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Dive into the research topics where Shoko Ito-Kuwa is active.

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Featured researches published by Shoko Ito-Kuwa.


Mycopathologia | 1994

Extracellular proteolytic activity of Cryptococcus neoformans.

Shigeji Aoki; Shoko Ito-Kuwa; Kenjirou Nakamura; Joji Kato; Kazunori Ninomiya; Valerio Vidotto

Eight strains ofCryptococcus neoformans var.neoformans isolated from AIDS patients in the Infectious Disease Institute, University of Turin, Italy, were examined for growth and extracellular proteolytic activity in culture with solid and liquid media. All of the strains grew well on Yeast Carbon Base (YCB) agar medium supplemented with both 0.1% (w/v) bovine serum albumin (BSA) and 0.01% (w/v) polypeptone (Pp), and produced a clear proteolytic zone around their colonies, whereas they exhibited less growth and proteolytic activity on YCB medium supplemented with BSA alone. Strain #8 with a strong proteolytic activity was cultured in three different liquid media. Its growth was limited in YCB medium supplemented with 0.1% BSA, but was moderate in that with 0.01% Pp. Enhanced growth was supported by the addition of both BSA and Pp to the YCB medium. The relative value of the final cellular yields obtained with the above YCB-0.1% BSA, YCB-0.01% Pp and YCB-0.1% BSA-0.01% Pp media was approximately 1:10:20. In the culture with YCB medium containing both BSA and Pp, a rapid decrease in the amount of BSA was demonstrated by a spectrophotometric assay and gel electrophoresis of the culture supernatant after the log-to-stationary phase. The proteolytic activity in the culture supernatant became detectable after the log phase when tested with skim milk agarose plates. These results allowed us to conclude thatCr. neoformans var.neoformans is able to secrete protease and to utilize protein as a source of nitrogen.


Zentralblatt Fur Bakteriologie-international Journal of Medical Microbiology Virology Parasitology and Infectious Diseases | 1990

Comparative Pathogenicity of a Wild-Type Strain and Respiratory Mutants of Candida albicans in Mice

Shigeji Aoki; Shoko Ito-Kuwa; Yasunori Nakamura; Taizo Masuhara

The pathogenicity of a parent wild-type strain and three respiratory mutants of Candida albicans was examined in intravenously infected mice. The wild-type strain K grew well in the kidney and caused severe candidosis, and the 21-day LD50 value was 7.2 x 10(6) cells/mouse. A mutant with a low rate of respiration (KRD-8) whose growth rate in vitro was somewhat lower than that of the wild type, produced germ tubes in vitro to the same extent as the wild-type strain and was associated with mortality rates similar to those of the wild-type strain. Two respiration-deficient (petite) mutants (KRD-19 and KRD-51), whose growth rates in vitro were far lower than that of the wild-type strain, could neither colonize the kidney nor cause fatal infection, even at a dose of 10(8) cells/mouse. Formation of germ tubes and hyphal growth in vitro of the petite mutants were less extensive than those of the wild-type strain or KRD-8. Extracellular proteinase was produced at pH 3.5 by the wild-type strain and by KRD-8 but not by the petite mutants. From these results, it is most likely that the nonlethality of infection by the petite mutants in mice results primarily from the low capacity of growth of these mutants, even though the inability of the petite mutants to produce extracellular proteinase may be also related to some extent to their avirulence.


Medical Mycology | 1987

Induction of petite mutation with acriflavine and elevated temperature in Candida albicans

Shigeji Aoki; Shoko Ito-Kuwa

A method of inducing respiratory deficient (petite) mutation in Candida albicans (which has been previously classed as a petite-negative yeast) and characteristics of some isolated mutants are reported. When grown at 42 degrees C in the presence of a cytoplasmic mutagen (acriflavine), C. albicans exhibited diauxie-like biphasic growth. Mutants which were unable to grow on a non-fermentable substrate, glycerol, were isolated from the above culture at a frequency of less than 1%. The simultaneous action of both acriflavine and a supraoptimal temperature of 42 degrees C was required to induce respiratory mutation. The respiratory mutants were separated into two groups: i. mutants exhibiting a complete cytochrome spectrum but with low respiratory activity and ii. those deficient in cytochrome aa3. Further characterization of their respiratory activity, colony morphology, mitochondrial morphology and growth manner supported the evidence that members of the latter group can be regarded as petite mutants.


Mycopathologia | 1998

Comparison of phospholipase production in Cryptococcus neoformans isolates from AIDS patients and bird droppings

Vidotto; Leone R; Sinicco A; Shoko Ito-Kuwa; Criseo G

Secreted phospholipase has been recently proposed as a virulence determinant in Cryptococcus neoformans as well as Candida albicans. This issue of cryptococcal phospholipase requires screening of phospholipase production in a larger number of isolates from clinical and environmental sources. In this study we examined phospholipase production in a total of 67 C. neoformans isolates from AIDS patients and bird droppings by using the egg-yolk plate method. Phenoloxidase activity, capsule size and growth at 37 °C were also measured in these strains in order to observe a possible relationship between phospholipase production of different C. neoformans strains and its virulence. Four of the 21 AIDS strains at 28 °C and 1 at 37 °C did not produce phospholipase, respectively. In contrast, 38 and 34 of the 46 bird dropping strains were negative for phospholipase production at 28, and 37 °C, respectively. Statistical analysis revealed a significant difference in phospholipase production, capsule size and growth ability at 37 °C, but not phenoloxidase activity, between the AIDS and the bird dropping strains. The highly prevalent distribution of phospholipase activity in the AIDS strains suggests a role of the enzyme in invading the host.


Microbiology and Immunology | 1984

The Appearance and Characterization of Cyanide‐Resistant Respiration in the Fungus Candida albicans

Shigeji Aoki; Shoko Ito-Kuwa

The respiration of yeast‐form cells of the dimorphic fungus Candida albicans became resistant to cyanide during aging treatment in the resting state. An alternative, cyanide‐resistant respiratory pathway was found to develop fully in cells aged at a concentration of 0.75 × 109/ml or more at 25 C, but did not appear at 5 C. Chloramphenicol did not prevent the appearance of the alternative respiratory pathway. The effects of inhibitors, salicylhydroxamic acid (SHAM) and disulfiram (tetraethylthiuram disulfide), on respiration of aged cells were examined, and results indicated that SHAM binds at a site on the alternative respiratory pathway whereas disulfiram binds at two sites, one on the conventional respiratory pathway and the other on the alternative pathway. Thus, SHAM is a more selective inhibitor of the alternative respiration of C. albicans cells. SHAM‐titration of the alternative respiration revealed that less than 10% of the maximal activity of the alternative respiratory pathway was utilized under normal conditions, indicating that the alternative respiratory pathway makes a small contribution to the total respiration. It was therefore concluded that the alternative, cyanide‐resistant respiratory pathway operates fully when the cyanide‐sensitive, cytochrome pathway is blocked although aged cells possess both respiratory pathways.


Medical Mycology | 1991

Induction of experimental Candida arthritis in rats

Y. Nakamura; T. Masuhara; Shoko Ito-Kuwa; Shigeji Aoki

Experimental arthritis, caused by intravenously (IV) introduced Candida albicans, has been induced for the first time in rats. Four-week-old Sprague-Dawley rats were inoculated IV with three different strains of C. albicans and observed for 4 weeks. Each of the three strains tested was able to produce arthritis. The incidence of Candida arthritis increased in a dose-dependent manner and was more than 90% at sublethal doses. Joints of the limbs were affected predominantly, and at higher doses arthritis was produced in multiple (four or five) joints in individual animals, showing it to be polyarthritis. C. albicans was recovered from all cultures of affected limb joints, which were excised 12, 19 and 28 days after inoculation and showed different stages and degrees of joint swelling. Results of histopathology and radiography showed that the Candida arthritis involved not only periarticular inflammation but also changes in joint bones. In particular, metaphyseal enlargement, punched-out lesions at the diaphysis and the appearance of osteoclasts were the most prominent changes in affected bones. These pathological features are compared with those of Candida arthritis in humans.


Mycoscience | 1998

Oxygen as a possible tropic factor in hyphal growth of Candida albicans

Shigeji Aoki; Shoko Ito-Kuwa; Kenjirou Nakamura; Valerio Vidotto; Kanji Takeo

Hyphae ofCandida albicans elongated towards the oxygen-rich direction when exposed to gradients of oxygen concentration in thin-layer and capillary-tube cultures with corn meal (CM) agar. The thin-layer culture was prepared by covering a drop of molten CM agar containingC. albicans cells with a cover slip in Petri dishes. Cells located in the central region of the thin-layered medium neither grew nor produced hyphae. Cells in the marginal regions at first directed their hyphae in arbitrary directions after forming a small colony. Hyphae then gradually changed their direction of elongation and eventually oriented towards the nearest margin. Under anaerobiosis, cells seeded in the thin-layered medium did not grow even in the marginal regions. When exposed to air, the cells in the marginal regions rapidly began to form hyphae which elongated towards the nearest margin. To prepare an oxygen gradient in capillary-tube cultures, CM agar, and dilute and dense cell suspensions in CM agar were introduced sequentially into the capillary tubes, and the end closest to the dense cell suspension was sealed with paraffin. Among cells in the dilute layer, only that located closest to the meniscus grew well and extended hyphae towards the meniscus, where oxygen concentrations were highest. These studies suggest a positive aerotropic response in the hyphal growth ofC. albicans.


Microbiology and Immunology | 2008

Diversity of laccase among Cryptococcus neoformans serotypes

Shoko Ito-Kuwa; Kenjirou Nakamura; Brenda Valderrama; Shigeji Aoki; Valerio Vidotto; Tetsuaki Osafune

The pathogenic yeast C. neoformans is classified into three varieties with five serotypes; var. grubii (serotype A), var. neoformans (serotype D), var. gattii (serotypes B and C), and serotype AD. Melanin is a virulence factor in the species, and its biosynthesis is catalyzed by laccase, encoded by the LAC1 gene. In order to estimate the natural variability of the LAC1 gene among Cryptococcus serotypes, the laccase protein sequence from 55 strains was determined and the phylogenetic relationships between cryptococcal and related fungal laccases revealed. The deduced laccase proteins consisted of 624 amino acid residues in serotypes A, D and AD, and 613 to 615 residues in serotypes B and C. Intra‐serotype amino acid variation was marginal within serotypes A and D, and none was found within serotypes AD and C. Maximum amino acid replacement occurred in two serotype B strains. The similarity in the deduced sequence ranged from 80 to 96% between serotypes. The sequence in the copper‐binding regions was strongly conserved in the five serotypes. The laccases of the five serotypes were grouped together in the same clade of the phylogenetic tree reconstructed from different fungal laccases, suggesting a monophyletic clade.


Microbiology and Immunology | 2005

Comparisons of the laccase gene among serotypes and melanin-deficient variants of Cryptococcus neoformans.

Eiichiro Tanaka; Shoko Ito-Kuwa; Kenjirou Nakamura; Shigeji Aoki; Valerio Vidotto; Masaaki Ito

Cryptococcus neoformans is a fungus causing life‐threatening infections in immunocompromised hosts. Melanin production is a major virulence factor of this fungus and the initial steps of dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA)‐melanin biosynthesis pathways are catalyzed by laccase. To understand phylogenetic relationships among serotypes of three varieties, partial sequences (about 600 bases) of the laccase gene (CNLAC1) were determined in a total of 64 strains, including 10 melanin‐deficient variants. The phylogenetic tree constructed from the nucleotide sequence grouped the 64 strains into the clusters corresponding to the three varieties. The diversity of the fragment sequences was very minor among strains of each of var. grubii and var. neoformans. Strains in var. gattii, however, were subdivided into two groups, although differences between serotypes B and C were not large. The sequences of the melanin‐deficient variants were almost completely homologous to those of the melanin‐producing strains in the same serotype. Results of laccase assay and northern blot analysis suggested that the lower melanin production in the variants was associated with lower transcription of the laccase gene.


Mycopathologia | 1993

Radiographic features of experimentalCandida arthritis in rats

Yasunori Nakamura; S. Noda; T. Masuhara; Shoko Ito-Kuwa; Kenjirou Nakamura; Shigeji Aoki

Sprague-Dawley rats were inoculated intravenously (i.v.) withCandida albicans, and limb joints showing signs ofCandida-induced arthritis were subjected to radiographic and histologic examination. New bone formation and bone resorption were morbidly enhanced in bones sampled from the arthritic joints. Sparsely distributed needle-shaped calcified deposits began to be formed on bony surfaces in parallel with the onset of joint swelling. The calcified deposits gradually became denser and then covered the bony surfaces almost entirely, giving rise to an exostosis-like profile. In addition to the new bone formation, bone resorption was also observed in regions adjacent to the sites of new bone formation, and punched-out bone lesions were produced. Eventually, severe deformation of joint bones due to new bone formation and bone resorption was evident. Reflecting these unusual radiographic changes, abundant osteoblasts and osteoclasts were demonstrated histologically in the bones. On the basis of these results, possible mechanisms for the induction of arthritis byCandida infection are discussed.

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Shigeji Aoki

The Nippon Dental University

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Kenjirou Nakamura

The Nippon Dental University

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Yasunori Nakamura

The Nippon Dental University

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Taizo Masuhara

The Nippon Dental University

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Tomoko Ehara

Tokyo Medical University

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