Hikaru Nakazawa
Tohoku University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Hikaru Nakazawa.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2013
Keiko Tawa; Mitsuo Umetsu; Hikaru Nakazawa; Takamitsu Hattori; Izumi Kumagai
The grating substrate covered with a metal layer, a plasmonic chip, and a bispecific antibody can play a key role in the sensitive detection of a marker protein with an immunosensor, because of the provision of an enhanced fluorescence signal and the preparation of a sensor surface densely modified with capture antibody, respectively. In this study, one of the tumor markers, a soluble epidermal growth factor receptor (sEGFR), was selected as the target to be detected. The ZnO- and silver-coated plasmonic chip with precise regularity and the appropriate duty ratio in the periodic structure further enhanced the fluorescence intensity. As for sensor surface modification with capture antibody, a bispecific antibody (anti-sEGFR and anti-ZnO antibody), the concentrated bispecific antibody solution was found to nonlinearly form a surface densely immobilized with antibody, because the binding process of a bispecific antibody to the ZnO surface can be a competitive process with adsorption of phosphate. As a result, the interface on the plasmonic chip provided a 300× enhanced fluorescence signal compared with that on a ZnO-coated glass slide, and therefore sEGFR was found to be quantitatively detected in a wide concentration range from 10 nM to 700 fM on our plasmonic surface.
Nano Letters | 2014
A. Sikora; Javier Ramón-Azcón; K. Kim; Kelley T. Reaves; Hikaru Nakazawa; Mitsuo Umetsu; Izumi Kumagai; Tadafumi Adschiri; Hitoshi Shiku; Tomokazu Matsue; Wonmuk Hwang; Winfried Teizer
As a complementary tool to nanofluidics, biomolecular-based transport is envisioned for nanotechnological devices. We report a new method for guiding microtubule shuttles on multi-walled carbon nanotube tracks, aligned by dielectrophoresis on a functionalized surface. In the absence of electric field and in fluid flow, alignment is maintained. The directed translocation of kinesin propelled microtubules has been investigated using fluorescence microscopy. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of microtubules gliding along carbon nanotubes.
Catalysis Science & Technology | 2012
Do-Myoung Kim; Hikaru Nakazawa; Mitsuo Umetsu; Takashi Matsuyama; Nobuhiro Ishida; Akinori Ikeuchi; Haruo Takahashi; Ryutaro Asano; Izumi Kumagai
We describe here the construction of artificial cellulosomes by nanoclustering recombinant cellulolytic modules on non-cellulosome-derived scaffolds. Catalytic and cellulose-binding domain modules derived from cellulosomes were assembled on streptavidin and on inorganic nanoparticles. Heteroclustering of the modules significantly promoted the activity of the assembled catalytic modules for degradation of water-insoluble substrates.
ACS Nano | 2015
A. Sikora; Filippo Federici Canova; K. Kim; Hikaru Nakazawa; Mitsuo Umetsu; Izumi Kumagai; Tadafumi Adschiri; Wonmuk Hwang; Winfried Teizer
We report the observation of kinesin driven quantum dots (QDs) trapped in a microtubule loop, allowing the investigation of moving QDs for a long time and an unprecedented long distance. The QD conjugates did not depart from our observational field of view, enabling the tracking of specific conjugates for more than 5 min. The unusually long run length and the periodicity caused by the loop track allow comparing and studying the trajectory of the kinesin driven QDs for more than 2 full laps, i.e., about 70 μm, enabling a statistical analysis of interactions of the same kinesin driven object with the same obstacle. The trajectories were extracted and analyzed from kymographs with a newly developed algorithm. Despite dispersion, several repetitive trajectory patterns can be identified. A method evaluating the similarity is introduced allowing a quantitative comparison between the trajectories. The velocity variations appear strongly correlated to the presence of obstacles. We discuss the reasons making this long continuous travel distances on the loop track possible.
Biomedical Microdevices | 2014
Kyongwan Kim; Andrew L. Liao; A. Sikora; Daniel Oliveira; Hikaru Nakazawa; Mitsuo Umetsu; Izumi Kumagai; Tadafumi Adschiri; Wonmuk Hwang; Winfried Teizer
Gliding of microtubule filaments on surfaces coated with the motor protein kinesin has potential applications for nano-scale devices. The ability to guide the gliding direction in three dimensions allows the fabrication of tracks of arbitrary geometry in space. Here, we achieve this by using kinesin-coated glass wires of micrometer diameter range. Unlike previous methods in which the guiding tracks are fixed on flat two-dimensional surfaces, the flexibility of glass wires in shape and size facilitates building in-vitro devices that have deformable tracks.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Aruto Sugiyama; Mitsuo Umetsu; Hikaru Nakazawa; Teppei Niide; Tomoko Onodera; Katsuhiro Hosokawa; Shuhei Hattori; Ryutaro Asano; Izumi Kumagai
Small bispecific antibodies that induce T-cell–mediated cytotoxicity have the potential to damage late-stage tumor masses to a clinically relevant degree, but their cytotoxicity is critically dependent on their structural and functional properties. Here, we constructed an optimized procedure for identifying highly cytotoxic antibodies from a variety of the T-cell–recruiting antibodies engineered from a series of antibodies against cancer antigens of epidermal growth factor receptor family and T-cell receptors. By developing and applying a set of rapid operations for expression vector construction and protein preparation, we screened the cytotoxicity of 104 small antibodies with diabody format and identified some with 103-times higher cytotoxicity than that of previously reported active diabody. The results demonstrate that cytotoxicity is enhanced by synergistic effects between the target, epitope, binding affinity, and the order of heavy-chain and light-chain variable domains. We demonstrate the importance of screening to determine the critical rules for highly cytotoxic antibodies.
Molecular Systems Design & Engineering | 2016
Yutaro Mori; Hikaru Nakazawa; Geisa A.L. Gonçalves; Tsutomu Tanaka; Mitsuo Umetsu; Noriho Kamiya
In biological systems, proteins can form well-organized, higher-order structures with unique functions that would be difficult to achieve with a single protein. These proteinaceous supramolecular structures form by self-assembly, and the spatial arrangement of the protein building blocks in them is very important. In the present study, an artificial system was developed using recombinant proteins as building blocks, which were assembled in a one-dimensional manner. The assembly of these building blocks was based on the avidin–biotin interaction. A tetrameric biotin ligand unit was designed so that the 1 : 4 stoichiometry of the avidin–biotin interaction was altered to a 1 : 2 directional interaction between the streptavidin and tetrabiotinylated protein units. In a proof-of-concept study, site-specifically tetrabiotin-labeled endoglucanase and cellulose-binding module units were prepared, and then these components were self-assembled by mixing with streptavidin to mimic a natural cellulosome. The formation of one-dimensional assemblies of the protein units depended on the stoichiometry of the avidin–biotin interaction sites in the system. Interestingly, the saccharification efficiency improved when the component ratio of protein units in the assemblies was changed. The presence of the optimal ratio of the building blocks implies the modularity of the present protein assembly system.
Japanese Journal of Applied Physics | 2013
Keiko Tawa; Mari Satoh; Koichi Uegaki; Tomoko Hara; Masami Kojima; Haruko Kumanogoh; Hiroyuki Aota; Yoshiki Yokota; Takahiko Nakaoki; Mitsuo Umetsu; Hikaru Nakazawa; Izumi Kumagai
Plasmonic chips, which are grating replicas coated with thin metal layers and overlayers such as ZnO, were applied in immunosensors to improve their detection sensitivity. Fluorescence from labeled antibodies bound to plasmonic chips can be enhanced on the basis of a grating-coupled surface plasmon resonance (GC-SPR) field. In this study, as one of the representative candidate protein markers for brain disorders, the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) was quantitatively measured by sandwich assay on a plasmonic chip and detected on our plasmonic chip in the concentration of 5–7 ng/mL within 40 min. Furthermore, BDNF was detected in the blood sera from three types of mice: wild-type mice and two types of mutant mice. This technique is promising as a new clinical diagnosis tool for brain disorders based on scientific evidence such as blood test results.
bioRxiv | 2018
Yutaka Saito; Misaki Oikawa; Hikaru Nakazawa; Teppei Niide; Tomoshi Kameda; Koji Tsuda; Mitsuo Umetsu
Molecular evolution based on mutagenesis is widely used in protein engineering. However, optimal proteins are often difficult to obtain due to a large sequence space that requires high costs for screening experiments. Here, we propose a novel approach that combines molecular evolution with machine learning. In this approach, we conduct two rounds of mutagenesis where an initial library of protein variants is used to train a machine-learning model to guide mutagenesis for the second-round library. This enables to prepare a small library suited for screening experiments with high enrichment of functional proteins. We demonstrated a proof-of-concept of our approach by altering the reference green fluorescent protein (GFP) so that its fluorescence is changed to yellow while improving its fluorescence intensity. Using 155 and 78 variants for the initial and the second-round libraries, respectively, we successfully obtained a number of proteins showing yellow fluorescence, 12 of which had better fluorescence performance than the reference yellow fluorescent protein (YFP). These results show the potential of our approach as a powerful platform for accelerated discovery of functional proteins.
Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering | 2018
Aruto Sugiyama; Mitsuo Umetsu; Hikaru Nakazawa; Teppei Niide; Ryutaro Asano; Takamitsu Hattori; Izumi Kumagai
The cytotoxicity of T cell-recruiting antibodies with their potential to damage late-stage tumor masses is critically dependent on their structural and functional properties. Recently, we reported a semi-high-throughput process for screening highly cytotoxic small bispecific antibodies (i.e., diabodies). In the present study, we improved the high-throughput performance of this screening process by removing the protein purification stage and adding a stage for determining the concentrations of the diabodies in culture supernatant. The diabodies were constructed by using an Escherichia coli expression system, and each diabody contained tandemly arranged peptide tags at the C-terminus, which allowed the concentration of diabodies in the culture supernatant to be quantified by using a tag-sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. When estimated diabody concentrations were used to determine the cytotoxicity of unpurified antibodies, results comparable to those of purified antibodies were obtained. In a surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy-based target-binding assay, contaminants in the culture supernatant prevented us from conducting a quantitative binding analysis; however, this approach did allow relative binding affinity to be determined, and the relative binding affinities of the unpurified diabodies were comparable to those of the purified antibodies. Thus, we present here an improved high-throughput process for the simultaneous screening and determination of the binding parameters of highly cytotoxic bispecific antibodies.