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Dive into the research topics where Kazuhiko Matsui is active.

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Featured researches published by Kazuhiko Matsui.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2007

Altered Metabolic Flux due to Deletion of odhA causes l-Glutamate Overproduction in Corynebacterium glutamicum

Yoko Asakura; Eiichiro Kimura; Yoshihiro Usuda; Yoshio Kawahara; Kazuhiko Matsui; Tsuyoshi Osumi; Tsuyoshi Nakamatsu

ABSTRACT l-Glutamate overproduction in Corynebacterium glutamicum, a biotin auxotroph, is induced by biotin limitation or by treatment with certain fatty acid ester surfactants or with penicillin. We have analyzed the relationship between the inductions, 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complex (ODHC) activity, and l-glutamate production. Here we show that a strain deleted for odhA and completely lacking ODHC activity produces l-glutamate as efficiently as the induced wild type (27.8 mmol/g [dry weight] of cells for the ohdA deletion strain compared with only 1.0 mmol/g [dry weight] of cells for the uninduced wild type). This level of production is achieved without any induction or alteration in the fatty acid composition of the cells, showing that l-glutamate overproduction can be caused by the change in metabolic flux alone. Interestingly, the l-glutamate productivity of the odhA-deleted strain is increased about 10% by each of the l-glutamate-producing inductions, showing that the change in metabolic flux resulting from the odhA deletion and the inductions have additive effects on l-glutamate overproduction. Tween 40 was indicated to induce drastic metabolic change leading to l-glutamate overproduction in the odhA-deleted strain. Furthermore, optimizing the metabolic flux from 2-oxoglutarate to l-glutamate by tuning glutamate dehydrogenase activity increased the l-glutamate production of the odhA-deleted strain.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2010

Production of succinic acid at low pH by a recombinant strain of the aerobic yeast Yarrowia lipolytica

Tigran V. Yuzbashev; Evgeniya Y. Yuzbasheva; Tatiana I. Sobolevskaya; Ivan A. Laptev; Tatiana V. Vybornaya; Anna S. Larina; Kazuhiko Matsui; Keita Fukui; Sergey P. Sineoky

Biotechnological production of weak organic acids such as succinic acid is most economically advantageous when carried out at low pH. Among naturally occurring microorganisms, several bacterial strains are known to produce considerable amounts of succinic acid under anaerobic conditions but they are inefficient in performing the low‐pH fermentation due to their physiological properties. We have proposed therefore a new strategy for construction of an aerobic eukaryotic producer on the basis of the yeast Yarrowia lipolytica with a deletion in the gene coding one of succinate dehydrogenase subunits. Firstly, an original in vitro mutagenesis‐based approach was proposed to construct strains with Ts mutations in the Y. lipolytica SDH1 gene. These mutants were used to optimize the composition of the media for selection of transformants with the deletion in the Y. lipolytica SDH2 gene. Surprisingly, the defects of each succinate dehydrogenase subunit prevented the growth on glucose but the mutant strains grew on glycerol and produced succinate in the presence of the buffering agent CaCO3. Subsequent selection of the strain with deleted SDH2 gene for increased viability allowed us to obtain a strain capable of accumulating succinate at the level of more than 45 g L−1 in shaking flasks with buffering and more than 17 g L−1 without buffering. The possible effect of the mutations on the utilization of different substrates and perspectives of constructing an industrial producer is discussed. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2010;107:673–682.


Journal of Biotechnology | 2010

Dynamic modeling of Escherichia coli metabolic and regulatory systems for amino-acid production.

Yoshihiro Usuda; Yosuke Nishio; Shintaro Iwatani; Stephen Van Dien; Akira Imaizumi; Kazutaka Shimbo; Naoko Kageyama; Daigo Iwahata; Hiroshi Miyano; Kazuhiko Matsui

Our aim is to construct a practical dynamic-simulation system that can model the metabolic and regulatory processes involved in the production of primary metabolites, such as amino acids. We have simulated the production of glutamate by transient batch-cultivation using a model of Escherichia coli central metabolism. Kinetic data were used to produce both the metabolic parts of the model, including the phosphotransferase system, glycolysis, the pentose-phosphate pathway, the tricarboxylic acid cycle, the glyoxylate shunt, and the anaplerotic pathways, and the regulatory parts of the model, including regulation by transcription factors, cyclic AMP receptor protein (CRP), making large colonies protein (Mlc), catabolite repressor/activator (Cra), pyruvate dehydrogenase complex repressor (PdhR), and acetate operon repressor (IclR). RNA polymerase and ribosome concentrations were expressed as a function of the specific growth rate, mu, corresponding to the changes in the growth rate during batch cultivation. Parameter fitting was performed using both extracellular concentration measurements and in vivo enzyme activities determined by (13)C flux analysis. By manual adjustment of the parameters, we simulated the batch fermentation of glucose or fructose by a wild-type strain (MG1655) and a glutamate-producing strain (MG1655 Delta sucA). The differences caused by the carbon source, and by wild-type and glutamate-producing strains, were clearly shown by the simulation. A sensitivity analysis revealed the factors that could be altered to improve the production process. Furthermore, an in silico deletion experiments could suggested the existence of uncharacterized regulation. We concluded that our simulation model could function as a new tool for the rational improvement and design of metabolic and regulatory networks.


Molecular Systems Biology | 2008

Computer-aided rational design of the phosphotransferase system for enhanced glucose uptake in Escherichia coli

Yousuke Nishio; Yoshihiro Usuda; Kazuhiko Matsui; Hiroyuki Kurata

The phosphotransferase system (PTS) is the sugar transportation machinery that is widely distributed in prokaryotes and is critical for enhanced production of useful metabolites. To increase the glucose uptake rate, we propose a rational strategy for designing the molecular architecture of the Escherichia coli glucose PTS by using a computer‐aided design (CAD) system and verified the simulated results with biological experiments. CAD supports construction of a biochemical map, mathematical modeling, simulation, and system analysis. Assuming that the PTS aims at controlling the glucose uptake rate, the PTS was decomposed into hierarchical modules, functional and flux modules, and the effect of changes in gene expression on the glucose uptake rate was simulated to make a rational strategy of how the gene regulatory network is engineered. Such design and analysis predicted that the mlc knockout mutant with ptsI gene overexpression would greatly increase the specific glucose uptake rate. By using biological experiments, we validated the prediction and the presented strategy, thereby enhancing the specific glucose uptake rate.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2006

Functional Analysis of the Twin-Arginine Translocation Pathway in Corynebacterium glutamicum ATCC 13869

Yoshimi Kikuchi; Masayo Date; Hiroshi Itaya; Kazuhiko Matsui; Long-Fei Wu

ABSTRACT Compared to those of other gram-positive bacteria, the genetic structure of the Corynebacterium glutamicum Tat system is unique in that it contains the tatE gene in addition to tatA, tatB, and tatC. The tatE homologue has been detected only in the genomes of gram-negative enterobacteria. To assess the function of the C. glutamicum Tat pathway, we cloned the tatA, tatB, tatC, and tatE genes from C. glutamicum ATCC 13869 and constructed mutants carrying deletions of each tat gene or of both the tatA and tatE genes. Using green fluorescent protein (GFP) fused with the twin-arginine signal peptide of the Escherichia coli TorA protein, we demonstrated that the minimal functional Tat system required TatA and TatC. TatA and TatE provide overlapping function. Unlike the TatB proteins from gram-negative bacteria, C. glutamicum TatB was dispensable for Tat function, although it was required for maximal efficiency of secretion. The signal peptide sequence of the isomaltodextranase (IMD) of Arthrobacter globiformis contains a twin-arginine motif. We showed that both IMD and GFP fused with the signal peptide of IMD were secreted via the C. glutamicum Tat pathway. These observations indicate that IMD is a bona fide Tat substrate and imply great potential of the C. glutamicum Tat system for industrial production of heterologous folded proteins.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2009

TatABC Overexpression Improves Corynebacterium glutamicum Tat-Dependent Protein Secretion

Yoshimi Kikuchi; Hiroshi Itaya; Masayo Date; Kazuhiko Matsui; Long-Fei Wu

ABSTRACT The twin-arginine translocation (Tat) pathway in Corynebacterium glutamicum has been described previously. The minimal functional Tat system in C. glutamicum required TatA and TatC but did not require TatB, although this component was required for maximal efficiency of Tat-dependent secretion. We previously demonstrated that Chryseobacterium proteolyticum pro-protein glutaminase (pro-PG) and Streptomyces mobaraensis pro-transglutaminase (pro-TG) could be secreted via the Tat pathway in C. glutamicum. Here we report that the amounts of pro-PG secreted were more than threefold larger when TatC or TatAC was overexpressed, and there was a further threefold increase when TatABC was overexpressed. These results show that the amount of TatC protein is the first bottleneck and the amount of TatB protein is the second bottleneck in Tat-dependent protein secretion in C. glutamicum. In addition, the amount of pro-TG that accumulated via the Tat pathway when TatABC was overexpressed with the TorA signal peptide in C. glutamicum was larger than the amount that accumulated via the Sec pathway. We concluded that TatABC overexpression improves Tat-dependent pro-PG and pro-TG secretion in C. glutamicum.


Journal of Biotechnology | 2011

Identification of succinate exporter in Corynebacterium glutamicum and its physiological roles under anaerobic conditions.

Keita Fukui; Chie Koseki; Yoko Yamamoto; Jun Nakamura; Ayako Sasahara; Reiko Yuji; Kenichi Hashiguchi; Yoshihiro Usuda; Kazuhiko Matsui; Hiroyuki Kojima; Keietsu Abe

Corynebacterium glutamicum produces succinate from glucose via the reductive tricarboxylic acid cycle under microaerobic and anaerobic conditions. We identified a NCgl2130 gene of C. glutamicum as a novel succinate exporter that functions in succinate production, and designated sucE1. sucE1 expression levels were higher under microaerobic conditions than aerobic conditions, and overexpression or disruption of sucE1 respectively increased or decreased succinate productivity during fermentation. Under microaerobic conditions, the sucE1 disruptant sucE1Δ showed 30% less succinate productivity and a lower sugar-consumption rate than the parental strain. Under anaerobic conditions, succinate production by sucE1Δ ceased. The intracellular succinate and fructose-1,6-bisphosphate levels of sucE1Δ under microaerobic conditions were respectively 1.7-fold and 1.6-fold higher than those of the parental strain, suggesting that loss of SucE1 function caused a failure of succinate removal from the cells, leading to intracellular accumulation that inhibited upstream sugar metabolism. Homology and transmembrane helix searches identified SucE1 as a membrane protein belonging to the aspartate:alanine exchanger (AAE) family. Partially purified 6x-histidine-tagged SucE1 (SucE1-[His](6)) reconstituted in succinate-loaded liposomes clearly demonstrated counterflow and self-exchange activities for succinate. Together, these findings suggest that sucE1 encodes a novel succinate exporter that is induced under microaerobic conditions, and is important for succinate production under both microaerobic and anaerobic conditions.


Scientia Horticulturae | 1998

In vitro propagation utilizing suspension cultures of meristematic nodular cell clumps and chromosome stability of Lilium×formolongi hort.

Toshinari Godo; Katsunori Kobayashi; Tomoyuki Tagami; Kazuhiko Matsui; Takao Kida

Abstract Suspension cultures composed of meristematic nodular cell clumps of Lilium×formolongi hort. line R13 have been maintained in liquid MS medium containing 1 mg/l picloram for over 4 years. All of the cell clumps checked were diploid and these clumps maintained a high potential for shoot regeneration. The fresh weight of meristematic nodular cell clumps increased 2.5-fold during 14 days of cultivation in a flask or bioreactor. The sucrose concentration in the regeneration medium and the addition of BA affected shoot regeneration from the cell clumps. More than 85% of the clumps produced shoots on solidified regeneration medium (1/2 MS medium containing 5–10 g/l sucrose) after 2 months of culture. A sucrose concentration more than 20 g/l resulted in the reduction of shoot regeneration. Addition of BA to the solidified medium was effective in increasing shoot numbers and stimulating the induction of shoots. The plantlets regenerated from cell clumps were all diploid with 24 chromosomes and grew normally to flowering. It is expected that about 4.5×1010 plantlets per year could be produced from 1 g of meristematic nodular cell clumps through this propagation method.


Plant Cell Reports | 1996

Effect of sugar type on the efficiency of plant regeneration from protoplasts isolated from shoot tip-derived meristematic nodular cell clumps of Lilium x formolongi hort.

Toshinari Godo; Kazuhiko Matsui; Takao Kida; Masahiro Mii

SummarySuspension cultures composed of meristematic nodular cell clumps of Lilium x formolongi hort were established from shoot tips placed on MS medium supplemented with 1 mg/l picloram and 30 g/l sucrose, glucose, fructose or sorbitol. Protoplasts isolated from these cultures were embedded in 1 g/l gellan gumsolidified 1/2MS medium with 1 mg/l picloram and the different kinds of sugars at 0.5 M, and cultured at 25 °C in the dark. The highest plating efficiency (13.7%) was obtained when the protoplasts were isolated from the cell clumps which had been subcultured in MS medium containing glucose and were likewise cultured in MS medium supplemented with 0.5 M glucose. Plants were regenerated from the protoplast-derived calli on 1/2MS medium containing 2.5–10 g/l sucrose or 5–10 g/l glucose. These results suggest that the kinds of sugar and concentration are important parameters affecting protoplast isolation, proliferation and plant regeneration in L. x formolomgi hort.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 1990

Molecular breeding of a Brevibacterium lactofermentum l-phenylalanine producer using a cloned prephenate dehydratase gene

Hisao Ito; Katsuaki Sato; Kazuhiko Matsui; Konosuke Sano; Hitoshi Enei; Yoshio Hirose

SummaryThe prephenate dehydratase gene was cloned from a mutant of Brevibacterium lactofermentum, AJ11957 that produced enzyme free from feedback inhibition. The recombinant plasmids pPH11 and pPH14 complemented a phenylalanine auxotroph of B. lactofermentum, A-15, provided the transformant with the desensitized enzyme and caused an increased level of the enzyme compared to that of a wild strain. Plasmid pPH14 was introduced into l-phenylalanine producers genetically induced from B. lactofermentum; MF358 and FP-1 excreting l-tyrosine and anthranilate, respectively, as by-products. Both transformants predominantly accumulated l-phenylalanine at the expense of by-product formation. Co-existence of pPH14 and pTAR16, a recombinant plasmid expressing desensitized 3-deoxy-d-arabino-hepturosonate-7-phosphate synthase had a marked effect on further improvement in l-phenylalanine productivity, accompanied by an increase in the corresponding enzyme activity. The parent, MF358, accumulating 5.5 g/l l-phenylalanine, 6.8 g/l l-tyrosine and 0.3 g/l anthranilate turned into a potent l-phenylalanine producer producing 18.2 g/l l-phenylalanine and 1.0 g/l l-tyrosine by-product.

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