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Dive into the research topics where Kazuhiro Kogure is active.

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Featured researches published by Kazuhiro Kogure.


Nature Communications | 2013

A light-driven sodium ion pump in marine bacteria

Keiichi Inoue; Hikaru Ono; Rei Abe-Yoshizumi; Susumu Yoshizawa; Hiroyasu Ito; Kazuhiro Kogure; Hideki Kandori

Light-driven proton-pumping rhodopsins are widely distributed in many microorganisms. They convert sunlight energy into proton gradients that serve as energy source of the cell. Here we report a new functional class of a microbial rhodopsin, a light-driven sodium ion pump. We discover that the marine flavobacterium Krokinobacter eikastus possesses two rhodopsins, the first, KR1, being a prototypical proton pump, while the second, KR2, pumps sodium ions outward. Rhodopsin KR2 can also pump lithium ions, but converts to a proton pump when presented with potassium chloride or salts of larger cations. These data indicate that KR2 is a compatible sodium ion-proton pump, and spectroscopic analysis showed it binds sodium ions in its extracellular domain. These findings suggest that light-driven sodium pumps may be as important in situ as their proton-pumping counterparts.


Microbiology | 1999

The effect of motility and cell-surface polymers on bacterial attachment

Hisao Morisaki; Shinichi Nagai; Hiroyuki Ohshima; Eiko Ikemoto; Kazuhiro Kogure

Recently it was shown that motility of Vibrio alginolyticus facilitated cell attachment to glass surfaces. In the present study the same relationship between motility and cell attachment was confirmed for Alcaligenes and Alteromonas spp. These findings clearly answer a long-standing question: does motility facilitate attachment? However, they are contradictory to a general view on cell attachment that the energy barrier due to electrostatic repulsion between negatively charged bacterial cells and a glass surface is much greater than both the thermal kinetic energy of the bacterial cell and the bacterial swimming energy. It is shown that the energy barrier becomes far less than that usually estimated when bacterial cells are rich in polymers at their surfaces. This finding reasonably explains the dependence of bacterial attachment rate on cell motility and demands reconsideration of the mechanism of bacterial attachment.


Evolution | 2010

Evolutionary biology in biodiversity science, conservation, and policy: A call to action

Andrew P. Hendry; Lúcia G. Lohmann; Elena Conti; Joel Cracraft; Keith A. Crandall; Daniel P. Faith; Christoph Häuser; Carlos Alfredo Joly; Kazuhiro Kogure; Anne Larigauderie; Susana Magallón; Craig Moritz; Simon Tillier; Rafael Zardoya; Anne Hélène Prieur-Richard; Bruno A. Walther; Tetsukazu Yahara; Michael J. Donoghue

Evolutionary biologists have long endeavored to document how many species exist on Earth, to understand the processes by which biodiversity waxes and wanes, to document and interpret spatial patterns of biodiversity, and to infer evolutionary relationships. Despite the great potential of this knowledge to improve biodiversity science, conservation, and policy, evolutionary biologists have generally devoted limited attention to these broader implications. Likewise, many workers in biodiversity science have underappreciated the fundamental relevance of evolutionary biology. The aim of this article is to summarize and illustrate some ways in which evolutionary biology is directly relevant. We do so in the context of four broad areas: (1) discovering and documenting biodiversity, (2) understanding the causes of diversification, (3) evaluating evolutionary responses to human disturbances, and (4) implications for ecological communities, ecosystems, and humans. We also introduce bioGENESIS, a new project within DIVERSITAS launched to explore the potential practical contributions of evolutionary biology. In addition to fostering the integration of evolutionary thinking into biodiversity science, bioGENESIS provides practical recommendations to policy makers for incorporating evolutionary perspectives into biodiversity agendas and conservation. We solicit your involvement in developing innovative ways of using evolutionary biology to better comprehend and stem the loss of biodiversity.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Functional characterization of flavobacteria rhodopsins reveals a unique class of light-driven chloride pump in bacteria

Susumu Yoshizawa; Yohei Kumagai; Hana Kim; Yoshitoshi Ogura; Tetsuya Hayashi; Wataru Iwasaki; Edward F. DeLong; Kazuhiro Kogure

Significance Ion-translocating, light-activated membrane proteins known as rhodopsins are found in all three domains of life. Proton-pumping rhodopsins, such as proteorhodopsin, are known to be broadly distributed in marine bacteria. The first known sodium-pumping rhodopsin was recently described in marine flavobacterium. We report the discovery and characterization of a unique type of light-activated ion-translocating rhodopsin that translocates chloride ions into the cell and is evolutionarily distinct from the other known rhodopsin chloride pump, halorhodopsin, found in haloarchaea. Our data show that rhodopsins with different ion specificities have evolved independently in marine bacteria, with individual strains containing as many as three functionally different rhodopsins. Light-activated, ion-pumping rhodopsins are broadly distributed among many different bacteria and archaea inhabiting the photic zone of aquatic environments. Bacterial proton- or sodium-translocating rhodopsins can convert light energy into a chemiosmotic force that can be converted into cellular biochemical energy, and thus represent a widespread alternative form of photoheterotrophy. Here we report that the genome of the marine flavobacterium Nonlabens marinus S1-08T encodes three different types of rhodopsins: Nonlabens marinus rhodopsin 1 (NM-R1), Nonlabens marinus rhodopsin 2 (NM-R2), and Nonlabens marinus rhodopsin 3 (NM-R3). Our functional analysis demonstrated that NM-R1 and NM-R2 are light-driven outward-translocating H+ and Na+ pumps, respectively. Functional analyses further revealed that the light-activated NM-R3 rhodopsin pumps Cl− ions into the cell, representing the first chloride-pumping rhodopsin uncovered in a marine bacterium. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that NM-R3 belongs to a distinct phylogenetic lineage quite distant from archaeal inward Cl−-pumping rhodopsins like halorhodopsin, suggesting that different types of chloride-pumping rhodopsins have evolved independently within marine bacterial lineages. Taken together, our data suggest that similar to haloarchaea, a considerable variety of rhodopsin types with different ion specificities have evolved in marine bacteria, with individual marine strains containing as many as three functionally different rhodopsins.


Microbial Ecology | 2007

Isolation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa from Open Ocean and Comparison with Freshwater, Clinical, and Animal Isolates

Nurul Huda Khan; Yoshikazu Ishii; Noriko Kimata-Kino; Hidetake Esaki; Tomohiko Nishino; Masahiko Nishimura; Kazuhiro Kogure

Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an opportunistic pathogen responsible for morbidity and mortality in humans, animals, and plants. This bacterium has been regarded to be widely present in terrestrial and freshwater environments, but not in open ocean environments. Our purpose was to clarify its presence in open ocean, and their genotypic and physiological characteristics were compared with those of isolates from clinical, animal, and freshwater sources. Water samples were collected from freshwater, bays, and offshore environments in Japan. Sixty-two isolates, including 26 from the open ocean, were identified as P. aeruginosa by phenotypic characteristics and the BD Phoenix System. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) was performed on all strains, together with 21 clinical and 8 animal strains. The results showed that open ocean strains are composed of a few genotypes, which are separated from other strains. Although some clinical isolates made a cluster, other strains tended to mix together. Different antibiotypes were observed among marine isolates that had similar PFGE and serotyping patterns. Some were multidrug-resistant. Laboratory-based microcosm study were carried out to see the responses of P. aeruginosa toward increased NaCl concentrations in deionized water (DW). Marine strains showed better survival with the increase, whereas river and clinical strains were suppressed by the increase. These findings illustrate the potential significance of open ocean as a possible reservoir of P. aeruginosa, and there may be clones unique to this environment. To our knowledge, this is the first report on the presence and characterization of P. aeruginosa in the open ocean.


Nature | 2015

Structural basis for Na + transport mechanism by a light-driven Na + pump

Hideaki E. Kato; Keiichi Inoue; Rei Abe-Yoshizumi; Yoshitaka Kato; Hikaru Ono; Masae Konno; Shoko Hososhima; Toru Ishizuka; Mohammad Razuanul Hoque; Hirofumi Kunitomo; Jumpei Ito; Susumu Yoshizawa; Keitaro Yamashita; Mizuki Takemoto; Tomohiro Nishizawa; Reiya Taniguchi; Kazuhiro Kogure; Andrés D. Maturana; Yuichi Iino; Hiromu Yawo; Ryuichiro Ishitani; Hideki Kandori; Osamu Nureki

Krokinobacter eikastus rhodopsin 2 (KR2) is the first light-driven Na+ pump discovered, and is viewed as a potential next-generation optogenetics tool. Since the positively charged Schiff base proton, located within the ion-conducting pathway of all light-driven ion pumps, was thought to prohibit the transport of a non-proton cation, the discovery of KR2 raised the question of how it achieves Na+ transport. Here we present crystal structures of KR2 under neutral and acidic conditions, which represent the resting and M-like intermediate states, respectively. Structural and spectroscopic analyses revealed the gating mechanism, whereby the flipping of Asp116 sequesters the Schiff base proton from the conducting pathway to facilitate Na+ transport. Together with the structure-based engineering of the first light-driven K+ pumps, electrophysiological assays in mammalian neurons and behavioural assays in a nematode, our studies reveal the molecular basis for light-driven non-proton cation pumps and thus provide a framework that may advance the development of next-generation optogenetics.


Microbial Ecology | 2004

Pseudomonas aeruginosa Isolated from Marine Environments in Tokyo Bay

N. Kimata; Tomohiko Nishino; Satoru Suzuki; Kazuhiro Kogure

Pseudomonas aeruginosa is a pathogenic bacterium that has been thoroughly investigated since the 19th century and is generally regarded as a freshwater or terrestrial organism. In 1995, it was reported that the OprP porin, an outer membrane protein corresponding to that of this bacterium, was widely distributed as a dissolved component in seawater. This finding led us to investigate the presence of P. aeruginosa in marine environments. Both culture-independent and -dependent methods were applied to seawater samples obtained in Tokyo Bay during four cruises. The DVC-FA (direct viable count–fluorescent antibody) technique showed that cells reactive to an antibody against P. aeruginosa were widely present in the bay, i.e., 103 to 104 cells/mL in the inner bay, and 102 to 103 cells/mL at the mouth. Bacterial cells isolated by selective medium were identified by three methods: the presence of oprI and oprL, two outer membrane lipoprotein genes specific to P. aeruginosa; the API20 NE kit; and 16S rDNA sequence analysis. The results confirmed that the majority of isolates from the bay were P. aeruginosa. Immuno-chemical analyses of the seawater results indicate that P. aeruginosa is commonly present in coastal marine environments and sheds OprP.


Environmental Microbiology | 2012

Diversity and functional analysis of proteorhodopsin in marine Flavobacteria

Susumu Yoshizawa; Akira Kawanabe; Hiroyasu Ito; Hideki Kandori; Kazuhiro Kogure

Proteorhodopsin (PR) genes are widely distributed among marine prokaryotes and functions as light-driven proton pump when expressed heterologously in Escherichia coli, suggesting that light energy passing through PR may be substantial in marine environment. However, there are no data on PR proton pump activities in native marine bacteria. Here, we demonstrate light-driven proton pump activity (c. 124 H(+) PR(-1)  min(-1) ) in recently isolated marine Flavobacteria. Among 75 isolates, 38 possessed the PR gene. Illumination of cell suspensions from all eight tested strains in five genera triggered marked pH drops. The action spectrum of proton pump activity closely matched the spectral distribution of the sea surface green light field. Addition of hydroxylamine to a solubilized membrane fraction shifted the spectrum to a form characteristic of PR photobleached into retinal oxime, indicating that PRs in flavobacterial cell membranes transform the photon dose in incident radiation into energy in the form of membrane potential. Our results revealed that PR-mediated proton transport can create the sufficient membrane potential for the ATP synthesis in native flavobacterial cells.


Toxicon | 1996

A biological method for the quantitative measurement of tetrodotoxin (TTX): Tissue culture bioassay in combination with a water-soluble tetrazolium salt

Koji Hamasaki; Kazuhiro Kogure; Kouichi Ohwada

A tissue culture bioassay, using the mouse neuroblastoma cell line (Neuro2A), was improved to provide a simple and sensitive bioassay for TTX or sodium channel-blocking toxins (SCB). The water-soluble tetrazolium salt, 2-(4-iodophenyl)-3-(4-nitrophenyl)-5-(2,4-disulfophenyl)-2H-tetraz olium, monosodium salt (WST-1), was applied to replace the time-consuming and subjective cell-counting procedure of the cells with automatic measurement, using a microplate reader. It was also confirmed that this method is directly applicable to bacterial culture supernatants, with the precaution of possible interference.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2008

Multilocus sequence typing and phylogenetic analyses of Pseudomonas aeruginosa Isolates from the ocean.

Nurul Huda Khan; Mahbuba Ahsan; Susumu Yoshizawa; Shoichi Hosoya; Akira Yokota; Kazuhiro Kogure

ABSTRACT Recent isolation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains from the open ocean and subsequent pulsed-field gel electrophoresis analyses indicate that these strains have a unique genotype (N. H. Khan, Y. Ishii, N. Kimata-Kino, H. Esaki, T. Nishino, M. Nishimura, and K. Kogure, Microb. Ecol. 53:173-186, 2007). We hypothesized that ocean P. aeruginosa strains have a unique phylogenetic position relative to other strains. The objective of this study was to clarify the intraspecies phylogenetic relationship between marine strains and other strains from various geographical locations. Considering the advantages of using databases, multilocus sequence typing (MLST) was chosen for the typing and discrimination of ocean P. aeruginosa strains. Seven housekeeping genes (acsA, aroE, guaA, mutL, nuoD, ppsA, and trpE) were analyzed, and the results were compared with data on the MLST website. These genes were also used for phylogenetic analysis of P. aeruginosa. Rooted and unrooted phylogenetic trees were generated for each gene locus and the concatenated gene fragments. MLST data showed that all the ocean strains were new. Trees constructed for individual and concatenated genes revealed that ocean P. aeruginosa strains have clusters distinct from those of other P. aeruginosa strains. These clusters roughly reflected the geographical locations of the isolates. These data support our previous findings that P. aeruginosa strains are present in the ocean. It can be concluded that the ocean P. aeruginosa strains have diverged from other isolates and form a distinct cluster based on MLST and phylogenetic analyses of seven housekeeping genes.

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Kouichi Ohwada

Prefectural University of Kumamoto

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Hideki Kandori

Nagoya Institute of Technology

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Hiroaki Tsutsumi

Prefectural University of Kumamoto

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