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Featured researches published by Ei-ichi Matsuo.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Post-liberation cleavage of signal peptides is catalyzed by the site-2 protease (S2P) in bacteria

Akira Saito; Yohei Hizukuri; Ei-ichi Matsuo; Shinobu Chiba; Hiroyuki Mori; Osamu Nishimura; Koreaki Ito; Yoshinori Akiyama

A signal peptide (SP) is cleaved off from presecretory proteins by signal peptidase during or immediately after insertion into the membrane. In metazoan cells, the cleaved SP then receives proteolysis by signal peptide peptidase, an intramembrane-cleaving protease (I-CLiP). However, bacteria lack any signal peptide peptidase member I-CLiP, and little is known about the metabolic fate of bacterial SPs. Here we show that Escherichia coli RseP, an site-2 protease (S2P) family I-CLiP, introduces a cleavage into SPs after their signal peptidase-mediated liberation from preproteins. A Bacillus subtilis S2P protease, RasP, is also shown to be involved in SP cleavage. These results uncover a physiological role of bacterial S2P proteases and update the basic knowledge about the fate of signal peptides in bacterial cells.


EMBO Reports | 2000

Length recognition at the N-terminal tail for the initiation of FtsH-mediated proteolysis.

Shinobu Chiba; Yoshinori Akiyama; Hiroyuki Mori; Ei-ichi Matsuo; Koreaki Ito

FtsH‐mediated proteolysis against membrane proteins is processive, and presumably involves dislocation of the substrate into the cytosol where the enzymatic domains of FtsH reside. To study how such a mode of proteolysis is initiated, we manipulated N‐terminal cytosolic tails of three membrane proteins. YccA, a natural substrate of FtsH was found to require the N‐terminal tail of 20 amino acid residues or longer to be degraded by FtsH in vivo. Three unrelated sequences of this segment conferred the FtsH sensitivity to YccA. An artificially constructed TM9‐PhoA protein, derived from SecY, as well as the SecE protein, were sensitized to FtsH by addition of extra amino acid sequences to their N‐terminal cytosolic tails. Thus, FtsH recognizes a cytosolic region of sufficient length (∼20 amino acids) to initiate the processive proteolysis against membrane proteins. Such a region is typically at the N‐terminus and can be diverse in amino acid sequences.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Syd, a SecY-interacting Protein, Excludes SecA from the SecYE Complex with an Altered SecY24 Subunit

Ei-ichi Matsuo; Hiroyuki Mori; Takashi Shimoike; Koreaki Ito

Syd is an Escherichia coli cytosolic protein that interacts with SecY. Overproduction of this protein causes a number of protein translocation-related phenotypes, including the strong toxicity against the secY24 mutant cells. Previously, this mutation was shown to impair the interaction between SecY and SecE, the two fundamental subunits of the membrane-embedded part of protein translocase. We have now studied in vitrothe mechanisms of the Syd-directed inhibition of protein translocation. Pro-OmpA translocation into inverted membrane vesicles (IMVs) prepared from the secY24 mutant cells as well as the accompanied translocation ATPase activity of SecA were rapidly inhibited by purified Syd protein. In the course of protein translocation, high affinity binding of preprotein-bearing SecA to the translocase on the IMV is followed by ATP-driven insertion of the 30-kDa SecA segment into the membrane. Our experiments using 125I-labeled SecA and the secY24 mutant IMV showed that Syd abolished both the high affinity SecA binding and the SecA insertion. Syd was even able to release the inserted form of SecA that had been stabilized by a nonhydrolyzable ATP analog. Syd affected markedly the proteolytic digestion pattern of the IMV-integrated SecY24 protein, suggesting that Syd exerts its inhibitory effect by interacting directly with the SecY24 protein. In accordance with this notion, a SecY24 variant with a second site mutation (secY249) resisted the Syd action bothin vivo and in vitro. Thus, Syd acts against the SecY24 form of translocase, in which SecY-SecE interaction has been compromised, to exclude the SecA motor protein from the SecYE channel complex.


FEBS Letters | 1999

The plasmid F OmpP protease, a homologue of OmpT, as a potential obstacle to E. coli‐based protein production

Ei-ichi Matsuo; Gen-ichi Sampei; Kiyoshi Mizobuchi; Koreaki Ito

OmpT, an outer membrane‐localized protease of Escherichia coli, cleaves a number of exogenous and endogenous proteins during their purification. SecY, an endogenous membrane protein, is a target of this artificial proteolysis in vitro. Here we report that SecY cleavage occurs even in cell extracts from ompT‐disrupted cells, if they carry an F plasmid derivative. A gene, ompP, on the F plasmid was shown to be responsible for this proteolysis. These results indicate that the absence of an F‐like plasmid should be checked when choosing a host strain for E. coli‐based protein production.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 2003

Interfering mutations provide in vivo evidence that Escherichia coli SecE functions in multimeric states.

Ei-ichi Matsuo; Hiroyuki Mori; Koreaki Ito

SecY, SecE and SecG form a heterotrimer, which functions as a protein translocation channel in Escherichia coli. The cytosolic loop of SecE contains a segment that is conserved among different organisms. Here we show that mutational alterations in this segment not only inactivate the SecE function but confer dominant interfering properties on the altered SecE molecule. Such effects were especially evident in mutant cells in which the requirement for SecE function was increased. Overproduction of SecE, but not of SecY, alleviated the dominant negative effects. These results suggest that the inactive SecE molecule sequesters wild-type SecE. It was also found that an amino acid substitution, D112P, in the C-terminal periplasmic region intragenically suppressed the dominant interference. These results are consistent with a notion that there is significant SecE-SecE interaction in vivo, in which the C-terminal region has an important role. The data hence suggest that dimeric SecE participates in the formation of the functional translocation channel.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1998

Genetic analysis of an essential cytoplasmic domain of Escherichia coli SecY based on resistance to Syd, a SecY-interacting protein

Ei-ichi Matsuo; Koreaki Ito

Abstract We previously described a dominant negative secY-d1 allele in Escherichia coli, whose product interferes with protein export, presumably by sequestering SecE, the stabilizing partner of SecY. Syd is the product of a multicopy suppressor of the secY-d1 phenotype, and its overproduction preferentially stabilizes the wild-type SecY protein. In contrast, overproduction of Syd is toxic to the secY24 mutant, which shows a partial defect in SecY-SecE interaction. We isolated Syd-resistant revertants from the secY24 mutant. Pseudo-reversions mapped to sites at or near the secY24 mutation site (Gly240→Asp). The secY249 mutation (Ala249→Val) intragenically suppressed Syd sensitivity, but not the temperature-sensitive Sec phenotype of the secY24 mutation. The SecY249 mutant protein shows a reduced capacity to be stabilized by Syd, suggesting that the mutation weakens the SecY-Syd interaction. The other two mutations changed residue 240 (the site of the secY24 alteration) to Asn (secY245) or Ala (secY241) and restored the ability of the cell to export protein. Although the secY245 mutant retained some sensitivity␣to Syd overproduction, the secY241 mutant was completely Syd-resistant. Furthermore, the secY241 mutation seemed to represent a “hyper reversion” with respect to the SecY-SecE interaction. Protein export in this mutant was no longer sensitive to SecY-d1. When the secY-d1 mutation was combined intragenically with secY241, the resulting double mutant gene (secY-d1–241) showed an increased ability to interfere with protein export. On the basis of our model for SecY-d1, these results suggest that the secY241 alteration enhances SecY-SecE interaction. These results indicate that residue 240 of SecY is crucial for the interaction between the cytosolic domains of SecY and SecE required for the establishment of the translocase complex.


Journal of biomolecular techniques | 2006

Rapid and efficient MALDI-TOF MS peak detection of 2-nitrobenzenesulfenyl-labeled peptides using the combination of HPLC and an automatic spotting apparatus.

Tetsuo Iida; Hiroki Kuyama; Makoto Watanabe; Chikako Toda; Ei-ichi Matsuo; Atsushi Kido; Eiji Ando; Susumu Tsunasawa; Osamu Nishimura


Molecular Microbiology | 1999

A class of integral membrane proteins will be overlooked by the 'proteome' study that is based on two-dimensional gel electrophoresis.

Koreaki Ito; Ei-ichi Matsuo; Yoshinori Akiyama


Archive | 2011

COLORECTAL CANCER MARKER GALECTIN, METHOD FOR ANALYZING GALECTIN CONCENTRATION IN BLOOD SAMPLE, AND KIT FOR DETECTING COLORECTAL CANCER MARKER GALECTIN

Makoto Watanabe; Ei-ichi Matsuo; Naoki Kaneko; Toshiya Matsubara; Osamu Nishimura; Masaki Mori; Ichiro Takemasa


Archive | 2011

COLORECTAL CANCER MARKER VITRONECTIN AND METHOD FOR ANALYZING VITRONECTIN CONCENTRATION IN BLOOD SAMPLE

Makoto Watanabe; Ei-ichi Matsuo; Naoki Kaneko; Toshiya Matsubara; Masaki Mori; Ichiro Takemasa; Osamu Nishimura

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Koreaki Ito

Kyoto Sangyo University

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Ichiro Takemasa

Sapporo Medical University

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