A total of 402 fecal specimens collected during July 2003-June 2004 from infants and children with acute gastroenteritis, encompassing five localities (Maizuru, Tokyo, Sapporo, Saga, and Osaka) of Japan, were tested for the presence of norovirus by RT-PCR. It was found that 58 (14.4%) fecal specimens were positive for norovirus. Norovirus infection was detected throughout the year with the highest prevalence in December. Norovirus GII was the most predominant genogroup (98.3%; 57 of 58). The genotypes detected in this study were GI/4, GII/2, GII/3, GII/4, and GII/6. Of these, NoV GII/3 (known as the Arg320 virus cluster) was the most predominant genotype (43.9%), followed by NoV GII/4 (the Lordsdale virus cluster; 35.1%) and others. Two norovirus strains clustered with a "new variant designated GIIb" and a "new variant of GII/4" were found circulating in Japan for the first time. It was interesting to note that NoV GIIb and NoV GII/3 appeared to be the recombinant strains and the recombination site was demonstrated at the overlap of ORF1 and ORF2. The majority (96%) of the dominant norovirus strains were identified as the recombination of GII/3 capsid and GII/12 polymerase. The recombination in the NoV GIIb capsid gene at the breakpoint located at P1 domain was also identified. Obviously, NoV GIIb isolate in Japan had double recombination. This is the first report demonstrating the existence of different "new variants" co-circulating in Japanese infants and children with acute gastroenteritis.
Species and numbers of intestinal bacteria have recently been investigated and the biochemical interaction between a host and its intestinal flora has become the object of research. It has been suggested that the purgative activities of Rhei rhizoma and Sennae folium are related to the intestinal bacterial action. The present study was undertaken to reveal the process of the metabolism of sennosides, the rnain effective cornponents of these crude drugs, by human intestinal bacteria, to account for the relation between their defaecation effect and intestinal flora. Through a qualitative study of the abi
To assess the severity of ischemic liver injury, we examined release of mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase (EC 2.6.1.1) and its cytoplasmic isozyme from the ischemic rat liver into the circulation. Their patterns of leakage were quite different: the level of cytoplasmic aspartate aminotransferase reached a peak soon after the circulation to the ischemic liver was restored, while that of mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase increased slowly, reaching a maximum after more than 10 hr. On anoxic incubation of mitochondria isolated from the normal liver, oxidative phosphorylation capacity was lost within 2 hr, at which time no leakage of matrix enzymes was observed: more than 10 hr after-loss-of-oxidative phosphorylation were needed for the matrix enzymes to leak out of the mitochondrial membrane. Since the viability of cells is considered to depend on the capacity of oxidative phosphorylation, it is highly likely that the delayed appearance of mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase in blood indicates the postmortem changes of injured cells. In fact, the cumulative activity of mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase but not cytoplasmic aspartate aminotransferase in circulation after ischemic liver injury correlated fairly well with the decrease of total adenine nucleotides which were monitored to measure viable cells. The difference between mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase and cytoplasmic aspartate aminotransferase as quantitative indices of hepatic necrosis may be due to the relative stability of the former and significant inactivation of the latter during hepatic ischemia. Therefore, the determination of mitochondrial aspartate aminotransferase in blood may be useful in the assessment of liver necrosis after ischemic injury.
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