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Dive into the research topics where Kazutaka Fukushima is active.

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Featured researches published by Kazutaka Fukushima.


Brazilian Journal of Microbiology | 2004

Heavy metal biosorption by chitin and chitosan isolated from Cunninghamella elegans (IFM 46109)

Luciana de Oliveira Franco; Rita de Cássia C. Maia; Ana Lúcia Figueiredo Porto; Arminda Sacconi Messias; Kazutaka Fukushima; Galba Maria de Campos-Takaki

Chitin and chitosan were extracted from mycelial biomass of Cunninghamella elegans and the performance for copper, lead and iron biosorption in aqueous solution was evaluated. The growth curve of C. elegans was accomplished by determination of biomass, pH, glucose and nitrogen consumption. Chitin and chitosan were extracted by alkali-acid treatment and the yields were 23.8 and 7.8%, respectively. For the adsorption analysis, the process of heavy uptake metal sorption was evaluated using polysaccharides solutions (1% w/v). The rate of metallic biosorption was dependent upon the concentration and pH of metal solutions, and the best results were observed with pH 4.0. Chitosan showed the highest affinity for copper and chitin for iron adsorption. The results suggest that C. elegans (IFM 46109) is an attractive source of production of chitin and chitosan, with a great potential of heavy metals bioremediation in polluted environments.


Fems Immunology and Medical Microbiology | 2004

Identification of pathogenic dematiaceous fungi and related taxa based on large subunit ribosomal DNA D1/D2 domain sequence analysis

Paride Abliz; Kazutaka Fukushima; Kayoko Takizawa; Kazuko Nishimura

The nucleotide sequences of the D1/D2 domains of large subunit (26S) ribosomal DNA for 76 strains of 46 species of pathogenic dematiaceous fungi and related taxa were determined. Intra-species sequence diversity of medically important dematiaceous fungi including Phialophora verrucosa, Fonsecaea pedrosoi, Fonsecaea compacta, Cladophialophora carrionii, Cladophialophora bantiana, Exophiala dermatitidis, Exophiala jeanselmei, Exophiala spinifera, Exophiala moniliae, and Hortaea werneckii were extremely small; as few as 0 changes were detected in C. bantiana, Fonsecaea and Exophiala species, 1 bp in C. carrionii and H. werneckii, and 2 bp in P. verrucosa. Inter-species nucleotide diversity between most species was higher. These data suggested that the D1/D2 domain is sufficiently variable for identification of pathogenic dematiaceous fungi and relevant species. The phylogenetic trees constructed from the sequence data revealed that most human pathogenic species formed a single cluster and that Cladosporium and Phialophora species were distributed polyphyletically into several clusters.


Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease | 2001

Trichosporon species infection in bone marrow transplanted patients.

M. Luiza Moretti-Branchini; Kazutaka Fukushima; Angélica Zaninelli Schreiber; Kazuko Nishimura; Priscila Maria de Oliveira Papaiordanou; Plínio Trabasso; Reiko Tanaka; Makoto Miyaji

Trichosporon species are emerging as opportunistic agents that cause systemic diseases in immunocompromised patients. Patients undergoing bone marrow transplant are submitted to intense and prolonged periods of neutropenia and consequently to several risk factors to fungal infections as the use of broad spectrum antibiotics and invasive devices. Two cases of fungal infections caused by Trichosporon asahii var. asahii and T. inkin in patients with bone marrow transplant are described T. asahii var. asahii was responsible for fungemia and the identification of this microorganism was later performed. T. inkin caused vascular accesses infection and was recovered from an implanted Hickman-Broviac catheter. Both patients were under oral fluconazole prophylaxis. The patient with systemic infection died despite the therapy with amphotericin B and the patient with catheter-related infection recovered from the fungal infection after catheter removal. Difficulties in the identification of this microorganism lead to delays in treatment and post-mortem diagnosis.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2001

Antifungal Susceptibilities, Varieties, and Electrophoretic Karyotypes of Clinical Isolates of Cryptococcus neoformans from Brazil, Chile, and Venezuela

Belinda Calvo; Arnaldo Lopes Colombo; Olga Fischman; A. Santiago; Luis Thompson; Márcia dos Santos Lazéra; Flavio de Queiroz Telles; Kazutaka Fukushima; Kazuko Nishimura; Reiko Tanaka; Makoto Myiajy; M. Luiza Moretti-Branchini

ABSTRACT One hundred clinical isolates of Cryptococcus neoformans from human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected and non-HIV-infected patients from Brazil, Chile, and Venezuela were separated according to varieties and tested for antifungal susceptibility. A high susceptibility to antifungal agents was observed among all the isolates. The electrophoretic karyotyping of 51 strains revealed good discrimination among Cryptococcus neoformansvar. neoformans strains.


Medical Mycology | 2009

Molecular diversity of Fonsecaea (Chaetothyriales) causing chromoblastomycosis in southern China

Liyan Xi; Jiufeng Sun; Changming Lu; Honfang Liu; Zhi Xie; Kazutaka Fukushima; Kayoko Takizawa; Mohammad Javad Najafzadeh; G.S. de Hoog

Chromoblastomycosis is a chronic, cutaneous and subcutaneous infection caused by members of the order Chaetothyriales and commonly found in China. Among the etiologic agents, members of the genus Cladophialophora are predominant in northern China. Alternatively, Fonsecaea spp. are particularly common in southern China. However, the identification of Fonsecaea isolates recovered in China is difficult due to the fact that different species lack distinctive morphological characters. Therefore, the identification of 24 Fonsecaea isolates from symptomatic patients were re-evaluated by using morphology, ITS rDNA sequence diversity and partly through the use of randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) typing. Twenty strains, including a morphological mutant were found to be Fonsecaea monophora, while four strains corresponded to F. pedrosoi. We have demonstrated that Fonsecaea monophora is the predominant etiologic agent of chromoblastomycosis in southern China and populations showed marked geographic structuring.


Molecules | 2010

Prodigiosin Production by Serratia marcescens UCP 1549 Using Renewable-Resources as a Low Cost Substrate

Helvia W. Casullo de Araújo; Kazutaka Fukushima; Galba M. Campos Takaki

A new strain of Serratia marcescens UCP1459 isolated from a semi-arid soil produced the natural red pigment prodigiosin, characterized by an uncommon pyrrolylpyrromethane skeleton. Prodigiosin is a promising drug due to its reported antifungal, immunosuppressive and anti-proliferative activities. The objective of this work was to indentify a suitable medium to simultaneously enhance S. marcescens growth and pigment production using renewable resources obtained from industrial wastes. S. marcescens produced the highest level of prodigiosin (49.5 g/L) at 48 h of cultivation using 6% “manipueira” (cassava wastewater) supplemented with mannitol (2%) at pH 7 and 28 °C. Carbohydrates in “manipueira” and mannitol play a role in the enhanced cell growth and prodigiosin production. The purified pigment extracted from the biomass was analyzed by mass spectrophotometry and showed the expected molecular weight of 324 Da corresponding to prodigiosin. In conclusion, we have successfully designed a new, economically feasible medium supporting enhanced S. marcescens growth and a high yield production of prodigiosin.


Memorias Do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz | 2004

Oral Candida flora from Brazilian human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients in the highly active antiretroviral therapy era

Nr Melo; Hideaki Taguchi; J Jorge; Rj Pedro; Op Almeida; Kazutaka Fukushima; Kazuko Nishimura; Makoto Miyaji

One of the main opportunistic fungal infections amongst immunocompromised individuals is oral candidosis, which has been found in up to 90% of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients. This study employed yeasts isolated from the saliva and oral cavities of 114 HIV-infected patients living in Campinas, São Paulo. Of the isolates, 57.8% were identified as Candida albicans and 42.1% as non-C. albicans. The latter isolates were subsequently identified as C. krusei (7.5%), C. lusitaniae (5.2%), C. tropicalis (4.6%), C. parapsilosis (4.6%), C. glabrata (2.8%), C. kefyr (1.7%), C. guilliermondii (1.7%), C. intermedia (1.1%), C. norvegensis (0.5%), and Rhodotorula rubra (1.7%). Susceptibility of the isolates to amphotericin B, fluconazole, miconazole, and itraconazole was also determined by a microdilution method adopted by the National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards. The isolates demonstrated various susceptibilities to the antifungal agents. In particular 29 C. albicans and 13 non-C. albicans isolates showed low susceptibility to FLCZ (> 64 micro g/ml). This study revealed huge diversity of Candida species, in particular the increasing emergence of non-C. albicans associated with the oral flora of HIV-infected patients.


Brazilian Journal of Microbiology | 2001

Faster chitosan production by mucoralean strains in submerged culture

Rosa Valéria S. Amorim; Wanderley de Souza; Kazutaka Fukushima; Galba Maria de Campos-Takaki

Production of chitosan was conducted using two Mucoralean strains, Mucor racemosus and Cunninghamella elegans. Chitosan was extracted from mycelia of M. racemosus and C. elegans at different growth phases on YPD medium. In both fungi, chitosan was rapidly produced, while highest yield of extractable chitosan was found in 24h of cultivation in submerged culture. The yield of chitosan isolated from dry mycelia of M. racemosus was about 40% higher than from C. elegans. The degree of N-acetylation of chitosan was 49% in M. racemosus and 20% in C. elegans, and the D-glucosamine contents were about 48% and 90%, respectively.


Mycopathologia | 1989

Paecilotoxin production in clinical or terrestrial isolates of Paecilomyces lilacinus strains.

Yuzuru Mikami; Katsukiyo Yazawa; Kazutaka Fukushima; Tadashi Arai; Shun-ichi Udagawa; Robert A. Samson

The production of paecilotoxin from various isolates of Paecilomyces lilacinus was studied using three different media and high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Alkaline medium was found to be suitable for the production of the toxins. Among 20 strains tested, 19 including four clinical isolates were found to produce the toxins. Production patterns of paecilotoxins were very similar in each strain and the main toxins were A and B.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2003

Rapid Identification of the Genus Fonsecaea by PCR with Specific Oligonucleotide Primers

Paride Abliz; Kazutaka Fukushima; Kayoko Takizawa; Norikazu Nieda; Makoto Miyaji; Kazuko Nishimura

ABSTRACT An oligonucleotide primer set based on internal transcribed spacer regions of ribosomal DNA for PCR which gives the amplicon for only the DNA from Fonsecaea species was designed. This set yielded an amplicon with 333 bp for all strains of Fonsecaea pedrosoi and Fonsecaea compacta examined but no amplicons for related dematiaceous fungi and pathogenic yeasts. PCR using this primer set was considered to be a useful method for the rapid identification of the genus Fonsecaea.

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Kaoru Okada

Universidade Católica de Pernambuco

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Galba Maria de Campos-Takaki

Universidade Católica de Pernambuco

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