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Featured researches published by Ryo Iizuka.


FEBS Letters | 2005

Facilitated release of substrate protein from prefoldin by chaperonin

Tamotsu Zako; Ryo Iizuka; Mina Okochi; Tomoko Nomura; Taro Ueno; Hisashi Tadakuma; Masafumi Yohda; Takashi Funatsu

Prefoldin is a chaperone that captures a protein‐folding intermediate and transfers it to the group II chaperonin for correct folding. However, kinetics of interactions between prefoldin and substrate proteins have not been investigated. In this study, dissociation constants and dissociation rate constants of unfolded proteins with prefoldin were firstly measured using fluorescence microscopy. Our results suggest that binding and release of prefoldin from hyperthermophilic archaea with substrate proteins were in a dynamic equilibrium. Interestingly, the release of substrate proteins from prefoldin was facilitated when chaperonin was present, supporting a handoff mechanism of substrate proteins from prefoldin to the chaperonin.


Extremophiles | 2006

Contribution of the C-terminal region to the thermostability of the archaeal group II chaperonin from Thermococcus sp. strain KS-1

Takao Yoshida; Taro Kanzaki; Ryo Iizuka; Toshihiro Komada; Tamotsu Zako; Rintaro Suzuki; Tadashi Maruyama; Masafumi Yohda

Chaperonin is a double ring-shaped oligomeric protein complex, which captures a protein in the folding intermediate state and assists its folding in an ATP-dependent manner. The chaperonin from a hyperthermophilic archaeum, Thermococcus sp. strain KS-1, is a group II chaperonin and is composed of two distinct subunits, α and β. Although these subunits are highly homologous in sequence, the homo-oligomer of the β-subunit is more thermostable than that of the α-subunit. To identify the region responsible for this difference in thermostability, we constructed domain-exchange mutants. The mutants containing the equatorial domain of the β-subunit were more resistant to thermal dissociation than the mutants with that of the α-subunit. Thermostability of a β-subunit mutant whose C-terminal 22 residues were replaced with those of the α-subunit decreased to the comparable level of that of the α-subunit homo-oligomer. These results indicate that the difference in thermostability between α- and β-subunits mainly originates in the C-terminal residues in the equatorial domain, only where they exhibit substantial sequence difference.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Interaction of a Small Heat Shock Protein of the Fission Yeast, Schizosaccharomyces pombe, with a Denatured Protein at Elevated Temperature

Maya Hirose; Hideki Tohda; Yuko Giga-Hama; Reiko Tsushima; Tamotsu Zako; Ryo Iizuka; Chan-Gi Pack; Masataka Kinjo; Noriyuki Ishii; Masafumi Yohda

We have expressed, purified, and characterized one small heat shock protein of the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, SpHsp16.0. SpHsp16.0 was able to protect citrate synthase from thermal aggregation at 45 °C with high efficiency. It existed as a hexadecameric globular oligomer near the physiological growth temperature. At elevated temperatures, the oligomer dissociated into small species, probably dimers. The dissociation was completely reversible, and the original oligomer reformed immediately after the temperature dropped. Large complexes of SpHsp16.0 and denatured citrate synthase were observed by size exclusion chromatography and electron microscopy following incubation at 45 °C and then cooling. However, such large complexes did not elute from the size exclusion column incubated at 45 °C. The denatured citrate synthase protected from aggregation was trapped by a GroEL trap mutant at 45 °C. These results suggest that the complex of SpHsp16.0 and denatured citrate synthase at elevated temperatures is in the transient state and has a hydrophobic nature. Analyses of the interaction between SpHsp16.0 and denatured citrate synthase by fluorescence cross-correlation spectrometry have also shown that the characteristics of SpHsp16.0-denatured citrate synthase complex at the elevated temperature are different from those of the large complex obtained after the shift to lowered temperatures.


Extremophiles | 2007

Comparative analysis of the protein folding activities of two chaperonin subunits of Thermococcus strain KS-1: the effects of beryllium fluoride

Takao Yoshida; Ryo Iizuka; Keisuke Itami; Takuo Yasunaga; Haruhiko Sakuraba; Toshihisa Ohshima; Masafumi Yohda; Tadashi Maruyama

We conducted a comparative analysis of the effects of beryllium fluoride (BeFx) on protein folding mediated by the α- and β-subunit homooligomers (α16mer or β16mer) from the hyperthermophilic archaeum Thermococcus strain KS-1. BeFx inhibited the ATPase activities of both α16mer and β16mer with equal efficiency. This indicated that BeFx replaces the γ-phosphate of chaperonin-bound ATP, thereby forming a stable chaperonin–ADP–BeFx complex. In the presence of ATP and BeFx, both of the two chaperonin subunits mediated green fluorescent protein (GFP) folding. Gel filtration chromatography revealed that the refolded GFP was retained by both chaperonins. Protease digestion and electron microscopic analyses showed that both chaperonin–ADP–BeFx complexes of the two subunits adopted a symmetric closed conformation with the built-in lids of both rings closed and that protein folding took place in their central cavities. These data indicated that basic protein folding mechanisms of α16mer and β16mer are likely similar although there were some apparent differences. While β16mer-mediated GFP refolding in the presence of ATP–BeFx that proceeded more rapidly than in the presence of ATP alone and reached a twofold higher plateau than that achieved with AMP–PNP, the folding mediated by the α16mer that proceeded with much lower yields. A mutant of α16mer, trapα, which traps the unfolded and partially folded substrate protein, did not affect the ATP–BeFx-dependent GFP folding by β16mer but it suppressed that mediated by α16mer to the level of spontaneous folding. These results suggested that β16mer differed from the α16mer in nucleotide binding affinity or the rate of nucleotide hydrolysis.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2004

Crystal Structures of the Group II Chaperonin from Thermococcus strain KS-1: Steric Hindrance by the Substituted Amino Acid, and Inter-subunit Rearrangement between Two Crystal Forms

Yasuhito Shomura; Takao Yoshida; Ryo Iizuka; Tadashi Maruyama; Masafumi Yohda; Kunio Miki


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2001

Glycine at the 65th position plays an essential role in ATP-dependent protein folding by Archael group II chaperonin.

Ryo Iizuka; Takao Yoshida; Tadashi Maruyama; Yasuhito Shomura; Kunio Miki; Masafumi Yohda


Journal of Luminescence | 2007

Complex formation of CdSe/ZnS/TOPO nanocrystal vs. molecular chaperone in aqueous solution by hydrophobic interaction

Hiromi Horiuchi; Noriya Iwami; Fumi Tachibana; Akashi Ohtaki; Ryo Iizuka; Tamotsu Zako; Masaru Oda; Masafumi Yohda; Toshiro Tani


Archive | 2015

核酸の検出方法、捕捉プローブ、検出プローブセット、マイクロアレイ、核酸検出キット、核酸固定化固相、及び流体デバイス

一木 隆範; Takanori Ichiki; 太郎 上野; Taro Ueno; 高志 船津; Takashi Funatsu; 怜 飯塚; Ryo Iizuka; 久皇 鈴木; Kuno Suzuki


生物物理 | 2014

1P124 SecMのN末端側領域による翻訳アレストの安定化(05B. 核酸 : 相互作用・複合体,ポスター,第52回日本生物物理学会年会(2014年度))

Zhuohao Yang; Ryo Iizuka; Takashi Funatsu


生物物理 | 2014

3P318 温度感受性ゲルを用いた蛍光検出によるドロップレットソーティング技術の開発とその応用(28. バイオエンジニアリング,ポスター,第52回日本生物物理学会年会(2014年度))

Haruka Okada; Ryo Iizuka; Ayaka Iguchi; Dong H. Yoon; Tetsushi Sekiguchi; Shuichi Shoji; Takashi Funatsu

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Masafumi Yohda

Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology

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Tadashi Maruyama

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

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Iwao Ohdomari

Nagaoka University of Technology

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