Motomi Torii
Case Western Reserve University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Motomi Torii.
Cell | 1990
John H. Adams; Dlana E. Hudson; Motomi Torii; Gary E. Ward; Thomas E. Wellems; Masamichi Aikawa; Louis H. Miller
Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium knowlesi merozoites invade human erythrocytes that express Duffy blood group surface determinants. A soluble parasite protein of 135 kd binds specifically to a human Duffy antigen. Using antisera affinity purified on the 135 kd protein, we cloned a gene that encodes a member of a P. knowlesi family of erythrocyte binding proteins. The gene is a member of a family that includes three homologous genes located on separate chromosomes. Two genes are expressed as major membrane-bound products that give rise to soluble erythrocyte binding proteins: the 135 kd Duffy binding protein and a 138 kd protein that binds only rhesus erythrocytes. These different erythrocyte binding specificities may result from sequence divergence of the homologous genes. The Duffy receptor family is localized in micronemes, an organelle found in all organisms of the phylum Apicomplexa.
Experimental Parasitology | 1990
Masamichi Aikawa; Motomi Torii; Anders Sjölander; Klavs Berzins; Peter Perlmann; Louis H. Miller
Immunoelectron microscopy demonstrated the presence of Pf155/RESA in dense granules of Plasmodium falciparum merozoites rather than in micronemes as previously suggested. Since the dense granules are released after the merozoite enters the parasitophorous vacuole, the role of Pf155/RESA in invasion and subsequent steps of parasite development may differ from that of a molecule located in the micronemes.
Experimental Parasitology | 1991
Klaus-Peter Sieber; Marcel Huber; David C. Kaslow; Steven M. Banks; Motomi Torii; Masamichi Aikawa; Louis H. Miller
We studied the point at which a monoclonal antibody (mAb C5) to a surface protein (Pgs25) on Plasmodium gallinaceum ookinetes blocked the infection of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes. The antibody did not block the development of zygotes to ookinetes in vitro. Development of ookinetes to oocysts in the mosquito was blocked to the same extent whether zygotes grew to ookinetes in the presence of mAb C5 or the antibody was added after the ookinetes had reached full development. When ookinetes developed in vitro in the presence of mAb C5, antibody remained on the surface of the parasite for the next 50 hr and did not block attachment to the peritrophic membrane. When ookinetes were fed to mosquitoes, two subpopulations of mosquitoes were observed (high numbers of oocysts per midgut and low numbers of oocysts per midgut). mAb C5 reduced the number of oocysts per midgut in the subpopulation that had low numbers of oocysts. The subpopulation that had high numbers of oocysts was unaffected by antibody, indicating that the antibody did not block invasion of the midgut epithelium. When mAb C5 was fed with gametocytes, the parasites invaded the epithelium at the same time (between 30 and 35 hr after the blood meal) as in controls, although at a markedly reduced rate. The ultrastructural observations were consistent with a block of parasites within the peritrophic membrane and not with a block at the epithelium, as parasites were not seen to accumulate within the space between the peritrophic membrane and the epithelium. The mechanism by which mAb C5 to Pgs25 of P. gallinaceum blocks the penetration of the peritrophic membrane remains undefined. We present evidence that the parasite modifies the peritrophic membrane during penetration, an observation first made for Babesia microti during penetration of the peritrophic membrane in Ixodes ticks. Ookinetes in the absence of antibodies appeared to disrupt the layers of the peritrophic membrane, suggesting an enzymatic mechanism for penetration.
Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology | 1992
Motomi Torii; Kei-ichiro Nakamura; Klaus P. Sieber; Louis H. Miller; Masamichi Aikawa
Archive | 1998
David C. Kaslow; Takafumi Tsuboi; Motomi Torii
The Japanese Biochemical Society/The Molecular Biology Society of Japan | 2017
Hideyuki Iriko; Kotomi Mimura; Hitoshi Otsuki; Mayumi Tachibana; Tomoko Ishino; Motomi Torii; Takafumi Tsuboi
The Japanese Biochemical Society/The Molecular Biology Society of Japan | 2017
Tomoko Ishino; Motomi Torii
Archive | 2013
Alan F. Cowman; Takafumi Tsuboi; James G. Beeson Chitnis; David L. Narum; Ivo Mueller; Brendan S. Crabb; Peter Siba; Christopher L. King; Motomi Torii; K. Thompson; Paul R. Gilson; Ross L. Coppel; Christine Langer; Satoru Takeo; Alex D. Uboldi; Julie Healer; Anthony N. Hodder; Freya J. I. Fowkes; S. Richards; Thangavelu U. Arumugam; Linda Reiling
Archive | 2013
Motomi Torii; Takafumi Tsuboi; James G. Beeson; Julie Healer; Brendan S. Crabb; Jennifer K. Thompson; Danny W. Wilson; Hong Zhou; Carole A. Long; Kazutoyo Miura; U. Arumugam; Satoru Takeo
Archive | 2004
Yaeta Endo; Takafumi Tsuboi; Motomi Torii; Tatsuya Sawasaki