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Dive into the research topics where Kiyoshi Nakahori is active.

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Featured researches published by Kiyoshi Nakahori.


Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2011

Efficient gene targeting in ΔCc.ku70 or ΔCc.lig4 mutants of the agaricomycete Coprinopsis cinerea

Takehito Nakazawa; Yuki Ando; Kohei Kitaaki; Kiyoshi Nakahori; Takashi Kamada

Coprinopsis cinerea is a model for studies of sexual development in agaricomycetes (homobasidiomycetes). Efficient gene targeting should facilitate such studies, especially because increasing genome and transcriptome information is now available in C. cinerea. To estimate the frequency of gene disruption by homologous integration in this fungus, we tried to disrupt Cc.wc-2, which encodes a WC-2 homolog, a partner of the fungal blue-light photoreceptor, WC-1. Disruption of Cc.wc-2 did not occur when recipients (protoplasts) of the disrupting construct were prepared from asexual spores, oidia, from the wild type, 326, while it occurred when protoplasts were prepared from mycelial cells from the same strain, albeit at a low frequency (3%). Double-stranded RNA-mediated silencing of a ku70 homolog, named Cc.ku70, or the lig4 homolog Cc.lig4 more or less increased the frequency of Cc.wc-2 targeting. On the basis of these results, we disrupted Cc.ku70 using a Cc.lig4-silenced strain. We then disrupted Cc.lig4 using the Cc.ku70 disruptant. We found that the disruption of Cc.ku70 or Cc.lig4 greatly enhanced gene targeting. In addition, this study demonstrates that Cc.wc-2 is involved in blue light perception in this fungus.


Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2010

Regulation of fruiting body photomorphogenesis in Coprinopsis cinerea

Takashi Kamada; Hiroaki Sano; Takehito Nakazawa; Kiyoshi Nakahori

The agaricomycete (homobasidiomycete) Coprinopsis cinerea has been used as a model to study the molecular mechanism for photomorphogenesis. Molecular genetic analyses of mutants defective in fruiting body (mushroom) photomorphogenesis of C. cinerea identified two genes, dst1 and dst2. dst1 encodes a homolog of WC-1, a fungal blue-light photoreceptor first identified in Neurospora crassa, while dst2 encodes a novel protein with a putative flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD)-binding-4 domain. In addition, reverse genetic analysis revealed that disruption of a C. cinerea gene encoding a WC-2 homolog, the partner of WC-1, causes the same blind phenotype. Searches on the genome data show that both WC-1 and WC-2 homologs are present in some agaricomycetes other than C. cinerea. Furthermore, in an agaricomycete, Lentinula edodes, it has been shown in vitro that the WC-1 and WC-2 homologs interact with each other. These findings suggest that the presumptive mechanism for blue-light sensing in agaricomycetes is fundamentally similar to that in Neurospora crassa, in which the WC-1/WC-2 complex plays a central role. Since the WC-1/WC-2 complex operates as a photoreceptor and a transcription factor, future studies will include identification of the targets of the WC-1/WC-2 complex that regulate photomorphogenesis in agaricomycetes. Another future challenge will be elucidation of the role of the newly identified photomorphogenetic protein, Dst2, in the blue-light-sensing mechanism.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Strand-Specific RNA-Seq Analyses of Fruiting Body Development in Coprinopsis cinerea

Hajime Muraguchi; Kiwamu Umezawa; Mai Niikura; Makoto Yoshida; Toshinori Kozaki; Kazuo Ishii; Kiyota Sakai; Motoyuki Shimizu; Kiyoshi Nakahori; Yuichi Sakamoto; Cindy Choi; Chew Yee Ngan; Eika Lindquist; Anna Lipzen; Andrew Tritt; Sajeet Haridas; Kerrie Barry; Igor V. Grigoriev; Patricia J. Pukkila

The basidiomycete fungus Coprinopsis cinerea is an important model system for multicellular development. Fruiting bodies of C. cinerea are typical mushrooms, which can be produced synchronously on defined media in the laboratory. To investigate the transcriptome in detail during fruiting body development, high-throughput sequencing (RNA-seq) was performed using cDNA libraries strand-specifically constructed from 13 points (stages/tissues) with two biological replicates. The reads were aligned to 14,245 predicted transcripts, and counted for forward and reverse transcripts. Differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between two adjacent points and between vegetative mycelium and each point were detected by Tag Count Comparison (TCC). To validate RNA-seq data, expression levels of selected genes were compared using RPKM values in RNA-seq data and qRT-PCR data, and DEGs detected in microarray data were examined in MA plots of RNA-seq data by TCC. We discuss events deduced from GO analysis of DEGs. In addition, we uncovered both transcription factor candidates and antisense transcripts that are likely to be involved in developmental regulation for fruiting.


Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2008

The exp1 gene essential for pileus expansion and autolysis of the inky cap mushroom Coprinopsis cinerea (Coprinus cinereus) encodes an HMG protein.

Hajime Muraguchi; Takashi Fujita; Yuya Kishibe; Kanako Konno; Nanae Ueda; Kiyoshi Nakahori; Sonoe O. Yanagi; Takashi Kamada

The homobasidiomycete Coprinopsis cinerea is a member of the fungi known as inky cap mushrooms, and its fruiting-body pileus autolyzes soon after completion of the development. During the last 3h of the development, the pileus exhibits umbrella-like expansion: the pileal tissue is cracked at the base of each gill and then each gill tissue is split to form a V-shape, as seen in a cross section. We identified two C. cinerea mutants defective in both pileus expansion and autolysis. The defects in both mutants are due to recessive mutations in a single gene, designated exp1. The exp1 gene is predicted to encode an HMG1/2-like protein with two HMG domains. The transcription of exp1 is strongly induced in the pileus 3h before pileus expansion. This result, together with the fact that the exp1 mutations cause a specific developmental phenotype, suggest that Exp1 is a novel, transcriptional regulator controlling the final phase of fruiting-body morphogenesis.


Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2011

A mutation in the Cc.ubc2 gene affects clamp cell morphogenesis as well as nuclear migration for dikaryosis in Coprinopsis cinerea.

Takehito Nakazawa; Hirofumi Kondo; Kiyoshi Nakahori; Takashi Kamada

The formation and proliferation of the dikaryon in the agaricomycete Coprinopsis cinerea is controlled by the mating type genes, A and B. The B genes, which encode pheromones and pheromone receptors, control nuclear migration for dikaryosis as well as the fusion of the clamp cell with the subterminal cell while the A genes, which encode two classes of homeodomain proteins, control conjugate nuclear division associated with clamp connection development. We characterized the mutant, B28, which was newly isolated as a strain that fails to form a primary hyphal knot, the first visible sign toward fruiting, from a homokaryotic fruiting strain after REMI mutagenesis. Detailed phenotypic analysis revealed that strain B28 exhibits, in addition to the fruiting defect, a defect in A-regulated clamp cell morphogenesis as well as a defect in B-regulated nuclear migration for dikaryosis. The mutant clamp cells are unique in that they continue growing like branches without fusing with the subterminal cells, in contrast to the unfused pseudoclamp which are normally formed in A-on B-off strains, providing evidence for the existence of an as yet unidentified mechanism for the growth suppression of the clamp cell. Molecular analysis revealed that the gene responsible for the phenotypes, designated Cc.ubc2, encodes a protein similar to Ubc2, an adaptor protein for filamentous growth, pheromone response and virulence in the smut fungus Ustilago maydis. In addition, western blot analysis demonstrated that the Cc.ubc2-1 mutation blocks phosphorylation of a presumptive MAP kinase.


Current Genetics | 2016

A mutation in the Cc.arp9 gene encoding a putative actin-related protein causes defects in fruiting initiation and asexual development in the agaricomycete Coprinopsis cinerea

Takehito Nakazawa; Yuki Ando; Takeshi Hata; Kiyoshi Nakahori

Agaricomycetes exhibit a remarkable morphological differentiation from vegetative mycelia to huge fruiting bodies. To investigate the molecular mechanism underlying the fruiting body development, we have isolated and characterized many Coprinopsis cinerea mutant strains defective in fruiting initiation to date. Dikaryon formation in agaricomycetes, which is followed by fruiting development, is governed by the mating type loci, A and B. Recently, mutations in the Cc.snf5 gene, which encodes a putative component of the chromatin remodeling complex switch/sucrose non-fermentable (SWI/SNF), were shown to cause defects in A-regulated clamp cell morphogenesis, as well as in fruiting initiation. Here, we demonstrate that Cc.arp9, which encodes a putative actin-related protein associated with two chromatin remodeling complexes, SWI/SNF and remodels the structure of chromatin (RSC), is also essential for fruiting initiation. In contrast to Cc.snf5 mutants, Cc.arp9 mutants were not defective in clamp cell formation. The effects of mutations in Cc.arp9 and Cc.snf5 on oidia production and the transcriptional expression levels of clp1 and pcc1, which are under the control of the A gene, were also examined. These indicated that Cc.Snf5 is involved in A-regulated pathways, whereas Cc.Arp9 is not apparently. Cc.arp9/Cc.snf5 double-gene disruptants were generated and their phenotypes were analyzed, which suggested a complicated developmental regulation mechanism mediated by chromatin remodeling.


Fungal Genetics and Biology | 2013

Cc.snf5, a gene encoding a putative component of the SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complex, is essential for sexual development in the agaricomycete Coprinopsis cinerea

Yuki Ando; Takehito Nakazawa; Kunihiko Oka; Kiyoshi Nakahori; Takashi Kamada

We characterized a Coprinopsis cinerea mutant strain, Spe20, defective in fruiting initiation, which was isolated after restriction enzyme-mediated integration (REMI) mutagenesis of a homokaryotic fruiting strain, 326. A plasmid rescue followed by complementation experiments, RACE, and cDNA analyses revealed that the gene, a mutation of which is responsible for the phenotype, is predicted to encode a protein that exhibits a high similarity to yeast Snf5p, a key component of the chromatin remodeling complex SWI/SNF, and named Cc.snf5. Cc.Snf5 is, however, different from Snf5p in that the former has, in addition to an Snf5 domain comprising N-terminal repeat1 (rp1) and C-terminal repeat2 (rp2) subdomains in a middle region, a GATA Zn-finger domain in a C-terminal region. In strain Spe20, plasmid pPHT1 used for REMI is inserted in the ORF encoding rp2. This raised the possibility that in strain Spe20, the disrupted Cc.Snf5 is functionally active albeit incompletely because it retains rp1. Thus, we disrupted the whole SNF5 domain and its downstream peptide and found that the disruption results in inhibition of not only fruiting initiation but also dikaryon development, a prerequisite for fruiting. We also found that specific disruption of the Zn-finger domain results in inhibition of fruiting initiation. These results indicate that Cc.Snf5 plays an essential role in sexual development of C. cinerea.


Microbiological Research | 2018

Blue light exposure and nutrient conditions influence the expression of genes involved in simultaneous hyphal knot formation in Coprinopsis cinerea

Yuichi Sakamoto; Shiho Sato; Miyuki Ito; Yuki Ando; Kiyoshi Nakahori; Hajime Muraguchi

Light and nutrients are crucial environmental factors influencing fungal sexual reproduction. Blue light induces simultaneous hyphal knot formation in Coprinopsis cinerea mycelia grown on low-glucose media but not in mycelia grown on high-glucose media. Many hyphal knots are visible in the arc near the edge of the colony one day after 15 min of blue light stimulation. These findings collectively suggest that blue light accelerates hyphal knot induction in nutrient-limited conditions. Transcriptome analysis revealed that gene expression after light exposure is divided into at least two major stages. In the first stage, genes coding for fasciclin (fas1), cyclopropane-fatty-acyl-phospholipid synthases (cfs1 and cfs2), and putative lipid exporter (nod1) are highly expressed after 1 h of light exposure in the mycelial region where the hyphal knot will be developed. These genes are upregulated by blue light and not influenced by glucose condition and mating. These results suggest that although some of the genes are critical for induction of the hyphal knots, they are not sufficient for hyphal knot development. In the second gene expression stage, genes encoding galectins (cgl1-3), farnesyl cysteine-carboxyl methyltransferases, mating pheromone-containing protein, nucleus protein (ich1), and laccase (lcc1) are specifically upregulated at 10-16 h after blue light exposure when the mycelia are cultivated on low-glucose media. These genes might be involved in the architecture of hyphal knots or signal transduction for further fruiting body development. These results contribute to the understanding of the effect of environmental factors on sexual reproduction in basidiomycetous fungi.


Plant and Cell Physiology | 1991

Auxin changes both the extensibility and the yield threshold of the cell wall of Vigna hypocotyls

Kiyoshi Nakahori; Kiyoshi Katou; Hisashi Okamoto


Plant and Cell Physiology | 1990

Effects of Auxin and Anoxia on the Cell Wall Yield Threshold Determined by Negative Pressure Jumps in Segments of Cowpea Hypocotyl

Hisashi Okamoto; Chiyomi Miwa; Tadashi Masuda; Kiyoshi Nakahori; Kiyoshi Katou

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Hajime Muraguchi

Akita Prefectural University

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Akiko Mizuno

Nihon Fukushi University

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Hiroaki Sano

Tokyo Institute of Technology

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