Atsuko Uenoyama
Osaka City University
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Featured researches published by Atsuko Uenoyama.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2004
Atsuko Uenoyama; Akiko Kusumoto; Makoto Miyata
Several mycoplasma species are known to glide in the direction of the membrane protrusion (head-like structure), but the mechanism underlying this movement is entirely unknown. To identify proteins involved in the gliding mechanism, protein fractions of Mycoplasma mobile were analyzed for 10 gliding mutants isolated previously. One large protein (Gli349) was observed to be missing in a mutant m13 deficient in hemadsorption and glass binding. The predicted amino acid sequence indicated a 348,758-Da protein that was truncated at amino acid residue 1257 in the mutant. Immunofluorescence microscopy with a monoclonal antibody showed that Gli349 is localized at the head-like protrusions base, which we designated the cell neck, and immunoelectron microscopy established that the Gli349 molecules are distributed all around this neck. The number of Gli349 molecules on a cell was estimated by immunoblot analysis to be 450 +/- 200. The antibody inhibited both the hemadsorption and glass binding of M. mobile. When the antibody was used to treat gliding mycoplasmas, the gliding speed and the extent of glass binding were inhibited to similar extents depending on the concentration of the antibody. This suggested that the Gli349 molecule is involved not only in glass binding for gliding but also in movement. To explain the present results, a model for the mechanical cycle of gliding is discussed.
Microbiology | 2000
Makoto Miyata; Takashi Shimizu; Atsuko Uenoyama; Christine Citti; Renate Rosengarten
The present study characterizes gliding motility mutants of Mycoplasma mobile which were obtained by UV irradiation. They were identified by their abnormal colony shapes in 0.1% agar medium, showing a reduced number of satellite colonies compared to the wild-type. A total of ten mutants were isolated based on their colony phenotype. Using dark-field and electron microscopy, two classes of mutants, group I and group II, were defined. Cells of group I mutants had irregular, flexible and sometimes elongated head-like structures and showed a tendency to aggregate. Neither binding to glass nor gliding motility was observed in these mutants. Cells of group II mutants were rather spherical in shape, with the long axis reduced to 80% and the short axis enlarged to 120% of that of wild-type cells, respectively. Their gliding speed was 20% faster than that of wild-type cells. Three of the ten mutants remained unclassified. Mutant m6 had a reduced binding activity to glass and a reduced gliding motility with 50% of the speed of the wild-type strain. The ability of wild-type and mutant colonies to adsorb erythrocytes was found to correlate with the binding activity required for gliding, indicating that mycoplasma gliding depends on cytadherence-associated components. Finally, the ability to form microcolonies on surfaces was shown to correlate with the gliding activity, suggesting a certain role of gliding motility in the parasitic life-cycle of mycoplasmas.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2005
Atsuko Uenoyama; Makoto Miyata
Mycoplasma mobile glides on a glass surface in the direction of its tapered end by an unknown mechanism. Two large proteins, Gli349 and Gli521, were recently reported to be involved in glass binding and force generation/transmission, respectively, in M. mobile gliding. These proteins are coded tandemly with two other open reading frames (ORFs) in the order p123-gli349-gli521-p42 on the genome. In the present study, reverse transcriptase PCR analysis suggested that these four ORFs are transcribed cistronically. To characterize the p123 gene coding a 123-kDa protein (Gli123) of 1,128 amino acids, we raised polyclonal antibody against the Gli123 protein. Immunoblotting for Gli123 revealed that Gli123 was missing in a mutant strain, m12, which was previously isolated and characterized by a deficiency in glass binding. Sequencing analysis showed a nonsense mutation at the 523rd amino acid of the protein in the m12 mutant. Immunofluorescence microscopy with the polyclonal antibody showed that Gli123 is localized at the head-like protrusions base, the cell neck, which is specialized for gliding, as observed for Gli349 and Gli521. Localization of the gliding proteins, Gli349 and Gli521, was disturbed in the m12 mutant, suggesting that Gli123 is essential for the positioning of gliding proteins in the cell neck.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2006
Jun Adan-Kubo; Atsuko Uenoyama; Toshiaki Arata; Makoto Miyata
Several species of mycoplasmas rely on an unknown mechanism to glide across solid surfaces in the direction of a membrane protrusion at the cell pole. Our recent studies on the fastest species, Mycoplasma mobile, suggested that a 349-kDa protein, Gli349, localized at the base of the membrane protrusion called the neck, forms legs that stick out from the neck and propel the cell by repeatedly binding to and releasing from a solid surface, based on the energy of ATP hydrolysis. Here, the Gli349 protein was isolated from mycoplasma cells and its structure was analyzed. Gel filtration analysis showed that the isolated Gli349 protein is monomeric. Rotary shadowing electron microscopy revealed that the molecular structure resembles the symbol for an eighth note in music. It contains an oval foot 14 nm long in axis. From this foot extend three rods in tandem of 43, 20, and 20 nm, in that order. The hinge connecting the first and second rods is flexible, while the next hinge has a distinct preference in its angle, near 90 degrees. Molecular images revealed that a monoclonal antibody that can bind to the position at one-third of the total peptide length from the N terminus bound to a position two-thirds from the foot end, suggesting that the foot corresponds to the C-terminal region. The amino acid sequence was assigned to the molecular image, and the topology of the molecule in the gliding machinery is discussed.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2009
Atsuko Uenoyama; Shintaro Seto; Daisuke Nakane; Makoto Miyata
Mycoplasma mobile glides on solid surfaces by use of a unique mechanism that involves two large proteins, Gli349 and Gli521. Here we isolated and analyzed two antibodies and three mutants that modified mycoplasma gliding. Mapping of the target points of antibodies and mutations currently available suggested that a 301-amino-acid region on the whole 3,138-amino-acid sequence, a C-terminal region of Gli349, and an N-terminal region of Gli521 are directly involved in the movements of the gliding machinery.
Biophysics | 2005
Shoichi Metsugi; Atsuko Uenoyama; Jun Adan-Kubo; Makoto Miyata; Kei Yura; Hidetoshi Kono; Nobuhiro Go
The motile mechanism of Mycoplasma mobile remains unknown but is believed to differ from any previously identified mechanism in bacteria. Gli349 of M. mobile is known to be responsible for both adhesion to glass surfaces and mobility. We therefore carried out sequence analyses of Gli349 and its homolog MYPU2110 from M. pulmonis to decipher their structures. We found that the motif “YxxxxxGF” appears 11 times in Gli349 and 16 times in MYPU2110. Further analysis of the sequences revealed that Gli349 contains 18 repeats of about 100 amino acid residues each, and MYPU2110 contains 22. No sequence homologous to any of the repeats was found in the NCBI RefSeq non-redundant sequence database, and no compatible fold structure was found among known protein structures, suggesting that the repeat found in Gli349 and MYPU2110 is novel and takes a new fold structure. Proteolysis of Gli349 using chymotrypsin revealed that cleavage positions were often located between the repeats, implying that regions connecting repeats are unstructured, flexible and exposed to the solvent. Assuming that each repeat folds into a structural domain, we constructed a model of Gli349 that fits well the shape and size of images obtained with electron microscopy.
Journal of Bacteriology | 2014
Isil Tulum; Masaru Yabe; Atsuko Uenoyama; Makoto Miyata
Mycoplasma mobile has a unique mechanism that enables it to glide on solid surfaces faster than any other gliding mycoplasma. To elucidate the gliding mechanism, we developed a transformation system for M. mobile based on a transposon derived from Tn4001. Modification of the electroporation conditions, outgrowth time, and colony formation from the standard method for Mycoplasma species enabled successful transformation. A fluorescent-protein tagging technique was developed using the enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (EYFP) and applied to two proteins that have been suggested to be involved in the gliding mechanism: P42 (MMOB1050), which is transcribed as continuous mRNA with other proteins essential for gliding, and a homolog of the F1-ATPase α-subunit (MMOB1660). Analysis of the amino acid sequence of P42 by PSI-BLAST suggested that P42 evolved from a common ancestor with FtsZ, the bacterial tubulin homologue. The roles of P42 and the F(1)-ATPase subunit homolog are discussed as part of our proposed gliding mechanism.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005
Atsuko Uenoyama; Makoto Miyata
Journal of Bacteriology | 2005
Shintaro Seto; Atsuko Uenoyama; Makoto Miyata
Fems Microbiology Letters | 2002
Makoto Miyata; Atsuko Uenoyama