Jumpei Hayakawa
Chuo University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jumpei Hayakawa.
Plant and Cell Physiology | 2015
Nobuko Sumiya; Yasuko Kawase; Jumpei Hayakawa; Mami Nakamura; Atsuko Era; Kan Tanaka; Akihiko Kondo; Tomohisa Hasunuma; Sousuke Imamura; Shin-ya Miyagishima
Nitrogen starvation is known to induce the accumulation of triacylglycerol (TAG) in many microalgae, and potential use of microalgae as a source of biofuel has been explored. However, nitrogen starvation also stops cellular growth. The expression of cyanobacterial acyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) reductase in the unicellular red alga Cyanidioschyzon merolae chloroplasts resulted in an accumulation of TAG, which led to an increase in the number and size of lipid droplets while maintaining cellular growth. Transcriptome and metabolome analyses showed that the expression of acyl-ACP reductase altered the activities of several metabolic pathways. The activities of enzymes involved in fatty acid synthesis in chloroplasts, such as acetyl-CoA carboxylase and pyruvate dehydrogenase, were up-regulated, while pyruvate decarboxylation in mitochondria and the subsequent consumption of acetyl-CoA by the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle were down-regulated. Aldehyde dehydrogenase, which oxidizes fatty aldehydes to fatty acids, was also up-regulated in the acyl-ACP reductase expresser. This activation was required for the lipid droplet accumulation and metabolic changes observed in the acyl-ACP reductase expresser. Nitrogen starvation also resulted in lipid droplet accumulation in C. merolae, while cell growth ceased as in the case of other algal species. The metabolic changes that occur upon the expression of acyl-ACP reductase are quite different from those caused by nitrogen starvation. Therefore, there should be a method for further increasing the storage lipid level while still maintaining cell growth that is different from the metabolic response to nitrogen starvation.
Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2009
Jumpei Hayakawa; Yoshihide Kondoh; Morio Ishizuka
Flagellin glycosylation was identified in Bacillus sp. PS3 and Geobacillus stearothermophilus. In vivo complementation showed that these flagellin genes did not restore the motility of a Bacillus subtilis flagellin mutant, whereas the genes encoding non-glycosylated flagellin from Geobacillus kaustophilus and Bacillus sp. Kps3 restored motility. Moreover, four types of flagellins expressed in B. subtilis were not glycosylated. We speculate that glycosylation is required for flagellar filament assembly of these bacilli.
Archive | 2012
Jumpei Hayakawa; Morio Ishizuka
In this chapter, we present the current advances in flagellar glycosylation. Glycosylation is well-known as one of the most frequent posttranslational protein modification. Glycosylation is well studied in eukaryotes as the superficial and secretory proteins are mostly glycosylated in the eukaryotic cell. Protein glycosylation was considered to be a eukaryotic organism specific modification for many years. However, reports of bacterial glycosylation have increased since the discovery of surface layer glycosylation on the cell envelope in archaea and hyperthermophiles in the mid-1970’s (Mescher & Strominger, 1976; Sleytr, 1975; Sleytr & Thorne, 1976).
Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2009
Jumpei Hayakawa; Morio Ishizuka
A group I intron that can be spliced in vivo and in vitro was identified in the flagellin gene of the thermophilic bacterium Geobacillus stearothermophilus. We also found one or two intervening sequences (IVS) of flagellin genes in five additional bacterial species. Furthermore, we report the presence of these sequences in two sites of a highly conserved region in the flagellin gene.
Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2009
Jumpei Hayakawa; Takao Kambe; Morio Ishizuka
Bacillus sp. PS3 produces a glycosylated flagellin. In this study, a number of the glycosylated residues of the flagellin protein were found to be located in the central variable region of this protein. We also report that the motility defect of the Bacillus subtilis flagellin mutant was complemented by Bacillus sp. PS3 flagellin variants without glycosylation, which contained amino acid substitutions and intragenic duplications in the variable region of flagellin.
Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2012
Jumpei Hayakawa; Morio Ishizuka
A previous report described the presence of a self-splicing group I intron in a flagellin gene from a thermophilic Bacillus species. Here, we present evidence that the splicing reaction of the flagellin introns is dependent on temperature. Furthermore, a complementation analysis using a Bacillus subtilis flagellin-deficient mutant indicated that the intron-containing flagellin gene significantly restored the motility of the mutant at higher temperatures.
Bioresource Technology | 2017
Hayato Hamano; Shun Nakamura; Jumpei Hayakawa; Hideaki Miyashita; Shigeaki Harayama
Archive | 2014
准平 早川; Jumpei Hayakawa; 曜子 井出; Yoko Ide; 原山 重明; Shigeaki Harayama; 秀彦 保井; Hidehiko Yasui
Algal Research-Biomass Biofuels and Bioproducts | 2018
Keita Takahashi; Yoko Ide; Jumpei Hayakawa; Yuya Yoshimitsu; Izumi Fukuhara; Jun Abe; Yuki Kasai; Shigeaki Harayama
The Japanese Biochemical Society/The Molecular Biology Society of Japan | 2017
Shota Chiba; Ryoya Ishikawa; Hayate Oyama; Nana Ishibashi; Wataru Umano; Jumpei Hayakawa; Genki Akanuma; Takako Awai; Morio Ishizuka