Publications by authors named "Ito-Kuwa S"

Certain species of Candida are known as opportunistic fungal pathogens and Candida albicans has especially been isolated oral candidiasis patients at high frequency as a result of its strong pathogenicity. Recently C. dubliniensis is isolated mainly from immunocompromised patients, but is also detected from healthy persons.

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The pathogenic yeast C. neoformans is classified into three varieties with five serotypes; var. grubii (serotype A), var.

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Sixty-six oral strains of Candida albicans, which had been consecutively isolated from 22 normal, young females in three isolation trials at intervals of one to three weeks, were biotyped by their susceptibility to boric acid, cetrimide, silver nitrate, sodium periodate and sodium selenite. The 66 isolates were grouped into 13 resistogram types. An identical biotype strain was found three times and twice in seven and six each of the 22 subjects in the three isolation trials, respectively.

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The pathogenic yeast Cryptococcus neoformans is traditionally classified into three varieties with five serotypes: var. grubii (serotype A), var. neoformans (serotype D), var.

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Three hundred and ten Cryptococcus neoformans strains isolated from AIDS patients in five different countries (151 from Brazil, 23 from Italy, 28 from Spain, 104 from Thailand and four from Turkey) were tested by the API-ZYM kit to detect their extracellular enzymatic activity. The enzymes esterase (C4) (no 3), esterase lipase (C8) (no 4), leucine arylamidase (no 6) and acid phosphatase (no 11) were commonly positive in most of the strains (more than 95%). These enzymes could be considered a useful tool not only for C.

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In Cryptococcus neoformans the DNA content of cells having tiny buds varied rather widely, depending on growth phases and strains used. Typically, buds of C. neoformans emerged soon after initiation of DNA synthesis in the early exponential phase.

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Respiration-deficient (petite) mutation is caused by hereditary impairment in mitochondrial functions. Yeasts have been grouped into "petite-positive" and "petite-negative" yeasts. Candida albicans has been regarded as a member of the petite-negative yeasts in which the respiration deficiency cannot be easily induced.

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Cryptococcus neoformans is a fungus causing life-threatening infections in immunocompromised hosts. Melanin production is a major virulence factor of this fungus and the initial steps of dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA)-melanin biosynthesis pathways are catalyzed by laccase. To understand phylogenetic relationships among serotypes of three varieties, partial sequences (about 600 bases) of the laccase gene (CNLAC1) were determined in a total of 64 strains, including 10 melanin-deficient variants.

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Nineteen Cryptococcus neoformans strains isolated from AIDS patients and 16 from bird droppings were tested for their extracellular activity. Typical enzymatic activity that was different from other medically important yeasts was found. The results obtained may indicate that there are new extracellular enzymatic activities that imply a relationship between C.

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The high toxicity of reactive oxygen species (ROS) suggested a possible role in the pathogenicity of human pathogenic fungi. We previously reported a chemiluminescence method for measuring ROS generation in Candida albicans. In the present study, we attempted to visualize the ROS, superoxide anion radical (O2-), generated by paraquat (PQ)-stimulated C.

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Twenty-six Candida dubliniensis and 27 Candida albicans oral strains isolated from patients infected by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) were tested for germ tube production and 21 extracellular enzymatic activities. Assessment of the enzymatic profile was performed by using the API-ZYM commercial kit system (bioMerieux, France), which tests 19 different enzymes. Protease activity was expressed during the first days of incubation by 100% of the strains studied and resulted higher than phospholipase activity in the C.

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Twenty-seven Candida albicans strains and 26 Candida dubliniensis strains, isolated from HIV patients, were tested for their adherence to buccal and vaginal epithelial cells. Both species showed important levels of adhesion to buccal and vaginal epithelial cells, although C. albicans showed the highest levels of adhesion.

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We previously reported that a respiration-competent parent strain (K) of Candida albicans was more susceptible to the intracellular superoxide radical (O2-) generator paraquat (PQ) than was a respiration-deficient mutant (KRD-19), although both showed a similar sensitivity to extracellularly generated O2-. To clarify the cause of the differential PQ lethality, we developed a chemiluminescence method for measuring O2- generated by C. albicans cells by using the probe methyl-Cypridina-luciferin analogue (MCLA), and examined the effects of PQ on O2- generation in both parent and mutant strains.

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We examined the ploidy of C. neoformans strains using both laser scanning cytometry and a fluorescence microscope equipped with a photomultiplier. Haploid strains consisted of normal-sized cells with a haploid DNA amount.

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It is important to know responses of the pathogenic fungi to reactive oxygen species by which hosts protect themselves against fungal infection. In the present study, sensitivities to the superoxide radical (O2-) and superoxide dismutase (SOD) were compared between a wild-type parent strain and a respiration-deficient mutant of Candida albicans. When their survival was examined on an agar medium containing an intracellular O2- generator, paraquat (PQ), the parent strain was selectively killed by increasing the PQ concentration.

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Secreted phospholipase has been recently proposed as a virulence determinant in Cryptococcus neoformans as well as Candida albicans. This issue of cryptococcal phospholipase requires screening of phospholipase production in a larger number of isolates from clinical and environmental sources. In this study we examined phospholipase production in a total of 67 C.

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Phospholipases have only been detected in a few fungi and yeasts, in particular in Candida albicans. Secreted phospholipases are considered by some researchers to be a potential factor of virulence and pathogenicity in C. albicans.

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Eight strains of Cryptococcus neoformans var. neoformans isolated from AIDS patients in the Infectious Disease Institute, University of Turin, Italy, were examined for growth and extracellular proteolytic activity in culture with solid and liquid media. All of the strains grew well on Yeast Carbon Base (YCB) agar medium supplemented with both 0.

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Sprague-Dawley rats were inoculated intravenously (i.v.) with Candida albicans, and limb joints showing signs of Candida-induced arthritis were subjected to radiographic and histologic examination.

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Experimental arthritis, caused by intravenously (IV) introduced Candida albicans, has been induced for the first time in rats. Four-week-old Sprague-Dawley rats were inoculated IV with three different strains of C. albicans and observed for 4 weeks.

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The pathogenicity of a parent wild-type strain and three respiratory mutants of Candida albicans was examined in intravenously infected mice. The wild-type strain K grew well in the kidney and caused severe candidosis, and the 21-day LD50 value was 7.2 x 10(6) cells/mouse.

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Yeast cells of Candida albicans were brought to germ tube formation and hyphal growth in liquid synthetic medium. The behaviour of mitochondria and mitochondrial nucleoids (mt-nucleoids) during morphological conversion was examined by fluorescence staining with 2-(4-dimethylaminostyryl)-1-methylpyridinium iodide (DASPMI) and 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI). Parent yeast cells possessed one or very few branched giant mitochondria which were stained intensely with DASPMI.

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A wild-type strain and two respiratory mutants of Candida albicans were examined for mitochondria and mitochondrial nucleoids (mt-nucleoids) using the fluorescent dyes, 2-(4-dimethylaminostyryl)-1-methylpyridinium iodide (DASPMI) and 4', 6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI). Rapidly growing cells of the wild type possessed one or a few giant branched mitochondria that were intensely stained with DASPMI. When a bud emerged, an end of the giant mitochondrion extended into the bud and the mitochondrion was divided and partitioned into mother and daughter cells by cytokinesis.

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A method of inducing respiratory deficient (petite) mutation in Candida albicans (which has been previously classed as a petite-negative yeast) and characteristics of some isolated mutants are reported. When grown at 42 degrees C in the presence of a cytoplasmic mutagen (acriflavine), C. albicans exhibited diauxie-like biphasic growth.

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