Updated on 2024/10/05

Information

 

写真a

 
MIYATA NORIYUKI
 
Organization
Faculty of Medical Sciences Department of Clinical Medicine Assistant Professor
School of Medicine Department of Medicine(Concurrent)
Title
Assistant Professor
External link

Degree

  • Doctor of Philosophy

Research Interests・Research Keywords

  • Research theme:Metabolomics Profile if Japanese female patients with restricting-type anorexia nervosa.

    Keyword:anorexia nervosa,metabolome

    Research period: 2017.4

Papers

  • Persistence of gut dysbiosis in individuals with anorexia nervosa

    Morisaki, Y; Miyata, N; Nakashima, M; Hata, T; Takakura, S; Yoshihara, K; Suematsu, T; Nomoto, K; Miyazaki, K; Tsuji, H; Sudo, N

    PLOS ONE   18 ( 12 )   e0296037   2023.12   ISSN:1932-6203

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    Language:English   Publisher:PLoS ONE  

    Recent evidence suggests a crucial role of the gut microbiota in the pathogenesis of anorexia nervosa (AN). In this study, we carried out a series of multiple analyses of the gut microbiota of hospitalized individuals with AN over three months using 16S or 23S rRNA-targeted reverse transcription-quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technology (YIF-SCAN®), which is highly sensitive and enables the precise quantification of viable microorganisms. Despite the weight gain and improvements in psychological features observed during treatment, individuals with AN exhibited persistent gut microbial dysbiosis over the three-month duration. Principal component analysis further underscored the distinct microbial profile of individuals with AN, compared with that of age-matched healthy women at all time points. Regarding the kinetics of bacterial detection, the detection rate of Lactiplantibacillus spp. significantly increased after inpatient treatment. Additionally, the elevation in the Bifidobacterium counts during inpatient treatment was significantly correlated with the subsequent body weight gain after one year. Collectively, these findings suggest that gut dysbiosis in individuals with AN may not be easily restored solely through weight gain, highlighting the potential of therapeutic interventions targeting microbiota via dietary modifications or live biotherapeutics. Copyright:

    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0296037

    Web of Science

    Scopus

    PubMed

  • Dietary supplementation with 1-kestose induces altered locomotor activity and increased striatal dopamine levels with a change in gut microbiota in male mice

    Altaisaikhan, A; Yoshihara, K; Hata, T; Miyata, N; Asano, Y; Suematsu, T; Kadota, Y; Sudo, N

    PHYSIOLOGICAL REPORTS   11 ( 23 )   e15882   2023.12   ISSN:2051-817X

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    Language:English   Publisher:Physiological Reports  

    1-Kestose (KES), a dietary fiber and prebiotic carbohydrate, benefits various physiological functions. This study aimed to examine whether diets supplemented with KES over three consecutive generations could significantly affect some host physiological aspects, including behavioral phenotypes and gut microbial ecology. Mice that received KES-supplemented diets for three generations demonstrated increased activity compared with those fed diets lacking KES. Furthermore, the KES group showed increased striatal dopamine (DA) and serotonin (5-HT) levels. The observed increase in DA levels within the striatum was positively correlated with locomotor activity in the KES group but not in the control (CON) group. The α-diversities were significantly lower in the KES group compared to the CON group. The three-dimensional principal coordinate analysis revealed a substantial distinction between the KES and CON groups across each generation. At the genus level, most gut microbiota genera exhibited lower abundances in the KES group than in the CON group, except for Bifidobacteria and Akkermansia. Spearman's rank-order analysis indicated significant negative correlations between the striatal DA levels and α-diversity values. These findings suggest that prolonged supplementation with KES may stimulate increased locomotor activity along with elevated striatal DA levels, which are potentially associated with KES-induced alterations in the gut microbiota.

    DOI: 10.14814/phy2.15882

    Web of Science

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    PubMed

  • Assessment of nutritional status and psychopathology in the treatment of eating disorders with different duration of illness

    Takakura, S; Morita, C; Miyata, N; Hata, T; Sudo, N

    ANNALS OF NUTRITION AND METABOLISM   79   78 - 78   2023.8   ISSN:0250-6807 eISSN:1421-9697

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  • Dietary tryptophan, tyrosine, and phenylalanine depletion induce reduced food intake and behavioral alterations in mice

    Zhang, XT; Yoshihara, K; Miyata, N; Hata, T; Altaisaikhan, A; Takakura, S; Asano, Y; Izuno, S; Sudo, N

    PHYSIOLOGY & BEHAVIOR   244   113653   2022.2   ISSN:0031-9384 eISSN:1873-507X

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    Language:English   Publisher:Physiology and Behavior  

    Important precursors of monoaminergic neurotransmitters, dietary tryptophan (TRP), tyrosine, and phenylalanine (all referred to as TTP), play crucial roles in a wide range of behavioral and emotional functions. In the current study, we investigated whether diets devoid of TTP or diets deficient in TRP alone can affect body weight, behavioral characteristics, and gut microbiota, by comparing mice fed on these amino acids-depleted diets to mice fed on diets containing regular levels of amino acids. Both dietary TTP- and TRP-deprived animals showed a reduction in food intake and body weight. In behavioral analyses, the mice fed TTP-deprived diets were more active than mice fed diets containing regular levels of amino acids. The TRP-deprived group exhibited a reduction in serum TRP levels, concomitant with a decrease in serotonin and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid levels in some regions of the brain. The TTP-deprived group showed a reduction in TTP levels in the serum, concomitant with decreases in both phenylalanine and tyrosine levels in the hippocampus, as well as serotonin, norepinephrine, and dopamine concentrations in some regions of the brain. Regarding the effects of TRP or TTP deprivation on gut microbial ecology, the relative abundance of genus Roseburia was significantly reduced in the TTP-deprived group than in the dietary restriction control group. Interestingly, TTP was found even in the feces of mice fed TTP- and TRP-deficient diets, suggesting that TTP is produced by microbial or enzymatic digestion of the host-derived proteins. However, microbe generated TTP did not compensate for the systemic TTP deficiency induced by the lack of dietary TTP intake. Collectively, these results indicate that chronic dietary TTP deprivation induces decreased monoamines and their metabolites in a brain region-specific manner. The altered activities of the monoaminergic systems may contribute to increased locomotor activity.

    DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2021.113653

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    Scopus

    PubMed

  • Metabolomics profile of Japanese female patients with restricting-type anorexia nervosa Reviewed

    Miyata Noriyuki

    Physiol Behav   2021.1

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    Authorship:Lead author   Language:English  

    DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2020.113204

Professional Memberships

  • 日本内科学会

  • 日本心身医学会

  • 日本心療内科学会

  • 日本アレルギー学会

  • 日本自律訓練学会

Class subject

  • 心身医学

    2023.10 - 2024.3   Second semester