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Featured researches published by Masaaki Urata.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2007

The Sphingomonas Plasmid pCAR3 Is Involved in Complete Mineralization of Carbazole

Masaki Shintani; Masaaki Urata; Kengo Inoue; Kaori Eto; Hiroshi Habe; Toshio Omori; Hisakazu Yamane; Hideaki Nojiri

We determined the complete 254,797-bp nucleotide sequence of the plasmid pCAR3, a carbazole-degradative plasmid from Sphingomonas sp. strain KA1. A region of about 65 kb involved in replication and conjugative transfer showed similarity to a region of plasmid pNL1 isolated from the aromatic-degrading Novosphingobium aromaticivorans strain F199. The presence of many insertion sequences, transposons, repeat sequences, and their remnants suggest plasticity of this plasmid in genetic structure. Although pCAR3 is thought to carry clustered genes for conjugative transfer, a filter-mating assay between KA1 and a pCAR3-cured strain (KA1W) was unsuccessful, indicating that pCAR3 might be deficient in conjugative transfer. Several degradative genes were found on pCAR3, including two kinds of carbazole-degradative gene clusters (car-I and car-II), and genes for electron transfer components of initial oxygenase for carbazole (fdxI, fdrI, and fdrII). Putative genes were identified for the degradation of anthranilate (and), catechol (cat), 2-hydroxypenta-2,4-dienoate (carDFE), dibenzofuran/fluorene (dbf/fln), protocatechuate (lig), and phthalate (oph). It appears that pCAR3 may carry clustered genes (car-I, car-II, fdxI, fdrI, fdrII, and, and cat) for the degradation of carbazole into tricarboxylic acid cycle intermediates; KA1W completely lost the ability to grow on carbazole, and the carbazole-degradative genes listed above were all expressed when KA1 was grown on carbazole. Reverse transcription-PCR analysis also revealed that the transcription of car-I, car-II, and cat genes was induced by carbazole or its metabolic intermediate. Southern hybridization analyses with probes prepared from car-I, car-II, repA, parA, traI, and traD genes indicated that several Sphingomonas carbazole degraders have DNA regions similar to parts of pCAR3.


Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2004

Divergent Structures of Carbazole Degradative car Operons Isolated from Gram-negative Bacteria

Kengo Inoue; Jaka Widada; Seiichiro Nakai; Takayuki Endoh; Masaaki Urata; Yuji Ashikawa; Masaki Shintani; Yuko Saiki; Takako Yoshida; Hiroshi Habe; Toshio Omori; Hideaki Nojiri

Southern hybridization analysis of the genomes from the newly-isolated 10 carbazole (CAR)-utilizing bacteria revealed that 8 of the isolates carried gene clusters homologous to the CAR-catabolic car operon of Pseudomonas resinovorans strain CA10. Sequencing analysis showed that two car operons and the neighboring regions of Pseudomonas sp. strain K23 are nearly identical to that of strain CA10. In contrast to strains CA10 and K23, carEF genes did not exist downstream of the car gene cluster of Janthinobacterium sp. strain J3. In the car gene clusters, strains CA10, K23 and J3 have Rieske-type ferredoxin as a component of carbazole dioxygenase, although Sphingomonas sp. strain KA1 possesses a putidaredoxin-type ferredoxin. We confirmed that this putidaredoxin-type ferredoxin CarAc can function as an electron mediator to CarAa of strain KA1. In the upstream regions of the carJ3 and carKA1 gene clusters, ORFs whose deduced amino acid sequences showed homology to GntR-family transcriptional regulators were identified.


Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2004

Genes Involved in Aniline Degradation by Delftia acidovorans Strain 7N and Its Distribution in the Natural Environment

Masaaki Urata; Eiji Uchida; Hideaki Nojiri; Toshio Omori; Rie Obo; Noriko Miyaura; Naoki Ouchiyama

Aniline-degraders were isolated from activated sludge and environmental samples and classified into eight phylogenetic groups. Seven groups were classified into Gram-negative bacteria, such as Acidovorax sp., Acinetobacter sp., Delftia sp., Comamonas sp., and Pseudomonas sp., suggesting the possible dominance of Gram-negative aniline-degraders in the environment. Aniline degradative genes were cloned from D. acidovorans strain 7N, and the nucleotide sequence of the 8,039-bp fragment containing eight open reading frames was determined. Their deduced amino acid sequences showed homologies to glutamine synthetase (GS)-like protein, glutamine amidotransferase (GA)-like protein, large and small subunits of aniline dioxygenase, reductase, LysR-type regulator, small ferredoxin-like protein, and catechol 2,3-dioxygenase, suggesting a high similarity of this gene cluster to those in P. putida strain UCC22 and Acinetobacter sp. strain YAA. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and sequencing analyses of GS-like protein gene segments of other Gram-negative bacteria suggested that Gram-negative bacteria have aniline degradative gene that can be divided into two distinctive groups.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2006

Plasmid pCAR3 Contains Multiple Gene Sets Involved in the Conversion of Carbazole to Anthranilate

Masaaki Urata; Hiromasa Uchimura; Haruko Noguchi; Tomoya Sakaguchi; Tetsuo Takemura; Kaori Eto; Hiroshi Habe; Toshio Omori; Hisakazu Yamane; Hideaki Nojiri

ABSTRACT The carbazole degradative car-I gene cluster (carAaIBaIBbICIAcI) of Sphingomonas sp. strain KA1 is located on the 254-kb circular plasmid pCAR3. Carbazole conversion to anthranilate is catalyzed by carbazole 1,9a-dioxygenase (CARDO; CarAaIAcI), meta-cleavage enzyme (CarBaIBbI), and hydrolase (CarCI). CARDO is a three-component dioxygenase, and CarAaI and CarAcI are its terminal oxygenase and ferredoxin components. The car-I gene cluster lacks the gene encoding the ferredoxin reductase component of CARDO. In the present study, based on the draft sequence of pCAR3, we found multiple carbazole degradation genes dispersed in four loci on pCAR3, including a second copy of the car gene cluster (carAaIIBaIIBbIICIIAcII) and the ferredoxin/reductase genes fdxI-fdrI and fdrII. Biotransformation experiments showed that FdrI (or FdrII) could drive the electron transfer chain from NAD(P)H to CarAaI (or CarAaII) with the aid of ferredoxin (CarAcI, CarAcII, or FdxI). Because this electron transfer chain showed phylogenetic relatedness to that consisting of putidaredoxin and putidaredoxin reductase of the P450cam monooxygenase system of Pseudomonas putida, CARDO systems of KA1 can be classified in the class IIA Rieske non-heme iron oxygenase system. Reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) and quantitative RT-PCR analyses revealed that two car gene clusters constituted operons, and their expression was induced when KA1 was exposed to carbazole, although the fdxI-fdrI and fdrII genes were expressed constitutively. Both terminal oxygenases of KA1 showed roughly the same substrate specificity as that from the well-characterized carbazole degrader Pseudomonas resinovorans CA10, although slight differences were observed.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2002

Dioxin catabolic genes are dispersed on the Terrabacter sp. DBF63 genome

Hideaki Nojiri; Mayuko Kamakura; Masaaki Urata; Takahiro Tanaka; Jin-Sung Chung; Tetsuo Takemura; Takako Yoshida; Hiroshi Habe; Toshio Omori

Reverse transcription-PCR of the dbfA1A2, dbfBC, and pht genes, encoding oxygenase component of multicomponent dioxygenase, meta cleavage enzyme and hydrolase, and phthalate-degrading enzymes, respectively, revealed their role in the aromatic compound degradation by Terrabacter sp. strain DBF63. The specific expression in strain DBF63 cells grown on dibenzofuran (the model compound of dioxin; DF) and/or fluorene (FN) indicated that the DbfA1A2 and DbfBC catalyze the conversion of DF to salicylate, and that the DbfA1A2 and Pht enzymes are involved in FN degradation. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis analyses revealed that the dbfA1A2 cistron and pht operon were located on the two linear plasmids, pDBF1 (160 kb) and pDBF2 (190 kb), while dbfBC genes were located on the chromosome. Because the pht operon is located immediately upstream of the dbfA1A2 cistron, the dioxin-catabolic genes were dispersed on the genome of strain DBF63, while FN-catabolic genes were gathered on the plasmids.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2007

Use of an Escherichia coli recombinant producing thermostable polyphosphate kinase as an ATP regenerator to produce fructose 1,6-diphosphate

Seishi Iwamoto; Kei Motomura; Yasuharu Shinoda; Masaaki Urata; Junichi Kato; Noboru Takiguchi; Hisao Ohtake; Ryuichi Hirota; Akio Kuroda

ABSTRACT Heat-treated Escherichia coli producing Thermus polyphosphate kinase regenerated ATP by using exogenous polyphosphate. This recombinant could be used as a platform to produce valuable compounds in combination with thermostable phosphorylating or energy-requiring enzymes. In this work, we demonstrated the production of fructose 1,6-diphosphate from fructose and polyphosphate.


Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2002

Organization and Transcriptional Characterization of Catechol Degradation Genes Involved in Carbazole Degradation by Pseudomonas resinovorans Strain CA10

Hideaki Nojiri; Kana Maeda; Hiroyo Sekiguchi; Masaaki Urata; Masaki Shintani; Takako Yoshida; Hiroshi Habe; Toshio Omori

Pseudomonas resinovorans strain CA10 assimilates catechol, which is an intermediate of carbazole degradation, by ortho cleavage pathway enzymes encoded by the catR, catBCA operon. Cat proteins of strain CA10 were very similar to those of P. putida, although the relatedness in non-coding regions was not high. It was found that catBCA genes were induced in carbazole-grown cells as a single transcriptional unit.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Differentiation of Carbazole Catabolic Operons by Replacement of the Regulated Promoter via Transposition of an Insertion Sequence

Masatoshi Miyakoshi; Masaaki Urata; Hiroshi Habe; Toshio Omori; Hisakazu Yamane; Hideaki Nojiri

The carbazole catabolic car operons from Pseudomonas resinovorans CA10 and Janthinobacterium sp. J3 have nearly identical nucleotide sequences in their structural and intergenic regions but not in their flanking regions. Transposition of ISPre1 from the anthranilate catabolic ant operon located an inducible promoter Pant upstream of the carCA10 operon, which is regulated by the AraC/XylS family activator AntR in response to anthranilate. The transposed Pant drives transcription of the carCA10 operon, which is composed of the car-AaAaBaBbCAcAdDFECA10 structural genes. Transcriptional fusion truncating Pant upstream of carAaCA10 resulted in constitutive luciferase expression. Primer extension analysis identified a transcription start point of the constitutive mRNA of the carCA10 operon at 385 nucleotides upstream of the carAaCA10 translation start point, and the PcarAa promoter was found. On the other hand, a GntR family regulatory gene carRJ3 is divergently located upstream of the carJ3 operon. The Pu13 promoter, required for inducible transcription of the carJ3 operon in the presence of carbazole, was identified in the region upstream of carAaJ3, which had been replaced with the Pant promoter in the carCA10 operon. Deletion of carRJ3 from a transcriptional fusion resulted in high level constitutive expression from Pu13. Purified CarRJ3 protein bound at two operator sequences OI and OII, showing that CarRJ3 directly represses Pu13 in the absence of its inducer, which was identified as 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-(2′-aminophenyl)hexa-2,4-dienoate, an intermediate of the carbazole degradation pathway.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2001

Genetic Characterization and Evolutionary Implications of a car Gene Cluster in the Carbazole Degrader Pseudomonas sp. Strain CA10

Hideaki Nojiri; Hiroyo Sekiguchi; Kana Maeda; Masaaki Urata; Seiichiro Nakai; Takako Yoshida; Hiroshi Habe; Toshio Omori


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2005

Structure of the terminal oxygenase component of angular dioxygenase, carbazole 1,9a-dioxygenase

Hideaki Nojiri; Yuji Ashikawa; Haruko Noguchi; Jeong-Won Nam; Masaaki Urata; Zui Fujimoto; Hiromasa Uchimura; Tohru Terada; Shugo Nakamura; Kentaro Shimizu; Takako Yoshida; Hiroshi Habe; Toshio Omori

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