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Featured researches published by Makiko Aichi.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2011

Regulation of nitrate assimilation in cyanobacteria

Yoshitake Ohashi; Wei Shi; Nobuyuki Takatani; Makiko Aichi; Shin-ichi Maeda; Satoru Watanabe; Hirofumi Yoshikawa; Tatsuo Omata

Nitrate assimilation by cyanobacteria is inhibited by the presence of ammonium in the growth medium. Both nitrate uptake and transcription of the nitrate assimilatory genes are regulated. The major intracellular signal for the regulation is, however, not ammonium or glutamine, but 2-oxoglutarate (2-OG), whose concentration changes according to the change in cellular C/N balance. When nitrogen is limiting growth, accumulation of 2-OG activates the transcription factor NtcA to induce transcription of the nitrate assimilation genes. Ammonium inhibits transcription by quickly depleting the 2-OG pool through its metabolism via the glutamine synthetase/glutamate synthase cycle. The P(II) protein inhibits the ABC-type nitrate transporter, and also nitrate reductase in some strains, by an unknown mechanism(s) when the cellular 2-OG level is low. Upon nitrogen limitation, 2-OG binds to P(II) to prevent the protein from inhibiting nitrate assimilation. A pathway-specific transcriptional regulator NtcB activates the nitrate assimilation genes in response to nitrite, either added to the medium or generated intracellularly by nitrate reduction. It plays an important role in selective activation of the nitrate assimilation pathway during growth under a limited supply of nitrate. P(II) was recently shown to regulate the activity of NtcA negatively by binding to PipX, a small coactivator protein of NtcA. On the basis of accumulating genome information from a variety of cyanobacteria and the molecular genetic data obtained from the representative strains, common features and group- or species-specific characteristics of the response of cyanobacteria to nitrogen is summarized and discussed in terms of ecophysiological significance.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2001

Role of NtcB in Activation of Nitrate Assimilation Genes in the Cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. Strain PCC 6803

Makiko Aichi; Nobuyuki Takatani; Tatsuo Omata

In Synechocystis sp. strain PCC 6803, the genes encoding the proteins involved in nitrate assimilation are organized into two transcription units, nrtABCD-narB and nirA, the expression of which was repressed by ammonium and induced by inhibition of ammonium assimilation, suggesting involvement of NtcA in the transcriptional regulation. Under inducing conditions, expression of the two transcription units was enhanced by nitrite, suggesting regulation by NtcB, the nitrite-responsive transcriptional enhancer we previously identified in Synechococcus sp. strain PCC 7942. The slr0395 gene, which encodes a protein 47% identical to Synechococcus NtcB, was identified as the Synechocystis ntcB gene, on the basis of the inability of an slr0395 mutant to rapidly accumulate the transcripts of the nitrate assimilation genes upon induction and to respond to nitrite. While Synechococcus NtcB strictly requires nitrite for its action, Synechocystis NtcB enhanced transcription significantly even in the absence of nitrite. Whereas the Synechococcus ntcB mutant expresses the nitrate assimilation genes to a significant level in an NtcA-dependent manner, the Synechocystis ntcB mutant showed only low-level expression of the nitrate assimilation genes, indicating that NtcA by itself cannot efficiently promote expression of these genes in Synechocystis. Activities of the nitrate assimilation enzymes in the Synechocystis ntcB mutant were consequently low, being 40 to 50% of the wild-type level, and the cells grew on nitrate at a rate approximately threefold lower than that of the wild-type strain. These results showed that the contribution of NtcB to the expression of nitrate assimilation capability varies considerably among different strains of cyanobacteria.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2004

Nitrite-Responsive Activation of the Nitrate Assimilation Operon in Cyanobacteria Plays an Essential Role in Up-Regulation of Nitrate Assimilation Activities under Nitrate-Limited Growth Conditions

Makiko Aichi; Shin-ichi Maeda; Kazuhiro Ichikawa; Tatsuo Omata

NtcB of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus strain PCC 7942 is a LysR family protein that enhances expression of the nitrate assimilation operon (nirA operon) in response to the presence of nitrite, an intermediate of assimilatory nitrate reduction. Inactivation of ntcB in this cyanobacterium specifically abolishes the nitrite responsiveness of nirA operon expression, but under nitrate-replete conditions (wherein negative feedback by intracellularly generated ammonium prevails over the positive effect of nitrite) activity levels of the nitrate assimilation enzymes are marginally higher in the wild-type cells than in the mutant cells, raising the issue of whether the nitrite-promoted regulation has physiological importance. On the other hand, the strains carrying ntcB expressed much higher nitrate assimilation enzyme activities under nitrate-limited growth conditions than under nitrate-replete conditions whereas the ntcB-deficient strains showed levels of the enzyme activities lower than those seen under the nitrate-replete conditions. Although the ntcB mutant maintained a constant cell population in a nitrate-limited chemostat when grown as a single culture, it was diluted at a rate expected for nondividing cells when mixed with the wild-type cells and subjected to nitrate limitation in the chemostat culture system. These results demonstrated that the nitrite-promoted activation of the nitrate assimilation operon is essential for up-regulation of the nitrate assimilation activities under the conditions of nitrate limitation and for competitive utilization of nitrate.


Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2006

Characterization of the Nitrate-Nitrite Transporter of the Major Facilitator Superfamily (the nrtP Gene Product) from the Cyanobacterium Nostoc punctiforme Strain ATCC 29133

Makiko Aichi; Saori Yoshihara; Madoka Yamashita; Shin-ichi Maeda; Kazuo Nagai; Tatsuo Omata

The products of the NpR1527 and NpR1526 genes of the filamentous, diazotrophic, fresh-water cyanobacterium Nostoc punctiforme strain ATCC 29133 were identified as a nitrate transporter (NRT) and nitrate reductase (NR) respectively, by complementation of nitrate assimilation mutants of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus strain PCC 7942. While other fresh-water cyanobacteria, including S. elongatus, have an ATP-binding cassette (ABC)-type NRT, the NRT of N. punctiforme belongs to the major facilitator superfamily, being orthologous to the one found in marine cyanobacteria (NrtP). Unlike the ABC-type NRT, which transports both nitrate and nitrite with high affinity, Nostoc NrtP transported nitrate preferentially over nitrite. NrtP was distinct from ABC-type NRT also in its insensitivity to ammonium-promoted regulation at the post-translational level. The nitrate reductase of N. punctiforme was, on the other hand, inhibited upon addition of ammonium to medium, lending ammonium sensitivity to nitrate assimilation.


Plant and Cell Physiology | 2015

Essential Role of Acyl-ACP Synthetase in Acclimation of the Cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus Strain PCC 7942 to High-Light Conditions

Nobuyuki Takatani; Kazuhide Use; Akihiro Kato; Kazutaka Ikeda; Kouji Kojima; Makiko Aichi; Shin-ichi Maeda; Tatsuo Omata

Most organisms capable of oxygenic photosynthesis have an aas gene encoding an acyl-acyl carrier protein synthetase (Aas), which activates free fatty acids (FFAs) via esterification to acyl carrier protein. Cyanobacterial aas mutants are often used for studies aimed at photosynthetic production of biofuels because the mutation leads to intracellular accumulation of FFAs and their secretion into the external medium, but the physiological significance of the production of FFAs and their recycling involving Aas has remained unclear. Using an aas-deficient mutant of Synechococcus elongatus strain PCC 7942, we show here that remodeling of membrane lipids is activated by high-intensity light and that the recycling of FFAs is essential for acclimation to high-light conditions. Unlike wild-type cells, the mutant cells could not increase their growth rate as the light intensity was increased from 50 to 400 µmol photons m(-2) s(-1), and the high-light-grown mutant cells accumulated FFAs and the lysolipids derived from all the four major classes of membrane lipids, revealing high-light-induced lipid deacylation. The high-light-grown mutant cells showed much lower PSII activity and Chl contents as compared with the wild-type cells or low-light-grown mutant cells. The loss of Aas accelerated photodamage of PSII but did not affect the repair process of PSII, indicating that PSII is destabilized in the mutant. Thus, Aas is essential for acclimation of the cyanobacterium to high-light conditions. The relevance of the present finding s to biofuel production using cyanobacteria is discussed.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2016

A simple method for isolation and construction of markerless cyanobacterial mutants defective in acyl-acyl carrier protein synthetase

Kouji Kojima; Sumie Keta; Kazuma Uesaka; Akihiro Kato; Nobuyuki Takatani; Kunio Ihara; Tatsuo Omata; Makiko Aichi

Cyanobacterial mutants defective in acyl-acyl carrier protein synthetase (Aas) secrete free fatty acids (FFAs) into the external medium and hence have been used for the studies aimed at photosynthetic production of biofuels. While the wild-type strain of Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 is highly sensitive to exogenously added linolenic acid, mutants defective in the aas gene are known to be resistant to the externally provided fatty acid. In this study, the wild-type Synechocystis cells were shown to be sensitive to lauric, oleic, and linoleic acids as well, and the resistance to these fatty acids was shown to be enhanced by inactivation of the aas gene. On the basis of these observations, we developed an efficient method to isolate aas-deficient mutants from cultures of Synechocystis cells by counter selection using linoleic acid or linolenic acid as the selective agent. A variety of aas mutations were found in about 70 % of the FFA-resistant mutants thus selected. Various aas mutants were isolated also from Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002, using lauric acid as a selective agent. Selection using FFAs was useful also for construction of markerless aas knockout mutants from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 and Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002. Thus, genetic engineering of FFA-producing cyanobacterial strains would be greatly facilitated by the use of the FFAs for counter selection.


Mammal Study | 2015

Identification of Muridae Species and Their Food Resources Using Dna Barcoding in Cat Tien National Park, Vietnam

Tomoyasu Shirako; Yusuke Ishizawa; Yui Ajioka; Makiko Aichi; Kaoru Ueno; Do Tan Hoa; Bach Thanh Hai; Tran Van Thanh; Masaaki Yamada; Motoyasu Minami

Abstract. Field surveys of species in the family Muridae and their food resources were conducted in Cat Tien National Park, Vietnam in March 2011 and March and September 2012. Species were identified by DNA barcoding using polymorphic mitochondrial DNA sequences (COI, Cyt b, and D-loop) and external morphology. A total of four species, Maxomys surifer, Niviventer fulvescens, N. bukit, and Rattus sp. were identified. In order to identify which food resources were utilized by these species in the study area, total DNA was extracted from the gastric contents of the collected individuals. Sequence fragments of the chloroplast rbcL and the mitochondrial COI genes were amplified by PCR from the gastric contents and used to identify plant and animal food resources, respectively. We detected 34 plant families and seven animal orders by the homology search using the BLAST algorithm.


Biotechnology for Biofuels | 2016

Modulation of the balance of fatty acid production and secretion is crucial for enhancement of growth and productivity of the engineered mutant of the cyanobacterium Synechococcus elongatus

Akihiro Kato; Kazuhide Use; Nobuyuki Takatani; Kazutaka Ikeda; Miyuki Matsuura; Kouji Kojima; Makiko Aichi; Shin-ichi Maeda; Tatsuo Omata


Plant and Cell Physiology | 2015

Identification of a cyanobacterial RND-type efflux system involved in export of free fatty acids.

Akihiro Kato; Nobuyuki Takatani; Kazuhide Use; Kazuma Uesaka; Kazutaka Ikeda; Yajun Chang; Kouji Kojima; Makiko Aichi; Kunio Ihara; Kenji Nakahigashi; Shin-ichi Maeda; Tatsuo Omata


Plant and Cell Physiology | 1998

MOLECULAR CLONING AND CHARACTERIZATION OF A cDNA ENCODING CYANASE FROM Arabidopsis thaliana

Makiko Aichi; Ikuko Nishida; Tatsuo Omata

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