Kazuya Ishikawa
University of Tokyo
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Featured researches published by Kazuya Ishikawa.
Plant Journal | 2014
Kensaku Maejima; Ryo Iwai; Misako Himeno; Ken Komatsu; Yugo Kitazawa; Naoko Fujita; Kazuya Ishikawa; Misato Fukuoka; Nami Minato; Yasuyuki Yamaji; Kenro Oshima; Shigetou Namba
Plant pathogens alter the course of plant developmental processes, resulting in abnormal morphology in infected host plants. Phytoplasmas are unique plant-pathogenic bacteria that transform plant floral organs into leaf-like structures and cause the emergence of secondary flowers. These distinctive symptoms have attracted considerable interest for many years. Here, we revealed the molecular mechanisms of the floral symptoms by focusing on a phytoplasma-secreted protein, PHYL1, which induces morphological changes in flowers that are similar to those seen in phytoplasma-infected plants. PHYL1 is a homolog of the phytoplasmal effector SAP54 that also alters floral development. Using yeast two-hybrid and in planta transient co-expression assays, we found that PHYL1 interacts with and degrades the floral homeotic MADS domain proteins SEPALLATA3 (SEP3), APETALA1 (AP1) and CAULIFLOWER (CAL). This degradation of MADS domain proteins was dependent on the ubiquitin–proteasome pathway. The expression of floral development genes downstream of SEP3 and AP1 was disrupted in 35S::PHYL1 transgenic plants. PHYL1 was genetically and functionally conserved among other phytoplasma strains and species. We designate PHYL1, SAP54 and their homologs as members of the phyllody-inducing gene family of ‘phyllogens’.
Journal of General Virology | 2012
Kazuya Ishikawa; Kensaku Maejima; Ken Komatsu; Yugo Kitazawa; Masayoshi Hashimoto; Daisuke Takata; Yasuyuki Yamaji; Shigetou Namba
Fig mosaic virus (FMV), a negative-strand RNA virus, is recognized as a causal agent of fig mosaic disease. We performed RT-PCR for 14 FMV isolates collected from symptomatic fig plants in Japan and Serbia using primers corresponding to the conserved 13 nt stretches found at the termini of FMV genomic segments. The resulting simultaneous amplification of all FMV genomic segments yielded four previously identified segments of FMV and two novel segments. These novel FMV genomic RNA segments were found in each of the 14 FMV isolates analysed. In Northern blot studies, both the sense and antisense strands of these novel RNA molecules accumulated in FMV-infected fig leaves but not in uninfected fig leaves, confirming that they replicate as FMV genomic segments. Sequence analysis showed that the novel RNA segments are similar, in their structural organization and molecular evolutionary patterns, to those of known FMV genomic RNA segments. Our findings thus indicate that these newly discovered RNA segments are previously unidentified FMV genomic segments, which we have designated RNA5 and RNA6.
BMC Plant Biology | 2012
Masayoshi Hashimoto; Ken Komatsu; Kensaku Maejima; Yukari Okano; Takuya Shiraishi; Kazuya Ishikawa; Yusuke Takinami; Yasuyuki Yamaji; Shigetou Namba
BackgroundThe mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) cascade is an evolutionarily ancient mechanism of signal transduction found in eukaryotic cells. In plants, MAPK cascades are associated with responses to various abiotic and biotic stresses such as plant pathogens. MAPK cascades function through sequential phosphorylation: MAPK kinase kinases (MAPKKKs) phosphorylate MAPK kinases (MAPKKs), and phosphorylated MAPKKs phosphorylate MAPKs. Of these three types of kinase, the MAPKKKs exhibit the most divergence in the plant genome. Their great diversity is assumed to allow MAPKKKs to regulate many specific signaling pathways in plants despite the relatively limited number of MAPKKs and MAPKs. Although some plant MAPKKKs, including the MAPKKKα of Nicotiana benthamiana (NbMAPKKKα), are known to play crucial roles in plant defense responses, the functional relationship among MAPKKK genes is poorly understood. Here, we performed a comparative functional analysis of MAPKKKs to investigate the signaling pathway leading to the defense response.ResultsWe cloned three novel MAPKKK genes from N. benthamiana: NbMAPKKKβ, NbMAPKKKγ, and NbMAPKKKε2. Transient overexpression of full-length NbMAPKKKβ or NbMAPKKKγ or their kinase domains in N. benthamiana leaves induced hypersensitive response (HR)-like cell death associated with hydrogen peroxide production. This activity was dependent on the kinase activity of the overexpressed MAPKKK. In addition, virus-induced silencing of NbMAPKKKβ or NbMAPKKKγ expression significantly suppressed the induction of programmed cell death (PCD) by viral infection. Furthermore, in epistasis analysis of the functional relationships among NbMAPKKKβ, NbMAPKKKγ, and NbMAPKKKα (previously shown to be involved in plant defense responses) conducted by combining transient overexpression analysis and virus-induced gene silencing, silencing of NbMAPKKKα suppressed cell death induced by the overexpression of the NbMAPKKKβ kinase domain or of NbMAPKKKγ, but silencing of NbMAPKKKβ failed to suppress cell death induced by the overexpression of NbMAPKKKα or NbMAPKKKγ. Silencing of NbMAPKKKγ suppressed cell death induced by the NbMAPKKKβ kinase domain but not that induced by NbMAPKKKα.ConclusionsThese results demonstrate that in addition to NbMAPKKKα, NbMAPKKKβ and NbMAPKKKγ also function as positive regulators of PCD. Furthermore, these three MAPKKKs form a linear signaling pathway leading to PCD; this pathway proceeds from NbMAPKKKβ to NbMAPKKKγ to NbMAPKKKα.
Journal of High Energy Physics | 2013
Motoi Endo; Koichi Hamaguchi; Kazuya Ishikawa; Sho Iwamoto; Norimi Yokozaki
A bstractGauge mediation model with vectorlike matters (V-GMSB) is one of the few viable SUSY models that explains the 126GeV Higgs boson mass and the muon anomalous magnetic moment simultaneously. We explore exclusion bounds on V-GMSB model from latest LHC SUSY searches.
Journal of General Virology | 2013
Kazuya Ishikawa; Kensaku Maejima; Ken Komatsu; Osamu Netsu; Takuya Keima; Takuya Shiraishi; Yukari Okano; Masayoshi Hashimoto; Yasuyuki Yamaji; Shigetou Namba
Fig mosaic virus (FMV), a member of the newly formed genus Emaravirus, is a segmented negative-strand RNA virus. Each of the six genomic FMV segments contains a single ORF: that of RNA4 encodes the protein p4. FMV-p4 is presumed to be the movement protein (MP) of the virus; however, direct experimental evidence for this is lacking. We assessed the intercellular distribution of FMV-p4 in plant cells by confocal laser scanning microscopy and we found that FMV-p4 was localized to plasmodesmata and to the plasma membrane accompanied by tubule-like structures. A series of experiments designed to examine the movement functions revealed that FMV-p4 has the capacity to complement viral cell-to-cell movement, prompt GFP diffusion between cells, and spread by itself to neighbouring cells. Altogether, our findings demonstrated that FMV-p4 shares several properties with other viral MPs and plays an important role in cell-to-cell movement.
Physical Review D | 2016
Koichi Hamaguchi; Kazuya Ishikawa
In the minimal supersymmetric standard models, neutralino dark matter with mass of
Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2015
Masayoshi Hashimoto; Ken Komatsu; Ryo Iwai; Takuya Keima; Kensaku Maejima; Takuya Shiraishi; Kazuya Ishikawa; Tetsuya Yoshida; Yugo Kitazawa; Yukari Okano; Yasuyuki Yamaji; Shigetou Namba
m_{\chi}\sim m_Z/2\sim 45
Physical Review D | 2014
Motoi Endo; Koichi Hamaguchi; Kazuya Ishikawa; Martin Stoll
GeV and
Virus Research | 2012
Ken Komatsu; Hisae Hirata; Takako Fukagawa; Yasuyuki Yamaji; Yukari Okano; Kazuya Ishikawa; Tatsushi Adachi; Kensaku Maejima; Masayoshi Hashimoto; Shigetou Namba
m_{\chi}\sim m_h/2\sim 62
Journal of Virology | 2015
Kazuya Ishikawa; Chihiro Miura; Kensaku Maejima; Ken Komatsu; Masayoshi Hashimoto; Tatsuya Tomomitsu; Misato Fukuoka; Akira Yusa; Yasuyuki Yamaji; Shigetou Namba
GeV can have the thermal relic abundance