Chuya Yoshida
Saitama University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Chuya Yoshida.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009
Koichiro Kitamura; Chuya Yoshida; Yasunori Kinoshita; Tomoko Kadowaki; Takahiro Tayama; Tomoyo Kawakubo; Mohammed Naimuddin; Md. Salimullah; Naoto Nemoto; Kazunori Hanada; Yuzuru Husimi; Kenji Yamamoto; Koichi Nishigaki
Proteases are involved in various biological functions. Thus, inhibition of their activities is scientifically interesting and medically important. However, there is no systematic method established to date to generate endopeptidase inhibitory peptides. Here, we report a general system to identify endopeptidase inhibitory peptides based on the use of in vitro evolution. Using this system, we generated peptides that inhibit cathepsin E (CE) specifically at a submicromolar IC(50). This system generates protease inhibitor peptides utilizing techniques of cDNA display, selection-by-function, Y-ligation-based block shuffling, and others. We further demonstrated the importance and effectiveness of a secondary library for obtaining small-sized and active peptides. CE inhibitory peptides generated by this method were characterized by a small size (8 to 12 aa) and quite different sequences, suggesting that they bind to different sites on CE. Typical CE inhibitory peptide aptamers obtained here (P(i)101; SCGG IIII SCIA) have half an inhibition activity (K(i); 5 nM) of pepstatin A (potent CE inhibitor) without inhibiting cathepsin D (structurally similar to CE). The general applicability of this system suggests that it may be useful to identify inhibitory peptides for various kinds of proteases and that it may therefore contribute to protein science and drug discovery. The peptide binding to a protein is discussed in comparison with the antibody binding to an antigen.
FEBS Letters | 2003
Koichiro Kitamura; Chuya Yoshida; Koichi Nishigaki
Insertion and deletion analyses of a protein have been less common than point mutation analyses, partly due to the lack in effective methods. This is the case with the green fluorescent protein (GFP), which is so widely applied in molecular biology and other fields. In this paper we first introduce a systematic approach for generating insertion/deletion mutants of GFP. A new technology of Y‐ligation‐based block shuffling (YLBS) was successfully applied to produce size‐altered GFPs, providing insertion‐containing GFPs of fluorescence, though no deletion type of fluorescence was obtained so far as examined. The analysis of these proteins suggested that size alteration (deletion/insertion) is acceptable so far as some type of rearrangement in a local structure can accommodate it. This paper demonstrates that YLBS can generate insertion and deletion mutant libraries systematically, which are beneficial in the study of structure–function relationship.
Oligonucleotides | 2008
Chuya Yoshida; Akira Kuniwake; Mohammed Naimuddin; Koichi Nishigaki
It has been strongly demanded by a number of people to elevate activities of molecules of a particular function. Currently, there is no general guide available for this purpose. Here we present a novel approach for this; a local sequence space map-directed method for exploring molecules of a higher activity. This approach exploits the knowledge of a local sequence space so far established and obtains the shape of sequence space (map) by intra- and extrapolating the known landscape, which was drawn through the principal coordinates analysis. In this method, we successfully obtained 16 DNA aptamers of cathepsin E (CE) inhibitory activity that have comparable or higher activities than the ancestral ones on which the designed molecules were based. Some of them had a 30% higher activity than the previously reported top one (SFR-6-3). This high efficiency in obtaining functional molecules (16 out of 21 newly designed ones) is by no means usual because most of molecules generated at random are known to have no function, showing the effectiveness of the map-based approach. The selected molecules were confirmed to have the i-motif structure, consistent to the fact that they have a C-rich sequence and their CE-inhibitory activities were measured at an acidic pH, both of which are favorable for the i-motif. This structure of CE-inhibitory aptamers was inferred to contribute to the structural stability but not to the function itself directly.
Chemistry Letters | 2008
Koichiro Kitamura; Chuya Yoshida; Salimullah; Yasunori Kinoshita; Miho Suzuki; Naoto Nemoto; Koichi Nishigaki
Archive | 2013
真也 本田; Masaya Honda; 渡邊 秀樹; H. Watanabe; 秀樹 渡邊; 昼也 吉田; Chuya Yoshida; 豊 磯部; Yutaka Isobe; ▲浜崎▼桃子; Momoko Hamasaki; 中井 康人; Yasuto Nakai; 康人 中井
生物物理 | 2010
Koichi Nishigaki; Koichiro Kitamura; Chuya Yoshida; Masae Futakami; Madhu Biyani; Sachika Ueno-Tsuji
Seibutsu Butsuri | 2010
Koichi Nishigaki; Koichiro Kitamura; Chuya Yoshida; Masae Futakami; Madhu Biyani; Sachika Ueno-Tsuji
生物物理 | 2008
Chuya Yoshida; Koichiro Kitamura; Madhu Biyani; Masae Futakami; Takuyo Aita; Koichi Nishigaki
Biophysics | 2008
Chuya Yoshida; Koichiro Kitamura; Madhu Biyani; Masae Futakami; Takuyo Aita; Koichi Nishigaki
Seibutsu Butsuri | 2007
Chuya Yoshida; Koichiro Kitamura; Koichi Nishigaki