7 results on '"Kango Tatemoto"'
Search Results
2. Histopathological Characterization of Cases of Spontaneous Fatal Feline Severe Fever with Thrombocytopenia Syndrome, Japan
- Author
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Yuko Kuwabara, Keita Ishijima, Ryusei Kuwata, Masahiro Morimoto, Masaru Okuda, Kango Tatemoto, Yudai Kuroda, Serina Mura, Kenzo Yonemitsu, Saya Kagimoto, Hiroshi Shimoda, Shohei Minami, Masashi Sakurai, Ken Maeda, Yusuke Sakai, and Kenji Baba
- Subjects
Phlebovirus ,Microbiology (medical) ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,Severe Fever with Thrombocytopenia Syndrome ,Epidemiology ,vector-borne infections ,030231 tropical medicine ,lcsh:Medicine ,Bunyaviridae Infections ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases ,Histopathological Characterization of Cases of Spontaneous Fatal Feline Severe Fever with Thrombocytopenia Syndrome, Japan ,Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome virus ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Japan ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,viruses ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Infectious disease (athletes) ,tickborne diseases ,Pathological ,Gastrointestinal tract ,Lung ,SFTS ,biology ,business.industry ,Research ,lcsh:R ,cats ,SFTS virus ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,zoonoses ,Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome ,Infectious Diseases ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Tick-Borne Diseases ,histopathology ,Histopathology ,Autopsy ,SFTSV ,business ,felines - Abstract
Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) is an emerging tickborne infectious disease caused by SFTS virus (SFTSV). We report 7 cases of spontaneous fatal SFTS in felines. Necropsies revealed characteristic lesions, including necrotizing lymphadenitis in 5 cases and necrotizing splenitis and SFTSV-positive blastic lymphocytes in all cases. We detected hemorrhagic lesions in the gastrointestinal tract in 6 cases and lungs in 3 cases, suggesting a more severe clinical course of SFTS in felids than in humans. We noted necrotic or ulcerative foci in the gastrointestinal tract in 3 cases, the lung in 2 cases, and the liver in 4 cases. We clarified that blastic lymphocytes are predominant targets of SFTSV and involved in induction of necrotic foci. We also found that thymic epithelial cells were additional targets of SFTSV. These results provide insights for diagnosing feline SFTS during pathological examination and demonstrate the similarity of feline and human SFTS cases.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Mosquito-borne viruses, insect-specific flaviviruses (family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus), Banna virus (family Reoviridae, genus Seadornavirus), Bogor virus (unassigned member of family Permutotetraviridae), and alphamesoniviruses 2 and 3 (family Mesoniviridae, genus Alphamesonivirus) isolated from Indonesian mosquitoes
- Author
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Tomohiko Takasaki, Tetsuya Mizutani, Eiichi Hondo, Shun Torii, Kango Tatemoto, Kyoko Sawabe, Tsutomu Omatsu, Kentaro Itokawa, Ai Takano, Kenzo Yonemitsu, Haruhiko Isawa, Hiroshi Shimoda, Supriyono, Dewi Maria Yuliani, Ryusei Kuwata, Ken Maeda, Agus Setiyono, Yudai Kuroda, Upik Kesumawati Hadi, Dimas Abiyoga, Shohei Minami, Keita Ishijima, Srihadi Agungpriyono, and Ngo Thuy Bao Tran
- Subjects
0303 health sciences ,Aedes albopictus ,General Veterinary ,biology ,040301 veterinary sciences ,viruses ,fungi ,virus diseases ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Aedes aegypti ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Arbovirus ,Virology ,Culex tritaeniorhynchus ,Culex quinquefasciatus ,Mesoniviridae ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,Genus ,Banna virus ,parasitic diseases ,medicine ,030304 developmental biology - Abstract
Mosquitoes transmit many kinds of arboviruses (arthropod-borne viruses), and numerous arboviral diseases have become serious problems in Indonesia. In this study, we conducted surveillance of mosquito-borne viruses at several sites in Indonesia during 2016-2018 for risk assessment of arbovirus infection and analysis of virus biodiversity in mosquito populations. We collected 10,015 mosquitoes comprising at least 11 species from 4 genera. Major collected mosquito species were Culex quinquefasciatus, Aedes albopictus, Culex tritaeniorhynchus, Aedes aegypti, and Armigeres subalbatus. The collected mosquitoes were divided into 285 pools and used for virus isolation using two mammalian cell lines, Vero and BHK-21, and one mosquito cell line, C6/36. Seventy-two pools showed clear cytopathic effects only in C6/36 cells. Using RT-PCR and next-generation sequencing approaches, these isolates were identified as insect flaviviruses (family Flaviviridae, genus Flavivirus), Banna virus (family Reoviridae, genus Seadornavirus), new permutotetravirus (designed as Bogor virus) (family Permutotetraviridae, genus Alphapermutotetravirus), and alphamesoniviruses 2 and 3 (family Mesoniviridae, genus Alphamesonivirus). We believed that this large surveillance of mosquitoes and mosquito-borne viruses provides basic information for the prevention and control of emerging and re-emerging arboviral diseases.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Characterization of rabbit hepatitis E virus isolated from a feral rabbit
- Author
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Supriyono, Ryusei Kuwata, Shintaro Abe, Wenjing Zhang, Kenzo Yonemitsu, Shohei Minami, Kango Tatemoto, Ken Maeda, Kayo Okabe, Tian-Cheng Li, Yudai Kuroda, Ai Okada, Milagros Virhuez Mendoza, Ngo Thuy Bao Tran, Keita Ishijima, Yusuke Inoue, Ai Takano, Hiroshi Shimoda, and Yasushi Ami
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viruses ,Viremia ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microbiology ,Japan ,Hepatitis E virus ,medicine ,Animals ,Seroprevalence ,Hepatitis Antibodies ,Seroconversion ,Phylogeny ,Feces ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Inoculation ,Nucleic acid sequence ,virus diseases ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,digestive system diseases ,Hepatitis E ,biology.protein ,RNA, Viral ,Rabbits ,Antibody - Abstract
Rabbit hepatitis E virus (HEV) has been detected among rabbits and recently isolated from immunocompromised patients, suggesting zoonotic transmission. In this study, HEV infection among feral rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus) was assessed by detection of anti-HEV antibodies and HEV RNA. The prevalence of anti-HEV antibodies in sera was of 33 % (20/60) and HEV RNA was detected from only one of fecal swabs (1.7 %, 1/58). Furthermore, one naive rabbit was intravenously inoculated with the suspension of the HEV-positive fecal specimen, exhibiting persistent HEV shedding in feces, intermittent viremia, seroconversion to anti-HEV IgM and IgG, and high alanine aminotransferase (ALT) values, indicating persistent HEV infection. The isolate JP-59 had a length of 7,282 bp excluding a poly (A) tail and possessed the characteristic 93 bp-insertion in ORF1. Phylogenetic analysis indicated that JP-59 formed a cluster with other rabbit HEV isolates from rabbits and human origin. The JP-59 shared the nucleotide sequence identities less than 87 % with other rabbit HEVs, suggesting that a novel rabbit HEV strain was circulating in Japan.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Zoonotic Infection with Oz Virus, a Novel Thogotovirus.
- Author
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Tran, Ngo T. B., Hiroshi Shimoda, Keita Ishijima, Kenzo Yonemitsu, Shohei Minami, Supriyono, Yudai Kuroda, Kango Tatemoto, Mendoza, Milagros V., Ryusei Kuwata, Ai Takano, Masahiko Muto, Kyoko Sawabe, Haruhiko Isawa, Daisuke Hayasaka, Ken Maeda, Shimoda, Hiroshi, Ishijima, Keita, Yonemitsu, Kenzo, and Minami, Shohei
- Abstract
Oz virus is a novel thogotovirus isolated from ticks that causes lethal infection in mice. We conducted serosurveillance of Oz virus infection among humans and wild mammals in Japan using virus-neutralization tests and ELISAs. Results showed that Oz virus may be naturally infecting humans and other mammalian hosts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Epidemiological study of Kabuto Mountain virus, a novel uukuvirus, in Japan.
- Author
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TRAN, Ngo T. B., Hiroshi SHIMODA, Junko MIZUNO, Keita ISHIJIMA, Kenzo YONEMITSU, Shohei MINAMI, Supriyono, Yudai KURODA, Kango TATEMOTO, MENDOZA, Milagros V., Ai TAKANO, Masahiko MUTO, Haruhiko ISAWA, Kyoko SAWABE, Daisuke HAYASAKA, and Ken MAEDA
- Subjects
SIKA deer ,TICKS ,VIRUSES ,MAMMALS ,MONKEYS - Abstract
Kabuto Mountain virus (KAMV), the new member of the genus Uukuvirus, was isolated from the tick Haemaphysalis flava in 2018 in Japan. To date, there is no information on KAMV infection in human and animals. Therefore, serological surveillance of the infection among humans and wild mammals was conducted by virus-neutralization (VN) test and indirect immunofluorescence assay (IFA). Sera of 24 humans, 59 monkeys, 171 wild boars, 233 Sika deer, 7 bears, and 27 nutria in Yamaguchi Prefecture were analyzed by VN test. The positive ratio of humans, monkeys, wild boars, and Sika deer were 20.8%, 3.4%, 33.9% and 4.7%, respectively. No positive samples were detected in bears and nutria. The correlation coefficients between VN test and IFA in human, monkey, wild boar, and Sika deer sera were 0.5745, 0.7198, 0.9967 and 0.9525, respectively. In addition, KAMV was detected in one pool of Haemaphysalis formosensis ticks in Wakayama Prefecture. These results indicated that KAMV or KAMV-like virus is circulating among many wildlife and ticks, and that this virus incidentally infects humans. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Histopathological Characterization of Cases of Spontaneous Fatal Feline Severe Fever with Thrombocytopenia Syndrome, Japan.
- Author
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Yusuke Sakai, Yuko Kuwabara, Keita Ishijima, Saya Kagimoto, Serina Mura, Kango Tatemoto, Ryusei Kuwata, Kenzo Yonemitsu, Shohei Minami, Yudai Kuroda, Kenji Baba, Masaru Okuda, Hiroshi Shimoda, Masashi Sakurai, Masahiro Morimoto, Ken Maeda, Sakai, Yusuke, Kuwabara, Yuko, Ishijima, Keita, and Kagimoto, Saya
- Subjects
THROMBOCYTOPENIA ,GASTROINTESTINAL system ,FEVER ,SYNDROMES ,EPITHELIAL cells ,LYMPHADENITIS ,EMERGING infectious diseases - Abstract
Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome (SFTS) is an emerging tickborne infectious disease caused by SFTS virus (SFTSV). We report 7 cases of spontaneous fatal SFTS in felines. Necropsies revealed characteristic lesions, including necrotizing lymphadenitis in 5 cases and necrotizing splenitis and SFTSV-positive blastic lymphocytes in all cases. We detected hemorrhagic lesions in the gastrointestinal tract in 6 cases and lungs in 3 cases, suggesting a more severe clinical course of SFTS in felids than in humans. We noted necrotic or ulcerative foci in the gastrointestinal tract in 3 cases, the lung in 2 cases, and the liver in 4 cases. We clarified that blastic lymphocytes are predominant targets of SFTSV and involved in induction of necrotic foci. We also found that thymic epithelial cells were additional targets of SFTSV. These results provide insights for diagnosing feline SFTS during pathological examination and demonstrate the similarity of feline and human SFTS cases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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