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Dive into the research topics where Yoshiyuki Seto is active.

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Featured researches published by Yoshiyuki Seto.


Journal of Immunology | 2003

Subcellular Localization of Toll-Like Receptor 3 in Human Dendritic Cells

Misako Matsumoto; Kenji Funami; Masako Tanabe; Hiroyuki Oshiumi; Masashi Shingai; Yoshiyuki Seto; Akitsugu Yamamoto; Tsukasa Seya

Toll-like receptor (TLR)3 recognizes dsRNA and transduces signals to activate NF-κB and IFN-β promoter. Type I IFNs (IFN-α/β) function as key cytokines in anti-viral host defense. Human fibroblasts express TLR3 on the cell surface, and anti-TLR3 mAb inhibits dsRNA-induced IFN-β secretion by fibroblasts, suggesting that TLR3 acts on the cell surface to sense viral infection. In this study, we examined the expression and localization of human TLR3 in various DC subsets using anti-TLR3 mAb. In monocyte-derived immature dendritic cells (iDCs), TLR3 predominantly resided inside the cells but not on the cell surface. iDCs produced IL-12p70 and IFN-α and -β in response to poly(I:C). Similar response was observed in iDCs treated with rotavirus-derived dsRNA. These responses could not be blocked by pretreatment of the cells with anti-TLR3 mAb. In CD11c+ blood DCs, cytoplasmic retention of TLR3 was also observed as in monocyte-derived iDCs, again endorsing a different TLR3 distribution profile from fibroblasts. In precursor DC2, however, TLR3 could not be detected inside or outside the cells. Of note, there was a putative centrosomal protein that shared an epitope with TLR3 in myeloid DCs and precursor DC2, but not peripheral blood monocytes. Immunoelectron microscopic analysis revealed that TLR3, when stably expressed in the murine B cell line Ba/F3, was specifically accumulated in multivesicular bodies, a subcellular compartment situated in endocytic trafficking pathways. Thus, regulation and localization of TLR3 are different in each cell type, which may reflect participation of cell type-specific multiple pathways in antiviral IFN induction via TLR3.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2003

Prevalence of Norwalk-Like Virus Infections in Cases of Viral Gastroenteritis among Children in Osaka City, Japan

Nobuhiro Iritani; Yoshiyuki Seto; Hideyuki Kubo; Tsukasa Murakami; Kosuke Haruki; Minoru Ayata; Hisashi Ogura

ABSTRACT Surveillance of Norwalk-like virus (NLV) infections in cases of pediatric gastroenteritis between April 1996 and March 2000 showed that NLVs were an important causative agent in viral gastroenteritis cases among children between November and January in those years. The predominant type of NLV was closely related to Lordsdale virus in genogroup 2. During the 1999-2000 season, Arg320-like strains, which may be genetic recombinants, suddenly appeared and spread.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2001

Characterization of Capsid Genes, Expressed in the Baculovirus System, of Three New Genetically Distinct Strains of “Norwalk-Like Viruses”

Gaël Belliot; Jacqueline S. Noel; Jin-Fen Li; Yoshiyuki Seto; Charles D. Humphrey; Tamie Ando; Roger I. Glass; Stephan S. Monroe

ABSTRACT “Norwalk-like viruses” (NLVs), members of a newly defined genus of the family Caliciviridae, are the most common agents of outbreaks of gastroenteritis in the United States. Two features of NLVs have hindered the development of simple methods for detection and determination of serotype: their genetic diversity and their inability to grow in cell culture. To assess the immune responses of patients involved in outbreaks of gastroenteritis resulting from infection with NLVs, we previously used recombinant-expressed capsid antigens representing four different genetic clusters, but this panel proved insufficient for detection of an immune response in many patients. To extend and further refine this panel, we expressed in baculovirus the capsid genes of three additional genetically distinct viruses, Burwash Landing virus (BLV), White River virus (WRV), and Florida virus. All three expressed proteins assembled into virus-like particles (VLPs) that contained a full-length 64-kDa protein, but both the BLV and WRV VLPs also contained a 58-kDa protein that resulted from deletion of 39 amino acids at the amino terminus. The purified VLPs were used to measure the immune responses in 403 patients involved in 37 outbreaks of acute gastroenteritis. A majority of patients demonstrated a fourfold rise in the titer of immunoglobulin G to the antigen homologous to the outbreak strain, but most seroconverted in response to other genetically distinct antigens as well, suggesting no clear pattern of type-specific immune response. Further study of the antigenicity of the NLVs by use of VLPs should allow us to design new detection systems with either broader reactivity or better specificity and to define the optimum panel of antigens required for routine screening of patient sera.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2009

Genetic Characterization of Clostridium botulinum Associated with Type B Infant Botulism in Japan

Kaoru Umeda; Yoshiyuki Seto; Tomoko Kohda; Masafumi Mukamoto; Shunji Kozaki

ABSTRACT The 15 proteolytic Clostridium botulinum type B strains, including 3 isolates associated with infant botulism in Japan, were genetically characterized by phylogenetic analysis of boNT/B gene sequences, genotyping, and determination of the boNT/B gene location by using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) for molecular epidemiological analysis of infant botulism in Japan. Strain Osaka05, isolated from a case in 2005, showed a unique boNT/B gene sequence and was considered to be a new BoNT/B subtype by phylogenetic analysis. Strain Osaka06, isolated from a case in 2006, was classified as the B2 subtype, the same as strain 111, isolated from a case in 1995. The five isolates associated with infant botulism in the United States were classified into the B1 subtype. Isolates from food samples in Japan were divided into the B1 and the B2 subtypes, although no relation with infant botulism was shown by PFGE genotyping. The results of PFGE and Southern blot hybridization with undigested DNA suggested that the boNT/B gene is located on large plasmids (approximately 150 kbp, 260 kbp, 275 kbp, or 280 kbp) in five strains belonging to three BoNT/B subtypes from various sources. The botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT) of Osaka05 was suggested to have an antigenicity different from the antigenicities of BoNT/B1 and BoNT/B2 by a sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay with the recombinant BoNT/B-C-terminal domain. We established a multiplex PCR assay for BoNT/B subtyping which will be useful for epidemiological studies of type B strains and the infectious diseases that they cause.


Microbiology and Immunology | 2005

Genotyping of Norovirus strains detected in outbreaks between April 2002 and March 2003 in Osaka City, Japan.

Yoshiyuki Seto; Nobuhiro Iritani; Hideyuki Kubo; Atsushi Kaida; Tsukasa Murakami; Kosuke Haruki; Osamu Nishio; Minoru Ayata; Hisashi Ogura

Noroviruses (NVs) are the major cause of food‐ and waterborne nonbacterial gastroenteritis in Japan. Between April 2002 and March 2003, a total of 111 fecal specimens from 40 outbreaks of acute nonbacterial gastroenteritis in Osaka City, Japan were subject to NV detection. Seventy‐two samples (64.9%) from 31 outbreaks (77.5%) were NV positive by a real time reverse transcription (RT)‐PCR assay. To further determine the genotype of individual NV strains, we sequenced the capsid N‐terminal/shell (N/S) domain of some representative strains from each outbreak. The 51 NV strains detected in this study were segregated into 15 genotypes (6 in genogroup I and 9 in genogroup II), and GII/5 genotype NV was a dominant outbreak genotype.


Journal of Virology | 2008

Genetic Analysis of the Capsid Gene of Genotype GII.2 Noroviruses

Nobuhiro Iritani; Harry Vennema; J. Joukje Siebenga; Roland J. Siezen; Bernadet Renckens; Yoshiyuki Seto; Atsushi Kaida; Marion Koopmans

ABSTRACT Noroviruses (NoVs) are considered to be a major cause of acute nonbacterial gastroenteritis in humans. The NoV genus is genetically diverse, and genotype GII.4 has been most commonly identified worldwide in recent years. In this study we analyzed the complete capsid gene of NoV strains belonging to the less prevalent genotype GII.2. We compared a total of 36 complete capsid sequences of GII.2 sequences obtained from the GenBank (n = 5) and from outbreaks or sporadic cases that occurred in The Netherlands (n = 10) and in Osaka City, Japan (n = 21), between 1976 and 2005. Alignment of all capsid sequences did not show fixation of amino acid substitutions over time as an indication for genetic drift. In contrast, when strains previously recognized as recombinants were excluded from the alignment, genetic drift was observed. Substitutions were found at five informative sites (two in the P1 subdomain and three in the P2 subdomain), segregating strains into five genetic groups (1994 to 1997, 1999 to 2000, 2001 to 2003, 2004, and 2005). Only one amino acid position changed consistently between each group (position 345). Homology modeling of the GII.2 capsid protein showed that the five amino acids were located on the surface of the capsid and close to each other at the interface of two monomers. The data suggest that these changes were induced by selective pressure, driving virus evolution. Remarkably, this was observed only for nonrecombinant genomes, suggesting differences in behavior with recombinant strains.


Microbiology and Immunology | 1991

Serial Observations of Chronic Rotavirus Infection in an Immunodeficient Child

Isao Oishi; Teruo Kimura; Tsukasa Murakami; Kosuke Haruki; Kenji Yamazaki; Yoshiyuki Seto; Yoshiichi Minekawa; Hitokazu Funamoto

Chronic rotavirus infection of an infant with severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) was studied by virological examinations in association with long‐term observation of his symptoms and immune status. During eleven months of hospitalization, the patient was suffering from incurable severe diarrhea with persisting excretion of rotaviruses detected by electron microscopy and the reversed‐passive hemagglutination (R‐PHA) test and had transient hepatitis symptom despite multiple administrations of human gammaglobulin and high calorie fluids. The detected viruses were morphologically recognized as rotavirus with double capsid structure. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic (PAGE) analysis of their genomic RNAs showed the long electropherotype of group A virus with abnormal migration profiles changing considerably from the early to the late phase of illness: (1) The 11th segment became undetectable; (2) the molecular weight of the 6th segment slightly increased; (3) seven to fourteen extra segments appeared; and (4) PAGE patterns of viral genomic RNAs changed every three or four months. These findings suggest that chronic infection with rotavirus accompanied the generation of extra viral genomic segments and their unusual assortments in an immunodeficient host.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2002

Molecular Classification of Enteroviruses Not Identified by Neutralization Tests

Hideyuki Kubo; Nobuhiro Iritani; Yoshiyuki Seto

We isolated six viruses from patients diagnosed with aseptic meningitis or hand, foot, and mouth disease. The cytopathic effect of these viruses on cultured cells was like that of enteroviruses. However, viral neutralization tests against standard antisera were negative. Phylogenetic analysis with the complete VP4 nucleotide sequences of these 6 viruses and 29 serotypes of enteroviruses classified 3 of the viruses as serotype echovirus type 18 (EV18) and 3 as serotype human enterovirus 71 (HEV71). These results were confirmed by remicroneutralization tests with HEV-monospecific antisera or an additional phylogenetic analysis with the complete VP4 nucleotide sequences. Phylogenetic analysis with complete VP4 genes is more useful than neutralization tests with enterovirus serotype-specific antisera in identifying enterovirus serotypes.


Microbiology and Immunology | 1991

Pattern of shedding of small, round-structured virus particles in stools of patients of outbreaks of food-poisoning from raw oysters

Kosuke Haruki; Yoshiyuki Seto; Tsukasa Murakami; Teruo Kimura

The pattern of shedding of the small, round‐structured virus (SRSV) particles in the stools of patients who suffered from food‐poisoning due to raw oysters was investigated. The duration and concentration of fecal shedding of the SRSV particles were studied by electron microscopic examinations of stool specimens obtained during the course of illness to see a relation of viral shedding to day of illness. It was found that the fecal shedding of the SRSV particles occurred within five days of illness; thereafter, the concentration of the SRSV particles in feces rapidly decreased within a few days during the course of illness.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2008

Epidemic of Genotype GII.2 Noroviruses during Spring 2004 in Osaka City, Japan

Nobuhiro Iritani; Atsushi Kaida; Hideyuki Kubo; Niichiro Abe; Tsukasa Murakami; Harry Vennema; Marion Koopmans; Naokazu Takeda; Hisashi Ogura; Yoshiyuki Seto

ABSTRACT Between March and May 2004, a GII.2 genotype norovirus strain caused an epidemic of acute gastroenteritis in Osaka, Japan. Phylogenetic analysis showed that this strain was distinct from all other GII.2 strains detected in Osaka City between April 1996 and March 2005.

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Kosuke Haruki

Dokkyo Medical University

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Naokazu Takeda

National Institutes of Health

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Osamu Nishio

National Institutes of Health

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