Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Kazuki Moriguchi is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Kazuki Moriguchi.


Archive | 2009

Ti and Ri Plasmids

Katsunori Suzuki; Katsuyuki Tanaka; Shinji Yamamoto; Kazuya Kiyokawa; Kazuki Moriguchi; Kazuo Yoshida

Agrobacterium species harboring tumor-inducing (Ti) or hairy root-inducing (Ri) plasmids cause crown gall or hairy root diseases, respectively. These natural plasmids provide the basis for vectors to construct transgenic plants. The plasmids are approximately 200 kbp in size. Complete sequence analysis indicates that the pathogenic plasmids contain gene clusters for DNA replication, virulence, T-DNA, opine utilization, and conjugation. T-DNA genes have lower G + C content, which is presumably suitable for expression in host plant cells. Besides these genes, each plasmid contains a large number of unique genes. Even plasmids of the same opine type differ considerably in gene content and have highly chimeric structures. The plasmids seem to interact with each other and with plasmids of other members of the Rhizobiaceae and are likely to shuffle genes for infection between Ti and Ri plasmids. Plasmid stability genes are discussed, which are important for plasmid evolution and construction of useful strains.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2009

Novel Toxin-Antitoxin System Composed of Serine Protease and AAA-ATPase Homologues Determines the High Level of Stability and Incompatibility of the Tumor-Inducing Plasmid pTiC58

Shinji Yamamoto; Kazuya Kiyokawa; Katsuyuki Tanaka; Kazuki Moriguchi; Katsunori Suzuki

Stability of plant tumor-inducing (Ti) plasmids differs among strains. A high level of stability prevents basic and applied studies including the development of useful strains. The nopaline type Ti plasmid pTiC58 significantly reduces the transconjugant efficiency for incoming incompatible plasmids relative to the other type, such as octopine-type plasmids. In this study we identified a region that increases the incompatibility and stability of the plasmid. This region was located on a 4.3-kbp segment about 38 kbp downstream of the replication locus, repABC. We named two open reading frames in the segment, ietA and ietS, both of which were essential for the high level of incompatibility and stability. Plasmid stabilization by ietAS was accomplished by a toxin-antitoxin (TA) mechanism, where IetS is the toxin and IetA is the antitoxin. A database search revealed that putative IetA and IetS proteins are highly similar to AAA-ATPases and subtilisin-like serine proteases, respectively. Amino acid substitution experiments in each of the highly conserved characteristic residues, in both putative enzymes, suggested that the protease activity is essential and that ATP binding activity is important for the operation of the TA system. The ietAS-containing repABC plasmids expelled Ti plasmids even in strains which were tolerant to conventional Ti-curing treatments.


Experimental Cell Research | 2011

Proper regulation of Cdc42 activity is required for tight actin concentration at the equator during cytokinesis in adherent mammalian Cells

Xiaodong Zhu; Junxia Wang; Kazuki Moriguchi; Lu Ting Liow; Sohail Ahmed; Irina Kaverina; Maki Murata-Hori

Cytokinesis in mammalian cells requires actin assembly at the equatorial region. Although functions of RhoA in this process have been well established, additional mechanisms are likely involved. We have examined if Cdc42 is involved in actin assembly during cytokinesis. Depletion of Cdc42 had no apparent effects on the duration of cytokinesis, while overexpression of constitutively active Cdc42 (CACdc42) caused cytokinesis failure in normal rat kidney epithelial cells. Cells depleted of Cdc42 displayed abnormal cell morphology and caused a failure of tight accumulation of actin and RhoA at the equator. In contrast, in cells overexpressing CACdc42, actin formed abnormal bundles and RhoA was largely eliminated from the equator. Our results suggest that accurate regulation of Cdc42 activity is crucial for proper equatorial actin assembly and RhoA localization during cytokinesis. Notably, our observations also suggest that tight actin concentration is not essential for cytokinesis in adherent mammalian cells.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2009

Construction of Disarmed Ti Plasmids Transferable between Escherichia coli and Agrobacterium Species

Kazuya Kiyokawa; Shinji Yamamoto; Kei Sakuma; Katsuyuki Tanaka; Kazuki Moriguchi; Katsunori Suzuki

ABSTRACT Agrobacterium-mediated plant transformation has been used widely, but there are plants that are recalcitrant to this type of transformation. This transformation method uses bacterial strains harboring a modified tumor-inducing (Ti) plasmid that lacks the transfer DNA (T-DNA) region (disarmed Ti plasmid). It is desirable to develop strains that can broaden the host range. A large number of Agrobacterium strains have not been tested yet to determine whether they can be used in transformation. In order to improve the disarming method and to obtain strains disarmed and ready for the plant transformation test, we developed a simple scheme to make certain Ti plasmids disarmed and simultaneously maintainable in Escherichia coli and mobilizable between E. coli and Agrobacterium. To establish the scheme in nopaline-type Ti plasmids, a neighboring segment to the left of the left border sequence, a neighboring segment to the right of the right border sequence of pTi-SAKURA, a cassette harboring the pSC101 replication gene between these two segments, the broad-host-range IncP-type oriT, and the gentamicin resistance gene were inserted into a suicide-type sacB-containing vector. Replacement of T-DNA with the cassette in pTiC58 and pTi-SAKURA occurred at a high frequency and with high accuracy when the tool plasmid was used. We confirmed that there was stable maintenance of the modified Ti plasmids in E. coli strain S17-1λpir and conjugal transfer from E. coli to Ti-less Agrobacterium strains and that the reconstituted Agrobacterium strains were competent to transfer DNA into plant cells. As the modified plasmid delivery system was simple and efficient, conversion of strains to the disarmed type was easy and should be applicable in studies to screen for useful strains.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Trans-Kingdom Horizontal DNA Transfer from Bacteria to Yeast Is Highly Plastic Due to Natural Polymorphisms in Auxiliary Nonessential Recipient Genes

Kazuki Moriguchi; Shinji Yamamoto; Katsuyuki Tanaka; Nori Kurata; Katsunori Suzuki

With the rapid accumulation of genomic information from various eukaryotes in the last decade, genes proposed to have been derived from recent horizontal gene transfer (HGT) events have been reported even in non-phagotrophic unicellular and multicellular organisms, but the molecular pathways underlying HGT remain to be explained. The development of in vitro HGT detection systems, which permit the molecular and genetic analyses of donor and recipient organisms and quantify HGT, are helpful in order to gain insight into mechanisms that may contribute to contemporary HGT events or may have contributed to past HGT events. We applied a horizontal DNA transfer system model based on conjugal gene transfer called trans-kingdom conjugation (TKC) from the prokaryote Escherichia coli to the eukaryote Saccharomyces cerevisiae, and assessed whether and to what extent genetic variations in the eukaryotic recipient affect its receptivity to TKC. Strains from a collection of 4,823 knock-out mutants of S. cerevisiae MAT-α haploids were tested for their individual TKC receptivity. Two types of mutants, an ssd1 mutant and respiratory mutants, which are also found in experimental strains and in nature widely, were identified as highly receptive mutants. The TKC efficiency for spontaneously accrued petite (rho −/0) mutants of the functional allele (SSD1-V) strain showed increased receptivity. The TKC efficiency of the ssd1Δ mutant was 36% for bacterial conjugation, while that of the petite/ssd1Δ double mutants was even higher (220% in average) compared to bacterial conjugation. This increased TKC receptivity was also observed when other conjugal transfer systems were applied and the donor bacterium was changed to Agrobacterium tumefaciens. These results support the idea that the genomes of certain eukaryotes have been exposed to exogenous DNA more frequently and continuously than previously thought.


Microbiological Research | 2012

Screening for yeast mutants defective in recipient ability for transkingdom conjugation with Escherichia coli revealed importance of vacuolar ATPase activity in the horizontal DNA transfer phenomenon

Mami Mizuta; Emi Satoh; Chika Katoh; Katsuyuki Tanaka; Kazuki Moriguchi; Katsunori Suzuki

Proteobacterium Escherichia coli strains harboring wide-transfer-range conjugative plasmids are able to transfer these plasmids to several yeast species. Whole plasmid DNA is mobilizable in the transkingdom conjugation phenomenon. Owing to the availability of various conjugative plasmids in bacteria, the horizontal DNA transfer has potential to occur between various bacteria and eukaryotes. In order to know host factor genes involved in such conjugation, we systematically tested the conjugability of strains among a yeast library comprising single-gene-knockout mutants in this study. This genome-wide screen identified 26 host chromosomal genes whose absence reduced the efficiency of the transkingdom conjugation. Among the 26 genes, 20 are responsible for vacuolar ATPase activity, while 5 genes (SHP1, CSG2, CCR4, NOT5, and HOF1) seem to play a role in maintaining the cell surface. Lack of either ZUO1 gene or SSZ1 gene, each of which encodes a component of the ribosome-associated cytoplasmic molecular chaperone, also strongly affected transkingdom conjugation.


Genes to Cells | 2012

Yeast transformation mediated by Agrobacterium strains harboring an Ri plasmid: comparative study between GALLS of an Ri plasmid and virE of a Ti plasmid.

Kazuya Kiyokawa; Shinji Yamamoto; Yukari Sato; Naoto Momota; Katsuyuki Tanaka; Kazuki Moriguchi; Katsunori Suzuki

Agrobacterium strains containing a Ti plasmid can transfer T‐DNA not only to plants but also to fungi, including the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. However, no Agrobacterium strain harboring an Ri plasmid has been evaluated in fungal transformation. Some Ri plasmids have GALLS , instead of virE1 and virE2. GALLS protein can functionally substitute in plant transformation for a structurally different protein VirE2. In this study, we compared the yeast transformation ability among Agrobacterium donors: a strain containing a Ti plasmid, strains harboring either an agropine‐type or a mikimopine‐type Ri plasmid, and a strain having a modified Ri plasmid supplemented with a Ti plasmid type virE operon. Agrobacterium strains possessing GALLS transformed yeast cells far less efficiently than the strain containing virE operon. Production of GALLS in recipient yeast cells improved the yeast transformation mediated by an Agrobacterium strain lacking neither GALLS nor virE operon. A reporter assay to detect mobilization of the proteins fused with Cre recombinase revealed that VirE2 protein is much more abundant in yeast cells than GALLS. Based on these results, we concluded that the low yeast transformability mediated by Agrobacterium strains having the Ri plasmid is because of low amount of mobilized GALLS in yeast cells.


BMC Microbiology | 2016

DNA repair genes RAD52 and SRS2, a cell wall synthesis regulator gene SMI1, and the membrane sterol synthesis scaffold gene ERG28 are important in efficient Agrobacterium-mediated yeast transformation with chromosomal T-DNA.

Yuta Ohmine; Yukari Satoh; Kazuya Kiyokawa; Shinji Yamamoto; Kazuki Moriguchi; Katsunori Suzuki

BackgroundPlant pathogenic Agrobacterium strains can transfer T-DNA regions of their Ti plasmids to a broad range of eukaryotic hosts, including fungi, in vitro. In the recent decade, the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is used as a model host to reveal important host proteins for the Agrobacterium-mediated transformation (AMT). Further investigation is required to understand the fundamental mechanism of AMT, including interaction at the cell surface, to expand the host range, and to develop new tools. In this study, we screened a yeast mutant library for low AMT mutant strains by advantage of a chromosome type T-DNA, which transfer is efficient and independent on integration into host chromosome.ResultsBy the mutant screening, we identified four mutant strains (srs2Δ, rad52Δ, smi1Δ and erg28Δ), which showed considerably low AMT efficiency. Structural analysis of T-DNA product replicons in AMT colonies of mutants lacking each of the two DNA repair genes, SRS2 and RAD52, suggested that the genes act soon after T-DNA entry for modification of the chromosomal T-DNA to stably maintain them as linear replicons and to circularize certain T-DNA simultaneously. The cell wall synthesis regulator SMI1 might have a role in the cell surface interaction between the donor and recipient cells, but the smi1Δ mutant exhibited pleiotropic effect, i.e. low effector protein transport as well as low AMT for the chromosomal T-DNA, but relatively high AMT for integrative T-DNAs. The ergosterol synthesis regulator/enzyme-scaffold gene ERG28 probably contributes by sensing a congested environment, because growth of erg28Δ strain was unaffected by the presence of donor bacterial cells, while the growth of the wild-type and other mutant yeast strains was suppressed by their presence.ConclusionsRAD52 and the DNA helicase/anti-recombinase gene SRS2 are necessary to form and maintain artificial chromosomes through the AMT of chromosomal T-DNA. A sterol synthesis scaffold gene ERG28 is important in the high-efficiency AMT, possibly by avoiding congestion. The involvement of the cell wall synthesis regulator SMI1 remains to be elucidated.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2013

Transkingdom Genetic Transfer from Escherichia coli to Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a Simple Gene Introduction Tool

Kazuki Moriguchi; Noritaka Edahiro; Shinji Yamamoto; Katsuyuki Tanaka; Nori Kurata; Katsunori Suzuki

Transkingdom conjugation (TKC) permits transfer of DNA from bacteria to eukaryotic cells using a bacterial conjugal transfer system. However, it is not clear whether the process of DNA acceptance in a recipient eukaryote is homologous to the process of conjugation between bacteria. TKC transfer requires mobilizable shuttle vectors that are capable of conjugal transfer and replication in the donor and recipient strains. Here, we developed TKC vectors derived from plasmids belonging to the IncP and IncQ groups. We also investigated forms of transfer of these vectors from Escherichia coli into Saccharomyces cerevisiae to develop TKC as a simple gene introduction method. Both types of vectors were transferred precisely, conserving the origin of transfer (oriT) sequences, but IncP-based vectors appeared to be more efficient than an IncQ-based vector. Interestingly, unlike in agrobacterial T-DNA (transfer DNA) transfer, the efficiency of TKC transfer was similar between a wild-type yeast strain and DNA repair mutants defective in homologous recombination (rad51Δ and rad52Δ) or nonhomologous end joining (rad50Δ, yku70Δ, and lig4Δ). Lastly, a shuttle vector with two repeats of IncP-type oriT (oriTP) sequences flanking a marker gene was constructed. TKC transfer of this vector resulted in precise excision of both the oriTP loci as well as the marker gene, albeit at a low frequency of 17% of all transconjugants. This feature would be attractive in biotechnological applications of TKC. Taken together, these results strongly suggest that in contrast to agrobacterial T-DNA transfer, the circularization of vector single-stranded DNA occurs either before or after transfer but requires a factor(s) from the donor. TKC is a simple method of gene transfer with possible applications in yeast genetics and biotechnology.


Plasmid | 2017

An extra repABC locus in the incRh2 Ti plasmid pTiBo542 exerts incompatibility toward an incRh1 plasmid

Shinji Yamamoto; Vita Agustina; Ayako Sakai; Kazuki Moriguchi; Katsunori Suzuki

Ti/Ri plasmids in pathogenic Agrobacterium species are repABC replicons that are stably maintained by the function of repABC genes. Two Ti plasmids, pTiBo542 and pTiS4, belonging to incRh2 and incRh4 incompatibility groups, respectively, were reported to carry two repABC loci. In the present study, to reveal the roles of the two repABC loci in the two plasmids, we constructed mini-replicons carrying any one or both of the repABC loci (referred to as repABC1 and repABC2 here) and examined their replication and incompatibility properties. The introduction of mini-replicons into A. tumefaciens C58C1 strains suggested that repABC1 functions as replicator genes but repABC2 does not in both the Ti plasmids. Because the components of repABC2 of pTiBo542 have highly similar amino acid and nucleotide sequences to those of the incRh1-type repABC replicon, we introduced repABC2-containing replicons into cells harboring an incRh1 plasmid in order to check their incompatibility traits. As a result, the repABC2-containing replicon expelled the resident incRh1 plasmid, indicating that the extra repABC locus is dispensable for replication and could work as an incompatibility determinant against incRh1 group plasmids. We suggest that the locus contributes to plasmid retention by eliminating the burden of co-existing competitive plasmids in host cells through its incompatibility.

Collaboration


Dive into the Kazuki Moriguchi's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Nori Kurata

National Institute of Genetics

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge