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Dive into the research topics where Kenji Nakahigashi is active.

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Featured researches published by Kenji Nakahigashi.


Current Opinion in Microbiology | 1999

Regulation of the heat-shock response

Takashi Yura; Kenji Nakahigashi

Current models of both heat induction and the chaperone-mediated feedback control of the sigma32 regulon in Escherichia coli have been further substantiated, and the extent of conservation among Gram-negative bacteria has been assessed. Analyses of the CIRCE and other regulons or operons in Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria have provided new insights into their significance and regulatory mechanisms.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2002

Heat Shock Proteome of Agrobacterium tumefaciens: Evidence for New Control Systems

Ran Rosen; Knut Büttner; Dörte Becher; Kenji Nakahigashi; Takashi Yura; Michael Hecker; Eliora Z. Ron

The regulation of Agrobacterium tumefaciens heat shock genes involves a transcriptional activator (RpoH) and repressor elements (HrcA-CIRCE). Using proteome analysis and mutants in these control elements, we show that the heat shock induction of 32 (out of 56) heat shock proteins is independent of RpoH and HrcA. These results indicate the existence of additional regulatory factors in the A. tumefaciens heat shock response.


Metabolomics | 2013

Metabolomic study of Chilean biomining bacteria Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans strain Wenelen and Acidithiobacillus thiooxidans strain Licanantay

Patricio Martínez; Sebastián Gálvez; Norimasa Ohtsuka; Marko Budinich; María Paz Cortés; Cristián Serpell; Kenji Nakahigashi; Akiyoshi Hirayama; Masaru Tomita; Tomoyoshi Soga; Servet Martínez; Alejandro Maass; Pilar Parada

In this study, we present the first metabolic profiles for two bioleaching bacteria using capillary electrophoresis coupled with mass spectrometry. The bacteria, Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans strain Wenelen (DSM 16786) and Acidithiobacillus thiooxidans strain Licanantay (DSM 17318), were sampled at different growth phases and on different substrates: the former was grown with iron and sulfur, and the latter with sulfur and chalcopyrite. Metabolic profiles were scored from planktonic and sessile states. Spermidine was detected in intra- and extracellular samples for both strains, suggesting it has an important role in biofilm formation in the presence of solid substrate. The canonical pathway for spermidine synthesis seems absent as its upstream precursor, putrescine, was not present in samples. Glutathione, a catalytic activator of elemental sulfur, was identified as one of the most abundant metabolites in the intracellular space in A. thiooxidans strain Licanantay, confirming its participation in the sulfur oxidation pathway. Amino acid profiles varied according to the growth conditions and bioleaching species. Glutamic and aspartic acid were highly abundant in intra- and extracellular extracts. Both are constituents of the extracellular matrix, and have a probable role in cell detoxification. This novel metabolomic information validates previous knowledge from in silico metabolic reconstructions based on genomic sequences, and reveals important biomining functions such as biofilm formation, energy management and stress responses.


BMC Genomics | 2014

Effect of codon adaptation on codon-level and gene-level translation efficiency in vivo

Kenji Nakahigashi; Yuki Takai; Yuh Shiwa; Mei Wada; Masayuki Honma; Hirofumi Yoshikawa; Masaru Tomita; Akio Kanai; Hirotada Mori

BackgroundThere is a significant difference between synonymous codon usage in many organisms, and it is known that codons used more frequently generally showed efficient decoding rate. At the gene level, however, there are conflicting reports on the existence of a correlation between codon adaptation and translation efficiency, even in the same organism.ResultsTo resolve this issue, we cultured Escherichia coli under conditions designed to maintain constant levels of mRNA and protein and subjected the cells to ribosome profiling (RP) and mRNA-seq analyses. We showed that the RP results correlated more closely with protein levels generated under similar culture conditions than with the mRNA abundance from the mRNA-seq. Our result indicated that RP/mRNA ratio could be used as a measure of translation efficiency at gene level. On the other hand, the RP data showed that codon-specific ribosome density at the decoding site negatively correlated with codon usage, consistent with the hypothesis that preferred codons display lower ribosome densities due to their faster decoding rate. However, highly codon-adapted genes showed higher ribosome densities at the gene level, indicating that the efficiency of translation initiation, rather than higher elongation efficiency of preferred codons, exerted a greater effect on ribosome density and thus translation efficiency.ConclusionsThese findings indicate that evolutionary pressure on highly expressed genes influenced both codon bias and translation initiation efficiency and therefore explains contradictory findings that codon usage bias correlates with translation efficiency of native genes, but not with the artificially created gene pool, which was not subjected to evolution pressure.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2001

DnaK Chaperone-Mediated Control of Activity of a ς32 Homolog (RpoH) Plays a Major Role in the Heat Shock Response of Agrobacterium tumefaciens

Kenji Nakahigashi; Hideki Yanagi; Takashi Yura

RpoH (Escherichia coli sigma(32) and its homologs) is the central regulator of the heat shock response in gram-negative proteobacteria. Here we studied salient regulatory features of RpoH in Agrobacterium tumefaciens by examining its synthesis, stability, and activity while increasing the temperature from 25 to 37 degrees C. Heat induction of RpoH synthesis occurred at the level of transcription from an RpoH-dependent promoter, coordinately with that of DnaK, and followed by an increase in the RpoH level. Essentially normal induction of heat shock proteins was observed even with a strain that was unable to increase the RpoH level upon heat shock. Moreover, heat-induced accumulation of dnaK mRNA occurred without protein synthesis, showing that preexisting RpoH was sufficient for induction of the heat shock response. These results suggested that controlling the activity, rather than the amount, of RpoH plays a major role in regulation of the heat shock response. In addition, increasing or decreasing the DnaK-DnaJ chaperones specifically reduced or enhanced the RpoH activity, respectively. On the other hand, the RpoH protein was normally stable and remained stable during the induction phase but was destabilized transiently during the adaptation phase. We propose that the DnaK-mediated control of RpoH activity plays a primary role in the induction of heat shock response in A. tumefaciens, in contrast to what has been found in E. coli.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012

Glycogen is the primary source of glucose during the lag phase of E. coli proliferation

Tomoaki Yamamotoya; Hitomi Dose; Zhongyuan Tian; Adrien Fauré; Yoshihiro Toya; Masayuki Honma; Kaori Igarashi; Kenji Nakahigashi; Tomoyoshi Soga; Hirotada Mori; Hiroshi Matsuno

In the studies of Escherichia coli (E. coli), metabolomics analyses have mainly been performed using steady state culture. However, to analyze the dynamic changes in cellular metabolism, we performed a profiling of concentration of metabolites by using batch culture. As a first step, we focused on glucose uptake and the behavior of the first metabolite, G6P (glucose-6-phosphate). A computational formula was derived to express the glucose uptake rate by a single cell from two kinds of experimental data, extracellular glucose concentration and cell growth, being simulated by Cell Illustrator. In addition, average concentration of G6P has been measured by CE-MS. The existence of another carbon source was suggested from the computational result. After careful comparison between cell growth, G6P concentration, and the computationally obtained curve of glucose uptake rate, we predicted the consumption of glycogen in lag phase and its accumulation as an energy source in an E. coli cell for the next proliferation. We confirmed our prediction experimentally. This behavior indicates the importance of glycogen participation in the lag phase for the growth of E. coli. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Computational Methods for Protein Interaction and Structural Prediction.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2013

The tRNA Thiolation Pathway Modulates the Intracellular Redox State in Escherichia coli

Toru Nakayashiki; Natsumi Saito; Rikiya Takeuchi; Hiroshi Kadokura; Kenji Nakahigashi; Barry L. Wanner; Hirotada Mori

We have performed a screening of hydroxyurea (HU)-sensitive mutants using a single-gene-deletion mutant collection in Escherichia coli K-12. HU inhibits ribonucleotide reductase (RNR), an enzyme that catalyzes the formation of deoxyribonucleotides. Unexpectedly, seven of the mutants lacked genes that are required for the incorporation of sulfur into a specific tRNA modification base, 5-methylaminomethyl-2-thiouridine (mnm(5)s(2)U), via persulfide relay. We found that the expression of RNR in the mutants was reduced to about one-third both in the absence and presence of HU, while sufficient deoxynucleoside triphosphate (dNTP) was maintained in the mutants in the absence of HU but a shortage occurred in the presence of HU. Trans-supply of an RNR R2 subunit rescued the HU sensitivity of these mutants. The mutants showed high intracellular ATP/ADP ratios, and overexpression of Hda, which catalyzes the conversion of DnaA-ATP to DnaA-ADP, rescued the HU sensitivity of the mutants, suggesting that DnaA-ATP represses RNR expression. The high intracellular ATP/ADP ratios were due to high respiration activity in the mutants. Our data suggested that intracellular redox was inclined toward the reduced state in these mutants, which may explain a change in RNR activity by reduction of the catalytically formed disulfide bond and high respiration activity by the NADH reducing potential. The relation between persulfide relay and intracellular redox is discussed.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

GenoBase: comprehensive resource database of Escherichia coli K-12

Yuta Otsuka; Ai Muto; Rikiya Takeuchi; Chihiro Okada; Motokazu Ishikawa; Koichiro Nakamura; Natsuko Yamamoto; Hitomi Dose; Kenji Nakahigashi; Shigeki Tanishima; Sivasundaram Suharnan; Wataru Nomura; Toru Nakayashiki; Walid G. Aref; Barry R. Bochner; Tyrrell Conway; Michael Gribskov; Daisuke Kihara; Kenneth E. Rudd; Yukako Tohsato; Barry L. Wanner; Hirotada Mori

Comprehensive experimental resources, such as ORFeome clone libraries and deletion mutant collections, are fundamental tools for elucidation of gene function. Data sets by omics analysis using these resources provide key information for functional analysis, modeling and simulation both in individual and systematic approaches. With the long-term goal of complete understanding of a cell, we have over the past decade created a variety of clone and mutant sets for functional genomics studies of Escherichia coli K-12. We have made these experimental resources freely available to the academic community worldwide. Accordingly, these resources have now been used in numerous investigations of a multitude of cell processes. Quality control is extremely important for evaluating results generated by these resources. Because the annotation has been changed since 2005, which we originally used for the construction, we have updated these genomic resources accordingly. Here, we describe GenoBase (http://ecoli.naist.jp/GB/), which contains key information about comprehensive experimental resources of E. coli K-12, their quality control and several omics data sets generated using these resources.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1996

Regulatory Region C of theE. coliHeat Shock Transcription Factor, σ32, Constitutes a DnaK Binding Site and is Conserved Among Eubacteria

John S. McCarty; Stefan R üdiger; Hans-Joachim Sch önfeld; Jens Schneider-Mergener; Kenji Nakahigashi; Takashi Yura; Bernd Bukau


Nucleic Acids Research | 1995

Isolation and sequence analysis of rpoH genes encoding sigma 32 homologs from gram negative bacteria: conserved mRNA and protein segments for heat shock regulation.

Kenji Nakahigashi; Hideki Yanagi; Takashi Yura

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Hirotada Mori

Nara Institute of Science and Technology

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Hitomi Dose

Nara Institute of Science and Technology

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