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Featured researches published by Yoshiaki Okada.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2013

World Health Organization International Standard to Harmonize Assays for Detection of Hepatitis E Virus RNA

Sally A. Baylis; Johannes Blümel; Saeko Mizusawa; Keiji Matsubayashi; H. Sakata; Yoshiaki Okada; C. Micha Nübling; Kay-Martin Hanschmann

Nucleic acid amplification technique–based assays are a primary method for the detection of acute hepatitis E virus (HEV) infection, but assay sensitivity can vary widely. To improve interlaboratory results for the detection and quantification of HEV RNA, a candidate World Health Organization (WHO) International Standard (IS) strain was evaluated in a collaborative study involving 23 laboratories from 10 countries. The IS, code number 6329/10, was formulated by using a genotype 3a HEV strain from a blood donation, diluted in pooled human plasma and lyophilized. A Japanese national standard, representing a genotype 3b HEV strain, was prepared and evaluated in parallel. The potencies of the standards were determined by qualitative and quantitative assays. Assay variability was substantially reduced when HEV RNA concentrations were expressed relative to the IS. Thus, WHO has established 6329/10 as the IS for HEV RNA, with a unitage of 250,000 International Units per milliliter.


Pathology International | 2007

Blockade of interferon-γ-inducible protein-10 attenuates chronic experimental colitis by blocking cellular trafficking and protecting intestinal epithelial cells

Kenji Suzuki; Yusuke Kawauchi; Suresh S. Palaniyandi; Punniyakoti T. Veeraveedu; Masato Fujii; Satoshi Yamagiwa; Hiroyuki Yoneyama; Gi Dong Han; Hiroshi Kawachi; Yoshiaki Okada; Yoichi Ajioka; Kenichi Watanabe; Masamichi Hosono; Hitoshi Asakura; Yutaka Aoyagi; Shosaku Narumi

The role of chemokines, especially CXCL10/interferon‐γ‐inducible protein 10 kDa (IP‐10), a chemokine to attract CXCR3+ T‐helper 1‐type CD4+ T cells, is largely unknown in the pathophysiology of inflammatory bowel disease; ulcerative colitis and Crohns disease. The authors have earlier shown that IP‐10 neutralization protected mice from acute colitis by protecting crypt epithelial cells of the colon. To investigate the therapeutic effect of neutralization of IP‐10 on chronic colitis, an anti‐IP‐10 antibody was injected into mice with newly established murine AIDS (MAIDS) colitis. Anti‐IP‐10 antibody treatment reduced the number of colon infiltrating cells when compared to those mice given a control antibody. The treatment made the length of the crypt of the colon greater than control antibody. The number of Ki67+ proliferating epithelial cells was increased by the anti‐IP‐10 antibody treatment. Terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase‐mediated dUTP nick‐end labeling (TUNEL)+ apoptotic cells were observed in the epithelial cells of the luminal tops of crypts in control MAIDS colitis, whereas TUNEL+ apoptotic epithelial cells were rarely observed with anti‐IP‐10 antibody treatment. In conclusion, blockade of IP‐10 attenuated MAIDS colitis through blocking cellular trafficking and protecting intestinal epithelial cells, suggesting that IP‐10 plays a key role in the development of inflammatory bowel disease as well as in chronic experimental colitis.


Clinical Immunology | 2003

Kinetic analysis of the development of pancreatic lesions in mice infected with a murine retrovirus

Shiro Watanabe; Kenji Suzuki; Yusuke Kawauchi; Satoshi Yamagiwa; Hiroyuki Yoneyama; Hiroshi Kawachi; Yoshiaki Okada; Fujio Shimizu; Hitoshi Asakura; Yutaka Aoyagi

Sjögrens syndrome (SjS)-like sialoadenitis and exocrine pancreatitis were induced in mice infected with LP-BM5 murine leukemia virus, which induces a severe immunodeficiency termed murine AIDS (MAIDS). All mice with MAIDS showed advancing cellular infiltration around the pancreatic ducts as well as systemic exocrinopathy. The primary target tissue of the pancreas was acinar cells, and the pancreatic islets were well preserved until a late phase of the disease. Immunofluorescence and flow cytometry demonstrated that CD4(+) T cells, Mac-1(+) cells, and B220(+) cells were major inflammatory components, and IFN-gamma and IL-10 were mainly detected on CD4(+) T and Mac-1(+) cells in the pancreas. Both Th1 and Th2 cells were found. TUNEL(+) apoptotic cells were mostly detected among pancreas-infiltrating cells. Fas ligand and TNF-alpha were also detected among pancreas-infiltrating cells, whereas Fas was rarely expressed in the pancreatic acinar cells. Thus, MAIDS mice could be valuable for analyzing the pathogenesis of autoimmune-related pancreatitis associated with SjS.


Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering | 2013

Aggregation analysis of pharmaceutical human immunoglobulin preparations using size-exclusion chromatography and analytical ultracentrifugation sedimentation velocity.

Elena Krayukhina; Susumu Uchiyama; Kiyoko Nojima; Yoshiaki Okada; Isao Hamaguchi; Kiichi Fukui

In the pharmaceutical industry, analysis of soluble aggregates in pharmaceutical formulations is most commonly performed using size-exclusion chromatography (SEC). However, owing to concerns that aggregates can be overlooked by SEC analysis, it has been suggested that its results should be confirmed with orthogonal methods. One of the main alternative methods for SEC is analytical ultracentrifugation sedimentation velocity (AUC-SV), which has been indicated as an important tool for the measurement of protein aggregation. The present study aimed to show that AUC-SV can be effectively applied for the characterization of marketed immunoglobulin pharmaceutical preparations to support the results obtained by SEC. In addition, the present research aimed to assess the appropriateness of two integration approaches for the quantitative analysis of the SEC results. Thus, the aggregates were measured in seven different preparations of human immunoglobulins by AUC-SV and SEC, and the acquired chromatographic data were processed by using either the vertical drop method or the Gaussian skim approach, implemented in the Empower II chromatography data software (Waters, Tokyo, Japan). The results of aggregation measurements performed using AUC-SV were in good agreement with those obtained using SEC. As expected, the Gaussian skim integration approach inherently provided lower estimates of aggregation content than the results of the vertical drop method. The finding of this study confirmed the complementary nature of AUC-SV to SEC for aggregate composition analysis and underscored the important role that the different integration methods can play in the quantitative interpretation of chromatographic results.


Transfusion and Apheresis Science | 2013

Online reporting system for transfusion-related adverse events to enhance recipient haemovigilance in Japan: A pilot study

Chikako Odaka; Hidefumi Kato; Hiroko Otsubo; Shigeru Takamoto; Yoshiaki Okada; Maiko Taneichi; Kazu Okuma; Kimitaka Sagawa; Yasutaka Hoshi; Tetsunori Tasaki; Yasuhiko Fujii; Yuji Yonemura; Noriaki Iwao; Asashi Tanaka; Hitoshi Okazaki; Shun Ya Momose; Junichi Kitazawa; Hiroshi Mori; Akio Matsushita; Hisako Nomura; Hitoshi Yasoshima; Yasushi Ohkusa; Kazunari Yamaguchi; Isao Hamaguchi

BACKGROUND A surveillance system for transfusion-related adverse reactions and infectious diseases in Japan was started at a national level in 1993, but current reporting of events in recipients is performed on a voluntary basis. A reporting system which can collect information on all transfusion-related events in recipients is required in Japan. METHODS We have developed an online reporting system for transfusion-related events and performed a pilot study in 12 hospitals from 2007 to 2010. RESULTS The overall incidence of adverse events per transfusion bag was 1.47%. Platelet concentrates gave rise to statistically more adverse events (4.16%) than red blood cells (0.66%) and fresh-frozen plasma (0.93%). In addition, we found that the incidence of adverse events varied between hospitals according to their size and patient characteristics. CONCLUSION This online reporting system is useful for collection and analysis of actual adverse events in recipients of blood transfusions and may contribute to enhancement of the existing surveillance system for recipients in Japan.


Microbiology and Immunology | 1997

MHC Class I Presentation of an Exogenous Polypeptide Antigen Encoded by the Murine AIDS Defective Virus

Sung-Tae Yee; Yoshiaki Okada; Kazumasa Ogasawara; Satoshi Omura; Akira Takatsuki; Terutaka Kakiuchi; Daisaku Muno; Eiki Kominami; Toshiaki Mizuochi

Peptides derived from endogenous proteins are presented by MHC class I molecules, whereas those derived from exogenous proteins are presented by MHC class II molecules. This strict segregation has been reconsidered in recent reports in which exogenous antigens are shown to be presented by MHC class I molecules in the phagocytic pathway. In this report, the presentation pathway of an exogenously added highly antigenic polypeptide encoded by the murine AIDS (MAIDS) defective virus gag p12 gene is investigated. A 25‐mer polypeptide (P12–25) encoded within the gag p12 region of the MAIDS defective virus was found to be effective in stimulating unprimed B6 (H‐2b) CD8+ T cells in vitro. The presentation of P12–25 is sensitive to cytochalasin B and D, brefeldin A and gelonin, a ribosome‐inactivating protein synthesis inhibitor, but less sensitive or resistant to lactacystin, a highly specific inhibitor of the proteasome. Interestingly, CA‐074, a selective inhibitor of cathepsin B, inhibited presentation of the polypeptide, indicating its involvement in the degradation of the P12–25 polypeptide. In fact, when P12–25 was digested with purified cathepsin B in vitro, a highly antigenic 11‐mer peptide containing the class I (H‐2Db)‐binding motif was obtained. Our results favor the phagosome/macropinosome‐to‐cytosol‐to‐endoplasmic reticulum (ER)‐to‐cell surface pathway for exogenous antigens presented by MHC class I molecules. These findings may be relevant to exploiting peptide vaccines that specifically elicit CD8+ T cell immunity in vivo.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2015

Standardization of Quantitative PCR for Human T-cell Leukemia Virus Type 1 in Japan: A Collaborative Study

Madoka Kuramitsu; Kazu Okuma; Tadanori Yamochi; Tomoo Sato; Daisuke Sasaki; Hiroo Hasegawa; Kazumi Umeki; Ryuji Kubota; Rieko Sobata; Chieko Matsumoto; Noriaki Kaneko; Isao Naruse; Makoto Yamagishi; Makoto Nakashima; Haruka Momose; Kumiko Araki; Takuo Mizukami; Saeko Mizusawa; Yoshiaki Okada; Masaki Ochiai; Atae Utsunomiya; Ki-Ryang Koh; Masao Ogata; Kisato Nosaka; Kaoru Uchimaru; Masako Iwanaga; Yasuko Sagara; Yoshihisa Yamano; Masahiro Satake; Akihiko Okayama

ABSTRACT Quantitative PCR (qPCR) analysis of human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1) was used to assess the amount of HTLV-1 provirus DNA integrated into the genomic DNA of host blood cells. Accumulating evidence indicates that a high proviral load is one of the risk factors for the development of adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma and HTLV-1-associated myelopathy/tropical spastic paraparesis. However, interlaboratory variability in qPCR results makes it difficult to assess the differences in reported proviral loads between laboratories. To remedy this situation, we attempted to minimize discrepancies between laboratories through standardization of HTLV-1 qPCR in a collaborative study. TL-Om1 cells that harbor the HTLV-1 provirus were serially diluted with peripheral blood mononuclear cells to prepare a candidate standard. By statistically evaluating the proviral loads of the standard and those determined using in-house qPCR methods at each laboratory, we determined the relative ratios of the measured values in the laboratories to the theoretical values of the TL-Om1 standard. The relative ratios of the laboratories ranged from 0.84 to 4.45. Next, we corrected the proviral loads of the clinical samples from HTLV-1 carriers using the relative ratio. As expected, the overall differences between the laboratories were reduced by half, from 7.4-fold to 3.8-fold on average, after applying the correction. HTLV-1 qPCR can be standardized using TL-Om1 cells as a standard and by determining the relative ratio of the measured to the theoretical standard values in each laboratory.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2012

Toll-like receptor (TLR) 3 as a surrogate sensor of retroviral infection in human cells.

Kosuke Miyauchi; Emiko Urano; Satoshi Takeda; Tsutomu Murakami; Yoshiaki Okada; Kui Cheng; Hang Yin; Masato Kubo; Jun Komano

The toll-like receptor (TLR)-7 has been shown to sense the retroviral infection. However, a surrogate sensor has been implicated. We examined whether retrovirus serves as a TLR3 ligand in human cells by utilizing cell lines LNCaP and PC-3 lacking TLR7, and the xenotropic murine leukemia virus-relamoted virus (XMRV) insensitive to human tripartite motif-containing (TRIM) 5, a newly characterized pattern recognition receptor (PRR). A dominant-negative TLR3 or a chemical inhibitor of TLR3 attenuated the XMRV-induced IP-10/CXCL10 expression, a marker of TLR3 response. These data clearly indicated that retroviral infection exemplified by XMRV activates the TLR3 signal in human cells.


Immunology Letters | 1997

A polypeptide encoded within the murine AIDS defective virus stimulates primary proliferation of CD8+ T-cells

Sung-Tae Yee; Eri Abe; Yoshiaki Okada; Yoshiharu Matsuura; Yutaka Takebe; Kazumasa Ogasawara; Hidemi Takahashi; Toshiaki Mizuochi

The murine AIDS (MAIDS) is a retrovirus-induced disease that shows severe immunodeficiency with abnormal lymphoproliferation in susceptible strains of mice. To clarify the antigenicity of gag gene products of the LP-BM5 defective virus, which is known as the causative virus of MAIDS, we expressed and purified the gag p12 gene product (P12) by using a baculovirus expression vector system. The P12 protein strongly stimulated the proliferation of normal C57BL/6 (B6) lymph node T-cells in vitro. Furthermore, a 25-mer synthetic polypeptide within the P12 sequence gave rise to the similar or even higher activation of T-cells. The phenotype of responding T-cells was found to be CD8+ CD44low, indicating that naive CD8+ T-cells respond against a peptide encoded within a MAIDS defective virus gag p12 gene. Finally, the expression of T-cell receptor (TcR) V beta on the responding CD8+ T-cells was analyzed. Although CD8+ T-cells with the particular V beta chains were expanded in response to the 25-mer peptide, this polypeptide does not seem to be a superantigen, since this response is MHC class I-restricted and the V beta preference is not striking. The presentation pathway of this highly antigenic polypeptide will be discussed.


International Archives of Allergy and Immunology | 2000

Anti-tetanus toxoid antibody production and protection against lethal doses of tetanus toxin in hu-PBL-SCID mice.

Seishiro Naito; Yoshiaki Okada; Motohide Takahashi; Hiroshi Kato; Maiko Taneichi; Yasushi Ami; Yuriko Suzaki; Tetsuya Oka; Kunio Okuma; Kazunori Morokuma; Hideki Onodera; Masayoshi Inoue; Yoshiharu Takahashi; Setuko Yamazaki; Hitoshi Kimura; Katsutoshi Komuro; Tetsuya Uchida

Background: In this study, severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) mice, which permit the survival of lymphoid cells of human origin, were used to study the human anti-tetanus immune response. Methods: Human peripheral blood lymphocytes (hu-PBL) obtained from 88 healthy donors (aged from 18 to 62) were transplanted into SCID mice, and anti-tetanus toxoid (Ttd) antibody production and protection against lethal doses of tetanus toxin (Ttx) were investigated in the hu-PBL-SCID mice. Results: The transfer of human PBL evoked significant human anti-Ttd IgG antibody production for 37.5% of the donors. After in vivo immunization, the percentage of donors with PBL exhibiting positive anti-TtD IgG production in the mice increased to 54.5%. Mean anti-Ttd IgG levels in the sera were also significantly elevated in response to immunization. The mean IgG titer for the mice injected with PBL from donors under the age of 40 was significantly higher than that of the mice injected with PBL from donors aged 40 or older. Four weeks after the cell transfer, the mice were challenged with Ttx. The induction of protection against Ttx challenge was observed mostly in mice with PBL transferred from donors under the age of 40. In vivo immunization in SCID mice with Ttd increased the number of cases of resistance to Ttx. Conclusions: These results suggest that hu-PBL-SCID mice might serve as a tool for predicting the protective ability against pathogens in PBL donors and also for evaluating vaccine efficacy.

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Toshiaki Mizuochi

National Institutes of Health

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Kazunari Yamaguchi

National Institutes of Health

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Saeko Mizusawa

National Institutes of Health

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Isao Hamaguchi

National Institutes of Health

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Kazu Okuma

National Institutes of Health

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Maiko Taneichi

National Institutes of Health

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Chikako Odaka

National Institutes of Health

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