医学部 感染・免疫学講座 ウイルス学部門

仲屋 友喜

ナカヤ ユウキ  (Nakaya Yuki)

基本情報

所属
自治医科大学 医学部 感染・免疫学講座ウイルス学部門
学位
博士(医学)(2011年9月 京都大学)
学士(獣医学)(2008年3月 岩手大学)

ORCID ID
 https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0888-204X
J-GLOBAL ID
201601002536816808
Researcher ID
AAD-1553-2020
researchmap会員ID
B000256217

学歴

 2

論文

 26
  • Yuki Nakaya, Daichi Onomura, Yuji Hoshi, Tomoko Yamagata, Hiromi Morita, Hiroaki Okamoto, Kazumoto Murata
    The Journal of Infectious Diseases 2024年7月11日  査読有り筆頭著者責任著者
    Abstract Background Approximately 296 million people suffer from chronic hepatitis B (CHB) caused by hepatitis B virus (HBV). Current standard treatment, nucleos(t)ide analogs, are not efficient enough to eradicate HBV from the hepatocytes. Thus, developing new drugs for CHB is desired to achieve complete cure. Methods Here we established a novel HBV reporter system, HBV-HiBiT-PS2, to screen new drugs for CHB. HBV-HiBiT-PS2 was constructed by introducing a HiBiT-tag at the 5’-end of PreS2 and introduced into HepG2-NTCP cells. Culture supernatant containing HBV-HiBiT-PS2 virions was fractionated by a sucrose density gradient ultracentrifugation to characterize their components. Replication kinetics and reporter function of HBV-HiBiT-PS2 were determined by analyzing the parameters for HBV replication in the presence or absence of HBV inhibitors. Results HBV-HiBiT-PS2 could be used for monitoring most of the replication cycle of HBV. The effects of well-characterized HBV inhibitors could be evaluated by the HiBiT activity. HBV-HiBiT-PS2 could be specialized for screening secretion inhibitors for hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) because most of the HiBiT activity was derived from subviral particles which are the multimers of HBsAg. Conclusions We demonstrated that HBV-HiBiT-PS2 would be a robust tool for screening novel drugs, especially HBsAg secretion inhibitors, targeted for CHB.
  • Ryogo Shimizu, Kazuhisa Murai, Kensuke Tanaka, Yuga Sato, Naho Takeda, Saki Nakasyo, Takayoshi Shirasaki, Kazunori Kawaguchi, Tetsuro Shimakami, Kouki Nio, Yuki Nakaya, Harumi Kagiwada, Katsuhisa Horimoto, Masashi Mizokami, Shuichi Kaneko, Kazumoto Murata, Taro Yamashita, Masao Honda
    Hepatology Communications 8(1) 2024年1月  査読有り
    Background: Recent clinical studies have suggested that the risk of developing HCC might be lower in patients with chronic hepatitis B receiving tenofovir disoproxil fumarate than in patients receiving entecavir, although there is no difference in biochemical and virological remission between the 2 drugs. Methods: The effects of nucleoside analogs (NsAs; lamivudine and entecavir) or nucleotide analogs (NtAs; adefovir disoproxil, tenofovir disoproxil fumarate, and tenofovir alafenamide) on cell growth and the expression of growth signaling molecules in hepatoma cell lines and PXB cells were investigated in vitro. The tumor inhibitory effects of NsAs or NtAs were evaluated using a mouse xenograft model, and protein phosphorylation profiles were investigated. The binding of NsAs or NtAs to the insulin receptor (INSR) was investigated by thermal shift assays. Results: NtAs, but not NsAs, showed direct growth inhibitory effects on hepatoma cell lines in vitro and a mouse model in vivo. A phosphoprotein array revealed that INSR signaling was impaired and the levels of phosphorylated (p)-INSRβ and downstream molecules phosphorylated (p)-IRS1, p-AKT, p-Gab1, and p-SHP2 were substantially reduced by NtAs. In addition, p-epidermal growth factor receptor and p-AKT levels were substantially reduced by NtAs. Similar findings were also found in PXB cells and nontumor lesions of liver tissues from patients with chronic hepatitis B. Prodrug NtAs, but not their metabolites (adefovir, adefovir monophosphate, adefovir diphosphate, tenofovir, tenofovir monophosphate, and tenofovir diphosphate), had such effects. A thermal shift assay showed the binding of NtAs to INSRβ. Conclusions: NtAs (adefovir disoproxil, tenofovir disoproxil fumarate, and tenofovir alafenamide), which are adenine derivative acyclic nucleotide analogs, potentially bind to the ATP-binding site of growth factor receptors and inhibit their autophosphorylation, which might reduce the risk of HCC in patients with chronic hepatitis B.
  • Yuki Nakaya, Tsutomu Nishizawa, Hironori Nishitsuji, Hiromi Morita, Tomoko Yamagata, Daichi Onomura, Kazumoto Murata
    Scientific Reports 13(1) 13584 2023年8月21日  査読有り筆頭著者責任著者
    Abstract Chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is a major medical concern worldwide. Current treatments for HBV infection effectively inhibit virus replication; however, these treatments cannot cure HBV and novel treatment-strategies should be necessary. In this study, we identified tripartite motif-containing protein 26 (TRIM26) could be a supportive factor for HBV replication. Small interfering RNA-mediated TRIM26 knockdown (KD) modestly attenuated HBV replication in human hepatocytes. Endogenous TRIM26 physically interacted with HBV core protein (HBc), but not polymerase and HBx, through the TRIM26 SPRY domain. Unexpectedly, TRIM26 inhibited HBc ubiquitination even though TRIM26 is an E3 ligase. HBc was degraded by TRIM26 KD in Huh-7 cells, whereas the reduction was restored by a proteasome inhibitor. RING domain-deleted TRIM26 mutant (TRIM26ΔR), a dominant negative form of TRIM26, sequestered TRIM26 from HBc, resulting in promoting HBc degradation. Taking together, this study demonstrated that HBV utilizes TRIM26 to avoid the proteasome-dependent HBc degradation. The interaction between TRIM26 and HBc might be a novel therapeutic target against HBV infection.
  • Masato Yasuura, Yuki Nakaya, Hiroki Ashiba, Takashi Fukuda
    BMC Microbiology 22(1) 300 2022年12月12日  査読有り筆頭著者
    Abstract Background Although conventional polymerase chain reaction (PCR) methods are widely used in diagnosis, the titer of the pathogenic virus is difficult to determine based on the PCR. In our prior report, a long-range reverse-transcription quantitative PCR (LR-RT-qPCR) assay was developed to assess the titer of UV-irradiated influenza A virus (IAV) rapidly. In this research, we focused on whether the LR-RT-qPCR assay could evaluate the titer of IAV inactivated by other methods. Methods IAV was inactivated by: heating at 100 °C for periods ranging from 1 to 15 min, treating with 0.12% sodium hypochlorite for periods ranging from 3 to 30 min, or treating with 70% ethanol for periods ranging from 10 to 30 min. Fifty percent tissue culture infectious dose (TCID50) assay was performed to confirm the efficacy of the inactivation methods, followed by LR-RT-qPCR to investigate the correlation between infectivity and copy number. Results One minute heating, 3 min sodium hypochlorite treatment, or 10 min ethanol treatment was sufficient to deactivate IAV. Changes before and after the inactivations in the copy numbers on LR-RT-qPCR were significantly different among the inactivation methods. Heat-inactivation drastically decreased the copy number to below the cutoff value around 5 copies/μL after 5 min treatment. The inactivation time of heating estimated using LR-RT-qPCR was marginally higher than that determined using TCID50. However, the treatments with sodium hypochlorite or ethanol moderately and minimally affected the copy numbers obtained using LR-RT-qPCR (~ 1 digit or no copy number decrease), respectively. Conclusions In addition to good applicability in UV-irradiation previously reported, the LR-RT-qPCR method is suitable for evaluating the effect of heat-inactivation on IAV infectivity. However, minor modifications may be made and investigated in the future to reduce the time intervals with TCID50. Although this method is not applicable for the ethanol inactivation, rapid evaluation of the effects of chlorination on IAV can be determined by comparing copy numbers before and after treatment using the LR-RT-qPCR method.
  • Yuki Nakaya, Takashi Fukuda, Hiroki Ashiba, Masato Yasuura, Makoto Fujimaki
    BMC INFECTIOUS DISEASES 20(1) 585 2020年8月  査読有り筆頭著者責任著者
    BackgroundThe polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is commonly used to detect viral pathogens because of its high sensitivity and specificity. However, conventional PCR methods cannot determine virus infectivity. Virus infectivity is conventionally examined with methods such as the plaque assay, even though such assays require several days. Long-range reverse-transcription quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) has previously been suggested for the rapid assessment of RNA virus infectivity where the loss of infectivity is attributable to genomic fragmentation.MethodsIAV was irradiated with 253.7nm ultraviolet (UV) rays to induce genomic strand breaks that were confirmed by a full-length RT-PCR assay. The IAV was then subjected to plaque assay, conventional RT-qPCR and long-range RT-qPCR to examine the relationship between infectious titer and copy number. A simple linear regression analysis was performed to examine the correlation between the results of these assays.ResultsA long-range RT-qPCR assay was developed and validated for influenza A virus (IAV). Although only a few minutes of UV irradiation was required to completely inactivate IAV, genomic RNA remained detectable by the conventional RT-qPCR and the full-length RT-PCR for NS of viral genome following inactivation. A long-range RT-qPCR assay was then designed using RT-priming at the 3 termini of each genomic segment and subsequent qPCR of the 5 ' regions. UV-mediated IAV inactivation was successfully analyzed by the long-range RT-qPCR assay especially when targeting PA of the viral genome. This was also supported by the regression analysis that the long-range RT-qPCR is highly correlated with plaque assay (Adjusted R-2=0.931, P=0.000066).Conclusions p id=Par This study suggests that IAV infectivity can be predicted without the infectivity assays. The rapid detection of pathogenic IAV has, therefore, been achieved with this sensing technology.

MISC

 34

講演・口頭発表等

 2

共同研究・競争的資金等の研究課題

 11

その他

 1