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Dive into the research topics where Naofumi Handa is active.

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Featured researches published by Naofumi Handa.


BMC Microbiology | 2011

Evolution in an oncogenic bacterial species with extreme genome plasticity: Helicobacter pylori East Asian genomes

Mikihiko Kawai; Yoshikazu Furuta; Koji Yahara; Takeshi Go Tsuru; Kenshiro Oshima; Naofumi Handa; Noriko Takahashi; Masaru Yoshida; Takeshi Azuma; Masahira Hattori; Ikuo Uchiyama; Ichizo Kobayashi

BackgroundThe genome of Helicobacter pylori, an oncogenic bacterium in the human stomach, rapidly evolves and shows wide geographical divergence. The high incidence of stomach cancer in East Asia might be related to bacterial genotype. We used newly developed comparative methods to follow the evolution of East Asian H. pylori genomes using 20 complete genome sequences from Japanese, Korean, Amerind, European, and West African strains.ResultsA phylogenetic tree of concatenated well-defined core genes supported divergence of the East Asian lineage (hspEAsia; Japanese and Korean) from the European lineage ancestor, and then from the Amerind lineage ancestor. Phylogenetic profiling revealed a large difference in the repertoire of outer membrane proteins (including oipA, hopMN, babABC, sabAB and vacA-2) through gene loss, gain, and mutation. All known functions associated with molybdenum, a rare element essential to nearly all organisms that catalyzes two-electron-transfer oxidation-reduction reactions, appeared to be inactivated. Two pathways linking acetyl~CoA and acetate appeared intact in some Japanese strains. Phylogenetic analysis revealed greater divergence between the East Asian (hspEAsia) and the European (hpEurope) genomes in proteins in host interaction, specifically virulence factors (tipα), outer membrane proteins, and lipopolysaccharide synthesis (human Lewis antigen mimicry) enzymes. Divergence was also seen in proteins in electron transfer and translation fidelity (miaA, tilS), a DNA recombinase/exonuclease that recognizes genome identity (addA), and DNA/RNA hybrid nucleases (rnhAB). Positively selected amino acid changes between hspEAsia and hpEurope were mapped to products of cagA, vacA, homC (outer membrane protein), sotB (sugar transport), and a translation fidelity factor (miaA). Large divergence was seen in genes related to antibiotics: frxA (metronidazole resistance), def (peptide deformylase, drug target), and ftsA (actin-like, drug target).ConclusionsThese results demonstrate dramatic genome evolution within a species, especially in likely host interaction genes. The East Asian strains appear to differ greatly from the European strains in electron transfer and redox reactions. These findings also suggest a model of adaptive evolution through proteome diversification and selection through modulation of translational fidelity. The results define H. pylori East Asian lineages and provide essential information for understanding their pathogenesis and designing drugs and therapies that target them.


Genes & Development | 2009

Reconstitution of initial steps of dsDNA break repair by the RecF pathway of E. coli

Naofumi Handa; Katsumi Morimatsu; Susan T. Lovett; Stephen C. Kowalczykowski

The RecF pathway of Escherichia coli is important for recombinational repair of DNA breaks and gaps. Here ;we reconstitute in vitro a seven-protein reaction that recapitulates early steps of dsDNA break repair using purified RecA, RecF, RecO, RecR, RecQ, RecJ, and SSB proteins, components of the RecF system. Their combined action results in processing of linear dsDNA and its homologous pairing with supercoiled DNA. RecA, RecO, RecR, and RecJ are essential for joint molecule formation, whereas SSB and RecF are stimulatory. This reconstituted system reveals an unexpected essential function for RecJ exonuclease: the capability to resect duplex DNA. RecQ helicase stimulates this processing, but also disrupts joint molecules. RecO and RecR have two indispensable functions: They mediate exchange of RecA for SSB to form the RecA nucleoprotein filament, and act with RecF to load RecA onto the SSB-ssDNA complex at processed ssDNA-dsDNA junctions. The RecF pathway has many parallels with recombinational repair in eukaryotes.


Biochimie | 1999

Post-segregational killing by restriction modification gene complexes: Observations of individual cell deaths

Naofumi Handa; Ichizo Kobayashi

Through a mechanism known as post-segregational killing, several plasmids mediate their stable maintenance by carrying genes that kill plasmid-free segregant cells. We demonstrated earlier that loss of plasmids carrying type II restriction modification (RM) gene complexes inhibits the propagation of a cell population and causes chromosome breakage. We now show the morphology of individual cells changes following loss of thermosensitive plasmids carrying EcoRI RM or PaeR7I RM after a shift to a non-permissive temperature. After a lag, many cells formed long filaments containing multiple nuclei as detected by DAPI staining. Several hours after the shift, many of these long filaments lacked nuclei. Fragmentation of chromosomal DNA down to 5 kb was detected by electrophoresis. These observations lend strong support to the concept of post-segregational cell killing by type II restriction modification gene complexes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Birth and death of genes linked to chromosomal inversion

Yoshikazu Furuta; Mikihiko Kawai; Koji Yahara; Noriko Takahashi; Naofumi Handa; Takeshi Go Tsuru; Kenshiro Oshima; Masaru Yoshida; Takeshi Azuma; Masahira Hattori; Ikuo Uchiyama; Ichizo Kobayashi

The birth and death of genes is central to adaptive evolution, yet the underlying genome dynamics remain elusive. The availability of closely related complete genome sequences helps to follow changes in gene contents and clarify their relationship to overall genome organization. Helicobacter pylori, bacteria in our stomach, are known for their extreme genome plasticity through mutation and recombination and will make a good target for such an analysis. In comparing their complete genome sequences, we found that gain and loss of genes (loci) for outer membrane proteins, which mediate host interaction, occurred at breakpoints of chromosomal inversions. Sequence comparison there revealed a unique mechanism of DNA duplication: DNA duplication associated with inversion. In this process, a DNA segment at one chromosomal locus is copied and inserted, in an inverted orientation, into a distant locus on the same chromosome, while the entire region between these two loci is also inverted. Recognition of this and three more inversion modes, which occur through reciprocal recombination between long or short sequence similarity or adjacent to a mobile element, allowed reconstruction of synteny evolution through inversion events in this species. These results will guide the interpretation of extensive DNA sequencing results for understanding long- and short-term genome evolution in various organisms and in cancer cells.


Molecular Microbiology | 2001

Experimental genome evolution: large‐scale genome rearrangements associated with resistance to replacement of a chromosomal restriction–modification gene complex

Naofumi Handa; Y. Nakayama; Marat Sadykov; Ichizo Kobayashi

Type II restriction enzymes are paired with modification enzymes that protect type II restriction sites from cleavage by methylating them. A plasmid carrying a type II restriction–modification gene complex is not easily replaced by an incompatible plasmid because loss of the former leads to cell death through chromosome cleavage. In the present work, we looked to see whether a chromosomally located restriction–modification gene complex could be replaced by a homologous stretch of DNA. We tried to replace the PaeR7I gene complex on the Escherichia coli chromosome by transducing a homologous stretch of PaeR7I‐modified DNA. The replacement efficiency of the restriction–modification complex was lower than expected. Some of the resulting recombinant clones retained the recipient restriction–modification gene complex as well as the homologous DNA (donor allele), and slowly lost the donor allele in the absence of selection. Analysis of their genome‐wide rearrangements by Southern hybridization, inverse polymerase chain reaction (iPCR) and sequence determination demonstrated the occurrence of unequal homologous recombination between copies of the transposon IS3. It was strongly suggested that multiple rounds of unequal IS3–IS3 recombination caused large‐scale duplication and inversion of the chromosome, and that only one of the duplicated copies of the recipient PaeR7I was replaced.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

The AddAB Helicase/Nuclease Forms a Stable Complex with Its Cognate χ Sequence During Translocation

Frédéric Chédin; Naofumi Handa; Mark S. Dillingham; Stephen C. Kowalczykowski

The Bacillus subtilis AddAB enzyme possesses ATP-dependent helicase and nuclease activities, which result in the unwinding and degradation of double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) upon translocation. Similar to its functional counterpart, the Escherichia coli RecBCD enzyme, it also recognizes and responds to a specific DNA sequence, referred to as Chi (χ). Recognition of χ triggers attenuation of the 3′- to 5′-nuclease, which permits the generation of recombinogenic 3′-overhanging, single-stranded DNA (ssDNA), terminating at χ. Although the RecBCD enzyme briefly pauses atχ, no specific binding of RecBCD toχ during translocation has been documented. Here, we show that the AddAB enzyme transiently binds to its cognate χ sequence (χBs: 5′-AGCGG-3′) during translocation. The binding of AddAB enzyme to the 3′-end of the χBs-specific ssDNA results in protection from degradation by exonuclease I. This protection is gradually reduced with time and lost upon phenol extraction, showing that the binding is non-covalent. Addition of AddAB enzyme to processed, χBs-specific ssDNA that had been stripped of all protein does not restore nuclease protection, indicating that AddAB enzyme binds toχBs with high affinity only during translocation. Finally, protection of χBs-specific ssDNA is still observed when translocation occurs in the presence of competitor χBs-carrying ssDNA, showing that binding occurs in cis. We suggest that this transient binding of AddAB toχBs is an integral part of the AddAB-χBs interaction and propose that this molecular event underlies a general mechanism for regulating the biochemical activities and biological functions of RecBCD-like enzymes.


Genes to Cells | 1997

χ*, a χ‐related 11‐mer sequence partially active in an E. coli recC* strain

Naofumi Handa; Seishi Ohashi; Kohji Kusano; Ichizo Kobayashi

χ sequence (5′GCTGGTGG) of Escherichia coli was first identified as a site that increased the plaque size of bacteriophage λ. Subsequent studies showed that this site is responsible for both the attenuation of RecBCD exonuclease activity and the promotion of RecA, RecBCD‐mediated recombination. It is known that bacteriophage λ containing the χ site makes very small plaques on a recC* (recC1004) mutant because χ is not recognized by the RecBC*D mutant enzyme.


Genome Biology and Evolution | 2012

Genome-wide survey of mutual homologous recombination in a highly sexual bacterial species.

Koji Yahara; Mikihiko Kawai; Yoshikazu Furuta; Noriko Takahashi; Naofumi Handa; Takeshi Go Tsuru; Kenshiro Oshima; Masaru Yoshida; Takeshi Azuma; Masahira Hattori; Ikuo Uchiyama; Ichizo Kobayashi

The nature of a species remains a fundamental and controversial question. The era of genome/metagenome sequencing has intensified the debate in prokaryotes because of extensive horizontal gene transfer. In this study, we conducted a genome-wide survey of outcrossing homologous recombination in the highly sexual bacterial species Helicobacter pylori. We conducted multiple genome alignment and analyzed the entire data set of one-to-one orthologous genes for its global strains. We detected mosaic structures due to repeated recombination events and discordant phylogenies throughout the genomes of this species. Most of these genes including the “core” set of genes and horizontally transferred genes showed at least one recombination event. Taking into account the relationship between the nucleotide diversity and the minimum number of recombination events per nucleotide, we evaluated the recombination rate in every gene. The rate appears constant across the genome, but genes with a particularly high or low recombination rate were detected. Interestingly, genes with high recombination included those for DNA transformation and for basic cellular functions, such as biosynthesis and metabolism. Several highly divergent genes with a high recombination rate included those for host interaction, such as outer membrane proteins and lipopolysaccharide synthesis. These results provide a global picture of genome-wide distribution of outcrossing homologous recombination in a bacterial species for the first time, to our knowledge, and illustrate how a species can be shaped by mutual homologous recombination.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Molecular determinants responsible for recognition of the single-stranded DNA regulatory sequence, χ, by RecBCD enzyme

Naofumi Handa; Liang Yang; Mark S. Dillingham; Ichizo Kobayashi; Dale B. Wigley; Stephen C. Kowalczykowski

The RecBCD enzyme is important for both restriction of foreign DNA and recombinational DNA repair. Switching enzyme function from the destructive antiviral state to the productive recombinational state is regulated by the recombination hotspot, χ (5′-GCTGGTGG-3′). Recognition of χ is unique in that it is recognized as a specific sequence within single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) during DNA translocation and unwinding by RecBCD. The molecular determinants of χ recognition and the subsequent alteration in function are unknown. Consequently, we mutated residues within the RecC subunit that comprise a channel where ssDNA is thought to be scanned for a χ sequence. These mutants were characterized in vivo with regard to χ recognition, UV-sensitivity, phage degradation, and recombination proficiency. Of 38 residues mutated, 11 were previously undescribed mutations that altered χ recognition. The mutants fell into two classes: five that failed to respond to χ, and six that suggested a relaxed specificity for χ recognition. The location of the first set of mutations defines a recognition structure responsible for sequence-specific binding of ssDNA. The second set defines a highly conserved structure, linked to the recognition structure, which we hypothesize regulates conversion of RecBCD from a molecular machine that destroys DNA to one that repairs it. These findings offer insight into the evolution of enzymes with alternate χ recognition specificities.


Molecular Microbiology | 2003

Multiplication of a restriction-modification gene complex.

Marat Sadykov; Yasuo Asami; Hironori Niki; Naofumi Handa; Mitsuhiro Itaya; Masaru Tanokura; Ichizo Kobayashi

Previous works have suggested that some gene complexes encoding a restriction (R) enzyme and a cognate modification (M) enzyme may behave as selfish mobile genetic elements. RM gene complexes, which destroy ‘non‐self’ elements marked by the absence of proper methylation, are often associated with mobile genetic elements and are involved in various genome rearrangements. Here, we found amplification of a restriction–modification gene complex. BamHI gene complex inserted into the Bacillus chromosome showed resistance to replacement by a homologous stretch of DNA. Some cells became transformed with the donor without losing BamHI. In most of these transformants, multiple copies of BamHI and the donor allele were arranged as tandem repeats. When a clone carrying one copy of each allele was propagated, extensive amplification of BamHI and the donor unit was observed in a manner dependent on restriction enzyme gene. This suggests that restriction cutting of the genome participates in the amplification. Visualization by fluorescent in situ hybridization revealed that the amplification occurred in single cells in a burst‐like fashion that is reminiscent of induction of provirus replication. The multiplication ability in a bacterium with natural capacity for DNA release, uptake and transformation will be discussed in relation to spreading of RM gene complexes.

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Kohji Kusano

Kyushu Institute of Technology

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