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Dive into the research topics where Kohei Nishimura is active.

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Featured researches published by Kohei Nishimura.


Nature Methods | 2009

An auxin-based degron system for the rapid depletion of proteins in nonplant cells.

Kohei Nishimura; Tatsuo Fukagawa; Haruhiko Takisawa; Tatsuo Kakimoto; Masato T. Kanemaki

Plants have evolved a unique system in which the plant hormone auxin directly induces rapid degradation of the AUX/IAA family of transcription repressors by a specific form of the SCF E3 ubiquitin ligase. Other eukaryotes lack the auxin response but share the SCF degradation pathway, allowing us to transplant the auxin-inducible degron (AID) system into nonplant cells and use a small molecule to conditionally control protein stability. The AID system allowed rapid and reversible degradation of target proteins in response to auxin and enabled us to generate efficient conditional mutants of essential proteins in yeast as well as cell lines derived from chicken, mouse, hamster, monkey and human cells, thus offering a powerful tool to control protein expression and study protein function.


Molecular Cell | 2013

The Elg1 Replication Factor C-like Complex Functions in PCNA Unloading during DNA Replication

Takashi Kubota; Kohei Nishimura; Masato T. Kanemaki; Anne Dunlop Donaldson

The ring-shaped complex PCNA coordinates DNA replication, encircling DNA to act as a polymerase clamp and a sliding platform to recruit other replication proteins. PCNA is loaded onto DNA by replication factor C, but it has been unknown how PCNA is removed from DNA when Okazaki fragments are completed or the replication fork terminates. Here we show that the Elg1 replication factor C-like complex (Elg1-RLC) functions in PCNA unloading. Using an improved degron system we show that without Elg1, PCNA accumulates on Saccharomyces cerevisiae chromatin during replication. The accumulated PCNA can be removed from chromatin in vivo by switching on Elg1 expression. We find moreover that treating chromatin with purified Elg1-RLC causes PCNA unloading in vitro. Our results demonstrate that Elg1-RLC functions in unloading of both unmodified and SUMOylated PCNA during DNA replication, while the genome instability of an elg1Δ mutant suggests timely PCNA unloading is critical for chromosome maintenance.


Molecular Cell | 2012

Mcm8 and Mcm9 Form a Complex that Functions in Homologous Recombination Repair Induced by DNA Interstrand Crosslinks

Kohei Nishimura; Masamichi Ishiai; Kazuki Horikawa; Tatsuo Fukagawa; Minoru Takata; Haruhiko Takisawa; Masato T. Kanemaki

DNA interstrand crosslinks (ICLs) are highly toxic lesions that stall the replication fork to initiate the repair process during the S phase of vertebrates. Proteins involved in Fanconi anemia (FA), nucleotide excision repair (NER), and translesion synthesis (TS) collaboratively lead to homologous recombination (HR) repair. However, it is not understood how ICL-induced HR repair is carried out and completed. Here, we showed that the replicative helicase-related Mcm family of proteins, Mcm8 and Mcm9, forms a complex required for HR repair induced by ICLs. Chicken DT40 cells lacking MCM8 or MCM9 are viable but highly sensitive to ICL-inducing agents, and exhibit more chromosome aberrations in the presence of mitomycin C compared with wild-type cells. During ICL repair, Mcm8 and Mcm9 form nuclear foci that partly colocalize with Rad51. Mcm8-9 works downstream of the FA and BRCA2/Rad51 pathways, and is required for HR that promotes sister chromatid exchanges, probably as a hexameric ATPase/helicase.


BMC Cell Biology | 2011

Auxin-inducible protein depletion system in fission yeast

Mai Kanke; Kohei Nishimura; Masato T. Kanemaki; Tatsuo Kakimoto; Tatsuro Takahashi; Takuro Nakagawa; Hisao Masukata

BackgroundInducible inactivation of a protein is a powerful approach for analysis of its function within cells. Fission yeast is a useful model for studying the fundamental mechanisms such as chromosome maintenance and cell cycle. However, previously published strategies for protein-depletion are successful only for some proteins in some specific conditions and still do not achieve efficient depletion to cause acute phenotypes such as immediate cell cycle arrest. The aim of this work was to construct a useful and powerful protein-depletion system in Shizosaccaromyces pombe.ResultsWe constructed an auxin-inducible degron (AID) system, which utilizes auxin-dependent poly-ubiquitination of Aux/IAA proteins by SCFTIR1 in plants, in fission yeast. Although expression of a plant F-box protein, TIR1, decreased Mcm4-aid, a component of the MCM complex essential for DNA replication tagged with Aux/IAA peptide, depletion did not result in an evident growth defect. We successfully improved degradation efficiency of Mcm4-aid by fusion of TIR1 with fission yeast Skp1, a conserved F-box-interacting component of SCF (i mproved-AID system; i-AID), and the cells showed severe defect in growth. The i-AID system induced degradation of Mcm4-aid in the chromatin-bound MCM complex as well as those in soluble fractions. The i-AID system in conjunction with transcription repression (off-AID system), we achieved more efficient depletion of other proteins including Pol1 and Cdc45, causing early S phase arrest.ConclusionImprovement of the AID system allowed us to construct conditional null mutants of S. pombe. We propose that the off-AID system is the powerful method for in vivo protein-depletion in fission yeast.


Current protocols in pharmacology | 2014

Rapid Depletion of Budding Yeast Proteins via the Fusion of an Auxin-Inducible Degron (AID).

Kohei Nishimura; Masato T. Kanemaki

The auxin‐inducible degron (AID) system allows the rapid and reversible proteolysis of proteins of interest, and enables the generation of conditional mutants of budding yeast. The construction of budding yeast AID mutants is simple, and the effect of depletion of essential proteins on proliferation can be confirmed by analyzing their phenotype. In this protocol, we describe a procedure to generate AID mutants of budding yeast via a simple transformation using PCR‐amplified DNA. We also describe methods to confirm the depletion of proteins of interest that are required for proliferation by serial‐dilution and liquid‐culture assays. Curr. Protoc. Cell Biol. 64:20.9.1‐20.9.16.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Chromatin folding and DNA replication inhibition mediated by a highly antitumor-active tetrazolato-bridged dinuclear platinum(II) complex

Ryosuke Imai; Seiji Komeda; Mari Shimura; Sachiko Tamura; Satoshi Matsuyama; Kohei Nishimura; Ryan Rogge; Akihiro Matsunaga; Ichiro Hiratani; Hideaki Takata; Masako Uemura; Yutaka Iida; Yuko Yoshikawa; Jeffrey C. Hansen; Kazuto Yamauchi; Masato T. Kanemaki; Kazuhiro Maeshima

Chromatin DNA must be read out for various cellular functions, and copied for the next cell division. These processes are targets of many anticancer agents. Platinum-based drugs, such as cisplatin, have been used extensively in cancer chemotherapy. The drug–DNA interaction causes DNA crosslinks and subsequent cytotoxicity. Recently, it was reported that an azolato-bridged dinuclear platinum(II) complex, 5-H-Y, exhibits a different anticancer spectrum from cisplatin. Here, using an interdisciplinary approach, we reveal that the cytotoxic mechanism of 5-H-Y is distinct from that of cisplatin. 5-H-Y inhibits DNA replication and also RNA transcription, arresting cells in the S/G2 phase, and are effective against cisplatin-resistant cancer cells. Moreover, it causes much less DNA crosslinking than cisplatin, and induces chromatin folding. 5-H-Y will expand the clinical applications for the treatment of chemotherapy-insensitive cancers.


Genes & Development | 2017

Acute inactivation of the replicative helicase in human cells triggers MCM8–9-dependent DNA synthesis

Toyoaki Natsume; Kohei Nishimura; Sheroy Minocherhomji; Rahul Bhowmick; Ian D. Hickson; Masato T. Kanemaki

DNA replication fork progression can be disrupted at difficult to replicate loci in the human genome, which has the potential to challenge chromosome integrity. This replication fork disruption can lead to the dissociation of the replisome and the formation of DNA damage. To model the events stemming from replisome dissociation during DNA replication perturbation, we used a degron-based system for inducible proteolysis of a subunit of the replicative helicase. We show that MCM2-depleted cells activate a DNA damage response pathway and generate replication-associated DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs). Remarkably, these cells maintain some DNA synthesis in the absence of MCM2, and this requires the MCM8-9 complex, a paralog of the MCM2-7 replicative helicase. We show that MCM8-9 functions in a homologous recombination-based pathway downstream from RAD51, which is promoted by DSB induction. This RAD51/MCM8-9 axis is distinct from the recently described RAD52-dependent DNA synthesis pathway that operates in early mitosis at common fragile sites. We propose that stalled replication forks can be restarted in S phase via homologous recombination using MCM8-9 as an alternative replicative helicase.


Chromosome Research | 2017

An efficient method to generate conditional knockout cell lines for essential genes by combination of auxin-inducible degron tag and CRISPR/Cas9

Kohei Nishimura; Tatsuo Fukagawa

Generation of cells with a loss-of-function mutation in a gene (knockout cells) is a valuable technique for studying the function of a given gene product. However, if the product of the target gene is essential for cell viability, conditional knockout cell lines must be generated. Recently, as gene editing technology using CRISPR/Cas9 has developed, it has become possible to produce conditional knockout cell lines using this technique. However, to obtain final conditional knockout cell lines, it is necessary to perform several experiments with multiple complicated steps. In this paper, we introduce an easy and efficient method to generate conditional knockout cell lines based on combining auxin-inducible degron (AID) technology with CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing. Our method only requires performing a single transfection and is therefore an easy and rapid method to obtain a conditional knockout cell line.


Archive | 2009

Method for inducing degradation of protein in mammalian cell

Masato T. Kanemaki; Tatsuo Kakimoto; Kohei Nishimura; Haruhiko Takisawa; Tatsuo Fukagawa


The Japanese Biochemical Society/The Molecular Biology Society of Japan | 2017

Analysis of chromosome conformation associated with neocentromere formation using 4C-Seq

Masataka Komiya; Kohei Nishimura; Tetsuya Hori; Tatsuo Fukagawa; Takehiko Itoh

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Masato T. Kanemaki

National Institute of Genetics

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Masataka Komiya

Tokyo Institute of Technology

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Takehiko Itoh

Tokyo Institute of Technology

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Tetsuya Hori

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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Toyoaki Natsume

National Institute of Genetics

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