Hirokazu Isobe
Niigata University
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Featured researches published by Hirokazu Isobe.
Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2008
Tomomi Takano; Wataru Higuchi; Taketo Otsuka; Tatiana Baranovich; Shymaa Enany; Kohei Saito; Hirokazu Isobe; Soshi Dohmae; Kyoko Ozaki; Misao Takano; Yasuhisa Iwao; Michiko Shibuya; Takeshi Okubo; Shizuka Yabe; Da Shi; Ivan Reva; Lee-Jene Teng; Tatsuo Yamamoto
ABSTRACT Community-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA) strains, which often produce Panton-Valentine leucocidin (PVL), are increasingly noted worldwide. In this study, we examined 42 MRSA strains (25 PVL-positive [PVL+] strains and 17 PVL-negative [PVL−] strains) isolated in Taiwan for their molecular characteristics. The PVL+ MRSA strains included CA-MRSA strains with multilocus sequence type (ST) 59 (major PVL+ MRSA in Taiwan), its variants, and worldwide CA-MRSA ST30 strains. The PVL− MRSA strains included the pandemic Hungarian MRSA ST239 strain, the Hungarian MRSA ST239 variant, MRSA ST59 (largely hospital-acquired MRSA strains) and its variants, the pandemic New York/Japan MRSA ST5 strain (Japanese type), and the MRSA ST8 strain. The major PVL+ CA-MRSA ST59 strain possessed a tetracycline resistance-conferring (tetK positive) penicillinase plasmid and a drug resistance gene cluster (a possible composite transposon) for multidrug resistance. Moreover, it carried a novel staphylococcal cassette chromosome mec (SCCmec) with two distinct ccrC genes (ccrC2-C8). This SCCmec (previously named SCCmec type VT) was tentatively designated SCCmec type VII. Sequencing of the PVL genes revealed the polymorphisms, and the PVL+ CA-MRSA ST59 strain possessed the ST59-specific PVL gene sequence. The data suggest that a significant amount of clonal spread is occurring in Taiwan and that the major PVL+ CA-MRSA ST59Taiwan strain exhibits unique genetic characteristics, such as a novel SCCmec type and an ST59-specific PVL gene sequence.
Journal of Hospital Infection | 2008
Soshi Dohmae; Takeshi Okubo; Wataru Higuchi; Tomomi Takano; Hirokazu Isobe; Tatiana Baranovich; S. Kobayashi; Makoto Uchiyama; Y. Tanabe; M. Itoh; Tatsuo Yamamoto
It was noticed that there was an increase in Bacillus cereus nosocomial infections in the summer from 2000 to 2005. In 2005, five bloodstream infections occurred in five patients related to catheter use. The causative strains were distinct from each other and belonged to novel multilocus sequence types (ST): ST365, ST366, ST367 and ST368. Two ST365 strains from two patients were further distinguished by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. B. cereus contamination was observed with reused (dried and steamed) towels (>10(6)cfu/towel) and washing machines in hospital linen rooms. B. cereus strains from towels belonged to ST167, ST365, ST380 and ST382, and a proportion of these were the same, or similar, to strains from patients. All the hospital strains of B. cereus were distinct from those from food-poisoning strains (ST26, ST142, ST381). Ciprofloxacin resistance was observed only in hospital strains. Neither emetic toxin nor cytotoxin K gene, usually present in food poisoning strains, were found in the hospital strains, except for one patient isolate. The data suggest that specific B. cereus strains are circulating within a hospital, with genotypes, antibiotic susceptibilities and virulence gene patterns generally distinct from those of food poisoning, and that in Japan, towels are an important source of contamination, especially in summer.
Journal of Infection and Chemotherapy | 2010
Wataru Higuchi; Wei-Chun Hung; Tomomi Takano; Yasuhisa Iwao; Kyoko Ozaki; Hirokazu Isobe; Lee-Jene Teng; Tetsuya Shimazaki; Akihito Honda; Masato Higashide; Hideaki Hanaki; Tatsuo Yamamoto
Community-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA), which often produces Panton-Valentine leucocidin (PVL), has emerged worldwide as a life-threatening pathogen. Herein, we describe molecular characteristics of MRSA isolated from abdominal cellulitis in a 7-year-old Japanese boy. This MRSA was PVL-positive and belonged to the Taiwanese multiple drug-resistant CA-MRSA clone with the genotype of ST59, staphylococcal cassette chromosome mec (SCCmec) VII (SCCmecV, according to recent reclassification), agr1a (a novel agr1 subtype), and SaPI (which carried seb1, a newly designated variant seb gene). This study demonstrates the first isolation of the Taiwanese PVL-positive ST59 MRSA clone in Japan. The data also demonstrate novel subtypes in agr1 and seb and suggest that a combination of agr1a, seb1, and PVL could contribute to cellulitis (and its recurrence). Recently, a variety of PVL-positive MRSA clones are accumulating in Japan.
Journal of Infection and Chemotherapy | 2009
Ivan Reva; Wataru Higuchi; Tomomi Takano; Olga Singur; Kyoko Ozaki; Hirokazu Isobe; Shizuka Yabe; Kohei Saito; Tatiana Baranovich; Symaa Enany; Taketo Otsuka; Vladimir Potapov; Akihito Nishiyama; Tatsuo Yamamoto
Community-acquired methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (CA-MRSA), which is often positive for Panton-Valentine leucocidin (PVL), is increasingly noted as an emerging pathogen worldwide. In Japan, PVLpositive CA-MRSA belonging to multilocus sequence type (ST) 30 has spread and caused, for example, pediatric death due to community-acquired pneumonia and severe pelvic abscesses in an athlete. In this study, we investigated a new rapid screening method for PVL-positive ST30 CA-MRSA and its related clone by a combination of multiplex polymerase chain reaction (M-PCR) and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). For M-PCR, the targets of the assay were the five genes for PVL, collagen adhesin, bone sialoprotein adhesin, methicillin resistance, and S. aureus-specifi c thermostable nuclease. Only PVL-positive ST30 CA-MRSA strains produced all five bands in M-PCR. With PFGE, Japanese strains and most foreign strains of PVLpositive ST30 CA-MRSA shared the same pattern. Moreover, PFGE distinguished current PVL-positive CA-MRSA ST30/spa19 strains from previous PVL-positive MRSA ST30/spa43 strains (which were isolated at the time of nosocomial MRSA outbreaks in the late 1980s and early 1990s) in Japan. Thus, the M-PCR assay rapidly, and the M-PCR/PFGE combination assay more precisely, discriminated between PVL-positive ST30 CA-MRSA (or its related clone) and PVL-positive CA-MRSA belonging to other ST types such as ST1, 8, 59, and 80, PVL-negative CA-MRSA, hospital-acquired MRSA, methicillin-susceptible S. aureus, or coagulase-negative staphylococci (CNS), including MRCNS. This screening method is more useful than genotyping for routine work in many clinical laboratories.
Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2012
Hirokazu Isobe; Akihito Nishiyama; Tomomi Takano; Wataru Higuchi; Saori Nakagawa; Ikue Taneike; Yoichi Fukushima; Tatsuo Yamamoto
The effects of Lactobacillus johnsonii La1 (LC1) on Helicobacter pylori colonization in the stomach were investigated. H. pylori colonization and gastritis in LC1-inoculated Mongolian gerbils were significantly less intense than those in the control animals. LC1 culture supernatant (>10-kDa fraction) inhibited H. pylori motility and induced bacterial aggregation in human gastric epithelial cells, suggesting the potential of clinical use of LC1 product.
Microbiology and Immunology | 2008
Wataru Higuchi; Mineo Muramatsu; Soshi Dohmae; Tomomi Takano; Hirokazu Isobe; Shizuka Yabe; Shi Da; Tatiana Baranovich; Tatsuo Yamamoto
The use of probiotics such as Lactobacillus in animal feeds has gained popularity in recent years. In this study the 16S rRNA gene sequence of L. acidophilus in two commercial agents which have been used in animal feeds, LAB‐MOS and Ghenisson 22, was determined. Phylogenetic tree analysis revealed that the two agents, strain MNFLM01 in LAB‐MOS and strain GAL‐2 in Ghenisson 22, belonged to L. rhamnosus (a member of the L. casei group) and L. johnsonii (a member of the L. acidophilus group), respectively. Biochemical tests assigned the two as L. rhamnosus and ambiguously as L. acidophilus. The data suggest that 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis provides more accurate identification of Lactobacillus species than biochemical tests and would allow quality assurance of relevant commercial products. The 16S rRNA gene sequences of strains MNFLM01 and GAL‐2 determined in this study have been submitted to the DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank accession numbers under accession numbers AB288235 and AB295648, respectively.
Pediatrics International | 2013
Hirokazu Isobe; Dai Miyasaka; Tomoyuki Ito; Tomomi Takano; Akihito Nishiyama; Yasuhisa Iwao; Olga Khokhlova; Takeshi Okubo; Naoto Endo; Tatsuo Yamamoto
A 17‐year‐old female patient (a basketball player) suffered from recurrent pelvic abscesses from methicillin‐resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). The first episode, from strain NN12, occurred in October 2004. Her cutaneous abscesses complicated into systemic progression to osteomyelitis and multifocal pelvic abscesses, adjacent to the sacroiliac joint. The second episode, abscesses at tissues adjacent to the sacroiliac joint from strain NN31A, occurred late in February 2005. The third episode, from strain NN31B, occurred on July 30, 2005, repeating the second episode. Three MRSA strains were identical in terms of genotypes (belonging to Panton‐Valentine leukocidin [PVL]‐positive ST30 community‐acquired MRSA, CA‐MRSA), pulsed‐field gel electrophoresis patterns, and peptide cytolysin gene (psmα) expression levels. The three MRSA strains exhibited superior THP‐1 cell invasion ability over hospital‐acquired MRSA (New York/Japan clone). The data suggest that PVL‐positive ST30 CA‐MRSA, with high levels of cell invasion and peptide cytolysins, causes recurrence of pelvic abscesses in a healthy adolescent.
Journal of Infection and Chemotherapy | 2012
Yasuhisa Iwao; Rumiko Ishii; Yusuke Tomita; Yasuhiro Shibuya; Tomomi Takano; Wei-Chun Hung; Wataru Higuchi; Hirokazu Isobe; Akihito Nishiyama; Mio Yano; Tetsuya Matsumoto; Kikuyo Ogata; Takeshi Okubo; Olga Khokhlova; Pak-Leung Ho; Tatsuo Yamamoto
Journal of Infection and Chemotherapy | 2012
Tatsuo Yamamoto; Tomomi Takano; Shizuka Yabe; Wataru Higuchi; Yasuhisa Iwao; Hirokazu Isobe; Kyoko Ozaki; Misao Takano; Ivan Reva; Akihito Nishiyama
Biomedical Research-tokyo | 2012
Hirokazu Isobe; Tomomi Takano; Akihito Nishiyama; Wei-Chun Hung; Shuichi Kuniyuki; Yasuhiro Shibuya; Ivan Reva; Shizuka Yabe; Yasuhisa Iwao; Wataru Higuchi; Olga Khokhlova; Takeshi Okubo; Tatsuo Yamamoto