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Dive into the research topics where Sachie Kimura is active.

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Featured researches published by Sachie Kimura.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Synergistic Activation of the Arabidopsis NADPH Oxidase AtrbohD by Ca2+ and Phosphorylation

Yoko Ogasawara; Hidetaka Kaya; Goro Hiraoka; Fumiaki Yumoto; Sachie Kimura; Yasuhiro Kadota; Haruka Hishinuma; Eriko Senzaki; Satoshi Yamagoe; Koji Nagata; Masayuki Nara; Kazuo Suzuki; Masaru Tanokura; Kazuyuki Kuchitsu

Plant respiratory burst oxidase homolog (rboh) proteins, which are homologous to the mammalian 91-kDa glycoprotein subunit of the phagocyte oxidase (gp91phox) or NADPH oxidase 2 (NOX2), have been implicated in the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) both in stress responses and during development. Unlike mammalian gp91phox/NOX2 protein, plant rboh proteins have hydrophilic N-terminal regions containing two EF-hand motifs, suggesting that their activation is dependent on Ca2+. However, the significance of Ca2+ binding to the EF-hand motifs on ROS production has been unclear. By employing a heterologous expression system, we showed that ROS production by Arabidopsis thaliana rbohD (AtrbohD) was induced by ionomycin, which is a Ca2+ ionophore that induces Ca2+ influx into the cell. This activation required a conformational change in the EF-hand region, as a result of Ca2+ binding to the EF-hand motifs. We also showed that AtrbohD was directly phosphorylated in vivo, and that this was enhanced by the protein phosphatase inhibitor calyculin A (CA). Moreover, CA itself induced ROS production and dramatically enhanced the ionomycin-induced ROS production of AtrbohD. Our results suggest that Ca2+ binding and phosphorylation synergistically activate the ROS-producing enzyme activity of AtrbohD.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012

Protein phosphorylation is a prerequisite for the Ca2+-dependent activation of Arabidopsis NADPH oxidases and may function as a trigger for the positive feedback regulation of Ca2+ and reactive oxygen species.

Sachie Kimura; Hidetaka Kaya; Tomoko Kawarazaki; Goro Hiraoka; Eriko Senzaki; Masataka Michikawa; Kazuyuki Kuchitsu

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) produced by NADPH oxidases play critical roles in signalling and development. Given the high toxicity of ROS, their production is tightly regulated. In Arabidopsis, respiratory burst oxidase homologue F (AtrbohF) encodes NADPH oxidase. Here we characterised the activation of AtRbohF using a heterologous expression system. AtRbohF exhibited ROS-producing activity that was synergistically activated by protein phosphorylation and Ca2+. The two EF-hand motifs of AtRbohF in the N-terminal cytosolic region were crucial for its Ca2+-dependent activation. AtrbohD and AtrbohF are involved in stress responses. Although the activation mechanisms for AtRbohD and AtRbohF were similar, AtRbohD had significantly greater ROS-producing activity than AtRbohF, which may reflect their functional diversity, at least in part. We further characterised the interrelationship between Ca2+ and phosphorylation regarding activation and found that protein phosphorylation-induced activation was independent of Ca2+. In contrast, K-252a, a protein kinase inhibitor, inhibited the Ca2+-dependent ROS-producing activity of AtRbohD and AtRbohF in a dose-dependent manner, suggesting that protein phosphorylation is a prerequisite for the Ca2+-dependent activation of Rboh. Positive feedback regulation of Ca2+ and ROS through AtRbohC has been proposed to play a critical role in root hair tip growth. Our findings suggest that Rboh phosphorylation is the initial trigger for the plant Ca2+-ROS signalling network.


The Plant Cell | 2014

Ca2+-Activated Reactive Oxygen Species Production by Arabidopsis RbohH and RbohJ Is Essential for Proper Pollen Tube Tip Growth

Hidetaka Kaya; Ryo Nakajima; Megumi Iwano; Masahiro M. Kanaoka; Sachie Kimura; Seiji Takeda; Tomoko Kawarazaki; Eriko Senzaki; Yuki Hamamura; Tetsuya Higashiyama; Seiji Takayama; Mitsutomo Abe; Kazuyuki Kuchitsu

Arabidopsis RbohH and RbohJ, NADPH oxidases expressed in pollen tubes, are activated by Ca2+ via their EF-hand motifs to produce reactive oxygen species (ROS) that are essential for proper pollen tube tip growth in vivo. Positive feedback regulation involving Ca2+ and ROS production mediated by RbohH and RbohJ is proposed to shape the long tubular structure of the pollen tube. In flowering plants, pollen germinates on the stigma and pollen tubes grow through the style to fertilize the ovules. Enzymatic production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) has been suggested to be involved in pollen tube tip growth. Here, we characterized the function and regulation of the NADPH oxidases RbohH and RbohJ (Respiratory burst oxidase homolog H and J) in pollen tubes in Arabidopsis thaliana. In the rbohH and rbohJ single mutants, pollen tube tip growth was comparable to that of the wild type; however, tip growth was severely impaired in the double mutant. In vivo imaging showed that ROS accumulation in the pollen tube was impaired in the double mutant. Both RbohH and RbohJ, which contain Ca2+ binding EF-hand motifs, possessed Ca2+-induced ROS-producing activity and localized at the plasma membrane of the pollen tube tip. Point mutations in the EF-hand motifs impaired Ca2+-induced ROS production and complementation of the double mutant phenotype. We also showed that a protein phosphatase inhibitor enhanced the Ca2+-induced ROS-producing activity of RbohH and RbohJ, suggesting their synergistic activation by protein phosphorylation and Ca2+. Our results suggest that ROS production by RbohH and RbohJ is essential for proper pollen tube tip growth, and furthermore, that Ca2+-induced ROS positive feedback regulation is conserved in the polarized cell growth to shape the long tubular cell.


Journal of Biochemistry | 2013

The CBL-interacting protein kinase CIPK26 is a novel interactor of Arabidopsis NADPH oxidase AtRbohF that negatively modulates its ROS-producing activity in a heterologous expression system.

Sachie Kimura; Tomoko Kawarazaki; Hitomi Nibori; Masataka Michikawa; Aya Imai; Hidetaka Kaya; Kazuyuki Kuchitsu

The plant NADPH oxidases, known as respiratory burst oxidase homologues (Rbohs), play an indispensable role in a wide array of cellular and developmental processes. Arabidopsis thaliana RbohF (AtRbohF)-mediated production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) is involved in biotic and abiotic stress responses. Because of the toxicity of excess amount of ROS, the ROS-producing activity of Rbohs is speculated to be negatively regulated. However, its mechanism is mostly unknown to date. Here, we report the identification of calcineurin B-like protein-interacting protein kinase 26 (CIPK26) as a novel regulatory factor of AtRbohF. We isolated CIPK26 as an AtRbohF-interacting partner by a yeast two-hybrid screen. Our co-immunoprecipitation assay revealed that the CIPK26 protein interacts with the N-terminal region of AtRbohF in Nicotiana benthamiana cell extracts. The fluorescence of both GFP-tagged CIPK26 and AtRbohF was predominantly observed at the cell periphery. We also showed that co-expression of CIPK26 decreases the ROS-producing activity of AtRbohF in HEK293T cells. Together, these results suggest that the direct binding of CIPK26 to AtRbohF negatively modulates ROS production and play a role in the regulation of ROS signalling in plants.


Journal of Biochemistry | 2012

Reactive oxygen species production and activation mechanism of the rice NADPH oxidase OsRbohB

Shinya Takahashi; Sachie Kimura; Hidetaka Kaya; Ayako Iizuka; Hann Ling Wong; Ko Shimamoto; Kazuyuki Kuchitsu

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) produced by plant NADPH oxidases (NOXes) are important in plant innate immunity. The Oryza sativa respiratory burst oxidase homologue B (OsRbohB) gene encodes a NOX the regulatory mechanisms of which are largely unknown. Here, we used a heterologous expression system to demonstrate that OsRbohB shows ROS-producing activity. Treatment with ionomycin, a Ca(2+) ionophore, and calyculin A, a protein phosphatase inhibitor, activated ROS-producing activity; it was thus OsRbohB activated by both Ca(2+) and protein phosphorylation. Mutation analyses revealed that not only the first EF-hand motif but also the upstream amino-terminal region were necessary for Ca(2+)-dependent activation, while these regions are not required for phosphorylation-induced ROS production.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2013

A low temperature-inducible protein AtSRC2 enhances the ROS-producing activity of NADPH oxidase AtRbohF.

Tomoko Kawarazaki; Sachie Kimura; Ayako Iizuka; Shigeru Hanamata; Hitomi Nibori; Masataka Michikawa; Aya Imai; Mitsutomo Abe; Hidetaka Kaya; Kazuyuki Kuchitsu

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) produced by NADPH oxidases play critical roles in plant environmental responses. Arabidopsis thaliana NADPH oxidase AtRbohF-mediated ROS-production is involved in abiotic stress responses. Because overproduction of ROS is highly toxic to cells, the activity of AtRbohF needs to be tightly regulated in response to diverse stimuli. The ROS-producing activity of AtRbohF is activated by Ca(2+) and protein phosphorylation, but other regulatory factors for AtRbohF are mostly unknown. In this study, we screened for proteins that interact with the N-terminal cytosolic region of AtRbohF by a yeast two-hybrid screen, and isolated AtSRC2, an A. thaliana homolog of SRC2 (soybean gene regulated by cold-2). A co-immunoprecipitation assay revealed that AtSRC2 interacts with the N-terminal region of AtRbohF in plant cells. Intracellular localization of GFP-tagged AtSRC2 was partially overlapped with that of GFP-tagged AtRbohF at the cell periphery. Co-expression of AtSRC2 enhanced the Ca(2+)-dependent ROS-producing activity of AtRbohF in HEK293T cells, but did not affect its phosphorylation-dependent activation. Low-temperature treatment induced expression of the AtSRC2 gene in Arabidopsis roots in proportion to levels of ROS production that was partially dependent on AtRbohF. Our findings suggest that AtSRC2 is a novel activator of Ca(2+)-dependent AtRbohF-mediated ROS production and may play a role in cold responses.


New Phytologist | 2013

On the cellular site of two-pore channel TPC1 action in the Poaceae

Beata Dadacz-Narloch; Sachie Kimura; Takamitsu Kurusu; Edward E. Farmer; Dirk Becker; Kazuyuki Kuchitsu; Rainer Hedrich

The slow vacuolar (SV) channel has been characterized in different dicots by patch-clamp recordings. This channel represents the major cation conductance of the largest organelle in most plant cells. Studies with the tpc1-2 mutant of the model dicot plant Arabidopsis thaliana identified the SV channel as the product of the TPC1 gene. By contrast, research on rice and wheat TPC1 suggested that the monocot gene encodes a plasma membrane calcium-permeable channel. To explore the site of action of grass TPC1 channels, we expressed OsTPC1 from rice (Oryza sativa) and TaTPC1 from wheat (Triticum aestivum) in the background of the Arabidopsis tpc1-2 mutant. Cross-species tpc1 complementation and patch-clamping of vacuoles using Arabidopsis and rice tpc1 null mutants documented that both monocot TPC1 genes were capable of rescuing the SV channel deficit. Vacuoles from wild-type rice but not the tpc1 loss-of-function mutant harbor SV channels exhibiting the hallmark properties of dicot TPC1/SV channels. When expressed in human embryonic kidney (HEK293) cells OsTPC1 was targeted to Lysotracker-Red-positive organelles. The finding that the rice TPC1, just like those from the model plant Arabidopsis and even animal cells, is localized and active in lyso-vacuolar membranes associates this cation channel species with endomembrane function.


Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2015

Apoplastic ROS production upon pollination by RbohH and RbohJ in Arabidopsis

Hidetaka Kaya; Megumi Iwano; Seiji Takeda; Masahiro M. Kanaoka; Sachie Kimura; Mitsutomo Abe; Kazuyuki Kuchitsu

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) accumulate at the tip of growing pollen tubes. In Arabidopsis, NADPH oxidases RbohH and RbohJ are localized at the plasma membrane of pollen tube tip and produce ROS in a Ca2+-dependent manner. The ROS produced by Rbohs and Ca2+ presumably play a critical role in the positive feedback regulation that maintains the tip growth. Ultrastructural cytochemical analysis revealed ROS accumulation in the apoplast/cell wall of the pollen grains on the stigmatic papillae in the wild type, but not in the rbohH rbohJ double mutant, suggesting that apoplastic ROS derived from RbohH and RbohJ are involved in pollen tube elongation into the stigmatic papillae by affecting the cell wall metabolism.


Biotechnologia. Journal of Biotechnology, Computational Biology and Bionanotechnology | 2013

Signalling and multiple regulatory mechanisms for NADPH oxidase-mediated deliberate ROS production in plant cells

Kazuyuki Kuchitsu; Nobutaka Kitahata; Sachie Kimura; Tomoko Kawarazaki; Hidetaka Kaya; Takamitsu Kurusu


Archive | 2012

Arabidopsis NADPH oxidases and may function as a trigger for the positive feedback regulation of Ca 2+ and reactive oxygen species

Sachie Kimura; Hidetaka Kaya; Tomoko Kawarazaki; Goro Hiraoka; Eriko Senzaki; Masataka Michikawa; Kazuyuki Kuchitsu

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Kazuyuki Kuchitsu

Tokyo University of Science

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Tomoko Kawarazaki

Tokyo University of Science

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Eriko Senzaki

Tokyo University of Science

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Masataka Michikawa

Tokyo University of Science

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Goro Hiraoka

Tokyo University of Science

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Aya Imai

Tokyo University of Science

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Ayako Iizuka

Tokyo University of Science

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Hitomi Nibori

Tokyo University of Science

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