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Dive into the research topics where Masato Kawabe is active.

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Featured researches published by Masato Kawabe.


Journal of General Plant Pathology | 2005

Three evolutionary lineages of tomato wilt pathogen, Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici, based on sequences of IGS, MAT1, and pg1, are each composed of isolates of a single mating type and a single or closely related vegetative compatibility group

Masato Kawabe; Yumiko Kobayashi; Gen Okada; Isamu Yamaguchi; Tohru Teraoka; Tsutomu Arie

Three evolutionary lineages of the tomato wilt pathogen Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici were found among a worldwide sample of isolates based on phylogenetic analysis of the ribosomal DNA intergenic spacer region. Each lineage consisted of isolates mainly belonging to a single or closely related vegetative compatibility group (VCG) and a single mating type (MAT). The first lineage (A1) was composed of isolates VCG 0031 and MAT1-1; the second (A2) included VCG 0030 and/or 0032 and MAT1-1; and the third (A3) included VCG 0033 and MAT1-2. Race 1 and race 2 isolates belonged to the A1 or A2 lineages, and race 3 belonged to A2 or A3 lineages, suggesting that there is no correlation between race and lineage. However, for the isolates from Japan, race 1 (with one exception), race 2, and race 3 isolates belonged to A2, A1, and A3 lineages, respectively. These results suggest that the races could have evolved independently in each lineage; and in Japan the present races were likely to have been introduced independently after they had evolved in other locations.


Journal of General Plant Pathology | 2010

Real-time PCR for differential determination of the tomato wilt fungus, Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici, and its races

Keigo Inami; Chizu Yoshioka; Yasushi Hirano; Masato Kawabe; Seiya Tsushima; Tohru Teraoka; Tsutomu Arie

Five primer/probe sets to identify the tomato wilt pathogen, Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici (FOL), and its three races selectively were designed based on the rDNA-intergenic spacer and avirulence genes. Real-time PCR using genomic DNA from mycelia and soil DNA with the primer/probe sets allowed the successful identification of FOL and its races.


Journal of General Plant Pathology | 2004

Cloning of the pathogenicity-related gene FPD1 in Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici

Masato Kawabe; Kohei Mizutani; Takanobu Yoshida; Tohru Teraoka; Katsuyoshi Yoneyama; Isamu Yamaguchi; Tsutomu Arie

We selected a reduced-pathogenicity mutant of Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici, a tomato wilt pathogen, from the transformants generated by restriction enzyme-mediated integration (REMI) transformation. The gene tagged with the plasmid in the mutant was predicted to encode a protein of 321 amino acids and was designated FPD1. Homology search showed its partial similarity to a chloride conductance regulatory protein of Xenopus, suggesting that FPD1 is a transmembrane protein. Although the function of FPD1 has not been identified, it does participate in the pathogenicity of F. oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici because FPD1-deficient mutants reproduced the reduced pathogenicity on tomato.


Journal of General Plant Pathology | 2007

Genetic diversity of Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. spinaciae in Japan based on phylogenetic analyses of rDNA-IGS and MAT1 sequences

Masato Kawabe; Kazunori Katsube; Takanobu Yoshida; Tsutomu Arie; Kenichi Tsuchiya

Twenty-eight isolates of Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. spinaciae (FOS; the causal agent of spinach wilt) collected from Japan were assessed for mating type and subjected to phylogenetic analysis. Mating type analysis revealed all isolates to be MAT1-2, suggesting that there is no sexual recombination within the population. Phylogenetic analyses based on nucleotide sequences of the ribosomal DNA intergenic spacer (IGS) and the mating type locus (MAT1) suggested that FOS is polyphyletic. The cluster analysis based on IGS showed four phylogenetic groups (S1–S4) among the isolates. Two distinct lineages, S1 and S3, included FOS isolates both of the vegetative compatibility group (VCG) types, 0330 and 0331, demonstrating that VCG differentiation in FOS may not necessarily reflect the phylogenetic relationships based on IGS and MAT1-2-1.


Microbes and Environments | 2014

The Tomato Wilt Fungus Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici shares Common Ancestors with Nonpathogenic F. oxysporum isolated from Wild Tomatoes in the Peruvian Andes

Keigo Inami; Takeshi Kashiwa; Masato Kawabe; Akiko Onokubo-Okabe; Nobuko Ishikawa; Enrique Rodríguez Pérez; Takuo Hozumi; Liliana Aragón Caballero; Fatima Cáceres de Baldarrago; Mauricio Jiménez Roco; Khalid A. Madadi; Tobin L. Peever; Tohru Teraoka; Motoichiro Kodama; Tsutomu Arie

Fusarium oxysporum is an ascomycetous fungus that is well-known as a soilborne plant pathogen. In addition, a large population of nonpathogenic F. oxysporum (NPF) inhabits various environmental niches, including the phytosphere. To obtain an insight into the origin of plant pathogenic F. oxysporum, we focused on the tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) and its pathogenic F. oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici (FOL). We collected F. oxysporum from wild and transition Solanum spp. and modern cultivars of tomato in Chile, Ecuador, Peru, Mexico, Afghanistan, Italy, and Japan, evaluated the fungal isolates for pathogenicity, VCG, mating type, and distribution of SIX genes related to the pathogenicity of FOL, and constructed phylogenies based on ribosomal DNA intergenic spacer sequences. All F. oxysporum isolates sampled were genetically more diverse than FOL. They were not pathogenic to the tomato and did not carry SIX genes. Certain NPF isolates including those from wild Solanum spp. in Peru were grouped in FOL clades, whereas most of the NPF isolates were not. Our results suggested that the population of NPF isolates in FOL clades gave rise to FOL by gaining pathogenicity.


Journal of General Plant Pathology | 2012

Comparisons of ribosomal DNA-internal transcribed spacer sequences and biological features among Olpidium bornovanus isolates from Cucurbitaceae-cultivating soil in Japan

Tomofumi Mochizuki; Ayami Hojo-Kanda; Takehiro Ohki; Masato Kawabe; Shinya Tsuda

The chytrid fungus Olpidium bornovanus is an obligate plant parasite that acts as a vector to transmit Melon necrotic spot virus in cultivated soil. Here, we conducted a molecular phylogenetic analysis of 16 isolates of O. bornovanus taken from soil in which Cucurbitaceae plants had been grown in various locations throughout Japan. The ribosomal DNA and internal transcribed spacer region sequences of the 16 O. bornovanus isolates were divided into four molecular phylogenetic groups, designated O.bor-A to O.bor-D. Biological features of O. bornovanus isolates such as host specificity varied consistently with their molecular phylogenetic groups.


Gene | 2006

FCD1 encoding protein homologous to cellobiose: quinone oxidoreductase in Fusarium oxysporum.

Masato Kawabe; Takanobu Yoshida; Tohru Teraoka; Tsutomu Arie


Journal of General and Applied Microbiology | 2011

GMC oxidoreductase, a highly expressed protein in a potent biocontrol agent Fusarium oxysporum Cong:1-2, is dispensable for biocontrol activity

Masato Kawabe; Akiko Okabe Onokubo; Yutaka Arimoto; Takanobu Yoshida; Koji Azegami; Tohru Teraoka; Tsutomu Arie


Journal of Pesticide Science | 2008

Biocontrol activity in a nonpathogenic REMI mutant of Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. conglutinans and characterization of its disrupted gene

Takanobu Yoshida; Masato Kawabe; Yuichiro Miyata; Tohru Teraoka; Tsutomu Arie


Soil Microorganisms | 2008

Comparison of cellobiose dehydrogenase and cellobiose : quinon oxydoreductase activities between Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici, and its FCD1-disruptant

Masato Kawabe; Akiko Okabe; Tohru Teraoka; Tsutomu Arie

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Tsutomu Arie

Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology

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Tohru Teraoka

Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology

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Takanobu Yoshida

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Keigo Inami

Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology

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Akiko Okabe Onokubo

Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology

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Akiko Okabe

Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology

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Akiko Onokubo-Okabe

Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology

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Chizu Yoshioka

Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology

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