Yuichi Ishihara
Gifu University
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Microbiology and Immunology | 1995
Teruo Yamashita; Kenji Sakae; Shinichi Kobayashi; Yuichi Ishihara; Takashi Miyake; Agboatwalla Mubina; Shin Isomura
Aichi virus was isolated in Vero cells from 5 (2.3%) of 222 Pakistani children with gastroenteritis but none was found in 91 healthy children. Aichi virus was also isolated from 5 (0.7%) of 722 Japanese travelers returned from tours to Southeast Asian countries and complained of gastrointestinal symptoms at the quarantine station of Nagoya International Airport in Japan. Of 5 Japanese travelers, 3 were returning from Indonesia, and 2 from Thailand or Malaysia. These results indicate that Aichi virus or a similar agent is endemic in Southeast Asian countries and is a cause of gastrointestinal symptoms in children in these areas or in Japanese travelers who visit there.
Journal of Biological Standardization | 1984
Osamu Nishio; Yuichi Ishihara; Kenzi Sakae; Yukio Nonomura; Arifumi Kuno; Shirou Yasukawa; Hiromasa Inoue; Kikuko Miyamura; Reisaku Kono
The persistence of neutralizing antibody (NA) against three types of poliovirus acquired after two doses of trivalent live attenuated poliovirus vaccine (LPV) has been followed up for ten years in individual vaccinees. Sixty-seven children were bled once a year over a five year period following the primary vaccination. More than 80% of them retained NA against all three types of poliovirus. Thirty-two individuals whose NA titres were 1:16 or over for types 1 and 2 and 1:4 or over for type 3 at the fifth year were further followed up for a further five years and it was shown that during this period some of them had a naturally-acquired antibody rise, mostly against type 3 virus. At the sixth to eighth year after the primary vaccination, one further dose of the trivalent vaccine was administered to the children whose NA titres were down to 1:8 or less and the effect of booster vaccination on NA was followed. Other subjects were revaccinated with LPV and their fecal excretion of the vaccine virus was investigated. The results showed that a decrease in serum antibody level could be a good indicator of the local resistance of the alimentary tract and that reinfection could occur if serum NA had decreased to 1:8 or less, which allowed a virus excretion in the stools.
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part C: Pharmacology, Toxicology and Endocrinology | 1995
Yukio Naito; Makoto Sasaki; Toshihiko Umemoto; Isamu Namikawa; Kenji Sakae; Yuichi Ishihara; Shin Isomura; Ikukatsu Suzuki
We tested antibacterial and antiviral activities of rat cystatin S, a cysteine proteinase inhibitor, belonging to the family 2 cystatins against 18 different bacterial species and poliovirus type 1 (Sabin). Rat cystatin S specifically inhibited the growth of a human oral anaerobic bacterium Porphyromonas gingivalis due to a bactericidal effect.
Microbiology and Immunology | 1993
Takayuki Morishita; Shinichi Kobayashi; Takashi Miyake; Yuichi Ishihara; Setsuko Nakajima; Katsuhisa Nakajima
H1N1 strains of influenza A virus isolated during the influenza season of 1991–92 were divided into two groups according to the property of host‐specific hemagglutination. Group 1 viruses agglutinated human and chicken red blood cells. Group 2 viruses agglutinated human but not chicken red blood cells. The viruses of both groups, however, showed the same antigenic structure determined with ferret antisera. The virus clones which were plaque‐purified twice from a group 2 virus retained the characteristic of host‐specific hemagglutination after five successive passages in MDCK cells, indicating that this phenomenon is genetically determined. However, the amino acid, sequences of the hemagglutinin (HA) polypeptides deduced from the nucleotide sequences of the HA gene of the two groups did not show any differences between them. This suggests a difference in amino acids in some other polypeptide(s), which affects the host‐specific hemagglutination.
Microbiology and Immunology | 1990
Osamu Nishio; Junko Sumi; Kenji Sakae; Yuichi Ishihara; Sin Isomura; Sakae Inouye
We investigated fecal IgA antibody responses after oral polyvalent poliovirus vaccination. Infants were given vaccines twice with an interval of 6 weeks. Specific IgA antibodies in the feces were determined by enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay, and viruses were isolated in tissue cultures. We found that, after the first vaccination, antibody responses seemed to be elicited only against the serotypes of isolated viruses. After the second vaccination, however, antibodies were detected to all three serotypes with higher titers, suggesting that the first vaccination induced the immunologic memory. The IgA antibodies had virus‐neutralizing activity, and existed in the feces as both intact 11S and fragmented 4S molecules. Next, children were given the third vaccination 3 or 9 years later. Fecal IgA antibody responses were found to be poorer in elder children, while they responded with high serum neutralization titers. The secretory IgA memory seemed to last much shorter than the serum IgG memory.
Microbiology and Immunology | 1990
Osamu Nishio; Mituaki Ooseto; Kenzi Takagi; Yasutaka Yamasita; Yuichi Ishihara; Shin Isomura
For detection and identification of enteric adenovirus (Ad) types 40 and 41 in stool specimens, enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was developed with the use of three monoclonal antibodies: Ad group‐specific, Ad40 type‐specific, and Ad41 type‐specific antibodies. Of 860 fecal samples from patients with acute gastroenteritis, 44 strains of Ad were isolated using Graham 293 cell cultures. Of these isolates, 20 were typed as Ad40, 18 were Ad41, and 6 were other Ads by neutralization tests with cell cultures. Results of the ELISA tests on these 860 fecal samples resulted in good agreement to those with the cell culture method. The ELISA tests using Ad type‐specific monoclonal antibodies proved to be a specific and rapid technique for laboratory diagnosis of acute gastroenteritis caused by enteric Ads.
Microbiology and Immunology | 1992
Osamu Nishio; Kenji Sakae; Yuichi Ishihara; Shin Isomura; Sakae Inouye
We investigated adenovirus (Ad) infection of the intestine and Ad group‐specific fecal IgA antibody responses in seven infants who were followed up from birth to 16 months to seven years of age. We isolated in tissue culture from fecal samples not only enteric Ad type 41 but also other Ads (types 2, 3, 5, 6, and 12). We also detected Ad antigens in the feces by ELISA at the times of infection with even non‐enteric Ads, suggesting that a large amount of antigens were produced in the intestine. We found that repeated Ad infections with different serotypes were occurring and there were good fecal IgA antibody responses at each time. The infection seemed usually mild or asymptomatic: only one out of 23 occasions of the detected infections required hospitalization.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1991
Teruo Yamashita; Shinichi Kobayashi; Kcnji Sakac; Shuji Nakata; Shunzo Chiba; Yuichi Ishihara; Shin Isomura
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1991
Shinichi Kobayashi; Takayuki Morishita; Takashi Miyake; Hideto Fukushi; Katsuya Hirai; Yuichi Ishihara; Shin Isomura
The Journal of the Japanese Association for Infectious Diseases | 1985
Kenji Sakae; Yuichi Ishihara; Takayuki Morishita; Osamu Nishio; Junko Sumi; Hiromasa Inoue