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Dive into the research topics where Hiroharu Banno is active.

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Featured researches published by Hiroharu Banno.


Cell | 2002

Expansion of the Cell Plate in Plant Cytokinesis Requires a Kinesin-like Protein/MAPKKK Complex

Ryuichi Nishihama; Takashi Soyano; Masaki Ishikawa; Satoshi Araki; Hirokazu Tanaka; Tetsuhiro Asada; Kenji Irie; Mayumi Ito; Mizuya Terada; Hiroharu Banno; Yoshiko Yamazaki; Yasunori Machida

The tobacco mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase NPK1 regulates lateral expansion of the cell plate at cytokinesis. Here, we show that the kinesin-like proteins NACK1 and NACK2 act as activators of NPK1. Biochemical analysis suggests that direct binding of NACK1 to NPK1 stimulates kinase activity. NACK1 is accumulated specifically in M phase and colocalized with NPK1 at the phragmoplast equator. Overexpression of a truncated NACK1 protein that lacks the motor domain disrupts NPK1 concentration at the phragmoplast equator and cell plate formation. Incomplete cytokinesis is also observed when expression of NACK1 and NACK2 is repressed by virus-induced gene silencing and in embryonic cells from Arabidopsis mutants in which a NACK1 ortholog is disrupted. Thus, we conclude that expansion of the cell plate requires NACK1/2 to regulate the activity and localization of NPK1.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1993

NPK1, a tobacco gene that encodes a protein with a domain homologous to yeast BCK1, STE11, and Byr2 protein kinases.

Hiroharu Banno; Keiko Hirano; T Nakamura; Kenji Irie; S Nomoto; Kunihiro Matsumoto; Yasunori Machida

We have isolated a cDNA (cNPK1) that encodes a predicted protein kinase of 690 amino acids from suspension cultures of tobacco cells. The deduced sequence is closely related to those of the protein kinases encoded by the STE11 and BCK1 genes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and the byr2 gene of Schizosaccharomyces pombe. STE11 and Byr2 function in the yeast mating pheromone response pathways, and BCK1 acts downstream of the yeast protein kinase C homolog encoded by the PKC1 gene, which is essential for normal growth and division of yeast cells. Overexpression in yeast cells of a truncated form of cNPK1, which encodes only the putative catalytic domain, replaced the growth control functions of BCK1 and PKC1 but not the mating pheromone response function of STE11. Thus, the catalytic domain of NPK1 specifically activates the signal transduction pathway mediated by BCK1 in yeast. In tobacco cells in suspension culture, the NPK1 gene is transcribed during logarithmic phase and early stationary phase but not during late stationary phase. In a tobacco plant, it is also transcribed in stems and roots but not in mature leaves, which rarely contain growing cells. The present results suggest that a signal transduction pathway mediated by this BCK1- and STE11-related protein kinase is also conserved in plants and that a function of NPK1 is controlled at least in part at a transcriptional level.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1994

Characterization of tobacco protein kinase NPK5, a homolog of Saccharomyces cerevisiae SNF1 that constitutively activates expression of the glucose-repressible SUC2 gene for a secreted invertase of S. cerevisiae.

T Muranaka; Hiroharu Banno; Yasunori Machida

We have isolated a cDNA (cNPK5) that encodes a protein kinase of 511 amino acids from suspension cultures of tobacco cells. The predicted kinase domain of NPK5 is 65% identical in terms of amino acid sequence to that of the SNF1 serine/threonine protein kinase of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, which plays a central role in catabolite repression in yeast cells. SNF1 positively regulates transcription of various glucose-repressible genes of the yeast, such as the SUC2 gene for a secreted invertase, in response to glucose deprivation: snf1 mutants cannot utilize sucrose as a carbon source. Expression of cNPK5 in yeast cells allowed the snf1 mutant cells to utilize sucrose for growth and caused constitutive expression of the SUC2 gene in wild-type cells even in the presence of glucose, an indication that the NPK5 protein is present in a constitutively active form in S. cerevisiae. On the other hand, expression of cNPK5 failed to suppress the growth defect of the snf4 mutant cells in the presence of sucrose and to induce expression of the SUC2 gene. These results indicate that SNF4 is required for the induction of SUC2 expression by NPK5, as by SNF1, even if NPK5 is constitutively active in S. cerevisiae. The recombinant NPK5 protein is capable of autophosphorylation in vitro in a reaction that requires Mn2+ rather than Mg2+ ions but is inhibited by Ca2+ ions. Both dicotyledonous and monocotyledonous plants have several copies of the NPK5-related gene, which probably constitute a small gene family. NPK5-related genes were found to be expressed in the roots, leaves, and stems of tobacco plants. The high degree of structural conservation and the functional similarity of NPK5 to SNF1 lead us to speculate that NPK5 (or a related kinase) also plays a role in sugar metabolism in higher plants.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1995

A tobacco protein kinase, NPK2, has a domain homologous to a domain found in activators of mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKKs)

Wataru Shibata; Hiroharu Banno; Yukihiro Ito; Keiko Hirano; Kenji Irie; Shoji Usami; Chiyoko Machida; Yasunori Machida

A cDNA (cNPK2) that encodes a protein of 518 amino acids was isolated from a library prepared from poly(A)+ RNAs of tobacco cells in suspension culture. The N-terminal half of the predicted NPK2 protein is similar in amino acid sequence to the catalytic domains of kinases that activate mitogen-activated protein kinases (designated here MAPKKs) from various animals and to those of yeast homologs of MAPKKs. The N-terminal domain of NPK2 was produced as a fusion protein in Escherichia coli, and the purified fusion protein was found to be capable of autophosphorylation of threonine and serine residues. These results indicate that the N-terminal domain of NPK2 has activity of a serine/threonine protein kinase. Southern blot analysis showed that genomic DNAs from various plant species, including Arabidopsis thaliana and sweet potato, hybridized strongly with cNPK2, indicating that these plants also have genes that are closely related to the gene for NPK2. The structural similarity between the catalytic domain of NPK2 and those of MAPKKs and their homologs suggests that tobacco NPK2 corresponds to MAPKKs of other organisms. Given the existence of plant homologs of an MAP kinase and tobacco NPK1, which is structurally and functionally homologous to one of the activator kinases of yeast homologs of MAPKK (MAPKKKs), it seems likely that a signal transduction pathway mediated by a protein kinase cascade that is analogous to the MAP kinase cascades proposed in yeasts and animals, is also conserved in plants.


Journal of Plant Research | 1998

MAPKKK-Related protein kinase NPK1: Regulation of the M phase of plant cell cycle

Yasunori Machida; Marina Nakashima; Kayoko Morikiyo; Hiroharu Banno; Masaki Ishikawa; Takashi Soyano; Ryuichi Nishihama

The tobaccoNPK1 gene encodes a homolog of mitogenactivated protein kinase kinase kinases. We have recently identified tobacco kinesin-like proteins (NACK1/2) as activators for NPK1. Immunochemical analyses of NPK1 and NACK1 proteins suggest that NPK1 is involved in the regulation of some process in the M phase of the plant cell cycle.


Plant Physiology and Biochemistry | 2008

The Arabidopsis transcription factor ESR1 induces in vitro shoot regeneration through transcriptional activation.

Naoki Matsuo; Hiroharu Banno

The Arabidopsis Enhancer of Shoot Regeneration 1 (ESR1) gene regulates initiation of in vitro shoot regeneration. In this study, we investigated the transcription-modulating potential of ESR1. ESR1 induced reporter gene expression when overexpressed transiently in Arabidopsis leaf cells. Experiments using a fusion protein with the GAL4 DNA-binding domain located a transactivating domain of ESR1 within the C-terminal region. A nuclear localization signal was also located within the AP2/ERF domain. These results demonstrated that ESR1 functions as a transcriptional activator. Furthermore, we examined whether transcriptional modulation by ESR1 affects the in vitro shoot regeneration efficiency. Overexpression of ESR1 fused with the VP16 transactivating domain enhanced in vitro shoot regeneration as well as overexpressed wild-type ESR1 did, while overexpression of ESR1 fused with a strong repression domain, SRDX, inhibited shoot regeneration. These results suggest that ESR1 induces shoot regeneration through its transactivating ability.


Plant Science | 2011

Arabidopsis ENHANCER OF SHOOT REGENERATION (ESR)1 and ESR2 regulate in vitro shoot regeneration and their expressions are differentially regulated

Naoki Matsuo; Miho Makino; Hiroharu Banno

The Arabidopsis ENHANCER OF SHOOT REGENERATION (ESR)1 and ESR2 genes are thought to play critical roles in in vitro shoot regeneration. In this study, we investigated the functions and expression patterns of ESR1 and ESR2 during shoot regeneration by using their mutants and promoter-reporter systems. Shoot regeneration efficiencies of esr1 esr2 double mutants from hypocotyl explants decreased drastically; although the effects on shoot regeneration of the esr1 single mutation were much less marked than those of the esr2 single mutation, especially from root explants, their effects were additive. We found that ESR1 was initially expressed 1 day after transfer onto shoot-inducing medium (SIM), compared with 4 days for ESR2 expression. These results suggest that the functions of ESR1 and ESR2 in shoot regeneration are not redundant, even though they encode similar transcription factors and the ESR2 gene substituted with an ESR1 coding region complements the esr2 mutation. We also found that ESR1 expression was localized to a small number of cells in the lateral root meristem (LRM)-like structures, and the ESR1-expressing cells appeared to proliferate to form shoot apical meristem (SAM)-like structures. Thus, ESR1 may be involved in the change of LRM to SAM in tissue culture.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1994

NPK15, a tobacco protein-serine/threonine kinase with a single hydrophobic region near the amino-terminus.

Yukihiro Ito; Hiroharu Banno; Toyoki Moribe; Kokichi Hinata; Yasunori Machida

A cDNA clone (cNPK15) was isolated from tobacco cells in suspension culture, which encodes a predicted protein kinase of 422 amino acids. The predicted NPK15 protein consists of a hydrophobic region near the amino-terminus, a linker domain and the catalytic domain of a protein-serine/threonine kinase in the carboxyl-half. NPK15 was not found to be closely related to any reported protein, but its putative catalytic domain shares some structural similarity with those of receptor-like protein kinases of plants, such as ZmPK1 from Zea mays and TMK1 from Arabidopsis, even though no receptor-like domain is found in NPK15. Recombinant NPK15 expressed in Escherichia coli as a fusion protein was found capable of autophosphorylation and of phosphorylation of the histone H1 protein on both serine and threonine residues. Upon overexpression of cNPK15 under control of the promoter of cauliflower mosaic virus 35S RNA in tobacco cells, into which it had been introduced by Agrobacterium-mediated transformation, the NPK15 gene acted as a “suicide” gene and blocked proliferation of the host cells. By contrast, such a suicide effect was not observed with the gene for a kinase-negative mutant protein in which the nucleotide sequence for the ATP-binding site had been mutated or with a mutant derivative encoding a protein in which the hydrophobic region had been deleted. Thus, the protein kinase activity of NPK15 and the hydrophobic region of the protein are responsible for the suicide effect. The NPK15 protein kinase seems to be associated with specific cellular functions. Southern blot analysis with cNPK15 as the probe detected several fragments in restriction digests of genomic DNAs from both tobacco and other members of the Solanaceae. This result suggests that NPK15-related genes constitute a small gene family in the genomes of Solanaceae.


The Plant Cell | 2001

Overexpression of Arabidopsis ESR1 Induces Initiation of Shoot Regeneration

Hiroharu Banno; Yoshihisa Ikeda; Qi-Wen Niu; Nam-Hai Chua


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1995

Cutting activates a 46-kilodalton protein kinase in plants

Shoji Usami; Hiroharu Banno; Yukihiro Ito; Ryuichi Nishihama; Yasunori Machida

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