Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jun Sasaki is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jun Sasaki.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Photochromicity of anabaena sensory rhodopsin, an atypical microbial receptor with a cis-retinal light-adapted form

Oleg A. Sineshchekov; Vishwa D. Trivedi; Jun Sasaki; John L. Spudich

We characterize changes in isomeric states of the retinylidene chromophore during light-dark adaptation and photochemical reactions of Anabaena (Nostoc) sp. PCC7120 sensory rhodopsin (ASR). The results show that ASR represents a new type of microbial rhodopsin with a number of unusual characteristics. The three most striking are: (i) a primarily all-trans configuration of retinal in the dark-adapted state and (ii) a primarily 13-cis light-adapted state with a blue-shifted and lower extinction absorption spectrum, opposite of the case of bacteriorhodopsin; and (iii) efficient reversible light-induced interconversion between the 13-cis and all-trans unphotolyzed states of the pigment. The relative amount of ASR with cis and trans chromophore forms depends on the wavelength of illumination, providing a mechanism for single-pigment color sensing analogous to that of phytochrome pigments. In addition ASR exhibits unusually slow formation of L-like and M-like intermediates, with a dominant accumulation of M during the photocycle. Co-expression of ASR with its putative cytoplasmic transducer protein shifts the absorption maximum and strongly decreases the rate of dark adaptation of ASR, confirming interaction between the two proteins. Thus ASR, the first non-haloarchaeal sensory rhodopsin character-ized, demonstrates the diversity of photochemistry of microbial rhodopsins. Its photochromic properties and the position of its two ground state absorption maxima suggest it as a candidate for controlling differential photosynthetic light-harvesting pigment synthesis (chromatic adaptation) or other color-sensitive physiological responses in Anabaena cells.


Emerging Infectious Diseases | 2011

Porcine Rotavirus Closely Related to Novel Group of Human Rotaviruses

Mitsutaka Wakuda; Tomihiko Ide; Jun Sasaki; Satoshi Komoto; Junnichi Ishii; Takeshi Sanekata; Koki Taniguchi

We determined nucleotide sequences and inferred amino acid sequences of viral protein (VP) 4, VP6, VP7, and nonstructural protein 4 genes of a porcine rotavirus strain (SKA-1) from Japan. The strain was closely related to a novel group of human rotavirus strains (B219 and J19).


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

HAMP Domain Signal Relay Mechanism in a Sensory Rhodopsin-Transducer Complex

Jihong Wang; Jun Sasaki; Ah Lim Tsai; John L. Spudich

Background: HAMP domains are four-helix bundles that transmit signals from receptor to output domains in signaling proteins/complexes. Results: Opposite stimulus-induced helix motions with opposite signal output are resolved for two tandem HAMP domains on a phototaxis transducer. Conclusion: A molecular mechanism for HAMP domain switching and signal transmission is proposed. Significance: The HAMP switching and relay mechanism is important to many signal transduction proteins. The phototaxis receptor complex composed of sensory rhodopsin II (SRII) and the transducer subunit HtrII mediates photorepellent responses in haloarchaea. Light-activated SRII transmits a signal through two HAMP switch domains (HAMP1 and HAMP2) in HtrII that bridge the photoreceptive membrane domain of the complex and the cytoplasmic output kinase-modulating domain. HAMP domains, widespread signal relay modules in prokaryotic sensors, consist of four-helix bundles composed of two helices, AS1 and AS2, from each of two dimerized transducer subunits. To examine their molecular motion during signal transmission, we incorporated SRII-HtrII dimeric complexes in nanodiscs to allow unrestricted probe access to the cytoplasmic side HAMP domains. Spin-spin dipolar coupling measurements confirmed that in the nanodiscs, SRII photoactivation induces helix movement in the HtrII membrane domain diagnostic of transducer activation. Labeling kinetics of a fluorescein probe in monocysteine-substituted HAMP1 mutants revealed a light-induced shift of AS2 against AS1 by one-half α-helix turn with minimal other changes. An opposite shift of AS2 against AS1 in HAMP2 at the corresponding positions supports the proposal from x-ray crystal structures by Airola et al. (Airola, M. V., Watts, K. J., Bilwes, A. M., and Crane, B. R. (2010) Structure 18, 436–448) that poly-HAMP chains undergo alternating opposite interconversions to relay the signal. Moreover, we found that haloarchaeal cells expressing a HAMP2-deleted SRII-HtrII exhibit attractant phototaxis, opposite from the repellent phototaxis mediated by the wild-type di-HAMP SRII-HtrII complex. The opposite conformational changes and corresponding opposite output signals of HAMP1 and HAMP2 imply a signal transmission mechanism entailing small shifts in helical register between AS1 and AS2 alternately in opposite directions in adjacent HAMPs.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Transient dissociation of the transducer protein from Anabaena sensory rhodopsin concomitant with formation of the M state produced upon photoactivation

Masato Kondoh; Keiichi Inoue; Jun Sasaki; John L. Spudich; Masahide Terazima

Anabaena sensory rhodopsin (ASR), a microbial rhodopsin in the cyanobacterium sp. PCC7120, has been suggested to regulate cell processes in a light-quality-dependent manner (color-discrimination) through interaction with a water-soluble transducer protein (Tr). However, light-dependent ASR-Tr interaction changes have yet to be demonstrated. We applied the transient grating (TG) method to investigate protein-protein interaction between ASR with Tr. The molecular diffusion component of the TG signal upon photostimulation of ASR(AT) (ASR with an all-trans retinylidene chromophore) revealed that Tr dissociates from ASR upon formation of the M-intermediate and rebinds to ASR during the decay of M; that is, light induces transient dissociation of ASR and Tr during the photocycle. Further correlating the dissociation of the ASR-Tr pair with the M-intermediate, no transient dissociation was observed after the photoexcitation of the blue-shifted ASR(13C) (ASR with 13-cis, 15-syn chromophore), which does not produce M. This distinction between ASR(AT) and ASR(13C), the two isomeric forms in a color-sensitive equilibrium in ASR, provides a potential mechanism for color-sensitive signaling by ASR.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

A Schiff base connectivity switch in sensory rhodopsin signaling

Oleg A. Sineshchekov; Jun Sasaki; Brian J. Phillips; John L. Spudich

Sensory rhodopsin I (SRI) in Halobacterium salinarum acts as a receptor for single-quantum attractant and two-quantum repellent phototaxis, transmitting light stimuli via its bound transducer HtrI. Signal-inverting mutations in the SRI–HtrI complex reverse the single-quantum response from attractant to repellent. Fast intramolecular charge movements reported here reveal that the unphotolyzed SRI–HtrI complex exists in two conformational states, which differ by their connection of the retinylidene Schiff base in the SRI photoactive site to inner or outer half-channels. In single-quantum photochemical reactions, the conformer with the Schiff base connected to the cytoplasmic (CP) half-channel generates an attractant signal, whereas the conformer with the Schiff base connected to the extracellular (EC) half-channel generates a repellent signal. In the wild-type complex the conformer equilibrium is poised strongly in favor of that with CP-accessible Schiff base. Signal-inverting mutations shift the equilibrium in favor of the EC-accessible Schiff base form, and suppressor mutations shift the equilibrium back toward the CP-accessible Schiff base form, restoring the wild-type phenotype. Our data show that the sign of the behavioral response directly correlates with the state of the connectivity switch, not with the direction of proton movements or changes in acceptor pKa. These findings identify a shared fundamental process in the mechanisms of transport and signaling by the rhodopsin family. Furthermore, the effects of mutations in the HtrI subunit of the complex on SRI Schiff base connectivity indicate that the two proteins are tightly coupled to form a single unit that undergoes a concerted conformational transition.


Journal of Virology | 2008

Generation of Recombinant Rotavirus with an Antigenic Mosaic of Cross-Reactive Neutralization Epitopes on VP4

Satoshi Komoto; Masanori Kugita; Jun Sasaki; Koki Taniguchi

ABSTRACT Recombinant rotavirus (RV) with cDNA-derived chimeric VP4 was generated using recently developed reverse genetics for RV. The rescued virus, KU//rVP4(SA11)-II(DS-1), contains SA11 (simian RV strain, G3P[2])-based VP4, in which a cross-reactive neutralization epitope (amino acids 381 to 401) on VP5* is replaced by the corresponding sequence of a different P-type DS-1 (human RV strain, G2P[4]). Serological analyses with a panel of anti-VP4- and -VP7-neutralizing monoclonal antibodies revealed that the rescued virus carries a novel antigenic mosaic of cross-reactive neutralization epitopes on its VP4 surface. This is the first report of the generation of a recombinant RV with artificial amino acid substitutions.


Molecular Microbiology | 2007

Constitutive activity in chimeras and deletions localize sensory rhodopsin II/HtrII signal relay to the membrane‐inserted domain

Jun Sasaki; Toshifumi Nara; Elena N. Spudich; John L. Spudich

Halobacterium salinarum sensory rhodopsin II (HsSRII) is a phototaxis receptor for blue‐light avoidance that relays signals to its tightly bound transducer HsHtrII (H.u2003salinarum haloarchaeal transducer for SRII). We found that disruption of the salt bridge between the protonated Schiff base of the receptors retinylidene chromophore and its counterion Asp73 by residue substitutions D73A, N or Q constitutively activates HsSRII, whereas the corresponding Asp75 counterion substitutions do not constitutively activate Natronomonas pharaonis SRII (NpSRII) when complexed with N.u2003pharaonis haloarchaeal transducer for SRII (NpHtrII). However, NpSRIID75Q in complex with HsHtrII is fully constitutively active, showing that transducer sensitivity to the receptor signal contributes to the phenotype. The swimming behaviour of cells expressing chimeras exchanging portions of the two homologous transducers localizes their differing sensitivities to the HtrII transmembrane domains. Furthermore, deletion constructs show that the known contact region in the cytoplasmic domain of the NpSRII–NpHtrII complex is not required for phototaxis, excluding the domain as a site for signal transmission. These results distinguish between the prevailing models for SRII–HtrII signal relay, strongly supporting the ‘steric trigger‐transmembrane relay model’, which proposes that retinal isomerization directly signals HtrII through the mid‐membrane SRII–HtrII interface, and refuting alternative models that propose signal relay in the cytoplasmic membrane‐proximal domain.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2013

Role of trimer-trimer interaction of bacteriorhodopsin studied by optical spectroscopy and high-speed atomic force microscopy.

Hayato Yamashita; Keiichi Inoue; Mikihiro Shibata; Takayuki Uchihashi; Jun Sasaki; Hideki Kandori; Toshio Ando

Bacteriorhodopsin (bR) trimers form a two-dimensional hexagonal lattice in the purple membrane of Halobacterium salinarum. However, the physiological significance of forming the lattice has long been elusive. Here, we study this issue by comparing properties of assembled and non-assembled bR trimers using directed mutagenesis, high-speed atomic force microscopy (HS-AFM), optical spectroscopy, and a proton pumping assay. First, we show that the bonds formed between W12 and F135 amino acid residues are responsible for trimer-trimer association that leads to lattice assembly; the lattice is completely disrupted in both W12I and F135I mutants. HS-AFM imaging reveals that both crystallized D96N and non-crystallized D96N/W12I mutants undergo a large conformational change (i.e., outward E-F loop displacement) upon light-activation. However, lattice disruption significantly reduces the rate of conformational change under continuous light illumination. Nevertheless, the quantum yield of M-state formation, measured by low-temperature UV-visible spectroscopy, and proton pumping efficiency are unaffected by lattice disruption. From these results, we conclude that trimer-trimer association plays essential roles in providing bound retinal with an appropriate environment to maintain its full photo-reactivity and in maintaining the natural photo-reaction pathway.


Biochemistry | 2010

Attractant and repellent signaling conformers of sensory rhodopsin-transducer complexes

Oleg A. Sineshchekov; Jun Sasaki; Jihong Wang; John L. Spudich

Attractant and repellent signaling conformers of the dual-signaling phototaxis receptor sensory rhodopsin I and its transducer subunit (SRI−HtrI) have recently been distinguished experimentally by the opposite connection of their retinylidene protonated Schiff bases to the outwardly located periplasmic side and inwardly located cytoplasmic side. Here we show that the pKa of the outwardly located Asp76 counterion in the outwardly connected conformer is lowered by ∼1.5 units from that of the inwardly connected conformer. The pKa difference enables quantitative determination of the relative amounts of the two conformers in wild-type cells and behavioral mutants prior to photoexcitation, comparison of their absorption spectra, and determination of their relative signaling efficiency. We have shown that the one-photon excitation of the SRI−HtrI attractant conformer causes a Schiff base connectivity switch from inwardly connected to outwardly connected states in the attractant signaling photoreaction. Conversely, a second near-UV photon drives the complex back to the inwardly connected conformer in the repellent signaling photoreaction. The results suggest a model of the color-discriminating dual-signaling mechanism in which phototaxis responses (his-kinase modulation) result from the photointerconversion of the two oppositely connected SRI−HtrI conformers by one-photon and two-photon activation. Furthermore, we find that the related repellent phototaxis SRII−HtrII receptor complex has an outwardly connected retinylidene Schiff base like the repellent signaling forms of the SRI−HtrI complex, indicating the general applicability of macro conformational changes, which can be detected by the connectivity switch, to phototaxis signaling by sensory rhodopsin−transducer complexes.


Journal of Virology | 2008

Aichi Virus 2A Protein Is Involved in Viral RNA Replication

Jun Sasaki; Koki Taniguchi

ABSTRACT The Aichi virus 2A protein is not a protease, unlike many other picornavirus 2A proteins, and it is related to a cellular protein, H-rev107. Here, we examined the replication properties of two 2A mutants in Vero cells and a cell-free translation/replication system. In one mutant, amino acids 36 to 126 were replaced with an unrelated amino acid sequence. In the other mutant, the NC motif conserved in the H-rev107 family of proteins was changed to alanine residues. The two mutations abolished virus replication in cells. The mutations affected both negative- and positive-strand synthesis, the defect in positive-strand synthesis being more severe than that in negative-strand synthesis.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jun Sasaki's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John L. Spudich

University of Texas at Austin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Koki Taniguchi

Fujita Health University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Oleg A. Sineshchekov

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Satoshi Komoto

Fujita Health University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hideki Kandori

Nagoya Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nobuhiko Nakashima

Niigata University of Pharmacy and Applied Life Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hazuki Takahashi

Nagoya Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yuji Furutani

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge