal, testis, ovary, and the other endocrine-related organs. On the other hand, in monkeys, no toxicological events were observed. The goal of this study is to try to understand the reason why only rats, but not monkeys, showed toxicological events following treatment with SMP-028 and to eventually predict the possible toxicological effect of this compound on human endocrine organs. Our results show that SMP-028 inhibits neutral cholesterol esterase more strongly than other steroidogenic enzymes in rats. Although SMP-028 also inhibits monkeys and human neutral cholesterol esterase, this inhibition is much weaker than that of rat neutral cholesterol esterase. These results indicate (1) that the difference in endocrine toxicological events between rats and monkeys is mainly due to inhibition of steroidogenesis by SMP-028 in rats, not in monkeys, and (2) that SMP-028 may not affect steroidogenesis in humans and therefore might cause no endocrine toxicological events in clinical studies.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2012

The effects of clobazam treatment in rats on the expression of genes and proteins encoding glucronosyltransferase 1A/2B (UGT1A/2B) and multidrug resistance‐associated protein-2 (MRP2), and development of thyroid follicular cell hypertrophy

Izuru Miyawaki; Akitoshi Tamura; Izumi Matsumoto; Hiroshi Inada; Takeshi Kunimatsu; Juki Kimura; Hitoshi Funabashi

Clobazam (CLB) is known to increase hepatobiliary thyroxine (T4) clearance in Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats, which results in hypothyroidism followed by thyroid follicular cell hypertrophy. However, the mechanism of the acceleration of T4-clearance has not been fully investigated. In the present study, we tried to clarify the roles of hepatic UDP-glucronosyltransferase (UGT) isoenzymes (UGT1A and UGT2B) and efflux transporter (multidrug resistance-associated protein-2; MRP2) in the CLB-induced acceleration of T4-clearance using two mutant rat strains, UGT1A-deficient mutant (Gunn) and MRP2-deficient mutant (EHBR) rats, especially focusing on thyroid morphology, levels of circulating hormones (T4 and triiodothyronine (T3)) and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), and mRNA or protein expressions of UGTs (Ugt1a1, Ugt1a6, and Ugt2b1/2) and MRP2 (Mrp). CLB induced thyroid morphological changes with increases in TSH in SD and Gunn rats, but not in EHBR rats. T4 was slightly decreased in SD and Gunn rats, and T3 was decreased in Gunn rats, whereas these hormones were maintained in EHBR rats. Hepatic Ugt1a1, Ugt1a6, Ugt2b1/2, and Mrp2 mRNAs were upregulated in SD rats. In Gunn rats, UGT1A mRNAs (Ugt1a1/6) and protein levels were quite low, but UGT2B mRNAs (Ugt2b1/2) and protein were prominently upregulated. In SD and Gunn rats, MRP2 mRNA and protein were upregulated to the same degree. These results suggest that MRP2 is an important contributor in development of the thyroid cellular hypertrophy in CLB-treated rats, and that UGT1A and UGT2B work in concert with MRP2 in the presence of MRP2 function to enable the effective elimination of thyroid hormones.

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Hitoshi Funabashi

Dainippon Sumitomo Pharma Co.

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Juki Kimura

Dainippon Sumitomo Pharma Co.

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Kiyoko Bando

Dainippon Sumitomo Pharma Co.

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Yayoi Honda

Dainippon Sumitomo Pharma Co.

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Yumiko Nozaki

Dainippon Sumitomo Pharma Co.

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Hitoshi Watanabe

Dainippon Sumitomo Pharma Co.

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Izuru Miyawaki

Dainippon Sumitomo Pharma Co.

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