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Dive into the research topics where Hiroyuki Takahara is active.

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Featured researches published by Hiroyuki Takahara.


Science | 2010

Genome Expansion and Gene Loss in Powdery Mildew Fungi Reveal Tradeoffs in Extreme Parasitism

Pietro D. Spanu; James Abbott; Joelle Amselem; Timothy A. Burgis; Darren M. Soanes; Kurt Stüber; Emiel Ver Loren van Themaat; J. K. M. Brown; Sarah Butcher; Sarah J. Gurr; Marc-Henri Lebrun; Christopher J. Ridout; Paul Schulze-Lefert; Nicholas J. Talbot; Nahal Ahmadinejad; Christian Ametz; Geraint Barton; Mariam Benjdia; Przemyslaw Bidzinski; Laurence V. Bindschedler; Maike Both; Marin Talbot Brewer; Lance Cadle-Davidson; Molly M. Cadle-Davidson; Jérôme Collemare; Rainer Cramer; Omer Frenkel; Dale I. Godfrey; James Harriman; Claire Hoede

From Blight to Powdery Mildew Pathogenic effects of microbes on plants have widespread consequences. Witness, for example, the cultural upheavals driven by potato blight in the 1800s. A variety of microbial pathogens continue to afflict crop plants today, driving both loss of yield and incurring the increased costs of control mechanisms. Now, four reports analyze microbial genomes in order to understand better how plant pathogens function (see the Perspective by Dodds). Raffaele et al. (p. 1540) describe how the genome of the potato blight pathogen accommodates transfer to different hosts. Spanu et al. (p. 1543) analyze what it takes to be an obligate biotroph in barley powdery mildew, and Baxter et al. (p. 1549) ask a similar question for a natural pathogen of Arabidopsis. Schirawski et al. (p. 1546) compared genomes of maize pathogens to identify virulence determinants. Better knowledge of what in a genome makes a pathogen efficient and deadly is likely to be useful for improving agricultural crop management and breeding. A group of papers analyzes pathogen genomes to find the roots of virulence, opportunism, and life-style determinants. Powdery mildews are phytopathogens whose growth and reproduction are entirely dependent on living plant cells. The molecular basis of this life-style, obligate biotrophy, remains unknown. We present the genome analysis of barley powdery mildew, Blumeria graminis f.sp. hordei (Blumeria), as well as a comparison with the analysis of two powdery mildews pathogenic on dicotyledonous plants. These genomes display massive retrotransposon proliferation, genome-size expansion, and gene losses. The missing genes encode enzymes of primary and secondary metabolism, carbohydrate-active enzymes, and transporters, probably reflecting their redundancy in an exclusively biotrophic life-style. Among the 248 candidate effectors of pathogenesis identified in the Blumeria genome, very few (less than 10) define a core set conserved in all three mildews, suggesting that most effectors represent species-specific adaptations.


Nature Genetics | 2012

Lifestyle transitions in plant pathogenic Colletotrichum fungi deciphered by genome and transcriptome analyses

Richard O'Connell; Michael R. Thon; Stéphane Hacquard; Stefan G. Amyotte; Jochen Kleemann; Maria F. Torres; Ulrike Damm; Ester Buiate; Lynn Epstein; Noam Alkan; Janine Altmüller; Lucia Alvarado-Balderrama; Christopher Bauser; Christian Becker; Bruce W. Birren; Zehua Chen; Jae Young Choi; Jo Anne Crouch; Jonathan P. Duvick; Mark A. Farman; Pamela Gan; David I. Heiman; Bernard Henrissat; Richard J. Howard; Mehdi Kabbage; Christian Koch; Barbara Kracher; Yasuyuki Kubo; Audrey D. Law; Marc-Henri Lebrun

Colletotrichum species are fungal pathogens that devastate crop plants worldwide. Host infection involves the differentiation of specialized cell types that are associated with penetration, growth inside living host cells (biotrophy) and tissue destruction (necrotrophy). We report here genome and transcriptome analyses of Colletotrichum higginsianum infecting Arabidopsis thaliana and Colletotrichum graminicola infecting maize. Comparative genomics showed that both fungi have large sets of pathogenicity-related genes, but families of genes encoding secreted effectors, pectin-degrading enzymes, secondary metabolism enzymes, transporters and peptidases are expanded in C. higginsianum. Genome-wide expression profiling revealed that these genes are transcribed in successive waves that are linked to pathogenic transitions: effectors and secondary metabolism enzymes are induced before penetration and during biotrophy, whereas most hydrolases and transporters are upregulated later, at the switch to necrotrophy. Our findings show that preinvasion perception of plant-derived signals substantially reprograms fungal gene expression and indicate previously unknown functions for particular fungal cell types.


PLOS Pathogens | 2012

Sequential Delivery of Host-Induced Virulence Effectors by Appressoria and Intracellular Hyphae of the Phytopathogen Colletotrichum higginsianum

Jochen Kleemann; Linda J. Rincon-Rivera; Hiroyuki Takahara; Ulla Neumann; Emiel Ver Loren van Themaat; H. Charlotte van der Does; Stéphane Hacquard; Kurt Stüber; Isa Will; Wolfgang Schmalenbach; Elmon Schmelzer; Richard O'Connell

Phytopathogens secrete effector proteins to manipulate their hosts for effective colonization. Hemibiotrophic fungi must maintain host viability during initial biotrophic growth and elicit host death for subsequent necrotrophic growth. To identify effectors mediating these opposing processes, we deeply sequenced the transcriptome of Colletotrichum higginsianum infecting Arabidopsis. Most effector genes are host-induced and expressed in consecutive waves associated with pathogenic transitions, indicating distinct effector suites are deployed at each stage. Using fluorescent protein tagging and transmission electron microscopy-immunogold labelling, we found effectors localised to stage-specific compartments at the host-pathogen interface. In particular, we show effectors are focally secreted from appressorial penetration pores before host invasion, revealing new levels of functional complexity for this fungal organ. Furthermore, we demonstrate that antagonistic effectors either induce or suppress plant cell death. Based on these results we conclude that hemibiotrophy in Colletotrichum is orchestrated through the coordinated expression of antagonistic effectors supporting either cell viability or cell death.


Plant Journal | 2009

A locus conferring resistance to Colletotrichum higginsianum is shared by four geographically distinct Arabidopsis accessions

Doris Birker; Katharina Heidrich; Hiroyuki Takahara; Mari Narusaka; Laurent Deslandes; Yoshihiro Narusaka; Matthieu Reymond; Jane E. Parker; Richard O'Connell

Colletotrichum higginsianum is a hemibiotrophic fungal pathogen that causes anthracnose disease on Arabidopsis and other crucifer hosts. By exploiting natural variation in Arabidopsis we identified a resistance locus that is shared by four geographically distinct accessions (Ws-0, Kondara, Gifu-2 and Can-0). A combination of quantitative trait loci (QTL) and Mendelian mapping positioned this locus within the major recognition gene complex MRC-J on chromosome 5 containing the Toll-interleukin-1 receptor/nucleotide-binding site/leucine-rich repeat (TIR-NB-LRR) genes RPS4 and RRS1 that confer dual resistance to C. higginsianum in Ws-0 (Narusaka et al., 2009). We find that the resistance shared by these diverse Arabidopsis accessions is expressed at an early stage of fungal invasion, at the level of appressorial penetration and establishment of intracellular biotrophic hyphae, and that this determines disease progression. Resistance is not associated with host hypersensitive cell death, an oxidative burst or callose deposition in epidermal cells but requires the defense regulator EDS1, highlighting new functions of TIR-NB-LRR genes and EDS1 in limiting early establishment of fungal biotrophy. While the Arabidopsis accession Ler-0 is fully susceptible to C. higginsianum infection, Col-0 displays intermediate resistance that also maps to MRC-J. By analysis of null mutants of RPS4 and RRS1 in Col-0 we show that these genes, individually, do not contribute strongly to C. higginsianum resistance but are both required for resistance to Pseudomonas syringae bacteria expressing the Type III effector, AvrRps4. We conclude that distinct allelic forms of RPS4 and RRS1 probably cooperate to confer resistance to different pathogens.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2009

Discovery of Pathogenicity Genes in the Crucifer Anthracnose Fungus Colletotrichum higginsianum, Using Random Insertional Mutagenesis

Aurélie Huser; Hiroyuki Takahara; Wolfgang Schmalenbach; Richard O'Connell

Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation (ATMT) was used for random insertional mutagenesis to identify pathogenicity genes in the hemibiotrophic fungus Colletotrichum higginsianum. A high-throughput primary infection assay on Arabidopsis thaliana seedlings allowed the rapid screening of 8,850 transformants. Forty mutants showing reproducible pathogenicity defects on Arabidopsis and Brassica plants were obtained, and their infection phenotypes were characterized microscopically. Six mutants were impaired in appressorial melanization, fifteen had reduced penetration ability, 14 induced host papillae or hypersensitive cell death, and five were affected in the transition from biotrophy to necrotrophy. Southern blot analysis showed 58% of the transformants had single-site T-DNA integrations. Right-border flanking sequences were recovered from 12 mutants by inverse polymerase chain reaction (PCR) or thermal asymmetric interlaced PCR and were used to isolate the tagged genes from a genomic library. The putative pathogenicity genes encoded homologs of a major facilitator superfamily phosphate transporter, importin-beta2, ornithine decarboxylase, beta-1,3(4)-glucanase, ATP-binding endoribonuclease, carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase, and the polyprotein precursor of N-acetylglutamate kinase and N-acetylglutamyl-phosphate reductase. Six further loci were homologous to proteins of unknown function. None of these genes were previously implicated in the pathogenicity of any Colletotrichum species. The results demonstrate that ATMT is an effective tool for gene discovery in this model pathogen.


FEBS Letters | 2004

Tomatidine and lycotetraose, hydrolysis products of α‐tomatine by Fusarium oxysporum tomatinase, suppress induced defense responses in tomato cells

Shin-ichi Ito; Tomomi Eto; Shuhei Tanaka; Naoki Yamauchi; Hiroyuki Takahara; Tsuyoshi Ikeda

Many fungal pathogens of tomato produce extracellular enzymes, collectively known as tomatinases, that detoxify the preformed antifungal steroidal glycoalkaloid α‐tomatine. Tomatinase from the vascular wilt pathogen of tomato Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lycopersici cleaves α‐tomatine into the aglycon tomatidine (Td) and the tetrasaccharide lycotetraose (Lt). Although modes of action of α‐tomatine have been extensively studied, those of Td and Lt are poorly understood. Here, we show that both Td and Lt inhibit the oxidative burst and hypersensitive cell death in suspension‐cultured tomato cells. A tomatinase‐negative F. oxysporum strain inherently non‐pathogenic on tomato was able to infect tomato cuttings when either Td or Lt was present. These results suggest that tomatinase from F. oxysporum is required not only for detoxification of α‐tomatine but also for suppression of induced defense responses of host.


Microbiology | 2008

Identification of soluble secreted proteins from appressoria of Colletotrichum higginsianum by analysis of expressed sequence tags

Jochen Kleemann; Hiroyuki Takahara; Kurt Stüber; Richard O'Connell

The hemibiotrophic ascomycete Colletotrichum higginsianum causes anthracnose disease on brassica crops and the model plant Arabidopsis. Melanized appressoria pierce the host cuticle and cell wall to form specialized biotrophic hyphae inside living epidermal cells. To identify proteins secreted by appressoria that may function as virulence effectors, a cDNA library was prepared from mature appressoria formed in vitro. Bidirectional sequencing of 980 clones generated 1442 high-quality expressed sequence tags (ESTs), comprising 518 unique sequences. blastx analysis showed that 353 (68 %) of these had significant similarity to entries in the NCBI non-redundant protein database, of which 49 were also homologous to experimentally verified fungal pathogenicity genes. ORFs were predicted ab initio from the unique sequences and screened for potential signal peptides using SignalP. Fifty-three unique sequences (10 %) were predicted to encode proteins entering the secretory pathway, of which 26 were likely to be soluble secreted proteins. For a selected subset of these, RT-PCR showed that seven genes that encode secreted proteins of unknown function, including two Colletotrichum-specific genes, are upregulated in appressoria and expressed early during plant infection, and therefore represent candidate effectors.


Journal of General Plant Pathology | 2004

Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation as a tool for random mutagenesis of Colletotrichum trifolii

Hiroyuki Takahara; Gento Tsuji; Yasuyuki Kubo; Mikihiro Yamamoto; Kazuhiro Toyoda; Yoshishige Inagaki; Yuki Ichinose; Tomonori Shiraishi

We transformed Colletotrichum trifolii, the causal agent of alfalfa anthracnose, using Agrobacterium tumefaciens as a new tool for random insertional mutagenesis. Fungal spores of C. trifolii were transformed with T-DNA including the hygromycin phosphotransferase gene (hph). Southern analysis showed that every randomly selected transformant had a unique hybridization pattern of T-DNA, suggesting that the T-DNA was randomly integrated into the fungal genome. More significantly, about 75% of transformants had a single copy of the T-DNA. The results demonstrate that insertional mutagenesis via A. tumefaciens is a useful tool for studying the function of C. trifolii genes.


Plant Journal | 2009

Flow cytometric purification of Colletotrichum higginsianum biotrophic hyphae from Arabidopsis leaves for stage-specific transcriptome analysis

Hiroyuki Takahara; A. Dolf; Elmar Endl; Richard O'Connell

Generation of stage-specific cDNA libraries is a powerful approach to identify pathogen genes that are differentially expressed during plant infection. Biotrophic pathogens develop specialized infection structures inside living plant cells, but sampling the transcriptome of these structures is problematic due to the low ratio of fungal to plant RNA, and the lack of efficient methods to isolate them from infected plants. Here we established a method, based on fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS), to purify the intracellular biotrophic hyphae of Colletotrichum higginsianum from homogenates of infected Arabidopsis leaves. Specific selection of viable hyphae using a fluorescent vital marker provided intact RNA for cDNA library construction. Pilot-scale sequencing showed that the library was enriched with plant-induced and pathogenicity-related fungal genes, including some encoding small, soluble secreted proteins that represent candidate fungal effectors. The high purity of the hyphae (94%) prevented contamination of the library by sequences derived from host cells or other fungal cell types. RT-PCR confirmed that genes identified in the FACS-purified hyphae were also expressed in planta. The method has wide applicability for isolating the infection structures of other plant pathogens, and will facilitate cell-specific transcriptome analysis via deep sequencing and microarray hybridization, as well as proteomic analyses.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 2009

Characterization of autonomous Dart1 transposons belonging to the hAT superfamily in rice

Zenpei Shimatani; Kyoko Takagi; Chang Ho Eun; Masahiko Maekawa; Hiroyuki Takahara; Atsushi Hoshino; Qian Qian; Rie Terada; Yasuyo Johzuka-Hisatomi; Shigeru Iida; Kazuo Tsugane

An endogenous 0.6-kb rice DNA transposon, nDart1-0, was found as an active nonautonomous element in a mutable virescent line, pyl-v, displaying leaf variegations. Here, we demonstrated that the active autonomous element aDart in pyl-v corresponds to Dart1-27 on chromosome 6 in Nipponbare, which carries no active aDart elements, and that aDart and Dart1-27 are identical in their sequences and chromosomal locations, indicating that Dart1-27 is epigenetically silenced in Nipponbare. The identification of aDart in pyl-v was first performed by map-based cloning and by detection of the accumulated transposase transcripts. Subsequently, various transposition activities of the cloned Dart1-27 element from Nipponbare were demonstrated in Arabidopsis. Dart1-27 in Arabidopsis was able to excise nDart1-0 and Dart1-27 from cloned sites, generating footprints, and to integrate into new sites, generating 8-bp target site duplications. In addition to Dart1-27, Nipponbare contains 37 putative autonomous Dart1 elements because their putative transposase genes carry no apparent nonsense or frameshift mutations. Of these, at least four elements were shown to become active aDart elements in transgenic Arabidopsis plants, even though considerable sequence divergence arose among their transposases. Thus, these four Dart1 elements and Dart1-27 in Nipponbare must be potential autonomous elements silenced epigenetically. The regulatory and evolutionary implications of the autonomous Dart1 elements and the development of an efficient transposon-tagging system in rice are discussed.

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Yasuyuki Kubo

Kyoto Prefectural University

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