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Featured researches published by Hideki Takanashi.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Arabidopsis dynamin-related proteins DRP2B and DRP1A participate together in clathrin-coated vesicle formation during endocytosis

Masaru Fujimoto; Shin-ichi Arimura; Takashi Ueda; Hideki Takanashi; Yoshikazu Hayashi; Akihiko Nakano; Nobuhiro Tsutsumi

Endocytosis performs a wide range of functions in animals and plants. Clathrin-coated vesicle (CCV) formation is an initial step of endocytosis, and in animal cells is largely achieved by dynamins. However, little is known of its molecular mechanisms in plant cells. To identify dynamin-related proteins (DRPs) involved in endocytic CCV formation in plant cells, we compared the behaviors of two structurally different Arabidopsis DRPs, DRP2B and DRP1A, with those of the clathrin light chain (CLC), a marker of CCVs, at the plasma membrane by variable incidence angle fluorescent microscopy (VIAFM). DRP2B shares domain organization with animal dynamins whereas DRP1A is plant-specific. We show that green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged DRP2B and DRP1A colocalized with CLC tagged with monomeric Kusabira Orange (mKO) in Arabidopsis cultured cells. Time-lapse VIAFM observations suggested that both GFP-DRP2B and GFP-DRP1A appeared and accumulated on the existing mKO-CLC foci and disappeared at the same time as or immediately after the disappearance of mKO-CLC. Moreover, DRP2B and DRP1A colocalized and assembled/disassembled together at the plasma membrane in Arabidopsis cells. A yeast two-hybrid assay showed that DRP2B and DRP1A interacted with each other. An inhibitor of clathrin-mediated endocytosis, tyrphostin A23, disturbed the localization of DRP1A, but had little effect on the localization of DRP2B, indicating that DRP1A and DRP2B have different molecular properties. These results suggest that DRP2B and DRP1A participate together in endocytic CCV formation in Arabidopsis cells despite the difference of their molecular properties.


Nature Communications | 2011

The rice mitochondrial iron transporter is essential for plant growth

Khurram Bashir; Yasuhiro Ishimaru; Hugo Shimo; Seiji Nagasaka; Masaru Fujimoto; Hideki Takanashi; Nobuhiro Tsutsumi; Gynheung An; Hiromi Nakanishi; Naoko K. Nishizawa

In plants, iron (Fe) is essential for mitochondrial electron transport, heme, and Fe-Sulphur (Fe-S) cluster synthesis; however, plant mitochondrial Fe transporters have not been identified. Here we show, identify and characterize the rice mitochondrial Fe transporter (MIT). Based on a transfer DNA library screen, we identified a rice line showing symptoms of Fe deficiency while accumulating high shoot levels of Fe. Homozygous knockout of MIT in this line resulted in a lethal phenotype. MIT localized to the mitochondria and complemented the growth of Δmrs3Δmrs4 yeast defective in mitochondrial Fe transport. The growth of MIT-knockdown (mit-2) plants was also significantly impaired despite abundant Fe accumulation. Further, the decrease in the activity of the mitochondrial and cytosolic Fe-S enzyme, aconitase, indicated that Fe-S cluster synthesis is affected in mit-2 plants. These results indicate that MIT is a mitochondrial Fe transporter essential for rice growth and development.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2008

Substitution of the Gene for Chloroplast RPS16 Was Assisted by Generation of a Dual Targeting Signal

Minoru Ueda; Tomotaro Nishikawa; Masaru Fujimoto; Hideki Takanashi; Shin-ichi Arimura; Nobuhiro Tsutsumi; Koh-ichi Kadowaki

Organelle (mitochondria and chloroplasts in plants) genomes lost a large number of genes after endosymbiosis occurred. Even after this major gene loss, organelle genomes still lose their own genes, even those that are essential, via gene transfer to the nucleus and gene substitution of either different organelle origin or de novo genes. Gene transfer and substitution events are important processes in the evolution of the eukaryotic cell. Gene loss is an ongoing process in the mitochondria and chloroplasts of higher plants. The gene for ribosomal protein S16 (rps16) is encoded in the chloroplast genome of most higher plants but not in Medicago truncatula and Populus alba. Here, we show that these 2 species have compensated for loss of the rps16 from the chloroplast genome by having a mitochondrial rps16 that can target the chloroplasts as well as mitochondria. Furthermore, in Arabidopsis thaliana, Lycopersicon esculentum, and Oryza sativa, whose chloroplast genomes encode the rps16, we show that the product of the mitochondrial rps16 has dual targeting ability. These results suggest that the dual targeting of RPS16 to the mitochondria and chloroplasts emerged before the divergence of monocots and dicots (140-150 MYA). The gene substitution of the chloroplast rps16 by the nuclear-encoded rps16 in higher plants is the first report about ongoing gene substitution by dual targeting and provides evidence for an intermediate stage in the formation of this heterogeneous organelle.


Plant Physiology | 2011

Distinct Gene Expression Profiles in Egg and Synergid Cells of Rice as Revealed by Cell Type-Specific Microarrays

Takayuki Ohnishi; Hideki Takanashi; Mirai Mogi; Hirokazu Takahashi; Shunsuke Kikuchi; Kentaro Yano; Takashi Okamoto; Masahiro Fujita; Nori Kurata; Nobuhiro Tsutsumi

Double fertilization in flowering plants refers to a process in which two sperm cells, carried by the pollen tube, fertilize both the egg and the central cell after their release into a synergid cell of the female gametophyte. The molecular processes by which the female gametophytic cells express their unique functions during fertilization are not well understood. Genes expressed in egg and synergid cells might be important for multiple stages of the plant reproductive process. Here, we profiled genome-wide gene expression in egg and synergid cells in rice (Oryza sativa), a model monocot, using a nonenzymatic cell isolation technique. We found that the expression profiles of the egg and synergid cells were already specified at the micropylar end of the female gametophyte during the short developmental period that comprises the three consecutive mitotic nuclear divisions after megaspore generation. In addition, we identified a large number of genes expressed in the rice egg and synergid cells and characterized these genes using Gene Ontology analysis. The analysis suggested that epigenetic and posttranscriptional regulatory mechanisms are involved in the specification and/or maintenance of these cells. Comparisons between the rice profiles and reported Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) profiles revealed that genes enriched in the egg/synergid cell of rice were distinct from those in Arabidopsis.


Plant Journal | 2014

RCN1/OsABCG5, an ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter, is required for hypodermal suberization of roots in rice (Oryza sativa)

Katsuhiro Shiono; Miho Ando; Shunsaku Nishiuchi; Hirokazu Takahashi; Kohtaro Watanabe; Motoaki Nakamura; Yuichi Matsuo; Naoko Yasuno; Utako Yamanouchi; Masaru Fujimoto; Hideki Takanashi; Kosala Ranathunge; Rochus Franke; Nobukazu Shitan; Naoko K. Nishizawa; Itsuro Takamure; Masahiro Yano; Nobuhiro Tsutsumi; Lukas Schreiber; Kazufumi Yazaki; Mikio Nakazono; Kiyoaki Kato

Suberin is a complex polymer composed of aliphatic and phenolic compounds. It is a constituent of apoplastic plant interfaces. In many plant species, including rice (Oryza sativa), the hypodermis in the outer part of roots forms a suberized cell wall (the Casparian strip and/or suberin lamellae), which inhibits the flow of water and ions and protects against pathogens. To date, there is no genetic evidence that suberin forms an apoplastic transport barrier in the hypodermis. We discovered that a rice reduced culm number1 (rcn1) mutant could not develop roots longer than 100 mm in waterlogged soil. The mutated gene encoded an ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter named RCN1/OsABCG5. RCN1/OsABCG5 gene expression in the wild type was increased in most hypodermal and some endodermal roots cells under stagnant deoxygenated conditions. A GFP-RCN1/OsABCG5 fusion protein localized at the plasma membrane of the wild type. Under stagnant deoxygenated conditions, well suberized hypodermis developed in wild types but not in rcn1 mutants. Under stagnant deoxygenated conditions, apoplastic tracers (periodic acid and berberine) were blocked at the hypodermis in the wild type but not in rcn1, indicating that the apoplastic barrier in the mutant was impaired. The amount of the major aliphatic suberin monomers originating from C(28) and C(30) fatty acids or ω-OH fatty acids was much lower in rcn1 than in the wild type. These findings suggest that RCN1/OsABCG5 has a role in the suberization of the hypodermis of rice roots, which contributes to formation of the apoplastic barrier.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2017

High-Throughput Phenotyping of Sorghum Plant Height Using an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle and Its Application to Genomic Prediction Modeling

Kakeru Watanabe; Wei Guo; Keigo Arai; Hideki Takanashi; Hiromi Kajiya-Kanegae; Masaaki Kobayashi; Kentaro Yano; Tsuyoshi Tokunaga; Toru Fujiwara; Nobuhiro Tsutsumi; Hiroyoshi Iwata

Genomics-assisted breeding methods have been rapidly developed with novel technologies such as next-generation sequencing, genomic selection and genome-wide association study. However, phenotyping is still time consuming and is a serious bottleneck in genomics-assisted breeding. In this study, we established a high-throughput phenotyping system for sorghum plant height and its response to nitrogen availability; this system relies on the use of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) remote sensing with either an RGB or near-infrared, green and blue (NIR-GB) camera. We evaluated the potential of remote sensing to provide phenotype training data in a genomic prediction model. UAV remote sensing with the NIR-GB camera and the 50th percentile of digital surface model, which is an indicator of height, performed well. The correlation coefficient between plant height measured by UAV remote sensing (PHUAV) and plant height measured with a ruler (PHR) was 0.523. Because PHUAV was overestimated (probably because of the presence of taller plants on adjacent plots), the correlation coefficient between PHUAV and PHR was increased to 0.678 by using one of the two replications (that with the lower PHUAV value). Genomic prediction modeling performed well under the low-fertilization condition, probably because PHUAV overestimation was smaller under this condition due to a lower plant height. The predicted values of PHUAV and PHR were highly correlated with each other (r = 0.842). This result suggests that the genomic prediction models generated with PHUAV were almost identical and that the performance of UAV remote sensing was similar to that of traditional measurements in genomic prediction modeling. UAV remote sensing has a high potential to increase the throughput of phenotyping and decrease its cost. UAV remote sensing will be an important and indispensable tool for high-throughput genomics-assisted plant breeding.


Current Genetics | 2010

Studies of mitochondrial morphology and DNA amount in the rice egg cell

Hideki Takanashi; Takayuki Ohnishi; Mirai Mogi; Takashi Okamoto; Shin-ichi Arimura; Nobuhiro Tsutsumi

In plant vegetative cells, mitochondria are usually small and grain-shaped. In contrast, unusually shaped giant mitochondria (large cup-shaped or long stretched-rod-shaped) appear in the egg cells of geranium, maize, Ipomoea nil, and bracken. In this study, to characterize egg cell mitochondria in rice, we used nonenzymatic manual dissection to isolate unfertilized egg cells of rice and observed the egg cell mitochondria and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) simultaneously. These observations showed that the mitochondria in the rice egg cell are small and grain-shaped, unlike the mitochondria in geranium, maize, I. nil, and bracken. Double staining of mitochondria by MitoTracker and mtDNA by SYBR Green I showed that mitochondria in the rice egg cell have a large amount of mtDNA compared with the rice root protoplast. We also used real-time PCR analysis to quantify the mtDNA amount in the rice egg cell. We quantified the copy numbers of four mitochondrial genes per single rice egg cell and rice leaf protoplast. Real-time PCR analysis revealed that the egg cell has more than ten times more copy numbers of all of four genes encoded in the mitochondrial genome compared with the leaf protoplast.


Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2011

DCL2 is highly expressed in the egg cell in both rice and Arabidopsis

Hideki Takanashi; Takayuki Ohnishi; Mirai Mogi; Yuto Hirata; Nobuhiro Tsutsumi

Small RNAs are riboregulators that play critical roles in eukaryotic cells. They repress gene expression by acting either on DNA to guide sequence elimination and chromatin remodeling, or on RNA to guide cleavage and translation repression. Arabidopsis thaliana and Oryza sativa contain four and six DICER-LIKE (DCL) genes with specialized functions in small RNA biogenesis for RNA interference-related processes. We recently profiled genome-wide gene expression in egg and synergid cells in rice. In this article, we show that OsDCL2, OsDCL4, and OsHEN1 are preferentially expressed in the egg cell. In addition, we revealed that AtDCL2 is also preferentially expressed in the Arabidopsis egg cell. These findings suggest that small RNA pathways are activated in the egg cell in both rice and Arabidopsis. The activation of these pathways in the egg cell might be essential for egg cell maturation, fertilization, or embryogenesis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

Transcriptional switch for programmed cell death in pith parenchyma of sorghum stems

Masaru Fujimoto; Takashi Sazuka; Yoshihisa Oda; Hiroyuki Kawahigashi; Jianzhong Wu; Hideki Takanashi; Takayuki Ohnishi; Junichi Yoneda; Motoyuki Ishimori; Hiromi Kajiya-Kanegae; Ken-ichiro Hibara; Fumiko Ishizuna; Kazuo Ebine; Takashi Ueda; Tsuyoshi Tokunaga; Hiroyoshi Iwata; Takashi Matsumoto; Shigemitsu Kasuga; Jun-ichi Yonemaru; Nobuhiro Tsutsumi

Significance Sugar and ethanol productivity from the sugar juice of grass stems depends on their water content. Pith parenchyma cells function as a water storage tissue in plant stems, and the death of these cells reduces stem water content. In this study, we identified a gene, long referred to as D, in a promising energy grass, Sorghum bicolor, that is responsible for reducing stem water content. D and its Arabidopsis ortholog encode master transcriptional switches that induce programmed death of stem pith parenchyma cells by activating autolytic enzymes. Identifying D as the gene involved in programmed death of plant pith parenchyma cells will provide an approach to breeding crops for sugar and ethanol production. Pith parenchyma cells store water in various plant organs. These cells are especially important for producing sugar and ethanol from the sugar juice of grass stems. In many plants, the death of pith parenchyma cells reduces their stem water content. Previous studies proposed that a hypothetical D gene might be responsible for the death of stem pith parenchyma cells in Sorghum bicolor, a promising energy grass, although its identity and molecular function are unknown. Here, we identify the D gene and note that it is located on chromosome 6 in agreement with previous predictions. Sorghum varieties with a functional D allele had stems enriched with dry, dead pith parenchyma cells, whereas those with each of six independent nonfunctional D alleles had stems enriched with juicy, living pith parenchyma cells. D expression was spatiotemporally coupled with the appearance of dead, air-filled pith parenchyma cells in sorghum stems. Among D homologs that are present in flowering plants, Arabidopsis ANAC074 also is required for the death of stem pith parenchyma cells. D and ANAC074 encode previously uncharacterized NAC transcription factors and are sufficient to ectopically induce programmed death of Arabidopsis culture cells via the activation of autolytic enzymes. Taken together, these results indicate that D and its Arabidopsis ortholog, ANAC074, are master transcriptional switches that induce programmed death of stem pith parenchyma cells. Thus, targeting the D gene will provide an approach to breeding crops for sugar and ethanol production.


Plant Molecular Biology | 2018

miRNAs control HAM1 functions at the single-cell-layer level and are essential for normal embryogenesis in Arabidopsis

Hideki Takanashi; Hikari Sumiyoshi; Mirai Mogi; Yoshikazu Hayashi; Takayuki Ohnishi; Nobuhiro Tsutsumi

Key messagemiR171a controls HAM1 functions within the protodermal cells of the embryo, and these controls are essential for normal embryogenesis in Arabidopsis.AbstractArabidopsis thaliana miR171a is known to bind to and cleave mRNAs of three HAIRY MERISTEM (HAM) genes that encode members of the GRAS family transcriptional regulators. The molecular functions of the HAM genes are still being elucidated in Arabidopsis. However, detailed expression patterns of miR171a and the effects of the failure of miR171a to suppress HAM genes were unknown till now. Here, we show the detailed expression patterns of miR171a and HAM1 using green fluorescent protein and confocal scanning microscopy. Our observations revealed that miR171a was expressed in the surface cell layer of the embryo and shoot apical meristem, and it controlled HAM1 functions. To determine the impact of the failure of miR171a to suppress of HAM1, we introduced seven synonymous mutations into the miR171a target site of the HAM1 gene (modified HAM1, mHAM1) and generated transgenic plants that had mHAM1 driven by HAM1 native promoter. The mHAM1 transgenic plants showed organogenic defects. These results indicate that the control of HAM1 functions at the single-cell-layer level by miR171a is essential for proper organ formation in Arabidopsis.

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