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Dive into the research topics where Tokiko Watanabe is active.

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Featured researches published by Tokiko Watanabe.


Nature | 2012

Experimental adaptation of an influenza H5 HA confers respiratory droplet transmission to a reassortant H5 HA/H1N1 virus in ferrets

Masaki Imai; Tokiko Watanabe; Masato Hatta; Subash C. Das; Makoto Ozawa; Kyoko Shinya; Gongxun Zhong; Anthony Hanson; Hiroaki Katsura; Shinji Watanabe; Chengjun Li; Eiryo Kawakami; S. Yamada; Maki Kiso; Yasuo Suzuki; Eileen A. Maher; Gabriele Neumann; Yoshihiro Kawaoka

Highly pathogenic avian H5N1 influenza A viruses occasionally infect humans, but currently do not transmit efficiently among humans. The viral haemagglutinin (HA) protein is a known host-range determinant as it mediates virus binding to host-specific cellular receptors. Here we assess the molecular changes in HA that would allow a virus possessing subtype H5 HA to be transmissible among mammals. We identified a reassortant H5 HA/H1N1 virus—comprising H5 HA (from an H5N1 virus) with four mutations and the remaining seven gene segments from a 2009 pandemic H1N1 virus—that was capable of droplet transmission in a ferret model. The transmissible H5 reassortant virus preferentially recognized human-type receptors, replicated efficiently in ferrets, caused lung lesions and weight loss, but was not highly pathogenic and did not cause mortality. These results indicate that H5 HA can convert to an HA that supports efficient viral transmission in mammals; however, we do not know whether the four mutations in the H5 HA identified here would render a wholly avian H5N1 virus transmissible. The genetic origin of the remaining seven viral gene segments may also critically contribute to transmissibility in mammals. Nevertheless, as H5N1 viruses continue to evolve and infect humans, receptor-binding variants of H5N1 viruses with pandemic potential, including avian–human reassortant viruses as tested here, may emerge. Our findings emphasize the need to prepare for potential pandemics caused by influenza viruses possessing H5 HA, and will help individuals conducting surveillance in regions with circulating H5N1 viruses to recognize key residues that predict the pandemic potential of isolates, which will inform the development, production and distribution of effective countermeasures.


Nature | 2009

In vitro and in vivo characterization of new swine-origin H1N1 influenza viruses

Yasushi Itoh; Kyoko Shinya; Maki Kiso; Tokiko Watanabe; Yoshihiro Sakoda; Masato Hatta; Yukiko Muramoto; Daisuke Tamura; Yuko Sakai-Tagawa; Takeshi Noda; Saori Sakabe; Masaki Imai; Yasuko Hatta; Shinji Watanabe; Chengjun Li; S. Yamada; Ken Fujii; Shin Murakami; Hirotaka Imai; Satoshi Kakugawa; Mutsumi Ito; Ryo Takano; Kiyoko Iwatsuki-Horimoto; Masayuki Shimojima; Taisuke Horimoto; Hideo Goto; Kei Takahashi; Akiko Makino; Hirohito Ishigaki; Misako Nakayama

Influenza A viruses cause recurrent outbreaks at local or global scale with potentially severe consequences for human health and the global economy. Recently, a new strain of influenza A virus was detected that causes disease in and transmits among humans, probably owing to little or no pre-existing immunity to the new strain. On 11 June 2009 the World Health Organization declared that the infections caused by the new strain had reached pandemic proportion. Characterized as an influenza A virus of the H1N1 subtype, the genomic segments of the new strain were most closely related to swine viruses. Most human infections with swine-origin H1N1 influenza viruses (S-OIVs) seem to be mild; however, a substantial number of hospitalized individuals do not have underlying health issues, attesting to the pathogenic potential of S-OIVs. To achieve a better assessment of the risk posed by the new virus, we characterized one of the first US S-OIV isolates, A/California/04/09 (H1N1; hereafter referred to as CA04), as well as several other S-OIV isolates, in vitro and in vivo. In mice and ferrets, CA04 and other S-OIV isolates tested replicate more efficiently than a currently circulating human H1N1 virus. In addition, CA04 replicates efficiently in non-human primates, causes more severe pathological lesions in the lungs of infected mice, ferrets and non-human primates than a currently circulating human H1N1 virus, and transmits among ferrets. In specific-pathogen-free miniature pigs, CA04 replicates without clinical symptoms. The assessment of human sera from different age groups suggests that infection with human H1N1 viruses antigenically closely related to viruses circulating in 1918 confers neutralizing antibody activity to CA04. Finally, we show that CA04 is sensitive to approved and experimental antiviral drugs, suggesting that these compounds could function as a first line of defence against the recently declared S-OIV pandemic.


Nature | 2008

Drosophila RNAi screen identifies host genes important for influenza virus replication

Linhui Hao; Akira Sakurai; Tokiko Watanabe; Ericka Sorensen; Chairul A. Nidom; Michael A. Newton; Paul Ahlquist; Yoshihiro Kawaoka

All viruses rely on host cell proteins and their associated mechanisms to complete the viral life cycle. Identifying the host molecules that participate in each step of virus replication could provide valuable new targets for antiviral therapy, but this goal may take several decades to achieve with conventional forward genetic screening methods and mammalian cell cultures. Here we describe a novel genome-wide RNA interference (RNAi) screen in Drosophila that can be used to identify host genes important for influenza virus replication. After modifying influenza virus to allow infection of Drosophila cells and detection of influenza virus gene expression, we tested an RNAi library against 13,071 genes (90% of the Drosophila genome), identifying over 100 for which suppression in Drosophila cells significantly inhibited or stimulated reporter gene (Renilla luciferase) expression from an influenza-virus-derived vector. The relevance of these findings to influenza virus infection of mammalian cells is illustrated for a subset of the Drosophila genes identified; that is, for three implicated Drosophila genes, the corresponding human homologues ATP6V0D1, COX6A1 and NXF1 are shown to have key functions in the replication of H5N1 and H1N1 influenza A viruses, but not vesicular stomatitis virus or vaccinia virus, in human HEK 293 cells. Thus, we have demonstrated the feasibility of using genome-wide RNAi screens in Drosophila to identify previously unrecognized host proteins that are required for influenza virus replication. This could accelerate the development of new classes of antiviral drugs for chemoprophylaxis and treatment, which are urgently needed given the obstacles to rapid development of an effective vaccine against pandemic influenza and the probable emergence of strains resistant to available drugs.


Nature | 2013

Characterization of H7N9 influenza A viruses isolated from humans.

Tokiko Watanabe; Maki Kiso; Satoshi Fukuyama; Noriko Nakajima; Masaki Imai; S. Yamada; Shin Murakami; Seiya Yamayoshi; Kiyoko Iwatsuki-Horimoto; Yoshihiro Sakoda; Emi Takashita; Ryan McBride; Takeshi Noda; Masato Hatta; Hirotaka Imai; Dongming Zhao; Noriko Kishida; Masayuki Shirakura; Robert P. de Vries; Shintaro Shichinohe; Masatoshi Okamatsu; Tomokazu Tamura; Yuriko Tomita; Naomi Fujimoto; Kazue Goto; Hiroaki Katsura; Eiryo Kawakami; Izumi Ishikawa; Shinji Watanabe; Mutsumi Ito

Avian influenza A viruses rarely infect humans; however, when human infection and subsequent human-to-human transmission occurs, worldwide outbreaks (pandemics) can result. The recent sporadic infections of humans in China with a previously unrecognized avian influenza A virus of the H7N9 subtype (A(H7N9)) have caused concern owing to the appreciable case fatality rate associated with these infections (more than 25%), potential instances of human-to-human transmission, and the lack of pre-existing immunity among humans to viruses of this subtype. Here we characterize two early human A(H7N9) isolates, A/Anhui/1/2013 (H7N9) and A/Shanghai/1/2013 (H7N9); hereafter referred to as Anhui/1 and Shanghai/1, respectively. In mice, Anhui/1 and Shanghai/1 were more pathogenic than a control avian H7N9 virus (A/duck/Gunma/466/2011 (H7N9); Dk/GM466) and a representative pandemic 2009 H1N1 virus (A/California/4/2009 (H1N1pdm09); CA04). Anhui/1, Shanghai/1 and Dk/GM466 replicated well in the nasal turbinates of ferrets. In nonhuman primates, Anhui/1 and Dk/GM466 replicated efficiently in the upper and lower respiratory tracts, whereas the replicative ability of conventional human influenza viruses is typically restricted to the upper respiratory tract of infected primates. By contrast, Anhui/1 did not replicate well in miniature pigs after intranasal inoculation. Critically, Anhui/1 transmitted through respiratory droplets in one of three pairs of ferrets. Glycan arrays showed that Anhui/1, Shanghai/1 and A/Hangzhou/1/2013 (H7N9) (a third human A(H7N9) virus tested in this assay) bind to human virus-type receptors, a property that may be critical for virus transmissibility in ferrets. Anhui/1 was found to be less sensitive in mice to neuraminidase inhibitors than a pandemic H1N1 2009 virus, although both viruses were equally susceptible to an experimental antiviral polymerase inhibitor. The robust replicative ability in mice, ferrets and nonhuman primates and the limited transmissibility in ferrets of Anhui/1 suggest that A(H7N9) viruses have pandemic potential.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Selective incorporation of influenza virus RNA segments into virions

Yutaka Fujii; Hideo Goto; Tokiko Watanabe; Tetsuya Yoshida; Yoshihiro Kawaoka

The genome of influenza A virus is comprised of eight viral RNA (vRNA) segments. Although the products of all eight vRNA segments must be present for viral replication, little is known about the mechanism(s) responsible for incorporation of these segments into virions. Two models have been proposed for the generation of infectious virions containing eight vRNA segments. The random-incorporation model assumes a common structural feature in all the vRNAs, enabling any combination of vRNAs to be incorporated randomly into virions. The selective-incorporation model predicts the presence of specific structures in each vRNA segment, leading to the incorporation of a set of eight vRNA segments into virions. Here we demonstrate that eight different vRNA segments must be present for efficient virion formation and that sequences within the coding region of (and thus unique to) the neuraminidase vRNA possess a signal that drives incorporation of this segment into virions. These findings indicate a unique contribution from individual vRNA segments and thus suggest a selective (rather than random) mechanism of vRNA recruitment into virions. The neuraminidase vRNA incorporation signal and others yet to be identified should provide attractive targets for the attenuation of influenza viruses in vaccine production and the design of new antiviral drugs.


PLOS Pathogens | 2010

Biological and structural characterization of a host-adapting amino acid in influenza virus.

S. Yamada; Masato Hatta; Bart L. Staker; Shinji Watanabe; Masaki Imai; Kyoko Shinya; Yuko Sakai-Tagawa; Mutsumi Ito; Makoto Ozawa; Tokiko Watanabe; Saori Sakabe; Chengjun Li; Jin Hyun Kim; Peter J. Myler; Isabelle Phan; Amy Raymond; Eric Smith; Robin Stacy; Chairul A. Nidom; Simon M. Lank; Roger W. Wiseman; Benjamin N. Bimber; David H. O'Connor; Gabriele Neumann; Lance J. Stewart; Yoshihiro Kawaoka

Two amino acids (lysine at position 627 or asparagine at position 701) in the polymerase subunit PB2 protein are considered critical for the adaptation of avian influenza A viruses to mammals. However, the recently emerged pandemic H1N1 viruses lack these amino acids. Here, we report that a basic amino acid at position 591 of PB2 can compensate for the lack of lysine at position 627 and confers efficient viral replication to pandemic H1N1 viruses in mammals. Moreover, a basic amino acid at position 591 of PB2 substantially increased the lethality of an avian H5N1 virus in mice. We also present the X-ray crystallographic structure of the C-terminus of a pandemic H1N1 virus PB2 protein. Arginine at position 591 fills the cleft found in H5N1 PB2 proteins in this area, resulting in differences in surface shape and charge for H1N1 PB2 proteins. These differences may affect the proteins interaction with viral and/or cellular factors, and hence its ability to support virus replication in mammals.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2010

Cellular networks involved in the influenza virus life cycle

Tokiko Watanabe; Shinji Watanabe; Yoshihiro Kawaoka

Influenza viruses cause epidemics and pandemics. Like all viruses, influenza viruses rely on the host cellular machinery to support their life cycle. Accordingly, identification of the host functions co-opted for viral replication is of interest to understand the mechanisms of the virus life cycle and to find new targets for the development of antiviral compounds. Among the various approaches used to explore host factor involvement in the influenza virus replication cycle, perhaps the most powerful is RNAi-based genome-wide screening, which has shed new light on the search for host factors involved in virus replication. In this review, we examine the cellular genes identified to date as important for influenza virus replication in genome-wide screens, assess pathways that were repeatedly identified in these studies, and discuss how these pathways might be involved in the individual steps of influenza virus replication, ultimately leading to a comprehensive understanding of the virus life cycle.


Journal of Virology | 2003

Exploitation of nucleic acid packaging signals to generate a novel influenza virus-based vector stably expressing two foreign genes.

Tokiko Watanabe; Shinji Watanabe; Takeshi Noda; Yutaka Fujii; Yoshihiro Kawaoka

ABSTRACT At the final step in viral replication, the viral genome must be incorporated into progeny virions, yet the genomic regions required for this process are largely unknown in RNA viruses, including influenza virus. Recently, it was reported that both ends of the neuraminidase (NA) coding region are critically important for incorporation of this vRNA segment into influenza virions (Y. Fujii, H. Goto, T. Watanabe, T. Yoshida, and Y. Kawaoka, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 100:2002-2007, 2003). To determine the signals in the hemagglutinin (HA) vRNA required for its virion incorporation, we made a series of deletion constructs of this segment. Subsequent analysis showed that 9 nucleotides at the 3′ end of the coding region and 80 nucleotides at the 5′ end are sufficient for efficient virion incorporation of the HA vRNA. The utility of this information for stable expression of foreign genes in influenza viruses was assessed by generating a virus whose HA and NA vRNA coding regions were replaced with those of vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein (VSVG) and green fluorescent protein (GFP), respectively, while retaining virion incorporation signals for these segments. Despite the lack of HA and NA proteins, the resultant virus, which possessed only VSVG on the virion surface, was viable and produced GFP-expressing plaques in cells even after repeated passages, demonstrating that two foreign genes can be incorporated and maintained stably in influenza A virus. These findings could serve as a model for the construction of influenza A viruses designed to express and/or deliver foreign genes.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Importance of both the Coding and the Segment-Specific Noncoding Regions of the Influenza A Virus NS Segment for Its Efficient Incorporation into Virions

Ken Fujii; Yutaka Fujii; Takeshi Noda; Yukiko Muramoto; Tokiko Watanabe; Ayato Takada; Hideo Goto; Taisuke Horimoto; Yoshihiro Kawaoka

ABSTRACT The genome of influenza A virus consists of eight single-strand negative-sense RNA segments, each comprised of a coding region and a noncoding region. The noncoding region of the NS segment is thought to provide the signal for packaging; however, we recently showed that the coding regions located at both ends of the hemagglutinin and neuraminidase segments were important for their incorporation into virions. In an effort to improve our understanding of the mechanism of influenza virus genome packaging, we sought to identify the regions of NS viral RNA (vRNA) that are required for its efficient incorporation into virions. Deletion analysis showed that the first 30 nucleotides of the 3′ coding region are critical for efficient NS vRNA incorporation and that deletion of the 3′ segment-specific noncoding region drastically reduces NS vRNA incorporation into virions. Furthermore, silent mutations in the first 30 nucleotides of the 3′ NS coding region reduced the incorporation efficiency of the NS segment and affected virus replication. These results suggested that segment-specific noncoding regions together with adjacent coding regions (especially at the 3′ end) form a structure that is required for efficient influenza A virus vRNA packaging.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Suppression of cytokine storm with a sphingosine analog provides protection against pathogenic influenza virus

Kevin B. Walsh; John R. Teijaro; Peter R. Wilker; Anna Jatzek; Daniel M. Fremgen; Subash C. Das; Tokiko Watanabe; Masato Hatta; Kyoko Shinya; M. Suresh; Yoshihiro Kawaoka; Hugh Rosen; Michael B. A. Oldstone

Human pandemic H1N1 2009 influenza virus rapidly infected millions worldwide and was associated with significant mortality. Antiviral drugs that inhibit influenza virus replication are the primary therapy used to diminish disease; however, there are two significant limitations to their effective use: (i) antiviral drugs exert selective pressure on the virus, resulting in the generation of more fit viral progeny that are resistant to treatment; and (ii) antiviral drugs do not directly inhibit immune-mediated pulmonary injury that is a significant component of disease. Here we show that dampening the hosts immune response against influenza virus using an immunomodulatory drug, AAL-R, provides significant protection from mortality (82%) over that of the neuraminidase inhibitor oseltamivir alone (50%). AAL-R combined with oseltamivir provided maximum protection against a lethal challenge of influenza virus (96%). Mechanistically, AAL-R inhibits cellular and cytokine/chemokine responses to limit immunopathologic damage, while maintaining host control of virus replication. With cytokine storm playing a role in the pathogenesis of a wide assortment of viral, bacterial, and immunologic diseases, a therapeutic approach using sphingosine analogs is of particular interest.

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Yoshihiro Kawaoka

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Shinji Watanabe

National Institutes of Health

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Gabriele Neumann

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Masato Hatta

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Masaki Imai

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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