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Kotaro Tanaka

Kyoto University

ORCID: 0000-0002-4205-0589

Publishes on Virology and Viral Diseases, Cardiac Arrest and Resuscitation, Respiratory viral infections research. 31 papers and 1.6k citations.

31Publications
1.6kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

V Domain of Human SLAM (CDw150) Is Essential for Its Function as a Measles Virus Receptor
Nobuyuki Ono, Hironobu Tatsuo, Kotaro Tanaka et al.|Journal of Virology|2001
Cited by 112Open Access

Human signaling lymphocytic activation molecule (SLAM; also known as CDw150) has been shown to be a cellular receptor for measles virus (MV). Chinese hamster ovary cells transfected with a mouse SLAM cDNA were not susceptible to MV and the vesicular stomatitis virus pseudotype bearing MV envelope proteins alone, indicating that mouse SLAM cannot act as an MV receptor. To determine the functional domain of the receptor, we tested the abilities of several chimeric SLAM proteins to function as MV receptors. The ectodomain of SLAM comprises the two immunoglobulin superfamily domains (V and C2). Various chimeric transmembrane proteins possessing the V domain of human SLAM were able to act as MV receptors, whereas a chimera consisting of human SLAM containing the mouse V domain instead of the human V domain no longer acted as a receptor. To examine the interaction between SLAM and MV envelope proteins, recombinant soluble forms of SLAM were produced. The soluble molecules possessing the V domain of human SLAM were shown to bind to cells expressing the MV hemagglutinin (H) protein but not to cells expressing the MV fusion protein or irrelevant envelope proteins. These results indicate that the V domain of human SLAM is necessary and sufficient to interact with the MV H protein and allow MV entry.

Virus Entry Is a Major Determinant of Cell Tropism of Edmonston and Wild-Type Strains of Measles Virus as Revealed by Vesicular Stomatitis Virus Pseudotypes Bearing Their Envelope Proteins
Hironobu Tatsuo, Kazu Okuma, Kotaro Tanaka et al.|Journal of Virology|2000
Cited by 98Open Access

The Edmonston strain of measles virus (MV) that utilizes the human CD46 as the cellular receptor produced cytopathic effects (CPE) in all of the primate cell lines examined. In contrast, the wild-type MV strains isolated in a marmoset B-cell line B95a (the KA and Ichinose strains) replicated and produced CPE in some but not all of the primate lymphoid cell lines. To determine the mechanism underlying this difference in cell tropism, we used a recently developed recombinant vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) containing as a reporter the green fluorescent protein gene in lieu of the VSV G protein gene (VSVDeltaG*). MV glycoproteins were efficiently incorporated into VSVDeltaG*, producing the VSV pseudotypes. VSVDeltaG* complemented with VSV G protein efficiently infected all of the cell lines tested. The VSV pseudotype bearing the Edmonston hemagglutinin (H) and fusion (F) protein (VSVDeltaG*-EdHF) infected all cell lines in which the Edmonston strain caused CPE, including the rodent cell lines to which the human CD46 gene was stably transfected. The pseudotype bearing the wild-type KA H protein and Edmonston F protein (VSVDeltaG*-KAHF) infected all lymphoid cell lines in which the wild-type MV strains caused CPE as efficiently as VSVDeltaG*-EdHF, but it did not infect any of the cell lines resistant to infection with the KA strain. The results indicate that the difference in cell tropism between these MV strains was largely determined by virus entry, in which the H proteins of respective MV strains play a decisive role.

Induction of the measles virus receptor SLAM (CD150) on monocytes
Hiroko Minagawa, Kotaro Tanaka, Nobuyuki Ono et al.|Journal of General Virology|2001
Cited by 93

Wild-type strains of measles virus (MV) isolated in B95a cells use the signalling lymphocyte activation molecule (SLAM; also known as CD150) as a cellular receptor, whereas the Edmonston strain and its derivative vaccine strains can use both SLAM and the ubiquitously expressed CD46 as receptors. Among the major target cells for MV, lymphocytes and dendritic cells are known to express SLAM after activation, but monocytes have been reported to be SLAM-negative. In this study, SLAM expression on monocytes was examined under different conditions. When freshly isolated from the peripheral blood, monocytes did not express SLAM on the cell surface. However, monocytes became SLAM-positive after incubation with phytohaemagglutinin, bacterial lipopolysaccharide or MV. Anti-SLAM monoclonal antibodies efficiently blocked infection of activated monocytes with a wild-type strain of MV. These results indicate that SLAM is readily induced and acts as a monocyte receptor for MV.