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Dive into the research topics where Chikashi Toyoshima is active.

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Featured researches published by Chikashi Toyoshima.


Nature | 2000

Crystal structure of the calcium pump of sarcoplasmic reticulum at 2.6 A resolution

Chikashi Toyoshima; Masayoshi Nakasako; Hiromi Nomura; Haruo Ogawa

Calcium ATPase is a member of the P-type ATPases that transport ions across the membrane against a concentration gradient. Here we have solved the crystal structure of the calcium ATPase of skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum (SERCA1a) at 2.6 Å resolution with two calcium ions bound in the transmembrane domain, which comprises ten α-helices. The two calcium ions are located side by side and are surrounded by four transmembrane helices, two of which are unwound for efficient coordination geometry. The cytoplasmic region consists of three well separated domains, with the phosphorylation site in the central catalytic domain and the adenosine-binding site on another domain. The phosphorylation domain has the same fold as haloacid dehalogenase. Comparison with a low-resolution electron density map of the enzyme in the absence of calcium and with biochemical data suggests that large domain movements take place during active transport.


Nature | 2002

Structural changes in the calcium pump accompanying the dissociation of calcium

Chikashi Toyoshima; Hiromi Nomura

In skeletal muscle, calcium ions are transported (pumped) against a concentration gradient from the cytoplasm into the sarcoplasmic reticulum, an intracellular organelle. This causes muscle cells to relax after cytosolic calcium increases during excitation. The Ca2+ ATPase that carries out this pumping is a representative P-type ion-transporting ATPase. Here we describe the structure of this ion pump at 3.1 Å resolution in a Ca2+-free (E2) state, and compare it with that determined previously for the Ca2+-bound (E1Ca2+) state. The structure of the enzyme stabilized by thapsigargin, a potent inhibitor, shows large conformation differences from that in E1Ca2+. Three cytoplasmic domains gather to form a single headpiece, and six of the ten transmembrane helices exhibit large-scale rearrangements. These rearrangements ensure the release of calcium ions into the lumen of sarcoplasmic reticulum and, on the cytoplasmic side, create a pathway for entry of new calcium ions.


Nature | 2004

Crystal structure of the calcium pump with a bound ATP analogue.

Chikashi Toyoshima; Tatsuaki Mizutani

P-type ATPases are ATP-powered ion pumps that establish ion concentration gradients across cell and organelle membranes. Here, we describe the crystal structure of the Ca2+ pump of skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum, a representative member of the P-type ATPase superfamily, with an ATP analogue, a Mg2+ and two Ca2+ ions in the respective binding sites. In this state, the ATP analogue reorganizes the three cytoplasmic domains (A, N and P), which are widely separated without nucleotide, by directly bridging the N and P domains. The structure of the P-domain itself is altered by the binding of the ATP analogue and Mg2+. As a result, the A-domain is tilted so that one of the transmembrane helices moves to lock the cytoplasmic gate of the transmembrane Ca2+-binding sites. This appears to be the mechanism for occluding the bound Ca2+ ions, before releasing them into the lumen of the sarcoplasmic reticulum.


Nature | 2004

Lumenal gating mechanism revealed in calcium pump crystal structures with phosphate analogues

Chikashi Toyoshima; Hiromi Nomura; Takeo Tsuda

P-type ion transporting ATPases are ATP-powered ion pumps that establish ion concentration gradients across biological membranes. Transfer of bound cations to the lumenal or extracellular side occurs while the ATPase is phosphorylated. Here we report at 2.3 Å resolution the structure of the calcium-ATPase of skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum, a representative P-type ATPase that is crystallized in the absence of Ca2+ but in the presence of magnesium fluoride, a stable phosphate analogue. This and other crystal structures determined previously provide atomic models for all four principal states in the reaction cycle. These structures show that the three cytoplasmic domains rearrange to move six out of ten transmembrane helices, thereby changing the affinity of the Ca2+-binding sites and the gating of the ion pathway. Release of ADP triggers the opening of the lumenal gate and release of phosphate its closure, effected mainly through movement of the A-domain, the actuator of transmembrane gates.


Nature | 1998

Structure of the calcium pump from sarcoplasmic reticulum at 8-Å resolution

Peijun Zhang; Chikashi Toyoshima; Koji Yonekura; N. Michael Green; David L. Stokes

The calcium pump from sarcoplasmic reticulum (Ca2+-ATPase) is typical of the large family of P-type cation pumps. These couple ATP hydrolysis with cation transport, generating cation gradients across membranes. Ca2+-ATPase specifically maintains the low cytoplasmic calcium concentration of resting muscle by pumping calcium into the sarcoplasmic reticulum; subsequent release is used to initiate contraction. No high-resolution structure of a P-type pump has yet been determined, although a 14-Å structure ofCa2+-ATPase, obtained by electron microscopy of frozen-hydrated, tubular crystals, showed a large cytoplasmic head connected to the transmembrane domain by a narrow stalk. We have now improved the resolution to 8 Å and can discern ten transmembrane α-helices, four of which continue into the stalk. On the basis of constraints from transmembrane topology, site-directed mutagenesis and disulphide crosslinking, we have made tentative assignments for these α-helices within the amino-acid sequence. A distinct cavity leads to the putative calcium-binding site, providing a plausible path for calcium release to the lumen of the sarcoplasmic reticulum.


Nature | 1988

Ion channel of acetylcholine receptor reconstructed from images of postsynaptic membranes

Chikashi Toyoshima; Nigel Unwin

The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor belongs to a class of molecules that respond transiently to chemical stimuli by opening a water-filled channel through the cell membrane for cations to diffuse. This channel lies along the central axis delineated by a ring of five homologous, membrane-spanning subunits1,2 and thus has properties, such as conductance and ion selectivity, which depend on the profile created by the encircling subunits. Insight has been gained recently about the amino-acid residues implicated directly in the ion transport3–7, and some information about the subunit configuration around the channel has come from electron micros-copy studies of postsynaptic membranes crystallized in the form of flattened tubular vesicles8–11. The resolution along the axis of the channel has, however, been limited by the restricted range of views obtainable. Here we report the structure of the channel at 17 Å resolution, determined by three-dimensional image recon-struction from tubular vesicles having receptors organized in helical arrays across their surfaces. The helical symmetry is preserved by suspending the tubes in thin films of ice, and the receptors in such tubes can be seen from all angles, allowing the channel to be revealed clearly in relation to the lipid bilayer and the peripheral protein for the first time.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Crystal structure of the sodium-potassium pump (Na+,K+-ATPase) with bound potassium and ouabain

Haruo Ogawa; Takehiro Shinoda; Flemming Cornelius; Chikashi Toyoshima

The sodium-potassium pump (Na+,K+-ATPase) is responsible for establishing Na+ and K+ concentration gradients across the plasma membrane and therefore plays an essential role in, for instance, generating action potentials. Cardiac glycosides, prescribed for congestive heart failure for more than 2 centuries, are efficient inhibitors of this ATPase. Here we describe a crystal structure of Na+,K+-ATPase with bound ouabain, a representative cardiac glycoside, at 2.8 Å resolution in a state analogous to E2·2K+·Pi. Ouabain is deeply inserted into the transmembrane domain with the lactone ring very close to the bound K+, in marked contrast to previous models. Due to antagonism between ouabain and K+, the structure represents a low-affinity ouabain-bound state. Yet, most of the mutagenesis data obtained with the high-affinity state are readily explained by the present crystal structure, indicating that the binding site for ouabain is essentially the same. According to a homology model for the high affinity state, it is a closure of the binding cavity that confers a high affinity.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Homology modeling of the cation binding sites of Na+K+-ATPase

Haruo Ogawa; Chikashi Toyoshima

Homology modeling of the α-subunit of Na+K+-ATPase, a representative member of P-type ion transporting ATPases, was carried out to identify the cation (three Na+ and two K+) binding sites in the transmembrane region, based on the two atomic models of Ca2+-ATPase (Ca2+-bound form for Na+, unbound form for K+). A search for potential cation binding sites throughout the atomic models involved calculation of the valence expected from the disposition of oxygen atoms in the model, including water molecules. This search identified three positions for Na+ and two for K+ at which high affinity for the respective cation is expected. In the models presented, Na+- and K+-binding sites are formed at different levels with respect to the membrane, by rearrangements of the transmembrane helices. These rearrangements ensure that release of one type of cation coordinates with the binding of the other. Cations of different radii are accommodated by the use of amino acid residues located on different faces of the helices. Our models readily explain many mutational and biochemical results, including different binding stoichiometry and affinities for Na+ and K+.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Modeling of the inhibitory interaction of phospholamban with the Ca2+ ATPase

Chikashi Toyoshima; Michio Asahi; Yuji Sugita; Reena Khanna; Takeo Tsuda; David H. MacLennan

The inhibitory interaction of phospholamban (PLN) with the sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase isoform 1 (SERCA1a) was modeled on the basis of several constraints which included (i) spontaneous formation of SS-bridges between mutants L321C in transmembrane helix 4 (M4) of SERCA1a and N27C in PLN and between V89C (M4) and V49C (PLN); (ii) definition of the face of the PLN transmembrane helix that interacts with SERCA; (iii) cross-linking between Lys-3 of PLN and Lys-397 and Lys-400 of SERCA2a. The crystal structure of SERCA1a in the absence of Ca2+, which binds PLN, was used as the structure into which an atomic model of PLN was built. PLN can fit into a transmembrane groove formed by the juxtaposition of M2, the upper part of M4, M6, and M9. In the SERCA1a structure with bound Ca2+, this groove is closed, accounting for the ability of Ca2+ to disrupt PLN–SERCA interactions. Near the cytoplasmic surface of the bilayer, the PLN helix is disrupted to prevent its collision with M4. The model can be extended into the cytoplasmic domain so that Lys-3 in PLN can be cross-linked with Lys-397 and Lys-400 in SERCA1a with little unwinding of the N-terminal helix of PLN.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 2008

Structural aspects of ion pumping by Ca2+-ATPase of sarcoplasmic reticulum.

Chikashi Toyoshima

Ca2+-ATPase of muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum is an ATP-powered Ca2+-pump that establishes a >10,000-fold concentration gradient across the membrane. Its crystal structures have been determined for nine different states that cover nearly the entire reaction cycle. Presented here is a brief structural account of the ion pumping process, which is achieved by a series of very large domain rearrangements.

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Haruo Ogawa

Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology

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Giuseppe Inesi

California Pacific Medical Center

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