Yukitaka Sugihara
Nagasaki University
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Featured researches published by Yukitaka Sugihara.
Parasitology International | 2010
Kazuo Ogawa; S. Tanaka; Yukitaka Sugihara; I. Takami
A new sanguinicolid blood fluke, Cardicola orientalis n. sp., is described from the afferent branchial artery and heart of Pacific bluefin tuna Thunnus orientalis (Temminck & Schlegel) cultured in Mie and Nagasaki Prefectures, Japan. The new species is most similar to C. ambrosioi Braicovich, Etchegoin, Timi et Sardella, 2006 from the Brazilian flathead, Percophis brasiliensis Quoy & Gaimard, but can be differentiated by the position of the female genital pore (in midline or slightly sinistral in C. orientalis vs. sinistral in C. ambrosioi) and much longer distance between male and female genital pore (101microm vs. 27microm). In wet mount preparations of infected fish, eggs were accumulated in great numbers in the gill lamellae and afferent filament arteries. Importance of this blood fluke infection of cultured Pacific bluefin tuna in Japan is discussed.
Parasitology International | 2014
Yukitaka Sugihara; Toshiyuki Yamada; Akio Tamaki; Ryohei Yamanishi; Kinya Kanai
We found aporocotylid larval stages (sporocysts and cercariae) from five individuals of terebellid polychaete Terebella sp., which were collected from seabed substrate and ropes and floats attached to tuna cages in a tuna farm on the coast of Tsushima Island, Nagasaki, Japan. Nucleotide sequences of the regions of internal transcribed spacer 2 ribosomal DNA and 28S ribosomal DNA from these larval stages were 100% identical to those of Cardicola opisthorchis registered in GenBank. C. opisthorchis is a pathogen causing blood fluke infection of Pacific bluefin tuna Thunnus orientalis, which is considered to have a significant impact on the Japanese Pacific bluefin tuna aquaculture industry. This is the first description of the intermediate host of C. opisthorchis. This indicates that the life cycle of C. opisthorchis is completed within tuna farms in this area.
Parasitology International | 2017
Kazuo Ogawa; Sho Shirakashi; Kazuki Tani; Sang Phil Shin; Katsuya Ishimaru; Yukitaka Sugihara; Hiro'omi Uchida
Farming of Pacific bluefin tuna (PBT), Thunnus orientalis, is a rapidly growing industry in Japan. Aporocotylid blood flukes of the genus Cardicola comprising C. orientalis, C. opisthorchis and C. forsteri are parasites of economic importance for PBT farming. Recently, terebellid polychaetes have been identified as the intermediate hosts for all these parasites. We collected infected polychaetes, Terebella sp., the intermediate host of C. opisthorchis, from ropes and floats attached to tuna cages in Tsushima, Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan. Also, Neoamphitrite vigintipes (formerly as Amphitrite sp. sensu Shirakashi et al., 2016), the intermediate host of C. forsteri, were collected from culture cages in Kushimoto, Wakayama Prefecture, Japan. The terebellid intermediate hosts harbored the sporocysts and cercariae in their body cavity. Developmental stages of these blood flukes were molecularly identified using species specific PCR primers. In this paper, we describe the cercaria and sporocyst stages of C. opisthorchis and C. forsteri and compare their morphological characteristics among three Cardicola blood flukes infecting PBT. We also discuss phylogenetic relations of the six genera of the terebellid intermediate hosts (Artacama, Lanassa, Longicarpus, Terebella, Nicolea and Neoamphitrite) of blood flukes infecting marine fishes, based on their morphological characters.
Parasitology International | 2017
Yukitaka Sugihara; Toshiyuki Yamada; Shunsuke Iwanaga; Kinya Kanai
Cardicola opisthorchis is a blood fluke pathogen significantly affecting cultured Pacific bluefin tuna Thunnus orientalis in Japan. It is known that the intermediate host of C. opisthorchis is a terebellid polychaete Terebella sp. In order to study the intrapolychaete larval development of C. opisthorchis, we transplanted sporocysts, which contained a large number of cercariae, of C. opisthorchis obtained from Terebella sp. into sporocyst-free Terebella sp., which had been maintained at 20°C. The transplanted sporocysts switched from cercarial to sporocystal production by 17days after transplantation (d.a.t.) and daughter sporocysts were released into the polychaete body cavity at 25d.a.t. Subsequently, the released daughter sporocysts produced daughter sporocysts again. Thereafter, daughter sporocysts that contained cercariae appeared at 38d.a.t. and gradually increased. At 51d.a.t., 136 sporocysts that had multiplied from the original two transplanted sporocysts were observed in the body of one polychaete, and cercariae were released from daughter sporocysts inside the polychaete body cavity. Subsequently the cercariae were found to be released outside the polychaete at 57d.a.t. This is the first successful case of in situ observation of the development of a blood fluke within the intermediate host.
Fish Pathology | 2005
Tetsuya Yanagida; Mark Andrew Freeman; Yoshinori Nomura; Ikuo Takami; Yukitaka Sugihara; Hiroshi Yokoyama; Kazuo Ogawa
Fish Pathology | 2014
Tanvir Rahman; Koushirou Suga; Kinya Kanai; Yukitaka Sugihara
Fish Pathology | 2015
Yukitaka Sugihara; Toshiyuki Yamada; Kazuo Ogawa; Fumihiko Yokoyama; Kazuki Matsukura; Kinya Kanai
Aquaculture | 2016
Yukitaka Sugihara; Toshiyuki Yamada; Toshio Ichimaru; Kazuki Matsukura; Kinya Kanai
Fish Pathology | 2015
Tanvir Rahman; Koushirou Suga; Kinya Kanai; Yukitaka Sugihara
Fish Pathology | 2013
Toshiyuki Yamada; Yukitaka Sugihara; Ikuo Takami; Koushirou Suga; Kinya Kanai