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Featured researches published by Kazuyuki Tanabe.


Current Biology | 2010

Plasmodium falciparum Accompanied the Human Expansion out of Africa

Kazuyuki Tanabe; Toshihiro Mita; Thibaut Jombart; Anders Eriksson; Shun Horibe; Nirianne Marie Q. Palacpac; Lisa C. Ranford-Cartwright; Hiromi Sawai; Naoko Sakihama; Hiroshi Ohmae; Masatoshi Nakamura; Marcelo U. Ferreira; Ananias A. Escalante; Franck Prugnolle; Anders Björkman; Anna Färnert; Akira Kaneko; Toshihiro Horii; Andrea Manica; Hirohisa Kishino; Francois Balloux

Plasmodium falciparum is distributed throughout the tropics and is responsible for an estimated 230 million cases of malaria every year, with a further 1.4 billion people at risk of infection. Little is known about the genetic makeup of P. falciparum populations, despite variation in genetic diversity being a key factor in morbidity, mortality, and the success of malaria control initiatives. Here we analyze a worldwide sample of 519 P. falciparum isolates sequenced for two housekeeping genes (63 single nucleotide polymorphisms from around 5000 nucleotides per isolate). We observe a strong negative correlation between within-population genetic diversity and geographic distance from sub-Saharan Africa (R(2) = 0.95) over Africa, Asia, and Oceania. In contrast, regional variation in transmission intensity seems to have had a negligible impact on the distribution of genetic diversity. The striking geographic patterns of isolation by distance observed in P. falciparum mirror the ones previously documented in humans and point to a joint sub-Saharan African origin between the parasite and its host. Age estimates for the expansion of P. falciparum further support that anatomically modern humans were infected prior to their exit out of Africa and carried the parasite along during their colonization of the world.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2008

Big Bang in the Evolution of Extant Malaria Parasites

Toshiyuki Hayakawa; Richard Culleton; Hiroto Otani; Toshihiro Horii; Kazuyuki Tanabe

Malaria parasites (genus Plasmodium) infect all classes of terrestrial vertebrates and display host specificity in their infections. It is therefore assumed that malaria parasites coevolved intimately with their hosts. Here, we propose a novel scenario of malaria parasite-host coevolution. A phylogenetic tree constructed using the malaria parasite mitochondrial genome reveals that the extant primate, rodent, bird, and reptile parasite lineages rapidly diverged from a common ancestor during an evolutionary short time period. This rapid diversification occurred long after the establishment of the primate, rodent, bird, and reptile host lineages, which implies that host-switch events contributed to the rapid diversification of extant malaria parasite lineages. Interestingly, the rapid diversification coincides with the radiation of the mammalian genera, suggesting that adaptive radiation to new mammalian hosts triggered the rapid diversification of extant malaria parasite lineages.


Malaria Journal | 2008

Failure to detect Plasmodium vivax in West and Central Africa by PCR species typing

Richard Culleton; Toshihiro Mita; Mathieu Ndounga; Holger Unger; Pedro Cravo; Giacomo Maria Paganotti; Nobuyuki Takahashi; Akira Kaneko; Hideaki Eto; Halidou Tinto; Corine Karema; Umberto D'Alessandro; Virgílio E. do Rosário; Takatoshi Kobayakawa; Francine Ntoumi; Richard Carter; Kazuyuki Tanabe

BackgroundPlasmodium vivax is estimated to affect 75 million people annually. It is reportedly absent, however, from west and central Africa due to the high prevalence of the Duffy negative phenotype in the indigenous populations. Despite this, non-African travellers consistently return to their own countries with P. vivax malaria after visiting this region. An attempt was made, therefore, to detect the presence of P. vivax parasites in blood samples collected from the indigenous populations of west and central Africa.MethodsParasite species typing (for all four human malaria parasites) was carried out by PCR on 2,588 blood samples collected from individuals from nine African malaria-endemic countries.ResultsMost infections (98.5%) were Plasmodium falciparum, Plasmodium malariae was identified in 8.5% of all infections, and Plasmodium ovale in 3.9%. The prevalence of both parasites varied greatly by country. Only one case of P. vivax was detected from Sao Tome, an island off the west coast of Africa, confirming the scarcity of this parasite in Africa.ConclusionThe prevalence of P. vivax in local populations in sub-Saharan Africa is very low, despite the frequent identification of this parasite in non-African travellers.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Identification of Plasmodium malariae, a Human Malaria Parasite, in Imported Chimpanzees

Toshiyuki Hayakawa; Nobuko Arisue; Toshifumi Udono; Hirohisa Hirai; Jetsumon Sattabongkot; Tomoko Toyama; Takafumi Tsuboi; Toshihiro Horii; Kazuyuki Tanabe

It is widely believed that human malaria parasites infect only man as a natural host. However, earlier morphological observations suggest that great apes are likely to be natural reservoirs as well. To identify malaria parasites in great apes, we screened 60 chimpanzees imported into Japan. Using the sequences of small subunit rRNA and the mitochondrial genome, we identified infection of Plasmodium malariae, a human malaria parasite, in two chimpanzees that were imported about thirty years ago. The chimpanzees have been asymptomatic to the present. In Japan, indigenous malaria disappeared more than fifty years ago; and thus, it is most likely inferred that the chimpanzees were infected in Africa, and P. malariae isolates were brought into Japan from Africa with their hosts, suggesting persistence of parasites at low level for thirty years. Such a long term latent infection is a unique feature of P. malariae infection in humans. To our knowledge, this is the first to report P. malariae infection in chimpanzees and a human malaria parasite from nonhuman primates imported to a nonendemic country.


Parasitology International | 2009

Cross-reactivity in rapid diagnostic tests between human malaria and zoonotic simian malaria parasite Plasmodium knowlesi infections

Satoru Kawai; Makoto Hirai; Kosuke Haruki; Kazuyuki Tanabe; Yuichi Chigusa

Plasmodium knowlesi has a relatively broad host range extending to humans, in whom it causes zoonotic malaria. Recent studies have shown that human infection with P. knowlesi is widely distributed in forested areas of Southeast Asia. In the present study, we evaluated commercial rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) for human malaria to assess their reactivity and sensitivity in detecting P. knowlesi parasites using blood samples obtained from infected monkeys. The blood samples were assayed using two commercial RDTs based on immunochromatographic assays: (i) the OptiMAL-IT, designed to detect parasite lactate dehydrogenase (pLDH) of both P. falciparum and other plasmodia, and (ii) the Entebe Malaria Cassette (MC), designed to detect P. falciparum-specific histidine-rich protein 2 (PfHRP2) and P. vivax-specific pLDH. Interestingly, when the P. knowlesi-infected blood samples were examined with the RDTs, OptiMAL test results were interpreted as falciparum malaria-positive, while Entebe MC test results were interpreted as vivax malaria-positive. The sensitivities of both tests in detecting P. knowlesi parasite were similar to those for P. falciparum and higher than P. vivax. Thus, commercial RDTs based on detection of pLDH should be used with great caution, and should not replace conventional microscopy in the diagnosis of suspected cases of P. knowlesi malaria.


Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2008

Evolution and phylogeny of the heterogeneous cytosolic SSU rRNA genes in the genus Plasmodium

Yuriko Nishimoto; Nobuko Arisue; Satoru Kawai; Ananias A. Escalante; Toshihiro Horii; Kazuyuki Tanabe; Tetsuo Hashimoto

Unlike other eukaryotes, malaria parasites in the genus Plasmodium have structurally and functionally different paralogous copies of the cytosolic (cyto-) SSU rRNA (18S rRNA) gene that are expressed at different developmental stages. In P. falciparum, P. vivax, and P. berghei, A-type cyto-SSU rRNA is expressed in asexual stage, while S-type in sporozoite stage. A third type (O-type) has been described in P. vivax. It is expressed only in oocyst stage in the mosquito. Recently, it has been shown that the maintenance of heterogeneous cyto-SSU rRNAs in Plasmodium can be modeled as a birth-and-death process under strong purifying selection [Rooney, A.P., 2004. Mechanisms underlying the evolution and maintenance of functionally heterogeneous 18S rRNA genes in Apicomplexans. Mol. Biol. Evol. 21, 1704-1711]. In this study, we performed detailed phylogenetic analyses of Plasmodium cyto-SSU rRNAs with special emphasis on the evolution of multi-copy genes in simian Plasmodium species. We sequenced paralogous copies of the cyto-SSU rRNA genes from an African simian Plasmodium species, P. gonderi, and Asian simian Plasmodium species, P. fragile, P. coatneyi, P. inui, P. hylobati, P. fieldi, P. simiovale, and P. cynomolgi. Interestingly, all Asian simian Plasmodium species have a single S-type-like gene and several A-type-like genes. Alignment analysis demonstrated for the first time that an approximately 50-residue insertion in the V7 variable region near the stem 43 is shared exclusively by the S-type-like sequences of the Asian simian Plasmodium species and the S- and O-type sequences of P. vivax. We comprehensively analyzed all cyto-SSU rRNA sequences of the genus Plasmodium currently available in the database. Phylogenetic analyses of all publicly available cyto-SSU rRNA sequences for the genus Plasmodium clearly demonstrated that gene duplication events giving rise to A- and S-type-like sequences took place independently at least three times in the Plasmodium evolution, supporting the hypothesis that these genes evolve according to a birth-and-death model.


Parasitology International | 2011

Highly conserved gene arrangement of the mitochondrial genomes of 23 Plasmodium species.

Kenji Hikosaka; Yoh-ichi Watanabe; Fumie Kobayashi; Seiji Waki; Kiyoshi Kita; Kazuyuki Tanabe

Mitochondrial (mt) genomes from diverse phylogenetic groups vary considerably in size, structure and organization. The genus Plasmodium, the causative agent of malaria, has the smallest mt genome in the form of a tandemly repeated, linear element of 6 kb. The Plasmodium mt genome encodes only three protein genes (cox1, cox3 and cob) and large- and small-subunit ribosomal RNA (rRNA) genes, which are highly fragmented with 19 identified rRNA pieces. The complete mt genome sequences of 21 Plasmodium species have been published but a thorough investigation of the arrangement of rRNA gene fragments has been undertaken for only Plasmodium falciparum, the human malaria parasite. In this study, we determined the arrangement of mt rRNA gene fragments in 23 Plasmodium species, including two newly determined mt genome sequences from P. gallinaceum and P. vinckei vinckei, as well as Leucocytozoon caulleryi, an outgroup of Plasmodium. Comparative analysis reveals complete conservation of the arrangement of rRNA gene fragments in the mt genomes of all the 23 Plasmodium species and L. caulleryi. Surveys for a new rRNA gene fragment using hidden Markov models enriched with recent mt genome sequences led us to suggest the mtR-26 sequence as a novel candidate LSU rRNA fragment in the mt genomes of the 24 species. Additionally, we found 22-25 bp-inverted repeat sequences, which may be involved in the generation of lineage-specific mt genome arrangements after divergence from a common ancestor of the genera Eimeria and Plasmodium/Leucocytozoon.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2010

Lineage-specific positive selection at the merozoite surface protein 1 (msp1) locus of Plasmodium vivax and related simian malaria parasites

Hiromi Sawai; Hiroto Otani; Nobuko Arisue; Nirianne Marie Q. Palacpac; Leonardo de Oliveira Martins; Sisira Pathirana; Shiroma Handunnetti; Satoru Kawai; Hirohisa Kishino; Toshihiro Horii; Kazuyuki Tanabe

BackgroundThe 200 kDa merozoite surface protein 1 (MSP-1) of malaria parasites, a strong vaccine candidate, plays a key role during erythrocyte invasion and is a target of host protective immune response. Plasmodium vivax, the most widespread human malaria parasite, is closely related to parasites that infect Asian Old World monkeys, and has been considered to have become a parasite of man by host switch from a macaque malaria parasite. Several Asian monkey parasites have a range of natural hosts. The same parasite species shows different disease manifestations among host species. This suggests that host immune responses to P. vivax-related malaria parasites greatly differ among host species (albeit other factors). It is thus tempting to invoke that a major immune target parasite protein such as MSP-1 underwent unique evolution, depending on parasite species that exhibit difference in host range and host specificity.ResultsWe performed comparative phylogenetic and population genetic analyses of the gene encoding MSP-1 (msp1) from P. vivax and nine P. vivax-related simian malaria parasites. The inferred phylogenetic tree of msp1 significantly differed from that of the mitochondrial genome, with a striking displacement of P. vivax from a position close to P. cynomolgi in the mitochondrial genome tree to an outlier of Asian monkey parasites. Importantly, positive selection was inferred for two ancestral branches, one leading to P. inui and P. hylobati and the other leading to P. vivax, P. fieldi and P. cynomolgi. This ancestral positive selection was estimated to have occurred three to six million years ago, coinciding with the period of radiation of Asian macaques. Comparisons of msp1 polymorphisms between P. vivax, P. inui and P. cynomolgi revealed that while some positively selected amino acid sites or regions are shared by these parasites, amino acid changes greatly differ, suggesting that diversifying selection is acting species-specifically on msp1.ConclusionsThe present results indicate that the msp1 locus of P. vivax and related parasite species has lineage-specific unique evolutionary history with positive selection. P. vivax and related simian malaria parasites offer an interesting system toward understanding host species-dependent adaptive evolution of immune-target surface antigen genes such as msp1.


Gene | 2010

Phylogeny of Asian primate malaria parasites inferred from apicoplast genome-encoded genes with special emphasis on the positions of Plasmodium vivax and P. fragile

Hideya Mitsui; Nobuko Arisue; Naoko Sakihama; Yuji Inagaki; Toshihiro Horii; Masami Hasegawa; Kazuyuki Tanabe; Tetsuo Hashimoto

Phylogenetic analyses of several marker genes have previously shown that Asian primate Plasmodium species (malaria parasites) were monophyletic including Plasmodium vivax, one of the four malaria parasites that infect humans. However, except for the presence of a few established groupings, phylogenetic relationships among the Asian primate Plasmodium species + P. vivax group have neither been clearly resolved with confident statistical supports, nor the closest relative to P. vivax was elucidated. Since comparative biological studies between P. vivax and its closest relative would provide valuable information on immunopathogenesity of vivax malaria, the phylogenetic positions of P. vivax in the clade comprised of Asian primate Plasmodium species are crucial. In order to clarify the phylogeny and evolution of Asian primate Plasmodium species including P. vivax, we obtained sequences of apicoplast genome-encoded genes for small subunit rRNA (SSUrRNA), large subunit rRNA (LSUrRNA), and caseinolytic protease C (ClpC) from 10 Plasmodium species: P. vivax, P. coatneyi, P. cynomolgi, P. fieldi, P. fragile, P. hylobati, P .inui, P. knowlesi, P. simiovale, and P. gonderi. Together with published sequences of apicoplast genome-encoded elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu) from these species, we performed phylogenetic analyses of a combined 4-gene data set using P. gonderi, an African old world monkey parasite, as an outgroup. The ML phylogeny based on a concatenate model for combining information of the 4 genes clearly revealed close relationships between P. vivax and P. cynomolgi and monophyly of P. fragile with the P. coatneyi/P. knowlesi clade. When separate models were assumed for combining phylogenetic information from the 4 genes that were independently analyzed, the support for the P. vivax/P. cynomolgi clade was substantially decreased, but the monophyly of P. fragile with the P. coatneyi/P. knowlesi clade was still robustly confirmed. The present analyses place P. fragile in a position that is incongruent with the early branching status of P. fragile amongst P-vivax-related primate Plasmodium species propose by Escalante et al. (Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2005 102: 1980).


Malaria Journal | 2010

Geographical origin of Plasmodium vivax in the Republic of Korea: haplotype network analysis based on the parasite's mitochondrial genome.

Moritoshi Iwagami; Seung Young Hwang; Megumi Fukumoto; Toshiyuki Hayakawa; Kazuyuki Tanabe; So-Hee Kim; Weon Gyu Kho; Shigeyuki Kano

BackgroundThe Republic of Korea (South Korea) is one of the countries where vivax malaria had been successfully eradicated by the late 1970s. However, re-emergence of vivax malaria in South Korea was reported in 1993. Several epidemiological studies and some genetic studies using antigenic molecules of Plasmodium vivax in the country have been reported, but the evolutionary history of P. vivax has not been fully understood. In this study, the origin of the South Korean P. vivax population was estimated by molecular phylogeographic analysis.MethodsA haplotype network analysis based on P. vivax mitochondrial (mt) DNA sequences was conducted on 11 P. vivax isolates from South Korea and another 282 P. vivax isolates collected worldwide.ResultsThe network analysis of P. vivax mtDNA sequences showed that the coexistence of two different groups (A and B) in South Korea. Groups A and B were identical or close to two different populations in southern China.ConclusionsAlthough the direct introduction of the two P. vivax populations in South Korea were thought to have been from North Korea, the results of this analysis suggest the genealogical origin to be the two different populations in southern China.

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Naoko Sakihama

Osaka Institute of Technology

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Satoru Kawai

Dokkyo Medical University

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