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Dive into the research topics where Shinji Ohgimoto is active.

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Featured researches published by Shinji Ohgimoto.


Journal of Virology | 2001

Quintuple Deglycosylation Mutant of Simian Immunodeficiency Virus SIVmac239 in Rhesus Macaques: Robust Primary Replication, Tightly Contained Chronic Infection, and Elicitation of Potent Immunity against the Parental Wild-Type Strain

Kazuyasu Mori; Yasuhiro Yasutomi; Shinji Ohgimoto; Tadashi Nakasone; Shiki Takamura; Tatsuo Shioda; Yoshiyuki Nagai

ABSTRACT We previously generated a mutant of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) lacking 5 of a total of 22 N-glycans in its external envelope protein gp120 with no impairment in viral replication capability and infectivity in tissue culture cells. Here, we infected rhesus macaques with this mutant and found that it also replicated robustly in the acute phase but was tightly, though not completely, contained in the chronic phase. Thus, a critical requirement for the N-glycans for the full extent of chronic infection was demonstrated. No evidence indicating reversion to a wild type was obtained during the observation period of more than 40 weeks. Monkeys infected with the mutant were found to tolerate a challenge infection with wild-type SIV very well. Analyses of host responses following challenge revealed no neutralizing antibodies against the challenge virus but strong secondary responses of cytotoxic T lymphocytes against multiple antigens, including Gag-Pol, Nef, and Env. Thus, the quintuple deglycosylation mutant appeared to represent a novel class of SIV live attenuated vaccine.


Microbiology and Immunology | 2003

Genotype and subtype analyses of hepatitis B virus (HBV) and possible co-infection of HBV and hepatitis C virus (HCV) or hepatitis D virus (HDV) in blood donors, patients with chronic liver disease and patients on hemodialysis in Surabaya, Indonesia.

Maria Inge Lusida; Surayah; Hiroshi Sakugawa; Motoko Nagano-Fujii; Soetjipto; Mulyanto; Retno Handajani; Boediwarsono; Poernomo Boedi Setiawan; Chairul A. Nidom; Shinji Ohgimoto; Hak Hotta

Four subtypes (adw, adr, ayw, and ayr) and eight genotypes (A to H) of the hepatitis B virus (HBV) have been identified. They appear to be associated with particular geographic distribution, ethnicity, and possibly clinical outcomes. In this study, hepatitis B surface antigen (HBsAg) subtyping and HBV genotyping were carried out on sera obtained from HBsAg‐positive HBV carriers, including healthy blood donors; patients with acute hepatitis, chronic hepatitis, liver cirrhosis, and hepatocellular carcinoma; and patients on hemodialysis all located in Surabaya, Indonesia. We report here that all HBV isolates tested in Surabaya belonged to genotype B, with more than 90% of them being classified into subtype adw. Our results also revealed that prevalence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) co‐infection among HBV carriers in Surabaya was approximately 10% for healthy blood donors and patients with chronic liver disease, and approximately 60% for patients on maintenance hemodialysis. Interestingly, HBsAg titers were lower in HBV carriers with HCV co‐infection than in those without HCV co‐infection. We also found that prevalence of hepatitis D virus (HDV) co‐infection was <0.5% among HBV carriers in Surabaya.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Influence of Glycosylation on the Efficacy of an Env-Based Vaccine against Simian Immunodeficiency Virus SIVmac239 in a Macaque AIDS Model

Kazuyasu Mori; Chie Sugimoto; Shinji Ohgimoto; Emi E. Nakayama; Tatsuo Shioda; Shigeru Kusagawa; Yutaka Takebe; Munehide Kano; Tetsuro Matano; Takae Yuasa; Daisuke Kitaguchi; Masaaki Miyazawa; Yumiko Takahashi; Michio Yasunami; Akinori Kimura; Naoki Yamamoto; Yasuo Suzuki; Yoshiyuki Nagai

ABSTRACT The envelope glycoprotein (Env) of human immunodeficiency viruses (HIVs) and simian immunodeficiency viruses (SIVs) is heavily glycosylated, and this feature has been speculated to be a reason for the insufficient immune control of these viruses by their hosts. In a macaque AIDS model, we demonstrated that quintuple deglycosylation in Env altered a pathogenic virus, SIVmac239, into a novel attenuated mutant virus (Δ5G). In Δ5G-infected animals, strong protective immunity against SIVmac239 was elicited. These HIV and SIV studies suggested that an understanding of the role of glycosylation is critical in defining not only the virological properties but also the immunogenicity of Env, suggesting that glycosylation in Env could be modified for the development of effective vaccines. To examine the effect of deglycosylation, we constructed prime-boost vaccines consisting of Env from SIVmac239 and Δ5G and compared their immunogenicities and vaccine efficacies by challenge infection with SIVmac239. Vaccination-induced immune responses differed between the two vaccine groups. Both Env-specific cellular and humoral responses were higher in wild-type (wt)-Env-immunized animals than in Δ5G Env-immunized animals. Following the challenge, viral loads in SIVmac239 Env (wt-Env)-immunized animals were significantly lower than in vector controls, with controlled viral replication in the chronic phase. Unexpectedly, viral loads in Δ5G Env-immunized animals were indistinguishable from those in vector controls. This study demonstrated that the prime-boost Env vaccine was effective against homologous SIVmac239 challenge. Changes in glycosylation affected both cell-mediated and humoral immune responses and vaccine efficacy.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Protection of Macaques with Diverse MHC Genotypes against a Heterologous SIV by Vaccination with a Deglycosylated Live-Attenuated SIV

Chie Sugimoto; Satoru Watanabe; Taeko Naruse; Eiji Kajiwara; Teiichiro Shiino; Natsuko Umano; Kayoko Ueda; Hirotaka Sato; Shinji Ohgimoto; Vanessa M. Hirsch; Francois Villinger; Aftab A. Ansari; Akinori Kimura; Masaaki Miyazawa; Yasuo Suzuki; Naoki Yamamoto; Yoshiyuki Nagai; Kazuyasu Mori

HIV vaccine development has been hampered by issues such as undefined correlates of protection and extensive diversity of HIV. We addressed these issues using a previously established SIV-macaque model in which SIV mutants with deletions of multiple gp120 N-glycans function as potent live attenuated vaccines to induce near-sterile immunity against the parental pathogenic SIVmac239. In this study, we investigated the protective efficacy of these mutants against a highly pathogenic heterologous SIVsmE543-3 delivered intravenously to rhesus macaques with diverse MHC genotypes. All 11 vaccinated macaques contained the acute-phase infection with blood viral loads below the level of detection between 4 and 10 weeks postchallenge (pc), following a transient but marginal peak of viral replication at 2 weeks in only half of the challenged animals. In the chronic phase, seven vaccinees contained viral replication for over 80 weeks pc, while four did not. Neutralizing antibodies against challenge virus were not detected. Although overall levels of SIV specific T cell responses did not correlate with containment of acute and chronic viral replication, a critical role of cellular responses in the containment of viral replication was suggested. Emergence of viruses with altered fitness due to recombination between the vaccine and challenge viruses and increased gp120 glycosylation was linked to the failure to control SIV. These results demonstrate the induction of effective protective immune responses in a significant number of animals against heterologous virus by infection with deglycosylated attenuated SIV mutants in macaques with highly diverse MHC background. These findings suggest that broad HIV cross clade protection is possible, even in hosts with diverse genetic backgrounds. In summary, results of this study indicate that deglycosylated live-attenuated vaccines may provide a platform for the elucidation of correlates of protection needed for a successful HIV vaccine against diverse isolates.


Journal of Virology | 2010

The F Gene of the Osaka-2 Strain of Measles Virus Derived from a Case of Subacute Sclerosing Panencephalitis Is a Major Determinant of Neurovirulence

Minoru Ayata; Kaoru Takeuchi; Makoto Takeda; Shinji Ohgimoto; Seiichi Kato; Luna Bhatta Sharma; Miyuu Tanaka; Mitsuru Kuwamura; Hiroshi Ishida; Hisashi Ogura

ABSTRACT Measles virus (MV) is the causative agent for acute measles and subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE). Although numerous mutations have been found in the MV genome of SSPE strains, the mutations responsible for the neurovirulence have not been determined. We previously reported that the SSPE Osaka-2 strain but not the wild-type strains of MV induced acute encephalopathy when they were inoculated intracerebrally into 3-week-old hamsters. The recombinant MV system was adapted for the current study to identify the gene(s) responsible for neurovirulence in our hamster model. Recombinant viruses that contained envelope-associated genes from the Osaka-2 strain were generated on the IC323 wild-type MV background. The recombinant virus containing the M gene alone did not induce neurological disease, whereas the H gene partially contributed to neurovirulence. In sharp contrast, the recombinant virus containing the F gene alone induced lethal encephalopathy. This phenotype was related to the ability of the F protein to induce syncytium formation in Vero cells. Further study indicated that a single T461I substitution in the F protein was sufficient to transform the nonneuropathogenic wild-type MV into a lethal virus for hamsters.


Vaccine | 2009

Reduced ability of hemagglutinin of the CAM-70 measles virus vaccine strain to use receptors CD46 and SLAM.

Seiichi Kato; Shinji Ohgimoto; Luna Bhatta Sharma; Sekiko Kurazono; Minoru Ayata; Katsuhiro Komase; Makoto Takeda; Kaoru Takeuchi; Toshiaki Ihara; Hisashi Ogura

The CAM-70 measles virus (MV) vaccine strain is currently used for vaccination against measles. We examined the fusion-inducing ability of the CAM-70 hemagglutinin (H) protein and found that it was impaired in both CD46- and signaling lymphocyte activation molecule (SLAM)-expressing cells. We also generated recombinant MVs possessing H genes derived from the CAM-70 strain. The CAM-70 H protein impaired viral growth in both CD46- and SLAM-expressing cells. In peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) and monocyte-derived dendritic cells (Mo-DC), the CAM-70 strain did not grow efficiently. Infection with recombinant MVs revealed that impaired growth of the CAM-70 strain was attributed to the H gene only partly in PBL and largely in Mo-DC. Thus, impaired fusion-inducing ability of the H protein may be one of the underlying molecular mechanisms resulting in the attenuation of the CAM-70 strain.


Journal of Virology | 2009

Contribution of Matrix, Fusion, Hemagglutinin, and Large Protein Genes of the CAM-70 Measles Virus Vaccine Strain to Efficient Growth in Chicken Embryonic Fibroblasts

Luna Bhatta Sharma; Shinji Ohgimoto; Seiichi Kato; Sekiko Kurazono; Minoru Ayata; Kaoru Takeuchi; Toshiaki Ihara; Hisashi Ogura

ABSTRACT Attenuated live vaccines of measles virus (MV) have been developed from clinical isolates by serial propagation in heterologous cells, mainly chicken embryonic cells. The safety and effectiveness of these vaccines have been well established. However, the molecular mechanism of their attenuation remains a subject of investigation. The CAM-70 MV vaccine strain was developed from the Tanabe strain by serial propagation in chicken embryonic cells. In the present study, we assessed the contribution of each gene in the CAM-70 strain to efficient growth in chicken embryonic fibroblasts (CEF). We used a cloned MV IC323 based on the wild-type IC-B strain and generated a series of IC323s that possess one or more of the CAM-70 genes. Then, we examined the infection of CEF and CEF expressing human signaling lymphocyte activation molecule with the recombinant MVs. Our results demonstrated that MV needs to adapt to CEF at both the entry and postentry steps and that the CAM-70 matrix protein gene plays an important role in adaptation to CEF at the early stage of the virus replication cycle. The CAM-70 large protein gene was responsible for the efficient transcription and replication in CEF, and the CAM-70 hemagglutinin and fusion protein genes were responsible for efficient entry. Investigations focusing on these genes might elucidate unknown molecular mechanisms underlying the attenuation of MV.


Microbiology and Immunology | 2011

Remarkable similarity in genome nucleotide sequences between the Schwarz FF-8 and AIK-C measles virus vaccine strains and apparent nucleotide differences in the phosphoprotein gene

Chie Ito; Shinji Ohgimoto; Seiichi Kato; Luna Bhatta Sharma; Minoru Ayata; Katsuhiro Komase; Kaoru Takeuchi; Toshiaki Ihara; Hisashi Ogura

The Schwarz FF‐8 (FF‐8) and AIK‐C measles virus vaccine strains are currently used for vaccination in Japan. Here, the complete genome nucleotide sequence of the FF‐8 strain has been determined and its genome sequence found to be remarkably similar to that of the AIK‐C strain. These two strains are differentiated only by two nucleotide differences in the phosphoprotein gene. Since the FF‐8 strain does not possess the amino acid substitutions in the phospho‐ and fusion proteins which are responsible for the temperature‐sensitivity and small syncytium formation phenotypes of the AIK‐C strain, respectively, other unidentified common mechanisms likely attenuate both the FF‐8 and AIK‐C strains.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

c-MIR, a Human E3 Ubiquitin Ligase, Is a Functional Homolog of Herpesvirus Proteins MIR1 and MIR2 and Has Similar Activity

Eiji Goto; Satoshi Ishido; Yuya Sato; Shinji Ohgimoto; Kaori Ohgimoto; Motoko Nagano-Fujii; Hak Hotta


Journal of General Virology | 2004

Hepatitis C virus NS5A protein interacts with 2′,5′-oligoadenylate synthetase and inhibits antiviral activity of IFN in an IFN sensitivity-determining region-independent manner

Takashi Taguchi; Motoko Nagano-Fujii; Masato Akutsu; Hiroyasu Kadoya; Shinji Ohgimoto; Satoshi Ishido; Hak Hotta

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Kazuyasu Mori

National Institutes of Health

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Yoshiyuki Nagai

National Institutes of Health

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