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Dive into the research topics where Jun-ya Shoji is active.

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Featured researches published by Jun-ya Shoji.


Eukaryotic Cell | 2006

Vacuolar Membrane Dynamics in the Filamentous Fungus Aspergillus oryzae

Jun-ya Shoji; Manabu Arioka; Katsuhiko Kitamoto

ABSTRACT Vacuoles in filamentous fungi are highly pleomorphic and some of them, e.g., tubular vacuoles, are implicated in intra- and intercellular transport. In this report, we isolated Aovam3, the homologue of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae VAM3 gene that encodes the vacuolar syntaxin, from Aspergillus oryzae. In yeast complementation analyses, the expression of Aovam3 restored the phenotypes of both Δvam3 and Δpep12 mutants, suggesting that AoVam3p is likely the vacuolar and/or endosomal syntaxin in A. oryzae. FM4-64 [N-(3-triethylammoniumpropyl)-4-(p-diethylaminophenyl-hexatrienyl)pyridinium dibromide] and CMAC (7-amino-4-chloromethylcoumarin) staining confirmed that the fusion protein of enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) with AoVam3p (EGFP-AoVam3p) localized on the membrane of the pleomorphic vacuolar networks, including large spherical vacuoles, tubular vacuoles, and putative late endosomes/prevacuolar compartments. EGFP-AoVam3p-expressing strains allowed us to observe the dynamics of vacuoles with high resolutions, and moreover, led to the discovery of several new aspects of fungal vacuoles, which have not been discovered so far with conventional staining methods, during different developmental stages. In old hyphae, EGFP fluorescence was present in the entire lumen of large vacuoles, which occupied most of the cell, indicating that degradation of cytosolic materials had occurred in such hyphae via an autophagic process. In hyphae that were not in contact with nutrients, such as aerial hyphae and hyphae that grew on a glass surface, vacuoles were composed of small punctate structures and tubular elements that often formed reticulum-like networks. These observations imply the presence of so-far-unrecognized roles of vacuoles in the development of filamentous fungi.


Molecular Microbiology | 2011

Septum‐directed secretion in the filamentous fungus Aspergillus oryzae

Yugo Hayakawa; Eri Ishikawa; Jun-ya Shoji; Hiroyuki Nakano; Katsuhiko Kitamoto

Although exocytosis in fungal cells takes place at hyphal tips, there also seems a line of circumstantial evidence suggesting the occurrence of exocytosis at other sites of cells, such as septa. To investigate whether exocytosis takes place at fungal septa, we monitored dynamics of EGFP‐fused α‐amylase (AmyB–EGFP), the representative secretory enzyme of the filamentous fungus Aspergillus oryzae. We found that AmyB–EGFP accumulates in Spitzenkörper at hyphal tips as well as septal periplasm between the plasma membrane and cell walls. The septal accumulation of AmyB–EGFP was a rapid process, and required microtubules but not F‐actin. Thus, this process is independent of exocytosis at hyphal tips that requires both microtubules and F‐actin. In addition, fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) analysis of EGFP‐fused AoSnc1 revealed that secretory vesicles constitutively fuse with the septal plasma membrane. These results demonstrated that exocytosis takes place at septa in addition to hyphal tips. Analysis of two plasma membrane transporters, AoUapC and AoGap1, revealed that they preferentially accumulate at septa and the lateral plasma membrane with no clear accumulation at apical Spitzenkörper, suggesting that non‐tip directed exocytosis is important for delivery of these proteins.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Macroautophagy-Mediated Degradation of Whole Nuclei in the Filamentous Fungus Aspergillus oryzae

Jun-ya Shoji; Takashi Kikuma; Manabu Arioka; Katsuhiko Kitamoto

Filamentous fungi consist of continuum of multinucleate cells called hyphae, and proliferate by means of hyphal tip growth. Accordingly, research interest has been focusing on hyphal tip cells, but little is known about basal cells in colony interior that do not directly contribute to proliferation. Here, we show that autophagy mediates degradation of basal cell components in the filamentous fungus Aspergillus oryzae. In basal cells, enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP)-labeled peroxisomes, mitochondria, and even nuclei were taken up into vacuoles in an autophagy-dependent manner. During this process, crescents of autophagosome precursors matured into ring-like autophagosomes to encircle apparently whole nuclei. The ring-like autophagosomes then disappeared, followed by dispersal of the nuclear material throughout the vacuoles, suggesting the autophagy-mediated degradation of whole nuclei. We also demonstrated that colony growth in a nutrient-depleted medium was significantly inhibited in the absence of functional autophagy. This is a first report describing autophagy-mediated degradation of whole nuclei, as well as suggesting a novel strategy of filamentous fungi to degrade components of existing hyphae for use as nutrients to support mycelial growth in order to counteract starvation.


Biotechnology Letters | 2007

Dissecting cellular components of the secretory pathway in filamentous fungi: insights into their application for protein production

Jun-ya Shoji; Manabu Arioka; Katsuhiko Kitamoto

Studies on protein production using filamentous fungi have mostly focused on improvement of the protein yields by genetic modifications such as overexpression. Recent genome sequencing in several filamentous fungal species now enables more systematic approaches based on reverse genetics and molecular biology of the secretion pathway. In this review, we summarize recent molecular-based advances in our understanding of vesicular trafficking in filamentous fungi, and discuss insights into their high secretion ability and application for protein production.


Autophagy | 2006

Possible involvement of pleiomorphic vacuolar networks in nutrient recycling in filamentous fungi.

Jun-ya Shoji; Manabu Arioka; Katsuhiko Kitamoto

Morphological analyses of vacuoles in filamentous fungi in the past decade have led to the remarkable finding that they are highly pleiomorphic organelles. Among them, tubular vacuoles have been implicated in nutrient transport between hyphal tips and the host plant surface in mycorrhizal fungi. However, a series of works suggested the presence of tubular vacuoles in other fungi that are not mycorrhizal, including Aspergillus oryzae, hinting at more general roles of the tubular vacuoles. Recently, we made two key observations by using the fusion protein of enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) with a putative vacuolar t-SNARE in A. oryzae; tubular vacuoles formed more extensively in hyphae that were not in contact with nutrients, and vacuoles that were interconnected by tubules in the mature mycelial region displayed traces of microautophagy-mediated degradation of cytoplasm. The aim of this addendum is to discuss the possible involvement of vacuoles in degrading, transporting, and recycling nutrients from the mature mycelial region to hyphal tips, to support the continuous tip growth. Addendum to: Vacuolar Membrane Dynamics in the Filamentous Fungus Aspergillus oryzae J.Y. Shoji, M. Arioka and K. Kitamoto Eukaryot Cell 2006; 5: 411-21


Eukaryotic Cell | 2012

Deletion of the Fungal Gene soft Disrupts Mutualistic Symbiosis between the Grass Endophyte Epichloë festucae and the Host Plant

Nikki D. Charlton; Jun-ya Shoji; Sita R. Ghimire; Jin Nakashima; Kelly D. Craven

ABSTRACT Hyphal anastomosis, or vegetative hyphal fusion, establishes the interconnection of individual hyphal strands into an integrated network of a fungal mycelium. In contrast to recent advances in the understanding of the molecular basis for hyphal anastomosis, knowledge of the physiological role of hyphal anastomosis in the natural habitats of filamentous fungi is still very limited. To investigate the role of hyphal anastomosis in fungal endophyte-plant interactions, we generated mutant strains lacking the Epichloë festucae soft (so) gene, an ortholog of the hyphal anastomosis gene so in the endophytic fungus E. festucae. The E. festucae Δso mutant strains grew similarly to the wild-type strain in culture but with reduced aerial hyphae and completely lacked hyphal anastomosis. The most striking phenotype of the E. festucae Δso mutant strain was that it failed to establish a mutualistic symbiosis with the tall fescue plant host (Lolium arundinaceum); instead, it killed the host plant within 2 months after the initial infection. Microscopic examination revealed that the death of the tall fescue plant host was associated with the distortion and disorganization of plant cells. This study suggests that hyphal anastomosis may have an important role in the establishment/maintenance of fungal endophyte-host plant mutualistic symbiosis.


Current Opinion in Microbiology | 2014

Vesicle trafficking, organelle functions, and unconventional secretion in fungal physiology and pathogenicity

Jun-ya Shoji; Takashi Kikuma; Katsuhiko Kitamoto

Specific localization of appropriate sets of proteins and lipids is central to functions and integrity of organelles, which in turn underlie cellular activities of eukaryotes. Vesicle trafficking is a conserved mechanism of intracellular transport, which ensures such a specific localization to a subset of organelles. In this review article, we summarize recent advances in our understanding of how vesicle trafficking and related organelles support physiology and pathogenicity of filamentous fungi. Examples include a link between Golgi organization and polarity maintenance during hyphal tip growth, a new role of early endosomes in transport of translational machinery, involvement of endosomal/vacuolar compartments in secondary metabolite synthesis, and functions of vacuoles and autophagy in fungal development, nutrient recycling and allocation. Accumulating evidence showing the importance of unconventional secretion in fungal pathogenicity is also summarized.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Vegetative Hyphal Fusion and Subsequent Nuclear Behavior in Epichloë Grass Endophytes

Jun-ya Shoji; Nikki D. Charlton; Mihwa Yi; Carolyn A. Young; Kelly D. Craven

Epichloë species (including the former genus Neotyphodium) are fungal symbionts of many agronomically important forage grasses, and provide their grass hosts with protection from a wide range of biotic and abiotic stresses. Epichloë species include many interspecific hybrids with allodiploid-like genomes, which may provide the potential for combined traits or recombination to generate new traits. Though circumstantial evidence suggests that such interspecific hybrids might have arisen from nuclear fusion events following vegetative hyphal fusion between different Epichloë strains, this hypothesis has not been addressed empirically. Here, we investigated vegetative hyphal fusion and subsequent nuclear behavior in Epichloë species. A majority of Epichloë strains, especially those having a sexual stage, underwent self vegetative hyphal fusion. Vegetative fusion also occurred between two hyphae from different Epichloë strains. Though Epichloë spp. are uninucleate fungi, hyphal fusion resulted in two nuclei stably sharing the same cytoplasm, which might ultimately lead to nuclear fusion. In addition, protoplast fusion experiments gave rise to uninucleate putative hybrids, which apparently had two markers, one from each parent within the same nucleus. These results are consistent with the notion that interspecific hybrids arise from vegetative hyphal fusion. However, we also discuss additional factors, such as post-hybridization selection, that may be important to explain the recognized prevalence of hybrids in Epichloë species.


Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2007

Systematic analysis of SNARE localization in the filamentous fungus Aspergillus oryzae.

Masahiro Kuratsu; Ayako Taura; Jun-ya Shoji; Satoko Kikuchi; Manabu Arioka; Katsuhiko Kitamoto


Fems Microbiology Letters | 2005

Development of Aspergillus oryzae thiA promoter as a tool for molecular biological studies.

Jun-ya Shoji; Jun-ichi Maruyama; Manabu Arioka; Katsuhiko Kitamoto

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Kelly D. Craven

North Carolina State University

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Nikki D. Charlton

North Carolina State University

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