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Featured researches published by Ken-ichi Iwata.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Trehalose transporter 1, a facilitated and high-capacity trehalose transporter, allows exogenous trehalose uptake into cells

Takahiro Kikawada; Ayako Saito; Yasushi Kanamori; Yuichi Nakahara; Ken-ichi Iwata; Daisuke Tanaka; Masahiko Watanabe; Takashi Okuda

Trehalose is potentially a useful cryo- or anhydroprotectant molecule for cells and biomolecules such as proteins and nucleotides. A major obstacle to application is that cellular membranes are impermeable to trehalose. In this study, we isolated and characterized the functions of a facilitated trehalose transporter [trehalose transporter 1 (TRET1)] from an anhydrobiotic insect, Polypedilum vanderplanki. Tret1 cDNA encodes a 504-aa protein with 12 predicted transmembrane structures. Tret1 expression was induced by either desiccation or salinity stress. Expression was predominant in the fat body and occurred concomitantly with the accumulation of trehalose, indicating that TRET1 is involved in transporting trehalose synthesized in the fat body into the hemolymph. Functional expression of TRET1 in Xenopus oocytes showed that transport activity was stereochemically specific for trehalose and independent of extracellular pH (between 4.0 and 9.0) and electrochemical membrane potential. These results indicate that TRET1 is a trehalose-specific facilitated transporter and that the direction of transport is reversible depending on the concentration gradient of trehalose. The extraordinarily high values for apparent Km (≥100 mM) and Vmax (≥500 pmol/min per oocyte) for trehalose both indicate that TRET1 is a high-capacity transporter of trehalose. Furthermore, TRET1 was found to function in mammalian cells, suggesting that it confers trehalose permeability on cells, including those of vertebrates as well as insects. These characteristic features imply that TRET1 in combination with trehalose has high potential for basic and practical applications in vivo.


FEBS Journal | 2010

Enzymatic control of anhydrobiosis-related accumulation of trehalose in the sleeping chironomid, Polypedilum vanderplanki.

Kanako Mitsumasu; Yasushi Kanamori; Mika Fujita; Ken-ichi Iwata; Daisuke Tanaka; Shingo Kikuta; Masahiko Watanabe; Richard Cornette; Takashi Okuda; Takahiro Kikawada

Larvae of an anhydrobiotic insect, Polypedilum vanderplanki, accumulate very large amounts of trehalose as a compatible solute on desiccation, but the molecular mechanisms underlying this accumulation are unclear. We therefore isolated the genes coding for trehalose metabolism enzymes, i.e. trehalose‐6‐phosphate synthase (TPS) and trehalose‐6‐phosphate phosphatase (TPP) for the synthesis step, and trehalase (TREH) for the degradation step. Although computational prediction indicated that the alternative splicing variants (PvTpsα/β) obtained encoded probable functional motifs consisting of a typical consensus domain of TPS and a conserved sequence of TPP, PvTpsα did not exert activity as TPP, but only as TPS. Instead, a distinct gene (PvTpp) obtained expressed TPP activity. Previous reports have suggested that insect TPS is, exceptionally, a bifunctional enzyme governing both TPS and TPP. In this article, we propose that TPS and TPP activities in insects can be attributed to discrete genes. The translated product of the TREH ortholog (PvTreh) certainly degraded trehalose to glucose. Trehalose was synthesized abundantly, consistent with increased activities of TPS and TPP and suppressed TREH activity. These results show that trehalose accumulation observed during anhydrobiosis induction in desiccating larvae can be attributed to the activation of the trehalose synthetic pathway and to the depression of trehalose hydrolysis.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2008

Production of human erythropoietin by chimeric chickens

Daisuke Kodama; Daisuke Nishimiya; Ken-ichi Iwata; Kazuhisa Yamaguchi; Kazuhiro Yoshida; Yoshinori Kawabe; Makoto Motono; Hiroyuki Watanabe; Takashi Yamashita; Ken-ichi Nishijima; Masamichi Kamihira; Shinji Iijima

The use of transgenic avian allows cost effective and safe production of pharmaceutical proteins. Here, we report the successful production of chimeric chickens expressing human erythropoietin (hEpo) using a high-titer retroviral vector. The hEpo expressed by transgenic hens accumulated abundantly in egg white and had N- and O-linked carbohydrates. While attachment of terminal sialic acid and galactose was incomplete, portions of N- and O-linked carbohydrates were present. In vitro biological activity of egg white-hEpo was comparable to that produced by recombinant CHO cells.


Zoological Science | 2009

High Hydrostatic Pressure Tolerance of Four Different Anhydrobiotic Animal Species

Daiki D. Horikawa; Ken-ichi Iwata; Kiyoshi Kawai; Shigenobu Koseki; Takashi Okuda; Kazutaka Yamamoto

High hydrostatic pressure (HHP) can induce physical changes in DNA, proteins, and lipids, causing lethal or sublethal damage to organisms. However, HHP tolerance of animals has not been studied sufficiently. In this study, HHP tolerance of four species of invertebrate anhydrobiotes (the tardigrade Milnesium tardigradum, a nematode species in the family Plectidae, larvae of Polypedilum vanderplanki, and cysts of Artemia franciscana), which have the potential to enter anhydrobiosis upon desiccation, were investigated by exposing them to 1.2 GPa for 20 minutes. This exposure killed the anhydrobiotes in their ordinary hydrated state, but did not affect their survival in the anhydrobiotic state. The results indicated that the hydrated anhydrobiotes were vulnerable to HHP, but that HHP of 1.2 GPa was not sufficient to kill them in anhyrdobiosis.


Cryobiology | 2010

Cells from an anhydrobiotic chironomid survive almost complete desiccation

Yuichi Nakahara; Shigeo Imanishi; Kanako Mitsumasu; Yasushi Kanamori; Ken-ichi Iwata; Masahiko Watanabe; Takahiro Kikawada; Takashi Okuda

Dry-preservation of nucleated cells from multicellular animals represents a significant challenge in life science. As anhydrobionts can tolerate a desiccated state, their cells and organs are expected to show high desiccation tolerance in vitro. In the present study, we established cell lines derived from embryonic tissues of an anhydrobiotic chironomid, Polypedilum vanderplanki, designated as Pv11 and Pv210. Salinity stress induced the expression of a set of anhydrobiosis-related genes in both Pv11 and Pv210 cells, suggesting that at least a part of cells can autonomously control the physiological changes for the entry into anhydrobiosis. When desiccated with medium supplemented with 300 mM trehalose or sucrose and stored for 4 weeks in dry air (approximately 5% relative humidity), a small percentage of the cells was found to be viable upon rehydration, although surviving cells seemed not to be able to multiply. We also attempted dry-preservation of organs isolated from P. vanderplanki larvae, and found that a proportion of cells in some organs, including fat body, testis, nerve and dorsal vessel, tolerated in vitro desiccation.


Journal of Insect Physiology | 2008

Effects of dehydration rate on physiological responses and survival after rehydration in larvae of the anhydrobiotic chironomid

Yuichi Nakahara; Masahiko Watanabe; Akihiko Fujita; Yasushi Kanamori; Daisuke Tanaka; Ken-ichi Iwata; Takao Furuki; Minoru Sakurai; Takahiro Kikawada; Takashi Okuda

Strategies to combat desiccation are critical for organisms living in arid and semi-arid areas. Larvae of the Australian chironomid Paraborniella tonnoiri resist desiccation by reducing water loss. In contrast, larvae of the African species Polypedilum vanderplanki can withstand almost complete dehydration, referred to as anhydrobiosis. For successful anhydrobiosis, the dehydration rate of P. vanderplanki larvae has to be controlled. Here, we desiccated larvae by exposing them to different drying regimes, each progressing from high to low relative humidity, and examined survival after rehydration. In larvae of P. vanderplanki, reactions following desiccation can be categorized as follows: (I) no recovery at all (direct death), (II) dying by unrepairable damages after rehydration (delayed death), and (III) full recovery (successful anhydrobiosis). Initial conditions of desiccation severely affected survival following rehydration, i.e. P. vanderplanki preferred 100% relative humidity where body water content decreased slightly. In subsequent conditions, unfavorable dehydration rate, such as more than 0.7 mg water lost per day, resulted in markedly decreased survival rate of rehydrated larvae. Slow dehydration may be required for the synthesis and distribution of essential molecules for anhydrobiosis. Larvae desiccated at or above maximum tolerable rates sometimes showed temporary recovery but died soon after.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2006

Dehydration-induced expression of LEA proteins in an anhydrobiotic chironomid

Takahiro Kikawada; Yuichi Nakahara; Yasushi Kanamori; Ken-ichi Iwata; Masahiko Watanabe; Brian McGee; Alan Tunnacliffe; Takashi Okuda


Physical Review B | 2004

Anomalous endohedral structure of Gd @ C 82 metallofullerenes

Eiji Nishibori; Ken-ichi Iwata; Makoto Sakata; Masaki Takata; Hiroshi Tanaka; Haruhito Kato; Hisanori Shinohara


Angewandte Chemie | 2005

An Anomalous Endohedral Structure of Eu@C82 Metallofullerenes†

Bao-Yun Sun; Toshiki Sugai; Eiji Nishibori; Ken-ichi Iwata; Makoto Sakata; Masaki Takata; Hisanori Shinohara


Cryobiology | 2009

29. Life without water: Anhydrobiosis in the sleeping chironomid, Polypedilum vanderplanki

Takashi Okuda; Takahiro Kikawada; Minoru Sakurai; Takao Furuki; Ken-ichi Akao; Yuichi Nakahara; Gusev Oleg; Ayako Saito; Masahiko Watanabe; Ken-ichi Iwata; Yasushi Kanamori; Richard Cornette

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Yasushi Kanamori

Kyoto Institute of Technology

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Yuichi Nakahara

Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology

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