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Dive into the research topics where Akinori Ikeuchi is active.

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Featured researches published by Akinori Ikeuchi.


Protein Engineering Design & Selection | 2013

Advanced evolutionary molecular engineering to produce thermostable cellulase by using a small but efficient library.

Yoichiro Ito; Akinori Ikeuchi; Chie Imamura

We aimed at constructing thermostable cellulase variants of cellobiohydrolase II, derived from the mesophilic fungus Phanerochaete chrysosporium, by using an advanced evolutionary molecular engineering method. By aligning the amino acid sequences of the catalytic domains of five thermophilic fungal CBH2 and PcCBH2 proteins, we identified 45 positions where the PcCBH2 genes differ from the consensus sequence of two to five thermophilic fungal CBH2s. PcCBH2 variants with the consensus mutations were obtained by a cell-free translation system that was chosen for easy evaluation of thermostability. From the small library of consensus mutations, advantageous mutations for improving thermostability were found to occur with much higher frequency relative to a random library. To further improve thermostability, advantageous mutations were accumulated within the wild-type gene. Finally, we obtained the most thermostable variant Mall4, which contained all 15 advantageous mutations found in this study. This variant had the same specific cellulase activity as the wild type and retained sufficient activity at 50°C for >72 h, whereas wild-type PcCBH2 retained much less activity under the same conditions. The history of the accumulation process indicated that evolution of PcCBH2 toward improved thermostability was ideally and rapidly accomplished through the evolutionary process employed in this study.


Journal of Biotechnology | 2013

Characterization of five terminator regions that increase the protein yield of a transgene in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

Yoichiro Ito; Mamoru Yamanishi; Akinori Ikeuchi; Chie Imamura; Kenro Tokuhiro; Takao Kitagawa; Takashi Matsuyama

Strong terminator regions could be used to improve metabolically engineered yeasts by increasing the target enzyme protein yields above those achieved with traditional terminator regions. We recently identified five strong terminator regions (RPL41Bt, RPL15At, DIT1t, RPL3t, and IDP1t) in a comprehensive analysis of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The effect of the terminator regions was analyzed by measuring the protein production of a linked transgene, and was shown to be twice that of a traditional terminator region (PGK1t). Here, we investigated whether the activity of the terminator regions is affected by exchange of a strong promoter or reporter in the linked transgene, carbon source for cell growth, stress factors, host yeast strain, or stage of the growth phase. Our results indicate that the activities of all five terminator regions were twice that of PGK1t in all conditions tested. In addition, we demonstrated that the strong activity of these terminator regions could be used to improve secretory production of endoglucanase II derived from Tricoderma ressei, and that the DIT1t strain was the best of the five strains for this purpose. We therefore propose that DIT1t, and the four other terminator regions, could be applied to the development of improved metabolically engineered yeasts.


ACS Synthetic Biology | 2015

A Highly Tunable System for the Simultaneous Expression of Multiple Enzymes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Yoichiro Ito; Mamoru Yamanishi; Akinori Ikeuchi; Takashi Matsuyama

Control of the expression levels of multiple enzymes in transgenic yeasts is essential for the effective production of complex molecules through fermentation. Here, we propose a tunable strategy for the control of expression levels based on the design of terminator regions and other gene-expression control elements in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Our genome-integrated system, which is capable of producing high expression levels over a wide dynamic range, will broadly enable metabolic engineering and synthetic biology. We demonstrated that the activities of multiple cellulases and the production of ethanol were doubled in a transgenic yeast constructed with our system compared with those achieved with a standard expression system.


Catalysis Science & Technology | 2012

A nanocluster design for the construction of artificial cellulosomes

Do-Myoung Kim; Hikaru Nakazawa; Mitsuo Umetsu; Takashi Matsuyama; Nobuhiro Ishida; Akinori Ikeuchi; Haruo Takahashi; Ryutaro Asano; Izumi Kumagai

We describe here the construction of artificial cellulosomes by nanoclustering recombinant cellulolytic modules on non-cellulosome-derived scaffolds. Catalytic and cellulose-binding domain modules derived from cellulosomes were assembled on streptavidin and on inorganic nanoparticles. Heteroclustering of the modules significantly promoted the activity of the assembled catalytic modules for degradation of water-insoluble substrates.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Combinatorial Screening for Transgenic Yeasts with High Cellulase Activities in Combination with a Tunable Expression System

Yoichiro Ito; Mamoru Yamanishi; Akinori Ikeuchi; Chie Imamura; Takashi Matsuyama

Combinatorial screening used together with a broad library of gene expression cassettes is expected to produce a powerful tool for the optimization of the simultaneous expression of multiple enzymes. Recently, we proposed a highly tunable protein expression system that utilized multiple genome-integrated target genes to fine-tune enzyme expression in yeast cells. This tunable system included a library of expression cassettes each composed of three gene-expression control elements that in different combinations produced a wide range of protein expression levels. In this study, four gene expression cassettes with graded protein expression levels were applied to the expression of three cellulases: cellobiohydrolase 1, cellobiohydrolase 2, and endoglucanase 2. After combinatorial screening for transgenic yeasts simultaneously secreting these three cellulases, we obtained strains with higher cellulase expressions than a strain harboring three cellulase-expression constructs within one high-performance gene expression cassette. These results show that our method will be of broad use throughout the field of metabolic engineering.


ACS Synthetic Biology | 2013

A Genome-Wide Activity Assessment of Terminator Regions in Saccharomyces cerevisiae Provides a ″Terminatome″ Toolbox

Mamoru Yamanishi; Yoichiro Ito; Reiko Kintaka; Chie Imamura; Satoshi Katahira; Akinori Ikeuchi; Hisao Moriya; Takashi Matsuyama


Archive | 2016

Method for producing expression product of exogenous gene in yeast, regulator of expression in yeast, and use thereof

Takashi Matsuyama; Mamoru Yamanishi; Chie Imamura; Satoshi Katahira; Akinori Ikeuchi; Yoichiro Ito


ACS Catalysis | 2013

Hybrid Nanocellulosome Design from Cellulase Modules on Nanoparticles: Synergistic Effect of Catalytically Divergent Cellulase Modules on Cellulose Degradation Activity

Hikaru Nakazawa; Do-Myoung Kim; Takashi Matsuyama; Nobuhiro Ishida; Akinori Ikeuchi; Yuri Ishigaki; Izumi Kumagai; Mitsuo Umetsu


Archive | 2009

USE OF CELLOBIOHYDROLASE DERIVED FROM PHANEROCHAETE

Akinori Ikeuchi; Chie Imamura; Haruo Takahashi; 千絵 今村; 暁紀 池内; 治雄 高橋


Green Chemistry | 2013

Biomass-binding peptides designed by molecular evolution for efficient degradation of cellulose in biomass by cellulase

Hikaru Nakazawa; Akinori Ikeuchi; Do-Myoung Kim; Yuri Ishigaki; Hidetaka Asano; Katsunori Kouda; Izumi Kumagai; Mitsuo Umetsu

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