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Dive into the research topics where Risa Mutoh is active.

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Featured researches published by Risa Mutoh.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

The roles of the dimeric and tetrameric structures of the clock protein KaiB in the generation of circadian oscillations in cyanobacteria

Reiko Murakami; Risa Mutoh; Ryo Iwase; Yukio Furukawa; Katsumi Imada; Kiyoshi Onai; Megumi Morishita; So Yasui; Kentaro Ishii; Jonathan Valencia Swain; Tatsuya Uzumaki; Keiichi Namba; Masahiro Ishiura

Background: The function of KaiB remains to be solved. Results: Dimeric KaiB1–94 generated circadian oscillation in vitro, but it did not in cells. Conclusion: KaiB tetramer-dimer transformation is responsible for the regulation of the SasA-mediated clock output pathway. Significance: We demonstrated the role of KaiB in the regulation of the SasA-KaiC interaction, involved in the transmission of time-information from KaiABC-machinery to transcription apparatus. The molecular machinery of the cyanobacterial circadian clock consists of three proteins, KaiA, KaiB, and KaiC. The three Kai proteins interact with each other and generate circadian oscillations in vitro in the presence of ATP (an in vitro KaiABC clock system). KaiB consists of four subunits organized as a dimer of dimers, and its overall shape is that of an elongated hexagonal plate with a positively charged cleft flanked by two negatively charged ridges. We found that a mutant KaiB with a C-terminal deletion (KaiB1–94), which lacks the negatively charged ridges, was a dimer. Despite its dimeric structure, KaiB1–94 interacted with KaiC and generated normal circadian oscillations in the in vitro KaiABC clock system. KaiB1–94 also generated circadian oscillations in cyanobacterial cells, but they were weak, indicating that the C-terminal region and tetrameric structure of KaiB are necessary for the generation of normal gene expression rhythms in vivo. KaiB1–94 showed the highest affinity for KaiC among the KaiC-binding proteins we examined and inhibited KaiC from forming a complex with SasA, which is involved in the main output pathway from the KaiABC clock oscillator in transcription regulation. This defect explains the mechanism underlying the lack of normal gene expression rhythms in cells expressing KaiB1–94.


Genes to Cells | 2010

Direct interaction between KaiA and KaiB revealed by a site-directed spin labeling electron spin resonance analysis.

Risa Mutoh; Hiroyuki Mino; Reiko Murakami; Tatsuya Uzumaki; Atsushi Takabayashi; Kentaro Ishii; Masahiro Ishiura

In cyanobacteria, three clock proteins, KaiA, KaiB and KaiC, play essential roles in generating circadian oscillations. The interactions of these proteins change during the circadian cycle. Here, we demonstrated direct interaction between KaiA and KaiB using electron spin resonance spectroscopy. We prepared cystein (Cys)‐substituted mutants of Thermosynechococcus elongatus KaiB, labeled specifically their Cys residues with spin labels and measured the ESR spectra of the labeled KaiB. We found that KaiB labeled at the 64th residue showed spectral changes in the presence of KaiA, but not in the presence of KaiC or bovine serum albumin as a negative control. KaiB labeled at the 101st residue showed no such spectral changes even in the presence of KaiA. The results suggest that KaiB interacts with KaiA in the vicinity of the 64th residue of KaiB. Further analysis demonstrated that the C‐terminal clock‐oscillator domain of KaiA is responsible for this interaction.


PLOS ONE | 2013

The ATP-Mediated Regulation of KaiB-KaiC Interaction in the Cyanobacterial Circadian Clock

Risa Mutoh; Atsuhito Nishimura; So Yasui; Kiyoshi Onai; Masahiro Ishiura

The cyanobacterial circadian clock oscillator is composed of three clock proteins--KaiA, KaiB, and KaiC, and interactions among the three Kai proteins generate clock oscillation in vitro. However, the regulation of these interactions remains to be solved. Here, we demonstrated that ATP regulates formation of the KaiB-KaiC complex. In the absence of ATP, KaiC was monomeric (KaiC(1mer)) and formed a complex with KaiB. The addition of ATP plus Mg(2+) (Mg-ATP), but not that of ATP only, to the KaiB-KaiC(1mer) complex induced the hexamerization of KaiC and the concomitant release of KaiB from the KaiB-KaiC(1mer) complex, indicating that Mg-ATP and KaiB compete each other for KaiC. In the presence of ATP and Mg(2+) (Mg-ATP), KaiC became a homohexameric ATPase (KaiC(6mer)) with bound Mg-ATP and formed a complex with KaiB, but KaiC hexamerized by unhydrolyzable substrates such as ATP and Mg-ATP analogs, did not. A KaiC N-terminal domain protein, but not its C-terminal one, formed a complex with KaiB, indicating that KaiC associates with KaiB via its N-terminal domain. A mutant KaiC(6mer) lacking N-terminal ATPase activity did not form a complex with KaiB whereas a mutant lacking C-terminal ATPase activity did. Thus, the N-terminal domain of KaiC is responsible for formation of the KaiB-KaiC complex, and the hydrolysis of the ATP bound to N-terminal ATPase motifs on KaiC(6mer) is required for formation of the KaiB-KaiC(6mer) complex. KaiC(6mer) that had been hexamerized with ADP plus aluminum fluoride, which are considered to mimic ADP-Pi state, formed a complex with KaiB, suggesting that KaiB is able to associate with KaiC(6mer) with bound ADP-Pi.


Genes to Cells | 2015

Importance of the monomer-dimer-tetramer interconversion of the clock protein KaiB in the generation of circadian oscillations in cyanobacteria.

Takahiro Iida; Risa Mutoh; Kiyoshi Onai; Megumi Morishita; Yukio Furukawa; Keiichi Namba; Masahiro Ishiura

The molecular machinery of the cyanobacterial circadian clock oscillator consists of three proteins, KaiA, KaiB and KaiC, which interact with each other to generate circadian oscillations in the presence of ATP (the in vitro KaiABC clock oscillator). KaiB comprises four subunits organized as a dimer of dimers. Our previous study suggested that, on interaction with KaiC, the tetrameric KaiB molecule dissociates into two molecules of dimeric KaiB. It is uncertain whether KaiB also exists as a monomer and whether the KaiB monomer can drive normal circadian oscillation. To address these questions, we constructed a new KaiB oligomer mutant with an N‐terminal deletion, KaiB10–108. KaiB10–108 was a monomer at 4 °C but a dimer at 35 °C. KaiB10–108 was able to drive normal clock oscillation in an in vitro reconstituted KaiABC clock oscillator at 25 °C, but it was not able to drive normal circadian gene expression rhythms in cyanobacterial cells at 41 °C. Wild‐type KaiB existed in equilibrium between a dimer and tetramer at lower KaiB concentrations or in the presence of 1 m NaCl. Our findings suggest that KaiB is in equilibrium between a monomer, dimer and tetramer in cyanobacterial cells.


Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2011

Nonselective excitation of pulsed ELDOR using multi-frequency microwaves

Yuki Asada; Risa Mutoh; Masahiro Ishiura; Hiroyuki Mino

The use of a polychromatic microwave pulse to expand the pumping bandwidth in pulsed electron-electron double resonance (PELDOR) was investigated. The pumping pulse was applied in resonance with the broad (∼100 mT) electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signal of the manganese cluster of photosystem II in the S2 state. The observation pulses were in resonance with the narrow EPR signal of the tyrosine radical, YD·. It was found that in the case of the polychromatic pumping pulse containing five harmonics with the microwave frequencies between 8.5 and 10.5 GHz the PELDOR effect corresponding to the dipole interaction between the Mn cluster and YD· was about 2.9 times larger than that achieved with a monochromatic pulse. In addition to the dipolar modulation, the nuclear modulation effects were observed. The effects could be suppressed by averaging the PELDOR trace over the time interval between the observation microwave pulses. The polychromatic excitation technique described will be useful for improving the PELDOR sensitivity in the measurements of long distances in biological samples, where the pair consists of a radical with a narrow EPR spectrum and slow phase relaxation, and a metal center that has a broad EPR spectrum and a short phase relaxation time.


Photosynthesis Research | 2017

Association of Ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase with the photosynthetic apparatus modulates electron transfer in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii

Laura Mosebach; Claudia Heilmann; Risa Mutoh; Philipp Gäbelein; Janina Steinbeck; Thomas Happe; Takahisa Ikegami; Guy Hanke; Genji Kurisu; Michael Hippler

Ferredoxins (FDX) and the FDX:NADP+ oxidoreductase (FNR) represent a key junction of electron transport downstream of photosystem I (PSI). Dynamic recruitment of FNR to the thylakoid membrane has been considered as a potential mechanism to define the fate of photosynthetically derived electrons. In this study, we investigated the functional importance of the association of FNR with the photosynthetic apparatus in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. In vitro assays based on NADP+ photoreduction measurements as well as NMR chemical shift perturbation analyses showed that FNR preferentially interacts with FDX1 compared to FDX2. Notably, binding of FNR to a PSI supercomplex further enhanced this preference for FDX1 over FDX2, suggesting that FNR is potentially capable of channelling electrons towards distinct routes. NADP+ photoreduction assays and immunoblotting revealed that the association of FNR with the thylakoid membrane including the PSI supercomplex is impaired in the absence of Proton Gradient Regulation 5 (PGR5) and/or Proton Gradient Regulation 5-Like photosynthetic phenotype 1 (PGRL1), implying that both proteins, directly or indirectly, contribute to the recruitment of FNR to the thylakoid membrane. As assessed via in vivo absorption spectroscopy and immunoblotting, PSI was the primary target of photodamage in response to high-light stress in the absence of PGR5 and/or PGRL1. Anoxia preserved the activity of PSI, pointing to enhanced electron donation to O2 as the source of the observed PSI inactivation and degradation. These findings establish another perspective on PGR5/PGRL1 knockout-related phenotypes and potentially interconnect FNR with the regulation of photosynthetic electron transport and PSI photoprotection in C. reinhardtii.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2016

Bacterial β-Glucosidase Reveals the Structural and Functional Basis of Genetic Defects in Human Glucocerebrosidase 2 (GBA2).

Ratana Charoenwattanasatien; Salila Pengthaisong; Imogen Breen; Risa Mutoh; Sompong Sansenya; Yanling Hua; Anupong Tankrathok; Liang Wu; Chomphunuch Songsiriritthigul; Hideaki Tanaka; Spencer J. Williams; Gideon J. Davies; Genji Kurisu; James R. Ketudat Cairns

Human glucosylcerebrosidase 2 (GBA2) of the CAZy family GH116 is responsible for the breakdown of glycosphingolipids on the cytoplasmic face of the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus. Genetic defects in GBA2 result in spastic paraplegia and cerebellar ataxia, while cross-talk between GBA2 and GBA1 glucosylceramidases may affect Gaucher disease. Here, we report the first three-dimensional structure for any GH116 enzyme, Thermoanaerobacterium xylanolyticum TxGH116 β-glucosidase, alone and in complex with diverse ligands. These structures allow identification of the glucoside binding and active site residues, which are shown to be conserved with GBA2. Mutagenic analysis of TxGH116 and structural modeling of GBA2 provide a detailed structural and functional rationale for pathogenic missense mutations of GBA2.


Biochemistry | 2015

X-ray Structure and Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Analysis of the Interaction Sites of the Ga-Substituted Cyanobacterial Ferredoxin

Risa Mutoh; Norifumi Muraki; Kanako Shinmura; Hisako Kubota-Kawai; Young-Ho Lee; Marc M. Nowaczyk; Matthias Rögner; Toshiharu Hase; Takahisa Ikegami; Genji Kurisu

In chloroplasts, ferredoxin (Fd) is reduced by Photosystem I (PSI) and oxidized by Fd-NADP(+) reductase (FNR) that is involved in NADP(+) reduction. To understand the structural basis for the dynamics and efficiency of the electron transfer reaction via Fd, we complementary used X-ray crystallography and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. In the NMR analysis of the formed electron transfer complex with Fd, the paramagnetic effect of the [2Fe-2S] cluster of Fd prevented us from detecting the NMR signals around the cluster. To solve this problem, the paramagnetic iron-sulfur cluster was replaced with a diamagnetic metal cluster. We determined the crystal structure of the Ga-substituted Fd (GaFd) from Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 at 1.62 Å resolution and verified its functional complementation using affinity chromatography. NMR analysis of the interaction sites on GaFd with PSI (molecular mass of ∼1 MDa) and FNR from Thermosynechococcus elongatus was achieved with high-field NMR spectroscopy. With reference to the interaction sites with FNR of Anabaena sp. PCC 7119 from the published crystal data, the interaction sites of Fd with FNR and PSI in solution can be classified into two types: (1) the core hydrophobic residues in the proximity of the metal center and (2) the hydrophilic residues surrounding the core. The former sites are shared in the Fd:FNR and Fd:PSI complex, while the latter ones are target-specific and not conserved on the residual level.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2017

Dynamics and energetics of cyanobacterial photosystem I:ferredoxin complexes in different redox states

Pierre Sétif; Risa Mutoh; Genji Kurisu

Fast turnover of ferredoxin/Fd reduction by photosystem-I/PSI requires that it dissociates rapidly after it has been reduced by PSI:Fd intracomplex electron transfer. The rate constants of Fd dissociation from PSI have been determined by flash-absorption spectroscopy with different combinations of cyanobacterial PSIs and Fds, and different redox states of Fd and of the terminal PSI acceptor (FAFB). Newly obtained values were derived firstly from the fact that the dissociation constant between PSI and redox-inactive gallium-substituted Fd increases upon (FAFB) reduction and secondly from the characterization and elucidation of a kinetic phase following intracomplex Fd reduction to binding of oxidized Fd to PSI, a process which is rate-limited by the foregoing dissociation of reduced Fd from PSI. By reference to the complex with oxidized partners, dissociation rate constants were found to increase moderately with (FAFB) single reduction and by about one order of magnitude after electron transfer from (FAFB)- to Fd, therefore favoring turnover of Fd reduction by PSI. With Thermosynechococcus elongatus partners, values of 270, 730 and >10000s-1 were thus determined for (FAFB)Fdoxidized, (FAFB)-Fdoxidized and (FAFB)Fdreduced, respectively. Moreover, assuming a conservative upper limit for the association rate constant between reduced Fd and PSI, a significant negative shift of the Fd midpoint potential upon binding to PSI has been calculated (< -60mV for Thermosynechococcus elongatus). From the present state of knowledge, the question is still open whether this redox shift is compatible with a large (>10) equilibrium constant for intracomplex reduction of Fd from (FAFB)-.


Genes to Cells | 2016

Circadian oscillations of KaiA-KaiC and KaiB-KaiC complex formations in an in vitro reconstituted KaiABC clock oscillator.

Reiko Murakami; Risa Mutoh; Ketaro Ishii; Masahiro Ishiura

The circadian clock is an endogenous biological mechanism that generates autonomous daily cycles in physiological activities. The phosphorylation levels of KaiC oscillated with a period of 24 h in an ATP‐dependent clock oscillator reconstituted in vitro from KaiA, KaiB and KaiC. We examined the complex formations of KaiA and KaiB with KaiC in the KaiABC clock oscillator by fluorescence correlation spectrometry (FCS) analysis. The formation of KaiB‐containing protein complex(es) oscillated in a circadian manner, with a single peak at 12 h and single trough at 24 h in the circadian cycle, whereas that of KaiA‐containing protein complex(es) oscillated with two peaks at 12 and 24 h. FCS and surface plasmon resonance analyses showed that the binding affinity of KaiA for a mutant KaiC with Ala substitutions at the two phosphorylation sites considered to mimic the nonphosphorylated form of KaiC (np‐KaiC) was higher than that for a mutant KaiC with Asp substitutions at the two phosphorylation sites considered to mimic the completely phosphorylated form of KaiC (cp‐KaiC). The results from the study suggest that a KaiA‐KaiB‐cp‐KaiC ternary complex and a KaiA‐np‐KaiC complex were formed at 12 and 24 h, respectively.

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