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Dive into the research topics where Akihide Yoshihara is active.

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Featured researches published by Akihide Yoshihara.


Organic Letters | 2011

Looking-glass synergistic pharmacological chaperones: DGJ and L-DGJ from the enantiomers of tagatose.

Sarah F. Jenkinson; George W. J. Fleet; Robert J. Nash; Yuriko Koike; Isao Adachi; Akihide Yoshihara; Kenji Morimoto; Ken Izumori; Atsushi Kato

The enantiomers of tagatose are converted to L-DGJ [a noncompetitive inhibitor of human lysosome α-galactosidase A (α-Gal A), K(i) 38.5 μM] and DGJ [a competitive inhibitor of α-Gal A, K(i) 15.1 nM] in 66% yield. L-DGJ and DGJ provide the first examples of pharmacological chaperones that (a) are enantiomeric iminosugars and (b) have synergistic activity with implications for the treatment of lysosomal storage disorders and other protein deficiencies.


Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2013

Gene Cloning and Characterization of L-Ribulose 3-epimerase from Mesorhizobium loti and Its Application to Rare Sugar Production

Keiko Uechi; Goro Takata; Yoshinori Fukai; Akihide Yoshihara; Kenji Morimoto

A gene encoding L-ribulose 3-epimerase (L-RE) from Mesorhizobium loti, an important enzyme for rare sugar production by the Izumoring strategy, was cloned and overexpressed. The enzyme showed highest activity toward L-ribulose (230 U/mg) among keto-pentoses and keto-hexoses. This is the first report on a ketose 3-epimerase showing highest activity toward keto-pentose. The optimum enzyme reaction conditions for L-RE were determined to be sodium phosphate buffer (pH 8.0) at 60 °C. The enzyme showed of higher maximum reaction a rate (416 U/mg) and catalytic efficiency (43 M(-1) min(-1)) for L-ribulose than other known ketose 3-epimerases. It was able to produce L-xylulose efficiently from ribitol in two-step reactions. In the end, 7.2 g of L-xylulose was obtained from 20 g of ribitol via L-ribulose at a yield of 36%.


Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering | 2008

Direct Production of l-Tagatose from l-Psicose by Enterobacter aerogenes 230S

Devendar Rao; Pushpakiran Gullapalli; Akihide Yoshihara; Sarah F. Jenkinson; Kenji Morimoto; Goro Takata; Kazuya Akimitsu; Shigeyuki Tajima; George W. J. Fleet; Ken Izumori

L-tagatose was produced directly from L-psicose by subjecting the same biomass suspension to microbial reduction followed by oxidation using a newly isolated bacteria Enterobacter aerogenes 230S. After various optimizations, it was observed that cells grown on xylitol have the best conversion potential. Moreover, E. aerogenes 230S converted L-psicose to L-tagatose at a faster rate in the presence of polyols such as glycerol, D-sorbitol, ribitol, L-arabitol, D-mannitol and xylitol. At 5% substrate concentration, the conversion ratio of L-psicose to L-tagatose was above 60% in the presence of glycerol. Identity of crystalline L-tagatose was confirmed by HPLC analysis, (13)C-NMR spectra, and optical rotation.


Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2011

Characterization of Mesorhizobium loti L-Rhamnose Isomerase and Its Application to L-Talose Production

Goro Takata; Keiko Uechi; Eriko Taniguchi; Yuka Kanbara; Akihide Yoshihara; Kenji Morimoto; Ken Izumori

The L-rhamnose isomerase gene (rhi) of Mesorhizobium loti was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli, and then characterized. The enzyme exhibited activity with respect to various aldoses, including D-allose and L-talose. Application of it in L-talose production from galactitol was achieved by a two-step reaction, indicating that it can be utilized in the large-scale production of L-talose.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Short and Sweet: D‐Glucose to L‐Glucose and L‐Glucuronic Acid

R. Fernando Martínez; Zilei Liu; Andreas F. G. Glawar; Akihide Yoshihara; Ken Izumori; George W. J. Fleet; Sarah F. Jenkinson

The scarcity and expense of access to L-sugars and other rare sugars have prevented the exploitation of their biological potential; for example D-psicose, only recently available, has been recognized as an important new food. Here we give the definitive and cheap synthesis of 99.4% pure L-glucose from D-glucose which requires purification of neither intermediates nor final product other than extraction into and removal of solvents; a simple crystallization will raise the purity to >99.8%.


Planta | 2013

Phosphorylation of D-allose by hexokinase involved in regulation of OsABF1 expression for growth inhibition in Oryza sativa L.

Takeshi Fukumoto; Akihito Kano; Kouhei Ohtani; Megumi Inoue; Akihide Yoshihara; Ken Izumori; Shigeyuki Tajima; Yoshio Shigematsu; Keiji Tanaka; Takeo Ohkouchi; Yutaka Ishida; Yoko Nishizawa; Yasuomi Tada; Kazuya Ichimura; Kenji Gomi; Sang Dong Yoo; Jen Sheen; Kazuya Akimitsu

We previously reported that a rare sugar d-allose, which is the d-glucose epimer at C3, inhibits the gibberellin-dependent responses such as elongation of the second leaf sheath and induction of α-amylase in embryo-less half seeds in rice (Fukumoto et al. 2011). d-Allose suppresses expressions of gibberellin-responsive genes downstream of SLR1 protein in the gibberellin-signaling through hexokinase (HXK)-dependent pathway. In this study, we discovered that d-allose induced expression of ABA-related genes including OsNCED1-3 and OsABA8ox1-3 in rice. Interestingly, d-allose also up-regulated expression of OsABF1, encoding a conserved bZIP transcription factor in ABA signaling, in rice. The d-allose-induced expression of OsABF1 was diminished by a hexokinase inhibitor, d-mannoheptulose (MNH). Consistently, d-allose also inhibited Arabidopsis growth, but failed to trigger growth retardation in the glucose-insensitive2 (gin2) mutant, which is a loss-of-function mutant of the glucose sensor AtHXK1. d-Allose activated AtABI5 expression in transgenic gin2 over-expressing wild-type AtHXK1 but not in gin2 over-expressing the catalytic mutant AtHXK1S177A, indicating that the d-allose phosphorylation by HXK to d-allose 6-phosphate (A6P) is the first step for the up-regulation of AtABI5 gene expression as well as d-allose-induced growth inhibition. Moreover, overexpression of OsABF1 showed increased sensitivity to d-allose in rice. These findings indicated that the phosphorylation of d-allose at C6 by hexokinase is essential and OsABF1 is involved in the signal transduction for d-allose-induced growth inhibition.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2013

The rare sugar d-allose acts as a triggering molecule of rice defence via ROS generation

Akihito Kano; Takeshi Fukumoto; Kouhei Ohtani; Akihide Yoshihara; Toshiaki Ohara; Shigeyuki Tajima; Ken Izumori; Keiji Tanaka; Takeo Ohkouchi; Yutaka Ishida; Yoko Nishizawa; Kazuya Ichimura; Yasuomi Tada; Kenji Gomi; Kazuya Akimitsu

Only d-allose, among various rare monosaccharides tested, induced resistance to Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae in susceptible rice leaves with defence responses: reactive oxygen species, lesion mimic formation, and PR-protein gene expression. These responses were suppressed by ascorbic acid or diphenylene iodonium. Transgenic rice plants overexpressing OsrbohC, encoding NADPH oxidase, were enhanced in sensitivity to d-allose. d-Allose-mediated defence responses were suppressed by the presence of a hexokinase inhibitor. 6-Deoxy-d-allose, a structural derivative of d-allose unable to be phosphorylated, did not confer resistance. Transgenic rice plants expressing Escherichia coli AlsK encoding d-allose kinase to increase d-allose 6-phosphate synthesis were more sensitive to d-allose, but E. coli AlsI encoding d-allose 6-phosphate isomerase expression to decrease d-allose 6-phosphate reduced sensitivity. A d-glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase-defective mutant was also less sensitive, and OsG6PDH1 complementation restored full sensitivity. These results reveal that a monosaccharide, d-allose, induces rice resistance to X. oryzae pv. oryzae by activating NADPH oxidase through the activity of d-glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase, initiated by hexokinase-mediated conversion of d-allose to d-allose 6-phosphate, and treatment with d-allose might prove to be useful for reducing disease development in rice.


Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering | 2013

Cloning and characterization of the l-ribose isomerase gene from Cellulomonas parahominis MB426

Kenji Morimoto; Yuji Terami; Yu-ichiro Maeda; Akihide Yoshihara; Goro Takata; Ken Izumori

A newly isolated bacterium, Cellulomonas parahominis MB426, produced l-ribose isomerase (CeLRI) on a medium containing l-ribose as a sole carbon source. A 32 kDa protein isomerizing l-ribose to l-ribulose was purified to homogeneity from this bacterium. A set of degenerated primers were synthesized based on amino acid sequences of the purified CeLRI, and a 747 bp gene encoding CeLRI was cloned, sequenced and overexpressed in Escherichia coli. This gene encoded a 249 amino acid protein with a calculated molecular mass of 27,435. The deduced amino acid sequence of this gene showed the highest identity with l-ribose isomerase from Acinetobacter calcoaceticus DL-28 (71%). The recombinant l-ribose isomerase (rCeLRI) was optimally active at pH 9.0 and 40°C, and was stable up to 40°C for 1 h and not dependent for metallic ions for its activity. The rCeLRI showed widely substrate specificity for the rare sugar which involved l-erythro form such as l-ribose, d-lyxose, d-talose, d-mannose, l-gulose, and l-allose.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2013

Structural insight into L-ribulose 3-epimerase from Mesorhizobium loti.

Keiko Uechi; Haruhiko Sakuraba; Akihide Yoshihara; Kenji Morimoto; Goro Takata

L-Ribulose 3-epimerase (L-RE) from Mesorhizobium loti has been identified as the first ketose 3-epimerase that shows the highest observed activity towards ketopentoses. In the present study, the crystal structure of the enzyme was determined to 2.7 Å resolution. The asymmetric unit contained two homotetramers with the monomer folded into an (α/β)8-barrel carrying four additional short α-helices. The overall structure of M. loti L-RE showed significant similarity to the structures of ketose 3-epimerases from Pseudomonas cichorii, Agrobacterium tumefaciens and Clostridium cellulolyticum, which use ketohexoses as preferred substrates. However, the size of the C-terminal helix (α8) was much larger in M. loti L-RE than the corresponding helices in the other enzymes. In M. loti L-RE the α8 helix and the following C-terminal tail possessed a unique subunit-subunit interface which promoted the formation of additional intermolecular interactions and strengthened the enzyme stability. Structural comparisons revealed that the relatively small hydrophobic pocket of the enzyme around the substrate was likely to be the main factor responsible for the marked specificity for ketopentoses shown by M. loti L-RE.


Organic Letters | 2012

Eight stereoisomers of homonojirimycin from D-mannose.

Gabriel M. J. Lenagh-Snow; Sarah F. Jenkinson; Scott Newberry; Atsushi Kato; Shinpei Nakagawa; Isao Adachi; Mark R. Wormald; Akihide Yoshihara; Kenji Morimoto; Kazuya Akimitsu; Ken Izumori; George W. J. Fleet

Although there are 32 6-azidoheptitols, there are only 16 homonojirimycin (HNJ) stereoisomers. Two epimeric azidoalditols derived from d-mannose allow the synthesis in water of eight stereoisomers of HNJ.

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