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Dive into the research topics where Masaya Ishikawa is active.

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Featured researches published by Masaya Ishikawa.


Autophagy | 2014

OsATG7 is required for autophagy-dependent lipid metabolism in rice postmeiotic anther development

Takamitsu Kurusu; Tomoko Koyano; Shigeru Hanamata; Takahiko Kubo; Yuhei Noguchi; Chikako Yagi; Noriko Nagata; Takashi Yamamoto; Takayuki Ohnishi; Yozo Okazaki; Nobutaka Kitahata; Daichi Ando; Masaya Ishikawa; Shinya Wada; Akio Miyao; Hirohiko Hirochika; Hiroaki Shimada; Amane Makino; Kazuki Saito; Hiroyuki Ishida; Tetsu Kinoshita; Nori Kurata; Kazuyuki Kuchitsu

In flowering plants, the tapetum, the innermost layer of the anther, provides both nutrient and lipid components to developing microspores, pollen grains, and the pollen coat. Though the programmed cell death of the tapetum is one of the most critical and sensitive steps for fertility and is affected by various environmental stresses, its regulatory mechanisms remain mostly unknown. Here we show that autophagy is required for the metabolic regulation and nutrient supply in anthers and that autophagic degradation within tapetum cells is essential for postmeiotic anther development in rice. Autophagosome-like structures and several vacuole-enclosed lipid bodies were observed in postmeiotic tapetum cells specifically at the uninucleate stage during pollen development, which were completely abolished in a retrotransposon-insertional OsATG7 (autophagy-related 7)-knockout mutant defective in autophagy, suggesting that autophagy is induced in tapetum cells. Surprisingly, the mutant showed complete sporophytic male sterility, failed to accumulate lipidic and starch components in pollen grains at the flowering stage, showed reduced pollen germination activity, and had limited anther dehiscence. Lipidomic analyses suggested impairment of editing of phosphatidylcholines and lipid desaturation in the mutant during pollen maturation. These results indicate a critical involvement of autophagy in a reproductive developmental process of rice, and shed light on the novel autophagy-mediated regulation of lipid metabolism in eukaryotic cells.


Molecular Crystals and Liquid Crystals | 1995

New Charge-Transfer Complex-Based Organic Ferromagnets: Pyridinium-Substitued Imidazolin-1-Oxyl/ Tetrafluorotetracyanoquinodimethanide or Hexacyanobutadienide Salts

Toyonari Sugimoto; Masaya Tsujii; Takehito Suga; Nobuyoshi Hosoito; Masaya Ishikawa; Naoya Takeda; Motoo Shiro

Abstract The charge-transfer (CT) complexes of a series of 4,4,5,5-tetramethylimidazolin-1-oxyls substituted with 4-(N-alkylpyridinium) groups at the 2-position with two radical anions, tetrafluorotetracyanoquinodimethanide (TCNQF4–) and hexacyanobutadienide (HCBD–) were prepared and their magnetic properties were investigated in the temperature range of 5 to 300 K. Ferromagnetic interaction was observed for the three CT complexes. Furthermore, the magnetic measurement at lower temperatures than 5 K showed that these CT complexes exhibited a ferromagnetic phase transition between 0.4 and 0.55 K. Consequently, the present CT complexes make a group of another type of organic ferromagnets without any magnetic metal elements.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2015

Ice nucleation activity in various tissues of Rhododendron flower buds: their relevance to extraorgan freezing

Masaya Ishikawa; Mikiko Ishikawa; Takayuki Toyomasu; Takayuki Aoki; William S. Price

Wintering flower buds of cold hardy Rhododendron japonicum cooled slowly to subfreezing temperatures are known to undergo extraorgan freezing, whose mechanisms remain obscure. We revisited this material to demonstrate why bud scales freeze first in spite of their lower water content, why florets remain deeply supercooled and how seasonal adaptive responses occur in regard to extraorgan freezing in flower buds. We determined ice nucleation activity (INA) of various flower bud tissues using a test tube-based assay. Irrespective of collection sites, outer and inner bud scales that function as ice sinks in extraorgan freezing had high INA levels whilst florets that remain supercooled and act as a water source lacked INA. The INA level of bud scales was not high in late August when flower bud formation was ending, but increased to reach the highest level in late October just before the first autumnal freeze. The results support the following hypothesis: the high INA in bud scales functions as the subfreezing sensor, ensuring the primary freezing in bud scales at warmer subzero temperatures, which likely allows the migration of floret water to the bud scales and accumulation of icicles within the bud scales. The low INA in the florets helps them remain unfrozen by deep supercooling. The INA in the bud scales was resistant to grinding and autoclaving at 121∘C for 15 min, implying the intrinsic nature of the INA rather than of microbial origin, whilst the INA in stem bark was autoclaving-labile. Anti-nucleation activity (ANA) was implicated in the leachate of autoclaved bud scales, which suppresses the INA at millimolar levels of concentration and likely differs from the colligative effects of the solutes. The tissue INA levels likely contribute to the establishment of freezing behaviors by ensuring the order of freezing in the tissues: from the primary freeze to the last tissue remaining unfrozen.


Plant Cell and Environment | 2016

Freezing behaviours in wintering Cornus florida flower bud tissues revisited using MRI

Masaya Ishikawa; Hiroyuki Ide; Hideyuki Yamazaki; Hiroki Murakawa; Kazuyuki Kuchitsu; William S. Price; Yoji Arata

How plant tissues control their water behaviours (phase and movement) under subfreezing temperatures through adaptative strategies (freezing behaviours) is important for their survival. However, the fine details of freezing behaviours in complex organs and their regulation mechanisms are poorly understood, and non-invasive visualization/analysis is required. The localization/density of unfrozen water in wintering Cornus florida flower buds at subfreezing temperatures was visualized with high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). This allowed tissue-specific freezing behaviours to be determined. MRI images revealed that individual anthers and ovules remained stably supercooled to -14 to -21 °C or lower. The signal from other floral tissues decreased during cooling to -7 °C, which likely indicates their extracellular freezing. Microscopic observation and differential thermal analyses revealed that the abrupt breakdown of supercooled individual ovules and anthers resulted in their all-or-nothing type of injuries. The distribution of ice nucleation activity in flower buds determined using a test tube-based assay corroborated which tissues primarily froze. MRI is a powerful tool for non-invasively visualizing unfrozen tissues. Freezing events and/or dehydration events can be located by digital comparison of MRI images acquired at different temperatures. Only anthers and ovules preferentially remaining unfrozen are a novel freezing behaviour in flower buds. Physicochemical and biological mechanisms/implications are discussed.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2015

Factors contributing to deep supercooling capability and cold survival in dwarf bamboo (Sasa senanensis) leaf blades.

Masaya Ishikawa; Asuka Oda; Reiko Fukami; Akira Kuriyama

Wintering Sasa senanensis, dwarf bamboo, is known to employ deep supercooling as the mechanism of cold hardiness in most of its tissues from leaves to rhizomes. The breakdown of supercooling in leaf blades has been shown to proceed in a random and scattered manner with a small piece of tissue surrounded by longitudinal and transverse veins serving as the unit of freezing. The unique cold hardiness mechanism of this plant was further characterized using current year leaf blades. Cold hardiness levels (LT20: the lethal temperature at which 20% of the leaf blades are injured) seasonally increased from August (−11°C) to December (−20°C). This coincided with the increases in supercooling capability of the leaf blades as expressed by the initiation temperature of low temperature exotherms (LTE) detected in differential thermal analyses (DTA). When leaf blades were stored at −5°C for 1–14 days, there was no nucleation of the supercooled tissue units either in summer or winter. However, only summer leaf blades suffered significant injury after prolonged supercooling of the tissue units. This may be a novel type of low temperature-induced injury in supercooled state at subfreezing temperatures. When winter leaf blades were maintained at the threshold temperature (−20°C), a longer storage period (1–7 days) increased lethal freezing of the supercooled tissue units. Within a wintering shoot, the second or third leaf blade from the top was most cold hardy and leaf blades at lower positions tended to suffer more injury due to lethal freezing of the supercooled units. LTE were shifted to higher temperatures (2–5°C) after a lethal freeze-thaw cycle. The results demonstrate that the tissue unit compartmentalized with longitudinal and transverse veins serves as the unit of supercooling and temperature- and time-dependent freezing of the units is lethal both in laboratory freeze tests and in the field. To establish such supercooling in the unit, structural ice barriers such as development of sclerenchyma and biochemical mechanisms to increase the stability of supercooling are considered important. These mechanisms are discussed in regard to ecological and physiological significance in winter survival.


Environmental and Experimental Botany | 2014

Seasonal changes in ice nucleation activity in blueberry stems and effects of cold treatments in vitro

Tadashi Kishimoto; Yoshihiko Sekozawa; Hideyuki Yamazaki; Hiroki Murakawa; Kazuyuki Kuchitsu; Masaya Ishikawa


Plant Growth Regulation | 2013

Comparison of long-term up-regulated genes during induction of freezing tolerance by cold and ABA in bromegrass cell cultures revealed by microarray analyses

Toshihide Nakamura; Junshi Yazaki; Naoki Kishimoto; Shoshi Kikuchi; Albert J. Robertson; Lawrence V. Gusta; Masaya Ishikawa


BMC Research Notes | 2013

Abscisic acid induced freezing tolerance in chilling-sensitive suspension cultures and seedlings of rice

Reiko Shinkawa; Aiko Morishita; Kumiko Amikura; Rika Machida; Hiroki Murakawa; Kazuyuki Kuchitsu; Masaya Ishikawa


Paddy and Water Environment | 2003

Clarification of adsorption and movement by predicting ammonia nitrogen concentrations in paddy percolation water

Masaya Ishikawa; Toshio Tabuchi; Eiji Yamaji


Indonesian Journal of Agronomy | 2003

The Effect of Rainfall Intensity on Soil Erosion and Runoff for Latosol Soil in Indonesia

Sukandi Sukartaatmadja; Yohei Sato; Eiji Yamaji; Masaya Ishikawa

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Yohei Sato

Paul Scherrer Institute

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Kazuyuki Kuchitsu

Tokyo University of Science

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Hideyuki Yamazaki

National Institute of Technology and Evaluation

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Hiroki Murakawa

Tokyo University of Science

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Eisaku Shiratani

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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