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Featured researches published by Rie Uenishi.


Virology | 2009

Phylodynamic analysis of the dissemination of HIV-1 CRF01_AE in Vietnam.

Huanan Liao; Kok Keng Tee; Saiki Hase; Rie Uenishi; Xiao-Jie Li; Shigeru Kusagawa; Pham Hong Thang; Nguyen Tran Hien; Oliver G. Pybus; Yutaka Takebe

To estimate the epidemic history of HIV-1 CRF01_AE in Vietnam and adjacent Guangxi, China, we determined near full-length nucleotide sequences of CRF01_AE from a total of 33 specimens collected in 1997-1998 from different geographic regions and risk populations in Vietnam. Phylogenetic and Bayesian molecular clock analyses were performed to estimate the date of origin of CRF01_AE lineages. Our study reconstructs the timescale of CRF01_AE expansion in Vietnam and neighboring regions and suggests that the series of CRF01_AE epidemics in Vietnam arose by the sequential introduction of founder strains into new locations and risk groups. CRF01_AE appears to have been present among heterosexuals in South-Vietnam for more than a decade prior to its epidemic spread in the early 1990s. In the late 1980s, the virus spread to IDUs in Southern Vietnam and subsequently in the mid-1990s to IDUs further north. Our results indicate the northward dissemination of CRF01_AE during this time.


Retrovirology | 2007

Optimal design and validation of antiviral siRNA for targeting HIV-1

Yuki Naito; Kyoko Nohtomi; Toshinari Onogi; Rie Uenishi; Kumiko Ui-Tei; Kaoru Saigo; Yutaka Takebe

We propose rational designing of antiviral short-interfering RNA (siRNA) targeting highly divergent HIV-1. In this study, conserved regions within HIV-1 genomes were identified through an exhaustive computational analysis, and the functionality of siRNAs targeting the highest possible conserved regions was validated. We present several promising antiviral siRNA candidates that effectively inhibited multiple subtypes of HIV-1 by targeting the best conserved regions in pandemic HIV-1 group M strains.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Antiviral Lectins from Red and Blue-Green Algae Show Potent In Vitro and In Vivo Activity against Hepatitis C Virus

Yutaka Takebe; Carrie J. Saucedo; Garry Lund; Rie Uenishi; Saiki Hase; Takayo Tsuchiura; Norman M. Kneteman; Koreen Ramessar; D. Lorne Tyrrell; Masayuki Shirakura; Takaji Wakita; James B. McMahon; Barry R. O'Keefe

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is a significant public health problem with over 170,000,000 chronic carriers and infection rates increasing worldwide. Chronic HCV infection is one of the leading causes of hepatocellular carcinoma which was estimated to result in ∼10,000 deaths in the United States in the year 2011. Current treatment options for HCV infection are limited to PEG-ylated interferon alpha (IFN-α), the nucleoside ribavirin and the recently approved HCV protease inhibitors telaprevir and boceprevir. Although showing significantly improved efficacy over the previous therapies, treatment with protease inhibitors has been shown to result in the rapid emergence of drug-resistant virus. Here we report the activity of two proteins, originally isolated from natural product extracts, which demonstrate low or sub-nanomolar in vitro activity against both genotype I and genotype II HCV. These proteins inhibit viral infectivity, binding to the HCV envelope glycoproteins E1 and E2 and block viral entry into human hepatocytes. In addition, we demonstrate that the most potent of these agents, the protein griffithsin, is readily bioavailable after subcutaneous injection and shows significant in vivo efficacy in reducing HCV viral titers in a mouse model system with engrafted human hepatocytes. These results indicate that HCV viral entry inhibitors can be an effective component of anti-HCV therapy and that these proteins should be studied further for their therapeutic potential.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2010

Identification of a novel second-generation circulating recombinant form (CRF48_01B) in Malaysia: a descendant of the previously identified CRF33_01B.

Yue Li; Kok Keng Tee; Huanan Liao; Saiki Hase; Rie Uenishi; Xiao-Jie Li; Takayo Tsuchiura; Rongge Yang; Sumathi Govindasamy; Yean K. Yong; Hong Yien Tan; Oliver G. Pybus; Adeeba Kamarulzaman; Yutaka Takebe

A molecular epidemiological investigation conducted among injecting drug users in eastern Peninsular Malaysia in 2007 identified a cluster of sequences (n = 3) located outside any known HIV-1 genotype. Analyses of near full-length nucleotide sequences of these strains from individuals with no recognizable linkage revealed that they have an identical subtype structure comprised of CRF01_AE and subtype B′, distinct from any known circulating recombinant forms (CRFs). This novel CRF, designated CRF48_01B, is closely related to CRF33_01B, previously identified in Kuala Lumpur. Phylogenetic analysis of multiple CRF48_01B genome regions showed that CRF48_01B forms a monophyletic cluster within CRF33_01B, suggesting that this new recombinant is very likely a descendant of CRF33_01B. CRF48_01B thus represents one of the first examples of a “second-generation” CRF, generated by additional crossover with pre-existing CRFs. Corroborating these results, Bayesian molecular clock analyses indicated that CRF48_01B emerged in ∼2001, approximately ∼8 years after the emergence of CRF33_01B.


Vaccine | 2010

Reconstructing the epidemic history of HIV-1 circulating recombinant forms CRF07_BC and CRF08_BC in East Asia: the relevance of genetic diversity and phylodynamics for vaccine strategies.

Yutaka Takebe; Huanan Liao; Saiki Hase; Rie Uenishi; Yue Li; Xiao-Jie Li; Xiaoxu Han; Hong Shang; Adeeba Kamarulzaman; Naoki Yamamoto; Oliver G. Pybus; Kok Keng Tee

HIV-1 CRF07_BC and CRF08_BC are closely related circulating recombinant forms (CRFs) with serious public health consequences in China. The temporal and spatial dynamics of these CRFs were determined by estimating their times of divergence, using phylogenetic and Bayesian coalescent methods. Studies of the timelines of CRF07_BC and CRF08_BC trace the expansion of these strains back their origins to Yunnan province. The present study highlights the relevance of incorporating evolutionary and molecular epidemiological analyses into an in-depth understanding of the genesis of HIV epidemic, providing information for determining regional and global public health policies, including future vaccine strategies.


Advances in pharmacology | 2008

Global Molecular Epidemiology of HIV: Understanding the Genesis of AIDS Pandemic

Yutaka Takebe; Rie Uenishi; Xiao-Jie Li

Publisher Summary This chapter describes the classification and distribution of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) genotypes and the biological and public health implications of genetic variability of this pathogen. Global dissemination of HIVs represents a dramatic and deadly example of recent genome emergence and expansion. Recent studies revealed that a pandemic HIV strain, HIV‐1 group M, began its expansion in human population during early 20th century, it has been diversifying rapidly, now comprising a number of different subtypes and circulating recombinant forms (CRFs), and that new recombinant strains are arising continually, becoming a powerful force in global HIV‐1 spread. Studies also provide information to delineate the mechanism of viral evolution and for the studies on biological features of HIV strains related to pathogenecity and disease progression. However, the biological significance of the global diversity of HIV‐1 strains remains to be defined. Although the immune correlates for protection are still incompletely understood, the extensive variation of HIVs could probably be important in the formulation of the vaccine immunogens.


AIDS | 2008

Chronology of the HIV-1 CRF07_BC expansion in East Asia.

Kok Keng Tee; Oliver G. Pybus; Huanan Liao; Rie Uenishi; Saiki Hase; Adeeba Kamarulzaman; Xiao-Jie Li; Yutaka Takebe

The HIV-1 epidemic among injecting drug users (IDU) in Taiwan is caused primarily by CRF07_BC infections. Evolutionary analyses, which utilize outgroup reference strains from northwestern China (Xinjiang), reveal that CRF07_BC was introduced into southern Taiwan in 1998–2001 and spread to central–northern Taiwan in 2001–2003, causing the largest HIV/AIDS epidemic in Taiwan. The separate introduction of CRF07_BC into Xinjiang occurred in 1992–1995. This study illustrates the temporal dynamics of CRF07_BC spread among IDU across east Asia.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Isolation and Characterization of a Replication-Competent Molecular Clone of an HIV-1 Circulating Recombinant Form (CRF33_01B)

Kok Keng Tee; Shigeru Kusagawa; Xiao-Jie Li; Narumi Onogi; Maya Isogai; Saiki Hase; Rie Uenishi; Huanan Liao; Adeeba bte Kamarulzaman; Yutaka Takebe

A growing number of emerging HIV-1 recombinants classified as circulating recombinant forms (CRFs) have been identified in Southeast Asia in recent years, establishing a molecular diversity of increasing complexity in the region. Here, we constructed a replication-competent HIV-1 clone for CRF33_01B (designated p05MYKL045.1), a newly identified recombinant comprised of CRF01_AE and subtype B. p05MYKL045.1 was reconstituted by cloning of the near full-length HIV-1 sequence from a newly-diagnosed individual presumably infected heterosexually in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The chimeric clone, which contains the 5′ LTR (long terminal repeat) region of p93JP-NH1 (a previously isolated CRF01_AE infectious clone), showed robust viral replication in the human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. This clone demonstrated robust viral propagation and profound syncytium formation in CD4+, CXCR4-expressing human glioma NP-2 cells, indicating that p05MYKL045.1 is a CXCR4-using virus. Viral propagation, however, was not detected in various human T cell lines including MT-2, M8166, Sup-T1, H9, Jurkat, Molt-4 and PM1. p05MYKL045.1 appears to proliferate only in restricted host range, suggesting that unknown viral and/or cellular host factors may play a role in viral infectivity and replication in human T cell lines. Availability of a CRF33_01B molecular clone will be useful in facilitating the development of vaccine candidates that match the HIV-1 strains circulating in Southeast Asia.


Virologica Sinica | 2007

HIV/AIDS in Asia: The Shape of Epidemics and Their Molecular Epidemiology *

Xiao-Jie Li; Rie Uenishi; Saiki Hase; Huanan Liao; Tee Kok Keng; Shigeru Kusagawa; Yutaka Takebe

The Asia-Pacific region is a home to 60% of the population in the world and to approximately one quarter of people with HIV/AIDS. Close to a million of people has been infected and a half million people died of AIDS annually in Asia, becoming the second largest epicenter of global AIDS epidemic. Molecular epidemiology has been useful tool to track a course of HIV spread. In-depth knowledge from the studies on molecular epidemiology elucidates the dynamics of HIV spread and the interrelationship of epidemics in the different regions in Asia.


Virology | 2010

Explosive HIV-1 subtype B' epidemics in Asia driven by geographic and risk group founder events

Yue Li; Rie Uenishi; Saiki Hase; Huanan Liao; Xiao-Jie Li; Takayo Tsuchiura; Kok Keng Tee; Oliver G. Pybus; Yutaka Takebe

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Yutaka Takebe

National Institutes of Health

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Saiki Hase

National Institutes of Health

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Huanan Liao

National Institutes of Health

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Xiao-Jie Li

National Institutes of Health

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Takayo Tsuchiura

National Institutes of Health

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Yue Li

National Institutes of Health

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Shigeru Kusagawa

National Institutes of Health

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