研究者業績

滝澤 香代子

タキザワ カヨコ  (Kayoko Takizawa)

基本情報

所属
千葉大学 真菌医学研究センター 病原真菌研究部門 生態分野 技術専門官
学位
薬学博士(千葉大学)

J-GLOBAL ID
200901013564337741
researchmap会員ID
0000026559

研究キーワード

 2

MISC

 20
  • P Abliz, K Takizawa, K Nishimura, K Fukushima, CMD Motta, OM Magallaos, SW Deng, LY Xi, Vidotto, V
    JOURNAL OF DERMATOLOGICAL SCIENCE 36(2) 125-127 2004年11月  
  • LY Xi, K Fukushima, CM Lu, K Takizawa, RD Liao, K Nishimura
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY 42(10) 4828-4831 2004年10月  
    We present here the first case in the People's Republic of China of human disease caused by the fungus Arthrographis kalrae. The male patient had fungal panophthalmitis and invasive sinusitis involving the maxillary and ethmoid sinuses. He was an apparently healthy man before receiving trauma to his left eye. He complained of pain and loss of visual acuity in the injured eye, which displayed redness and edema and eventually discharged pus. His symptoms became more severe after he was treated with steroids and several antibacterial agents. A computed tomography scan of the left eye revealed that the maxillary and ethmoid sinuses were involved. A smear of purulent material from the left eye orbit revealed fungal elements, and cultures of the material grew a fungus. The isolate was identified as A. kalrae based on gross and microscopic morphologies, biochemical assays, and DNA sequence analysis. The patient received amphotericin B intravenously, itraconazole orally, and atomized allitridum by nebulizing allitridum therapy. The patient's wound healed following surgical intervention, but the patient lost the use of his left eye. This case should remind ophthalmologists and other clinicians to consider the possibility of infections being fungal when antibacterial agents have no effect and the patient's condition worsens.
  • LY Xi, K Fukushima, CM Lu, K Takizawa, RD Liao, K Nishimura
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY 42(10) 4828-4831 2004年10月  
    We present here the first case in the People's Republic of China of human disease caused by the fungus Arthrographis kalrae. The male patient had fungal panophthalmitis and invasive sinusitis involving the maxillary and ethmoid sinuses. He was an apparently healthy man before receiving trauma to his left eye. He complained of pain and loss of visual acuity in the injured eye, which displayed redness and edema and eventually discharged pus. His symptoms became more severe after he was treated with steroids and several antibacterial agents. A computed tomography scan of the left eye revealed that the maxillary and ethmoid sinuses were involved. A smear of purulent material from the left eye orbit revealed fungal elements, and cultures of the material grew a fungus. The isolate was identified as A. kalrae based on gross and microscopic morphologies, biochemical assays, and DNA sequence analysis. The patient received amphotericin B intravenously, itraconazole orally, and atomized allitridum by nebulizing allitridum therapy. The patient's wound healed following surgical intervention, but the patient lost the use of his left eye. This case should remind ophthalmologists and other clinicians to consider the possibility of infections being fungal when antibacterial agents have no effect and the patient's condition worsens.
  • P Abliz, K Fukushima, K Takizawa, K Nishimura
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY 42(1) 404-407 2004年1月  
    Cladophialophora carrionii is one of the relatively common causative agents of chromoblastomycosis. We have developed the specific oligonucleotide primer set based on the internal transcribed spacer regions of ribosomal DNA for the rapid identification of this pathogen. PCR with this primer set amplified a 362-bp amplicon from C. carrionii strains. From other relevant dematiaceous species, including medically important dematiaceous fungi, such as Fonsecaea pedrosoi, Phialophora verrucosa, and Exophiala dermatitidis, and eight species of medically important yeasts, such as Candida albicans and Cryptococcus neoformans var. neoformans, the primer set did not produce any amplicon. PCR with this primer set may be a useful tool for the identification of C. carrionii.
  • P Abliz, K Fukushima, K Takizawa, M Miyaji, K Nishimura
    DIAGNOSTIC MICROBIOLOGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASE 46(2) 89-93 2003年6月  
    Hortaea werneckii, a black yeast-like hyphomycete that is widely distributed in tropical and subtropical environments, can cause superficial mycotic infection in humans. This fungus was recently isolated from superficial infectious lesions of a guinea pig in Japan. An oligonucleotide primer set specific for Hortaea werneckii was designed on the basis of the internal transcribed spacer regions of the ribosomal DNA (rDNA). Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) with this primer set yielded a 306 bp PCR amplicon from only H. werneckii. This primer set did not amplify DNAs of 42 other related dematiaceous species, including the medically important dematiaceous fungi Cladophialophora carrionii, Fonsecaea pedrosoi, Phialophora verrucosa, and Exophiala dermatitidis, and eight species of medically important yeasts, including Candida (C.) albicans, C. dublinensis, C. glabrata, C. parapsilosis, C. tropicalis, Cryptococcus neoformans var. neoformans, Malassezia furfur, and Trichosporon asahii var. asahii. PCR with this primer set may be a useful technique for rapid identification of H. werneckii. (C) 2003 Elsevier Science Inc. All rights reserved.
  • P Abliz, K Fukushima, K Takizawa, N Nieda, M Miyaji, K Nishimura
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY 41(2) 873-876 2003年2月  
    An oligonucleotide primer set based on internal transcribed spacer regions of ribosomal DNA for PCR which gives the amplicon for only the DNA from Fonsecaea species was designed. This set yielded an amplicon with 333 by for all strains of Fonsecaea pedrosoi and Fonsecaea compacta examined but no amplicons for related dematiaceous fungi and pathogenic yeasts. PCR using this primer set was considered to be a useful method for the rapid identification of the genus Fonsecaea.
  • P Abliz, K Fukushima, K Takizawa, N Nieda, M Miyaji, K Nishimura
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MICROBIOLOGY 41(2) 873-876 2003年2月  
    An oligonucleotide primer set based on internal transcribed spacer regions of ribosomal DNA for PCR which gives the amplicon for only the DNA from Fonsecaea species was designed. This set yielded an amplicon with 333 by for all strains of Fonsecaea pedrosoi and Fonsecaea compacta examined but no amplicons for related dematiaceous fungi and pathogenic yeasts. PCR using this primer set was considered to be a useful method for the rapid identification of the genus Fonsecaea.
  • Sharmin Shahana, Haritani Kumiko, Tanaka Reiko, Abliz Paride, Takizawa Kayoko, Sano Ayako, Fukushima Kazutaka, Nishimura Kazuko, Miyaji Makoto
    Jpn. J. Med. Mycol 43:175-180(3) 175-180 2002年  
    Hortaea werneckii, a black yeast and the causative agent of tinea nigra (a superficial type of dermatomycosis), is a human pathogen and is also found in the environment. It is not highly pathogenic but in the last fifteen to twenty years has been isolated from various human and environmental sources in Japan. As far as we know, there has been no report on the isolation of H. werneckii from animals. Recently, we found a case of a guinea pig with dark superficial lesions on the palm and dorsal areas. Cultural and morphological studies of scrapings from the lesion showed that the causative agent was a black yeast, which was identified as H. werneckii by morphological study and molecular biological screening. Dl/D2 region of the 26S large subunit rDNA gene of this isolate was identical to those of 11 other H. werneckii isolates used as reference strains in this study. This is the first case recorded of tinea nigra caused by H, werneckii in a guinea pig.
  • Sharmin Shahana, Haritani Kumiko, Tanaka Reiko, Abliz Paride, Takizawa Kayoko, Sano Ayako, Fukushima Kazutaka, Nishimura Kazuko, Miyaji Makoto
    日本医真菌学会雑誌 43:175-180(3) 175-180 2002年  
    Hortaea werneckii, a black yeast and the causative agent of tinea nigra (a superficial type of dermatomycosis), is a human pathogen and is also found in the environment. It is not highly pathogenic but in the last fifteen to twenty years has been isolated from various human and environmental sources in Japan. As far as we know, there has been no report on the isolation of H. werneckii from animals. Recently, we found a case of a guinea pig with dark superficial lesions on the palm and dorsal areas. Cultural and morphological studies of scrapings from the lesion showed that the causative agent was a black yeast, which was identified as H. werneckii by morphological study and molecular biological screening. Dl/D2 region of the 26S large subunit rDNA gene of this isolate was identical to those of 11 other H. werneckii isolates used as reference strains in this study. This is the first case recorded of tinea nigra caused by H, werneckii in a guinea pig.

共同研究・競争的資金等の研究課題

 2