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Dive into the research topics where Kazuhiko Yano is active.

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Featured researches published by Kazuhiko Yano.


PLOS Biology | 2004

Cell-passage activity is required for the malarial parasite to cross the liver sinusoidal cell layer.

Tomoko Ishino; Kazuhiko Yano; Yasuo Chinzei; Masao Yuda

Liver infection is an obligatory step in malarial transmission, but it remains unclear how the sporozoites gain access to the hepatocytes, which are separated from the circulatory system by the liver sinusoidal cell layer. We found that a novel microneme protein, named sporozoite microneme protein essential for cell traversal (SPECT), is produced by the liver-infective sporozoite of the rodent malaria parasite, Plasmodium berghei. Targeted disruption of the spect gene greatly reduced sporozoite infectivity to the liver. In vitro cell invasion assays revealed that these disruptants can infect hepatocytes normally but completely lack their cell passage ability. Their apparent liver infectivity was, however, restored by depletion of Kupffer cells, hepatic macrophages included in the sinusoidal cell layer. These results show that malarial sporozoites access hepatocytes through the liver sinusoidal cell layer by cell traversal motility mediated by SPECT and strongly suggest that Kupffer cells are main routes for this passage. Our findings may open the way for novel malaria transmission-blocking strategies that target molecules involved in sporozoite migration to the hepatocyte.


Molecular Microbiology | 2006

CelTOS, a novel malarial protein that mediates transmission to mosquito and vertebrate hosts

Tohru Kariu; Tomoko Ishino; Kazuhiko Yano; Yasuo Chinzei; Masao Yuda

The malarial parasite has two hosts in its life cycle, a vertebrate and a mosquito. We report here that malarial invasion into these hosts is mediated by a protein, designated cell‐traversal protein for ookinetes and sporozoites (CelTOS), which is localized to micronemes that are organelles for parasite invasive motility. Targeted disruption of the CelTOS gene in Plasmodium berghei reduced parasite infectivity in the mosquito host approximately 200‐fold. The disruption also reduced the sporozoite infectivity in the liver and almost abolished its cell‐passage ability. Liver infectivity was restored in Kupffer cell‐depleted rats, indicating that CelTOS is necessary for sporozoite passage from the circulatory system to hepatocytes through the liver sinusoidal cell layer. Electron microscopic analysis revealed that celtos‐disrupted ookinetes invade the midgut epithelial cell by rupturing the cell membrane, but then fail to cross the cell, indicating that CelTOS is necessary for migration through the cytoplasm. These results suggest that conserved cell‐passage mechanisms are used by both sporozoites and ookinetes to breach host cellular barriers. Elucidation of these mechanisms might lead to novel antimalarial strategies to block parasites transmission.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2002

MAEBL Is Essential for Malarial Sporozoite Infection of the Mosquito Salivary Gland

Tohru Kariu; Masao Yuda; Kazuhiko Yano; Yasuo Chinzei

Malarial sporozoites mature in the oocysts formed in the mosquito midgut wall and then selectively invade the salivary glands, where they wait to be transmitted to the vertebrate host via mosquito bite. Invasion into the salivary gland has been thought to be mediated by specific ligand–receptor interactions, but the molecules involved in these interactions remain unknown. MAEBL is a single transmembrane-like protein that is structurally related to merozoite adhesive proteins. We found MAEBL of the rodent malaria parasite, Plasmodium berghei, to be specifically produced by the sporozoites in the oocyst and localized in their micronemes, which are secretory organelles involved in malarial parasite invasion into the host cell. A targeted disruption experiment of the P. berghei MAEBL gene revealed that it was essential for sporozoite infection of the salivary gland and was involved in the attachment to the salivary gland surface. In contrast, the disruption of the MAEBL gene did not affect sporozoite motility in vitro nor infectivity to the vertebrate host. These results suggest that P. berghei MAEBL is a sporozoite attachment protein that participates in specific binding to and infection of the mosquito salivary gland.


Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | 2001

von Willebrand Factor A domain-related protein, a novel microneme protein of the malaria ookinete highly conserved throughout Plasmodium parasites.

Masao Yuda; Kazuhiko Yano; Takafumi Tsuboi; Motomi Torii; Yasuo Chinzei

The mosquito-invasive form of the malarial parasite, the ookinete, develops numerous secretory organelles, called micronemes, in the apical cytoplasm. Micronemal proteins are thought to be secreted during midgut invasion and to play a crucial role in attachment and motility of the ookinete. We found a novel ookinete micronemal protein of rodent malarial parasite Plasmodium berghei, named P. berghei von Willebrand factor A domain-related protein (PbWARP), and report it here as a putative soluble adhesive protein of the ookinete. The PbWARP gene contained a single open reading frame encoding a putative secretory protein of 303 amino acids, with a von Willebrand factor type A module-like domain as a main component. Western blot analysis demonstrated that PbWARP was firstly produced 12 h after fertilization by maturing ookinetes as SDS-resistant complexes. Recombinant PbWARP produced with a baculovirus system also formed SDS-resistant high-order oligomers. Immuno-electron microscopic studies showed that PbWARP was randomly distributed in the micronemes. PbWARP homologues also exist in human malarial parasites, Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax. Highly conserved primary structures of PbWARP homologues among these phylogenetically distant Plasmodium species suggest their functional significance and the presence of a common invasion mechanism widely utilized throughout Plasmodium parasites.


Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | 2008

Disruption of the Plasmodium berghei 2-Cys peroxiredoxin TPx-1 gene hinders the sporozoite development in the vector mosquito.

Kazuhiko Yano; Hitoshi Otsuki; Meiji Arai; Kanako Komaki-Yasuda; Takafumi Tsuboi; Motomi Torii; Shigeyuki Kano; Shin-ichiro Kawazu

To investigate the physiologic role of cytosolic 2-Cys peroxiredoxin of Plasmodium berghei (PbTPx-1), we infected the vector mosquito Anopheles stephensi with a parasite carrying a targeted knockout of pbtpx-1 (Prx-KO). The number of Prx-KO midgut oocysts at 14-15 days post-feeding (pf) was comparable to that of the parent strain (WT); however, the numbers of sporozoites that formed in midgut oocysts and accumulated in the salivary gland of Prx-KO-infected mosquitoes by 21 days pf were decreased to 10-20% and 3-10%, respectively, of those values in WT-infected mosquitoes. A higher frequency of DNA strand breaks was detected in Prx-KO oocysts than in WT oocysts. Sporozoites carrying the targeted disruption had reduced infectivity in mice; however, the knockout did not affect the ability of the sporozoite to reach the liver parenchyma and initiate exo-erythrocytic form (EEF) development. TPx-1 may be involved in development during exponentially multiplying stages, such as sporozoites and EEF.


Journal of Parasitology | 2002

IMMUNO-ELECTRON MICROSCOPIC OBSERVATION OF PLASMODIUM BERGHEI CTRP LOCALIZATION IN THE MIDGUT OF THE VECTOR MOSQUITO ANOPHELES STEPHENSI

Wutipong Limviroj; Kazuhiko Yano; Masao Yuda; Katsuhiko Ando; Yasuo Chinzei

The subcellular localization of Plasmodium berghei circumsporozoite protein and thrombospondin-related adhesive protein (PbCTRP) in the invasive stage ookinete of P. berghei was studied in the midgut of Anopheles stephensi by immuno-electron microscopic observations using polyclonal antibodies and immuno-gold labeling. PbCTRP was found to be associated with the micronemes of a mature ookinete throughout the movement from the endoperitrophic space to the basal lamina of the midgut epithelium. PbCTRP was also observed in the electron-dense area outside the ookinete, which might have been secreted from the apical pore. PbCTRP is found most abundantly at the site of contact between the apical end of an ookinete and the basal lamina of an epithelial cell. These results suggest that PbCTRP functions as an adhesion molecule for ookinete movement into the midgut lumen and epithelial cell and for ookinete association with the midgut basal lamina and transformation into an oocyst.


Parasitology International | 2005

Expression of mRNAs and proteins for peroxiredoxins in Plasmodium falciparum erythrocytic stage

Kazuhiko Yano; Kanako Komaki-Yasuda; Tamaki Kobayashi; Hitoshi Takemae; Kiyoshi Kita; Shigeyuki Kano; Shin-ichiro Kawazu


Mitochondrion | 2007

Mitochondria and apicoplast of Plasmodium falciparum: Behaviour on subcellular fractionation and the implication

Tamaki Kobayashi; Shigeharu Sato; Shinzaburo Takamiya; Kanako Komaki-Yasuda; Kazuhiko Yano; Ayami Hirata; Masayuki Hata; Fumika Mi-ichi; Takeshi Tanaka; Toshiharu Hase; Atsushi Miyajima; Shin-ichiro Kawazu; Yoh Ichi Watanabe; Kiyoshi Kita


Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | 2006

2-Cys peroxiredoxin TPx-1 is involved in gametocyte development in Plasmodium berghei

Kazuhiko Yano; Kanako Komaki-Yasuda; Takafumi Tsuboi; Motomi Torii; Shigeyuki Kano; Shin-ichiro Kawazu


Archive | 2015

Plasmodium falciparum infection test and diagnostic drug, and test and diagnostic kit

浩之 奥; Hiroyuki Oku; 繁之 狩野; Shigeyuki Kano; 和彦 矢野; Kazuhiko Yano

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Shin-ichiro Kawazu

Obihiro University of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine

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Kanako Komaki-Yasuda

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

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Shin Hasegawa

Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute

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