Etsuo Yokota
University of Hyogo
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Publication
Featured researches published by Etsuo Yokota.
The EMBO Journal | 2003
Motoki Tominaga; Hiroaki Kojima; Etsuo Yokota; Hidefumi Orii; R. Nakamori; Eisaku Katayama; Michael Anson; Teruo Shimmen; Kazuhiro Oiwa
High velocity cytoplasmic streaming is found in various plant cells from algae to angiosperms. We characterized mechanical and enzymatic properties of a higher plant myosin purified from tobacco bright yellow‐2 cells, responsible for cytoplasmic streaming, having a 175 kDa heavy chain and calmodulin light chains. Sequence analysis shows it to be a class XI myosin and a dimer with six IQ motifs in the light chain‐binding domains of each heavy chain. Electron microscopy confirmed these predictions. We measured its ATPase characteristics, in vitro motility and, using optical trap nanometry, forces and movement developed by individual myosin XI molecules. Single myosin XI molecules move processively along actin with 35 nm steps at 7 μm/s, the fastest known processive motion. Processivity was confirmed by actin landing rate assays. Mean maximal force was ∼0.5 pN, smaller than for myosin IIs. Dwell time analysis of beads carrying single myosin XI molecules fitted the ATPase kinetics, with ADP release being rate limiting. These results indicate that myosin XI is highly specialized for generation of fast processive movement with concomitantly low forces.
Protoplasma | 2003
Etsuo Yokota; T. Izeki; Teruo Shimmen
Summary. In root hair cells of Limnobium stoloniferum, transvacuolar strands disperse and cytoplasmic spherical bodies (CSBs) emerge upon treatment with a protein phosphatase inhibitor, calyculin A (CA), whose effects were previously shown to be canceled by simultaneous treatment of the cells with a nonselective protein kinase inhibitor, K-252a. CSB formation is also suppressed by latrunculin B (LB) or cytochalasin D, actin filament depolymerization drugs, or 2,3-butanedione monoxime, an inhibitor of myosin activity. To confirm the involvement of myosin activity in CSB formation induced by CA, we examined the effect of an inhibitor of energy metabolism, NaN3, on CSB formation in root hair cells pretreated simultaneously with CA and LB. In the presence of CA-LB, CSB formation was suppressed due to the depolymerization of actin filaments. When these drugs were removed, the actin filaments recovered and CSBs emerged even in the presence of K-252a. These results indicated that the phosphorylation level in the cells is elevated during the CA-LB treatment and that a phosphorylation level sufficient for the CSB formation was sustained even after CA removal. On the other hand, CSB formation after simultaneous treatment with CA and LB was significantly suppressed in the presence of NaN3. In such cells, actin filament bundles recovered, although their organization was random. The present and previous results suggested that myosin activity is necessary for CSB formation induced by CA, and that myosin regulated by phosphorylation-dephosphorylation is implicated in the organization of the actin cytoskeleton in root hair cells.
Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 2004
Teruo Shimmen; Etsuo Yokota
Plant and Cell Physiology | 2005
Kohsuke Hashimoto; Hisako Igarashi; Shoji Mano; Mikio Nishimura; Teruo Shimmen; Etsuo Yokota
Plant and Cell Physiology | 2003
Taisuke Nishimura; Etsuo Yokota; Takuji Wada; Teruo Shimmen; Kiyotaka Okada
Plant and Cell Physiology | 2005
Etsuo Yokota; Motoki Tominaga; Issei Mabuchi; Yasunori Tsuji; Christopher J. Staiger; Kazuhiro Oiwa; Teruo Shimmen
Plant and Cell Physiology | 2003
Etsuo Yokota; Luis Vidali; Motoki Tominaga; Hiroshi Tahara; Hidefumi Orii; Yosuke Morizane; Peter K. Hepler; Teruo Shimmen
Planta | 2004
Etsuo Yokota; Takahiro Ohmori; Shoshi Muto; Teruo Shimmen
Journal of Cell Science | 1994
Etsuo Yokota; Issei Mabuchi
Biochemistry | 1997
Yang-Il Fang; Etsuo Yokota; Issei Mabuchi; Hideshi Nakamura; Yasushi Ohizumi
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National Institute of Information and Communications Technology
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