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Dive into the research topics where Judy A. Sakanari is active.

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Featured researches published by Judy A. Sakanari.


Journal of Parasitology | 2005

MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND DIAGNOSIS OF ANISAKIS, PSEUDOTERRANOVA, AND CONTRACAECUM FROM NORTHERN PACIFIC MARINE MAMMALS

Steven A. Nadler; S. D'Amelio; Murray D. Dailey; L. Paggi; Sandra Siu; Judy A. Sakanari

Individual specimens of Anisakis, Pseudoterranova, and Contracaecum collected from marine mammals inhabiting northern Pacific waters were used for comparative diagnostic and molecular phylogenetic analyses. Forty-eight new sequences were obtained for this study of 14 Anisakis taxa, 8 Pseudoterranova taxa, 4 Contracaecum taxa, and 4 outgroup species. Partial 28S (LSU) and complete internal transcribed spacer (ITS-1, 5.8S, ITS-2) ribosomal DNA was amplified by the polymerase chain reaction and sequenced. Sequences of ITS indicated that Pseudoterranova specimens from Zalophus californianus (California sea lion), Mirounga angustirostris (northern elephant seal), Phoca vitulina (harbor seal), Enhydra lutris (sea otter), and Eumetopias jubatus (Stellers sea lion) exactly matched P. decipiens s. str., extending the host and geographic range of this species. Anisakis from northern Pacific marine mammals were most closely related to members of the A. simplex species complex. Comparison of Anisakis ITS sequences diagnosed the presence of A. simplex C in 2 M. angustirostris hosts, which is a new host record. Anisakis specimens from Phocoena phocoena (harbor porpoise), Lissodelphis borealis (Pacific rightwhale porpoise), and E. jubatus included 3 ITS sequences that did not match any known species. Contracaecum adults obtained from Z. californianus were most closely related to C. ogmorhini s.l. and C. rudolphii, but ITS sequences of these Contracaecum specimens did not match C. ogmorhini s. str. or C. margolisi. These novel Anisakis and Contracaecum ITS sequences may represent previously uncharacterized species. Phylogenetic analysis of LSU sequences revealed strong support for the monophyly of Anisakinae, Contracaecum plus Phocascaris, Pseudoterranova, and Anisakis. Phylogenetic trees inferred from ITS sequences yielded robustly supported relationships for Pseudoterranova and Anisakis species that are primarily consistent with previously published phenograms based on multilocus electrophoretic data.


Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | 1990

Amplification and sequencing of genomic DNA fragments encoding cysteine proteases from protozoan parasites.

Ann E. Eakin; Jacques Bouvier; Judy A. Sakanari; Charles S. Craik; James H. McKerrow

Cysteine protease gene fragments from three protozoan parasites Trypanosoma cruzi, Trypanosoma brucei, and Entamoeba histolytica were amplified by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) from genomic DNA using degenerate oligonucleotide primers. The primers used for the amplification were designed based upon amino acid sequences flanking the active site cysteine and asparagine residues that are conserved in the eukaryotic cysteine proteases analyzed to date. The amplified DNA fragments, representing approximately 70% of the coding regions of the cysteine protease genes, were subcloned and sequenced. Sequence analysis and alignment showed significant sequence similarity to other members of the eukaryotic cysteine protease family (45% identical to chicken cathepsin L) and conservation of the cysteine, histidine, and asparagine residues which form the catalytic triad. These gene fragments provide molecular probes for further analysis of the structure and function of these important metabolic enzymes.


Insect Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2000

Cloning and functional expression of a Boophilus microplus cathepsin L-like enzyme

Gaby Renard; José F. Garcia; F.C. Cardoso; Marc François Richter; Judy A. Sakanari; Luiz Shozo Ozaki; Carlos Termignoni; Aoi Masuda

A cysteine proteinase gene homologous to cathepsins L genes was isolated from a B. microplus cDNA library. The precursor protein deduced from the nucleotide sequence contains 332 amino acid residues consisting of a signal sequence (pre-region), a pro-region and a mature proteinase. The DNA fragment coding for the proenzyme was cloned and expressed using the E. coli expression vector pMAL-p. The recombinant protein (MBP+PROCP) once activated is able to hydrolyze synthetic substrates as well as protein substrates like hemoglobin, vitellin and gelatin. Its optimal enzymatic activity on both fluorogenic and protein substrates was found to occur at an acidic pH. Expression of the proteinase gene was tested by RT-PCR with tick larvae RNA. Detection of amplified sequences indicates that the gene is expressed at this stage of the tick life cycle and the molecule is therefore potentially a target for chemotherapy or an immunogen in a vaccine.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2012

WormAssay: a novel computer application for whole-plate motion-based screening of macroscopic parasites.

Chris Marcellino; Jiri Gut; Kee-Chong Lim; Rahul Singh; James H. McKerrow; Judy A. Sakanari

Lymphatic filariasis is caused by filarial nematode parasites, including Brugia malayi. Adult worms live in the lymphatic system and cause a strong immune reaction that leads to the obstruction of lymph vessels and swelling of the extremities. Chronic disease leads to the painful and disfiguring condition known as elephantiasis. Current drug therapy is effective against the microfilariae (larval stage) of the parasite, but no drugs are effective against the adult worms. One of the major stumbling blocks toward developing effective macrofilaricides to kill the adult worms is the lack of a high throughput screening method for candidate drugs. Current methods utilize systems that measure one well at a time and are time consuming and often expensive. We have developed a low-cost and simple visual imaging system to automate and quantify screening entire plates based on parasite movement. This system can be applied to the study of many macroparasites as well as other macroscopic organisms.


Journal of Parasitology | 1990

Identification of the secreted neutral proteases from Anisakis simplex.

Judy A. Sakanari; James H. McKerrow

Ingestion of larval nematodes (family: Anisakidae) can cause the human disease known as anisakiasis. After ingestion, Anisakis larvae can be invasive, penetrating host stomach or intestinal wall. Observation of larvae penetrating the tissue layers of human stomach in vitro by SEM showed tunnels and burrows were formed in the mucosa and submucosa. Based on these observations, we hypothesized that secreted proteases may be involved in the degradation of host tissue macromolecules to allow tunnel formation. Using a model of connective tissue extracellular matrix (ECM), we found that as few as 5 Anisakis simplex larvae could degrade approximately 25% of the ECM in a 16-mm culture well in 24 hr. Further characterization of the secreted proteases using synthetic peptide substrates and inhibitors revealed that there were 2 classes of proteases present: a metallo aminopeptidase and a trypsinlike serine protease. Extracts of Anisakis larvae contained a 25-kDa protease that was recognized by rabbit anti-rat trypsin antibody on western blots. This suggests that there is structural as well as functional similarity between the Anisakis trypsin and vertebrate trypsins.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Identification of the Major Cysteine Protease of Giardia and Its Role in Encystation

Kelly N. DuBois; Marla Abodeely; Judy A. Sakanari; Charles S. Craik; Malinda Lee; James H. McKerrow; Mohammed Sajid

Giardia lamblia is a protozoan parasite and the earliest branching clade of eukaryota. The Giardia life cycle alternates between an asexually replicating vegetative form and an infectious cyst form. Encystation and excystation are crucial processes for the survival and transmission of Giardia. Cysteine proteases in Giardia have been implicated in proteolytic processing events that enable the continuance of the life cycle throughout encystation and excystation. Using quantitative real-time PCR, the expression of twenty-seven clan CA cysteine protease genes in the Giardia genome was measured during both vegetative growth and encystation. Giardia cysteine protease 2 was the most highly expressed cysteine protease during both life cycle stages measured, with a dramatic expression increase during encystation. The mRNA transcript for Giardia cysteine protease 2 was 7-fold up-regulated during encystation and was greater than 3-fold higher than any other Giardia protease gene product. Recombinant Giardia cysteine protease 2 was expressed, purified, and biochemically characterized. The activity of the recombinant cysteine protease 2 protein was confirmed to be identical to the dominant cysteine protease activity found in G. lamblia lysates. Giardia cysteine protease 2 was co-localized with cyst wall protein in encystation-specific vesicles during encystation and processed cyst wall protein 2 to the size found in Giardia cyst walls. These data suggest that Giardia cysteine protease 2 is not only the major cysteine endoprotease expressed in Giardia, but is also central to the encystation process.


Experimental Parasitology | 1989

Extracellular proteases of Onchocerca

Angela Lackey; Eric R. James; Judy A. Sakanari; Steven D. Resnick; Margaret Brown; Albert E Bianco; James H. McKerrow

Two important events in infection by Onchocerca parasites involve cutaneous tissue migration by larval stages. L3 larvae migrate from the blackfly bite site to subcutaneous locations for adult development, and microfilariae from subcutaneous nodules to distant regions of the skin and sometimes the eye. By analogy to other tissue-invasive helminth larvae, it has been proposed that migration of Onchocerca larvae through cutaneous tissue is facilitated by secretion of proteolytic enzymes. To test this hypothesis, neutral protease activity capable of degrading a model of cutaneous extracellular matrix was assayed using live L3 larvae of O. lienalis and microfilariae of O. cervicalis and O. cervipedis. Five hundred L3 larvae degraded most of the matrix within 24 hr of incubation. Substrate gel electrophoresis and other protease assays showed a 43-kDa serine elastase was secreted by O. lienalis L3 larvae. Larvae and adults of the free-living nematode, Caenorhobditis elegans, by contrast, did not secrete neutral proteases and large numbers of motile C. elegans juveniles and adults produced no degradation of the extracellular matrix. Expression of Onchocerca neutral protease activity was stage specific. No protease activity corresponding to that seen in L3 larvae was found in adult worms. Microfilariae of O. cervicalis and O. cervipedis produced both a serine and a metalloprotease, but the level of protease activity of these microfilariae was substantially lower than that of L3 larvae, and no significant protease activity was detected in extracts of O. lienalis microfilariae. Uterine microfilariae of O. cervicalis had different protease species than skin microfilariae, suggesting that changes in protease expression parallel other morphologic and biochemical changes in the development of skin microfilariae. The serine protease of L3 larvae probably plays an important parasitic function, facilitating L3 migration from the blackfly bite site to distant regions of the body where adults will develop and form nodules. The protease activity of microfilariae, while individually considerably less than that of L3 larvae, may still contribute to the tissue destruction seen with heavy skin densities of microfilariae.


Biochemical Journal | 1999

Expression and alteration of the S2 subsite of the Leishmania major cathepsin B-like cysteine protease.

Victor J. Chan; Paul M. Selzer; J H McKerrow; Judy A. Sakanari

The mature form of the cathepsin B-like protease of Leishmania major (LmajcatB) is a 243 amino acid protein belonging to the papain family of cysteine proteases and is 54% identical to human-liver cathepsin B. Despite the high identity and structural similarity with cathepsin B, LmajcatB does not readily hydrolyse benzyloxycarbonyl-Arg-Arg-7-amino-4-methyl coumarin (Z-Arg-Arg-AMC), which is cleaved by cathepsin B enzymes. It does, however, hydrolyse Z-Phe-Arg-AMC, a substrate typically cleaved by cathepsin L and B enzymes. Based upon computer generated protein models of LmajcatB and mammalian cathepsin B, it was predicted that this variation in substrate specificity was attributed to Gly234 at the S2 subsite of LmajcatB, which forms a larger, more hydrophobic pocket compared with mammalian cathepsin B. To test this hypothesis, recombinant LmajcatB was expressed in the Pichia pastoris yeast expression system. The quality of the recombinant enzyme was confirmed by kinetic characterization, N-terminal sequencing, and Western blot analysis. Alteration of Gly234 to Glu, which is found at the corresponding site in mammalian cathepsin B, increased recombinant LmajcatB (rLmajcatB) activity toward Z-Arg-Arg-AMC 8-fold over the wild-type recombinant enzyme (kcat/Km=3740+/-413 M-1.s-1 versus 472+/-72.4 M-1.s-1). The results of inhibition assays of rLmajcatB with an inhibitor of cathepsin L enzymes, K11002 (morpholine urea-Phe-homoPhe-vinylsulphonylphenyl, kinact/Ki=208200+/-36000 M-1. s-1), and a cathepsin B specific inhibitor, CA074 [N-(L-3-trans-propylcarbamoyloxirane-2-carbonyl)-l-isoleucyl-l- prolin e, kinact/Ki=199200+/-32900 M-1.s-1], support the findings that this protozoan protease has the P2 specificity of cathepsin L-like enzymes while retaining structural homology to mammalian cathepsin B.


International Journal for Parasitology-Drugs and Drug Resistance | 2014

Utilization of computer processed high definition video imaging for measuring motility of microscopic nematode stages on a quantitative scale: “The Worminator”

Bob E. Storey; Chris Marcellino; Melissa Miller; Mary J. Maclean; Eman Mostafa; Sue B. Howell; Judy A. Sakanari; Adrian J. Wolstenholme; Ray M. Kaplan

Graphical abstract


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2015

Repurposing Auranofin as a Lead Candidate for Treatment of Lymphatic Filariasis and Onchocerciasis

Christina A. Bulman; Chelsea M. Bidlow; Sara Lustigman; Fidelis Cho-Ngwa; David L. Williams; Alberto A. Rascón; Nancy Tricoche; Moses Samje; Aaron Bell; Brian M. Suzuki; Kee-Chong Lim; Nonglak Supakorndej; Prasit Supakorndej; Alan R. Wolfe; Giselle M. Knudsen; Steven Chen; Chris Wilson; Kean-Hooi Ang; Michelle R. Arkin; Jiri Gut; Chris Franklin; Chris Marcellino; James H. McKerrow; Anjan Debnath; Judy A. Sakanari

Two major human diseases caused by filariid nematodes are onchocerciasis, or river blindness, and lymphatic filariasis, which can lead to elephantiasis. The drugs ivermectin, diethylcarbamazine (DEC), and albendazole are used in control programs for these diseases, but are mainly effective against the microfilarial stage and have minimal or no effect on adult worms. Adult Onchocerca volvulus and Brugia malayi worms (macrofilariae) can live for up to 15 years, reproducing and allowing the infection to persist in a population. Therefore, to support control or elimination of these two diseases, effective macrofilaricidal drugs are necessary, in addition to current drugs. In an effort to identify macrofilaricidal drugs, we screened an FDA-approved library with adult worms of Brugia spp. and Onchocerca ochengi, third-stage larvae (L3s) of Onchocerca volvulus, and the microfilariae of both O. ochengi and Loa loa. We found that auranofin, a gold-containing drug used for rheumatoid arthritis, was effective in vitro in killing both Brugia spp. and O. ochengi adult worms and in inhibiting the molting of L3s of O. volvulus with IC50 values in the low micromolar to nanomolar range. Auranofin had an approximately 43-fold higher IC50 against the microfilariae of L. loa compared with the IC50 for adult female O. ochengi, which may be beneficial if used in areas where Onchocerca and Brugia are co-endemic with L. loa, to prevent severe adverse reactions to the drug-induced death of L. loa microfilariae. Further testing indicated that auranofin is also effective in reducing Brugia adult worm burden in infected gerbils and that auranofin may be targeting the thioredoxin reductase in this nematode.

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Mike Moser

University of California

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J H McKerrow

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

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Kee-Chong Lim

University of California

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Victor J. Chan

University of California

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Ann E. Eakin

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Chris Marcellino

Case Western Reserve University

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