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Dive into the research topics where Masahide Oku is active.

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Featured researches published by Masahide Oku.


Autophagy | 2005

Pexophagy: the selective autophagy of peroxisomes.

Jr. Dunn; James M. Cregg; Jan A. K. W. Kiel; Ida J. van der Klei; Masahide Oku; Yasuyoshi Sakai; Andrei A. Sibirny; Oleh V. Stasyk; Marten Veenhuis

Pichia pastoris and Hanseula polymorpha are methylotrophic yeasts capable of utilizing methanol, as a sole source of carbon and energy. Growth of these yeast species on methanol requires the synthesis of cytosolic and peroxisomal enzymes combined with the proliferation of peroxisomes. Peroxisomes are also abundantly present in the alkane-utilizing yeast Yarrowia lipolytica upon growth of cells on oleic acid. This feature has made these yeast species attractive model systems to dissect the molecular mechanisms controlling peroxisome biogenesis. We have found that upon glucose- or ethanol-induced catabolite inactivation of metabolically superfluous peroxisomes are rapidly and selectively degraded within the vacuole by a process called pexophagy, the selective removal of peroxisomes by autophagy-like processes. Utilizing several genetic screens, we have identified a number of genes that are essential for pexophagy. In this review, we will summarize our current knowledge of the molecular events of pexophagy.


The Plant Cell | 2009

Atg26-Mediated Pexophagy Is Required for Host Invasion by the Plant Pathogenic Fungus Colletotrichum orbiculare

Makoto Asakura; Sachiko Ninomiya; Miki Sugimoto; Masahide Oku; Shun-ichi Yamashita; Tetsuro Okuno; Yasuyoshi Sakai; Yoshitaka Takano

The number of peroxisomes in a cell can change rapidly in response to changing environmental and physiological conditions. Pexophagy, a type of selective autophagy, is involved in peroxisome degradation, but its physiological role remains to be clarified. Here, we report that cells of the cucumber anthracnose fungus Colletotrichum orbiculare undergo peroxisome degradation as they infect host plants. We performed a random insertional mutagenesis screen to identify genes involved in cucumber pathogenesis by C. orbiculare. In this screen, we isolated a homolog of Pichia pastoris ATG26, which encodes a sterol glucosyltransferase that enhances pexophagy in this methylotrophic yeast. The C. orbiculare atg26 mutant developed appressoria but exhibited a specific defect in the subsequent host invasion step, implying a relationship between pexophagy and fungal phytopathogenicity. Consistent with this, its peroxisomes are degraded inside vacuoles, accompanied by the formation of autophagosomes during infection-related morphogenesis. The autophagic degradation of peroxisomes was significantly delayed in the appressoria of the atg26 mutant. Functional domain analysis of Atg26 suggested that both the phosphoinositide binding domain and the catalytic domain are required for pexophagy and pathogenicity. In contrast with the atg26 mutant, which is able to form appressoria, the atg8 mutant, which is defective in the entire autophagic pathway, cannot form normal appressoria in the earlier steps of morphogenesis. These results indicate a specific function for Atg26-enhanced pexophagy during host invasion by C. orbiculare.


Genes to Cells | 2002

Paz2 and 13 other PAZ gene products regulate vacuolar engulfment of peroxisomes during micropexophagy

Hiroyuki Mukaiyama; Masahide Oku; Misuzu Baba; Takeshi Samizo; Adam T. Hammond; Benjamin S. Glick; Nobuo Kato; Yasuyoshi Sakai

Background: In the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris, peroxisomes can be selectively degraded through direct engulfment by the vacuole in a process known as micropexophagy, but the mechanism of micropexophagy is not known.


The EMBO Journal | 2003

Peroxisome degradation requires catalytically active sterol glucosyltransferase with a GRAM domain

Masahide Oku; Dirk Warnecke; Takeshi Noda; Frank W. Müller; Ernst Heinz; Hiroyuki Mukaiyama; Nobuo Kato; Yasuyoshi Sakai

Fungal sterol glucosyltransferases, which synthesize sterol glucoside (SG), contain a GRAM domain as well as a pleckstrin homology and a catalytic domain. The GRAM domain is suggested to play a role in membrane traffic and pathogenesis, but its significance in any biological processes has never been experimentally demonstrated. We describe herein that sterol glucosyltransferase (Ugt51/Paz4) is essential for pexophagy (peroxisome degradation), but not for macroautophagy in the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris. By expressing truncated forms of this protein, we determined the individual contributions of each of these domains to pexophagy. During micropexophagy, the glucosyltransferase was associated with a recently identified membrane structure: the micropexophagic apparatus. A single amino acid substitution within the GRAM domain abolished this association as well as micropexophagy. This result shows that GRAM is essential for proper protein association with its target membrane. In contrast, deletion of the catalytic domain did not impair protein localization, but abolished pexophagy, suggesting that SG synthesis is required for this process.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2010

A Novel Fluorescent Sensor Protein for Visualization of Redox States in the Cytoplasm and in Peroxisomes

Taisuke Yano; Masahide Oku; Natsuko Akeyama; Akinori Itoyama; Hiroya Yurimoto; Shusuke Kuge; Yukio Fujiki; Yasuyoshi Sakai

ABSTRACT Reactive oxygen species are generated within peroxisomes during peroxisomal metabolism. However, due to technological difficulties, the intraperoxisomal redox state remain elusive, and the effect of peroxisome deficiency on the intracellular redox state is controversial. A newly developed, genetically encoded fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) probe, Redoxfluor, senses the physiological redox state via its internal disulfide bonds, resulting in a change in the conformation of the protein leading to a FRET response. We made use of Redoxfluor to measure the redox states at the subcellular level in yeast and Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. In wild-type peroxisomes harboring an intact fatty acid β-oxidation system, the redox state within the peroxisomes was more reductive than that in the cytosol, despite the fact that reactive oxygen species were generated within the peroxisomes. Interestingly, we observed that the redox state of the cytosol of cell mutants for peroxisome assembly, regarded as models for a neurological metabolic disorder, was more reductive than that of the wild-type cells in yeast and CHO cells. Furthermore, Redoxfluor was utilized to develop an efficient system for the screening of drugs that moderate the abnormal cytosolic redox state in the mutant CHO cell lines for peroxisome assembly without affecting the redox state of normal cells.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2006

PI4P-signaling pathway for the synthesis of a nascent membrane structure in selective autophagy

Shun-ichi Yamashita; Masahide Oku; Yuko Wasada; Yoshitaka Ano; Yasuyoshi Sakai

Phosphoinositides regulate a wide range of cellular activities, including membrane trafficking and biogenesis, via interaction with various effector proteins that contain phosphoinositide binding motifs. We show that in the yeast Pichia pastoris, phosphatidylinositol 4′-monophosphate (PI4P) initiates de novo membrane synthesis that is required for peroxisome degradation by selective autophagy and that this PI4P signaling is modulated by an ergosterol-converting PpAtg26 (autophagy-related) protein harboring a novel PI4P binding GRAM (glucosyltransferase, Rab-like GTPase activators, and myotubularins) domain. A phosphatidylinositol-4-OH kinase, PpPik1, is the primary source of PI4P. PI4P concentrated in a protein–lipid nucleation complex recruits PpAtg26 through an interaction with the GRAM domain. Sterol conversion by PpAtg26 at the nucleation complex is necessary for elongation and maturation of the membrane structure. This study reveals the role of the PI4P-signaling pathway in selective autophagy, a process comprising multistep molecular events that lead to the de novo membrane formation.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Mitochondrial impairment triggers cytosolic oxidative stress and cell death following proteasome inhibition

Sunita Maharjan; Masahide Oku; Masashi Tsuda; Yasuyoshi Sakai

Dysfunctions of the mitochondria and the ubiquitin–proteasome system, as well as generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), are linked to many aging-related neurodegenerative disorders. However, the order of these events remains unclear. Here, we show that the initial impairment occurs in mitochondria under proteasome inhibition. Fluorescent redox probe measurements revealed that proteasome inhibition led to mitochondrial oxidation followed by cytosolic oxidation, which could be prevented by a mitochondrial-targeted antioxidant or antioxidative enzyme. These observations demonstrated that proteasome dysfunction causes damage to mitochondria, leading them to increase their ROS production and resulting in cytosolic oxidation. Moreover, several antioxidants found in foods prevented intracellular oxidation and improved cell survival by maintaining mitochondrial membrane potential and reducing mitochondrial ROS generation. However, these antioxidant treatments did not decrease the accumulation of protein aggregates caused by inhibition of the proteasome. These results suggested that antioxidative protection of mitochondria maintains cellular integrity, providing novel insights into the mechanisms of cell death caused by proteasome dysfunction.


FEBS Journal | 2010

Peroxisomes as dynamic organelles: autophagic degradation

Masahide Oku; Yasuyoshi Sakai

Eukaryotic cells have to regulate peroxisomal metabolism to meet their environmental or developmental requirements. Therefore, the control of peroxisome number, which is mediated not only by proliferation but also by degradation, is an important cellular event. Here we briefly review studies on the autophagic degradation of peroxisomes, a process now termed pexophagy. Recent advances in molecular analyses of both nonselective and selective autophagic pathways have revealed a category of autophagy‐related genes (ATG), many of which are shared in different pathways. In this review we introduce the functions of the shared ATG products, along with their interactions with peroxisomal factors. Physiological functions of this process (especially cellular remodeling) in mammalian cells and in a phytopathogenic fungus are also introduced.


International Journal of Microbiology | 2011

Yeast methylotrophy: metabolism, gene regulation and peroxisome homeostasis.

Hiroya Yurimoto; Masahide Oku; Yasuyoshi Sakai

Eukaryotic methylotrophs, which are able to obtain all the carbon and energy needed for growth from methanol, are restricted to a limited number of yeast species. When these yeasts are grown on methanol as the sole carbon and energy source, the enzymes involved in methanol metabolism are strongly induced, and the membrane-bound organelles, peroxisomes, which contain key enzymes of methanol metabolism, proliferate massively. These features have made methylotrophic yeasts attractive hosts for the production of heterologous proteins and useful model organisms for the study of peroxisome biogenesis and degradation. In this paper, we describe recent insights into the molecular basis of yeast methylotrophy.


Journal of Cell Science | 2010

Atg8 regulates vacuolar membrane dynamics in a lipidation-independent manner in Pichia pastoris

Naoki Tamura; Masahide Oku; Yasuyoshi Sakai

Atg8 is a ubiquitin-like protein that is required, along with its lipidation system, for autophagy in all eukaryotic cells. The lipidated form of Atg8 is anchored on the autophagosomal membrane during autophagy. Here, we demonstrate a previously unknown role for Atg8 in vacuolar membrane dynamics. In the methylotrophic yeast Pichia pastoris, vacuoles were found to fuse to become a single spherical vacuole during adaptation from glucose- to methanol-containing medium. Atg8 is responsible for the vacuolar fusion in P. pastoris during this adaptation to methanol. Although vacuole fusion required processing of Atg8 at the C-terminus, it did not require lipidation of Atg8 for autophagy. This is the first report of the function of any Atg8 protein family member in a process other than autophagy that is independent of lipidation.

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