MICROBIOLOGY and IMMUNOLOGY
Online ISSN : 1348-0421
Print ISSN : 0385-5600
ISSN-L : 0385-5600
Volume 42, Issue 7
Displaying 1-7 of 7 articles from this issue
  • Takashi Sugita, Akemi Nishikawa, Reiko Ikeda, Takako Shinoda, Hiroyuki ...
    1998 Volume 42 Issue 7 Pages 475-478
    Published: 1998
    Released on J-STAGE: March 17, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Trichosporon species have been known to cause summer-type hypersensitivity pneumonitis (SHP). During the isolation of yeasts from an SHP patient's house, we recovered a strain belonging to the genus Trichosporon. Morphologically, the isolate produced rectangular arthroconidia when grown on corn meal agar. DNA-DNA hybridization experiments identified the isolate as T. ovoides. A slide agglutination test using specific factor sera demonstrated that the serotype of the strain was type II. Previously, T. asahii, a serotype II species, was considered to be the major antigen of SHP, but it is possible that T. ovoides may also be responsible for SHP. This is the first report of T. ovoides isolated from an SHP patient's home environment.
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  • Hirohide Uenishi, Norimasa Iwanami, Hideo Yamagishi, Takako Nakatani, ...
    1998 Volume 42 Issue 7 Pages 479-484
    Published: 1998
    Released on J-STAGE: March 17, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    We previously reported a helper T-cell (Th) epitope (peptide i) which corresponded to the sequence ranging from positions 462 to 479 from the N-terminus of the Friend-murine leukemia virus (F-MuLV) envelope protein (env462-479). Homologous sequences exist in both Moloney-murine leukemia (M-MuLV env452-469) and endogenous AKV (AKV env453-470) viruses, which differ from F-MuLV env462-479 in 5 and 7 amino acids, respectively. However, peptide i-specific Th clones did not respond to either of the corresponding exogenous or endogenous peptides. One amino acid substitution in M-MuLV env452-469 (Asn to Tyr at position 465:N465Y) and three amino acids in AKV env453-470 (H460S, A466Y and Y468H) endowed both peptides with the reactivity to one of the Th clones, F5-5, almost to the same degree as peptide i. However, the other Th clones responded differently to each of the modified endogenous peptides substituted by one to three amino acids. The cells responsive to the cross-reactive peptides occupied only a minor portion, if any, of the bulk cultured lymph node cells from peptide i-immune mice, and in particular, no significant response to the modified endogenous peptides was observed in repeated experiments. The exchange of at least 3 residues was necessary for the endogenous peptide to acquire sufficient cross-reactivity to two of the three Th clones. However, it was noticeable that a single substitution of alanine by tyrosine at the dominant T-cell receptor (TCR) contact position of the peptide ie generated a weak but significant cross-reactivity to one of the three Th clones in this study. Thus, peptides of endogenous retroviral origin that would be modified by mutational events might become ‘non-self’ and prime Th cells leading to auto-antibody production and resulting in autoimmune disease.
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  • 1. cDNA Cloning of the Catalytic Subunit (L Protein) of Avirulent HEP-Flury Strain and Its Expression in Animal Cells
    Kinjiro Morimoto, Takayuki Akamine, Fumihiko Takamatsu, Akihiko Kawai
    1998 Volume 42 Issue 7 Pages 485-496
    Published: 1998
    Released on J-STAGE: March 17, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    To investigate the RNA polymerase of rabies virus, we cloned a cDNA of the catalytic subunit (called L protein because of its large molecular size) of the HEP-Flury strain, an avirulent strain obtained by high frequencies of serial embryonated hen egg passages. Nucleotide sequencing showed that the cDNA encodes a long polypeptide of 2, 127 amino acids (Mr. 242, 938). A comparison of the deduced amino acid sequence with that of other strains (PV and SAD B19) indicated that the sequence was highly conserved, except for several amino acid substitutions which were accumulated in some limited regions. A fragment of the cDNA was used for expression in Escherichia coli (E. coli) to prepare the L antigen for raising the antibodies in rabbits. Immunoprecipitation studies with the rabbit antiserum showed that the polypeptides produced in the L cDNA-transfected COS-7 cells displayed almost the same electrophoretic mobility as that of authentic L protein. Immunofluorescence studies indicated that both L and P (another subunit of RNA polymerase) proteins displayed colocalized distribution with the nucleocapsid antigen (N) in the cytoplasmic inclusion bodies, where envelope proteins (G and M) were absent. On the other hand, expression of the L protein alone did not cause inclusion body-like granular distribution, suggesting that the inclusion body-like accumulation depends on certain interaction(s) with other viral gene products, probably with the ribonucleoproteins comprising the inclusion bodies.
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  • Kyoko Totake, Nobuharu Kobayashi, Takeshi Odaka
    1998 Volume 42 Issue 7 Pages 497-501
    Published: 1998
    Released on J-STAGE: March 17, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Genes encoding trimethoprim (TMP)-resistant and -susceptible dihydrofolate reductases (DHFR) in Staphylococcus epidermidis isolated in Saitama Prefecture were compared with the TMP-resistant DHFR gene of S. aureus, dfrA. The nucleotide sequences of TMPr and TMPs genes in five S. epidermidis isolates tested could be divided into three types: type 1, identical with the TMPr gene dfrA that had been found in S. aureus; type 3, identical with the TMPs gene dfrC in S. epidermidis; and type 2, having only two nucleotide substitutions to dfrC with no amino acid change. TMPr isolates carried either one of the type 2 or type 3 sequences in addition to the type 1 sequence. A Southern hybridization analysis revealed that, in TMPr S. epidermidis, the type 1 sequence was located on a 5.5kb EcoRI-EcoRV restriction fragment together with the sequence for the gentamicin (GM)-resistant gene, while the type 2 or type 3 sequence was located on the 1.0kb EcoRI-EcoRV fragment. No plasmid-carrying dfrA-homologous sequence was detected in the S. epidermidis isolates we tested. These results suggest that the TMPr and GMr genes are closely linked and located on the chromosome in S. epidermidis isolated in Japan.
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  • Beth M. Tyler, Michael F. Cole
    1998 Volume 42 Issue 7 Pages 503-508
    Published: 1998
    Released on J-STAGE: March 17, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Secretory IgA (SIgA) is the principal immunoglobulin isotype present in the mucosal secretions of humans. SIgA is thought to play a major role in host defense at these surfaces by inhibiting the colonization of potentially pathogenic microorganisms. A number of bacteria that are mucosal pathogens of humans produce a protease that specifically cleaves the IgA1 subclass of humans and great apes at the hinge region to produce Fab and Fc fragments. In order to study the effect of IgA1 protease on the ability of SIgA1 antibodies to inhibit bacterial adherence, an in vitro assay that quantifies the adsorption of radiolabeled Streptococcus mutans to hydroxyapatite (HA) beads was employed. High titer S. mutans-specific SIgA1 and SIgA2 antibodies were induced in chimpanzee milk for use in the assay. Fabα1 fragments had significantly reduced ability to inhibit adherence of S. mutans to saliva-coated HA compared to intact SIgA1 or SIgA2 anti-S. mutans antibodies. These data support the potential importance of IgA1 proteases as an ecological determinant in the oral cavity and their role as a determinant of pathogenesis of pathogenic bacteria whose portal of entry is the mucosal surface.
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  • Ken-ichi Amano, Shin-ichi Yokota, Tomonori Ishioka, Shunji Hayashi, To ...
    1998 Volume 42 Issue 7 Pages 509-514
    Published: 1998
    Released on J-STAGE: March 17, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    We have evaluated the use of proteinase K (PK)-treated cells isolated from Helicobacter pylori as lipopolysaccharide (LPS) antigens in an immunoblot assay and an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the serodiagnosis of H. pylori infection. The sera from patients with chronic gastritis, gastric ulcer, duodenal ulcer or gastric cancer, and from healthy adults with or without H. pylori infection were assayed with three commercial serodiagnostic kits (HM-CAP, Helico-G, and G.A.P. II) and novel methods relying on the use of PK-treated cells. The PK-treated cells used in these assays were selected on the basis of their possibility to possess a common epitope in the O-polysaccharides of H. pylori, which is known to be highly immunogenic in humans. Of the sera from these patients, 71-94% were positive with the commercial kits, 97% with immunoblot assay, and 90% with ELISA. On the other hand, of the healthy adults infected with H. pylori, 72-97% were positive with the commercial kits, 86% with immunoblot assay, and 72% with ELISA. PK-treated cells that did not contain the common epitope were unsuitable as an antigen for immunoblot assay or ELISA. Furthermore, the reactivity of these sera reacted specifically with H. pylori PK-treated cells but not with LPSs from other gram-negative bacteria, such as Campylobacter, Proteus, Bordetella, and Salmonella. These results demonstrate that the serological assays relying on the use of H. pylori PK-treated cells possessing a highly antigenic epitope are potentially useful as a serodiagnostic test for H. pylori infection.
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  • Hidemasa Izumiya, Takashi Masuda, Rafiq Ahmed, Rasik Khakhria, Akihito ...
    1998 Volume 42 Issue 7 Pages 515-519
    Published: 1998
    Released on J-STAGE: March 17, 2008
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    A total of 236 enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) O157:H7 isolates in Japan were investigated by bacteriophage typing, and the results were compared with those of pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). Seven phage types (PTs) were observed in 71 isolates which were derived from 22 outbreaks. All of the isolates from ten outbreaks in the Kinki region (midwestern part of Japan) in July-August 1996 were grouped into the same PFGE type (IIa) and PT 32, while among total isolates, there were such varieties as PFGE type IIa containing five phage types and PT32 containing two PFGE types. These results suggest that the ten outbreaks should be considered to be a single outbreak, and show that the combined use of bacteriophage typing and PFGE enhances reliability in epidemiological surveys.
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