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Dive into the research topics where Seishiro Aoki is active.

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Featured researches published by Seishiro Aoki.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Molecular Adaptation of rbcL in the Heterophyllous Aquatic Plant Potamogeton

Satoko Iida; Atsuko Miyagi; Seishiro Aoki; Motomi Ito; Yasuro Kadono; Keiko Kosuge

Background Heterophyllous aquatic plants show marked phenotypic plasticity. They adapt to environmental changes by producing different leaf types: submerged, floating and terrestrial leaves. By contrast, homophyllous plants produce only submerged leaves and grow entirely underwater. Heterophylly and submerged homophylly evolved under selective pressure modifying the species-specific optima for photosynthesis, but little is known about the evolutionary outcome of habit. Recent evolutionary analyses suggested that rbcL, a chloroplast gene that encodes a catalytic subunit of RuBisCO, evolves under positive selection in most land plant lineages. To examine the adaptive evolutionary process linked to heterophylly or homophylly, we analyzed positive selection in the rbcL sequences of ecologically diverse aquatic plants, Japanese Potamogeton. Principal Findings Phylogenetic and maximum likelihood analyses of codon substitution models indicated that Potamogeton rbcL has evolved under positive Darwinian selection. The positive selection has operated specifically in heterophyllous lineages but not in homophyllous ones in the branch-site models. This suggests that the selective pressure on this chloroplast gene was higher for heterophyllous lineages than for homophyllous lineages. The replacement of 12 amino acids occurred at structurally important sites in the quaternary structure of RbcL, two of which (residue 225 and 281) were identified as potentially under positive selection. Conclusions/Significance Our analysis did not show an exact relationship between the amino acid replacements and heterophylly or homophylly but revealed that lineage-specific positive selection acted on the Potamogeton rbcL. The contrasting ecological conditions between heterophyllous and homophyllous plants have imposed different selective pressures on the photosynthetic system. The increased amino acid replacement in RbcL may reflect the continuous fine-tuning of RuBisCO under varying ecological conditions.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2013

From β- to α-Proteobacteria: The Origin and Evolution of Rhizobial Nodulation Genes nodIJ

Seishiro Aoki; Motomi Ito; Wataru Iwasaki

Although many α- and some β-proteobacterial species are symbiotic with legumes, the evolutionary origin of nitrogen-fixing nodulation remains unclear. We examined α- and β-proteobacteria whose genomes were sequenced using large-scale phylogenetic profiling and revealed the evolutionary origin of two nodulation genes. These genes, nodI and nodJ (nodIJ), play key roles in the secretion of Nod factors, which are recognized by legumes during nodulation. We found that only the nodulating β-proteobacteria, including the novel strains isolated in this study, possess both nodIJ and their paralogous genes (DRA-ATPase/permease genes). Contrary to the widely accepted scenario of the α-proteobacterial origin of rhizobia, our exhaustive phylogenetic analysis showed that the entire nodIJ clade is included in the clade of Burkholderiaceae DRA-ATPase/permease genes, that is, the nodIJ genes originated from gene duplication in a lineage of the β-proteobacterial family. After duplication, the evolutionary rates of nodIJ were significantly accelerated relative to those of homologous genes, which is consistent with their novel function in nodulation. The likelihood analyses suggest that this accelerated evolution is not associated with changes in either nonsynonymous/synonymous substitution rates or transition/transversion rates, but rather, in the GC content. Although the low GC content of the nodulation genes has been assumed to reflect past horizontal transfer events from donor rhizobial genomes with low GC content, no rhizobial genome with such low GC content has yet been found. Our results encourage a reconsideration of the origin of nodulation and suggest new perspectives on the role of the GC content of bacterial genes in functional adaptation.


Journal of Plant Research | 2004

Resurrection of an ancestral gene: functional and evolutionary analyses of the Ngrol genes transferred from Agrobacterium to Nicotiana

Seishiro Aoki

The Ngrol genes, which have high similarity in sequence to the rol genes of Agrobacterium rhizogenes, are present in the genome of untransformed plants of Nicotiana glauca. It is thought that bacterial infection resulted in the transfer of the Ngrol genes to plants early in the evolution of the genus Nicotiana, since several species in this genus contain rol-like sequences but others do not. Plants transformed with the bacterial rol genes exhibit various developmental and morphological changes. The presence of rol-like sequences in plant genomes is therefore thought to have contributed to the evolution of Nicotiana species. This paper focuses on studies of the Ngrol genes in present-day plants and during the evolution of the genus Nicotiana. The functional sequences of several Ngrol genes may have been conserved after their ancient introduction from a bacterium to the plant. Resurrection of an ancestral function of one of the Ngrol genes, as examined by physiological and evolutionary analyses, is also described. The origin of the Ngrol genes is then considered, based on results of molecular phylogenetic analyses. The effects of the horizontal transfer of the Ngrol genes and mutations in the genes are discussed on the plants of the genus Nicotiana during evolution.


Systematic and Applied Microbiology | 2010

Genotypic and phenotypic diversity of rhizobia isolated from Lathyrus japonicus indigenous to Japan.

Seishiro Aoki; Tetsuya Kondo; Danielle Prévost; Sayuri Nakata; Tadashi Kajita; Motomi Ito

Sixty-one rhizobial strains from Lathyrus japonicus nodules growing on the seashore in Japan were characterized and compared to two strains from Canada. The PCR-based method was used to identify test strains with novel taxonomic markers that were designed to discriminate between all known Lathyrus rhizobia. Three genomic groups (I, II, and III) were finally identified using RAPD, RFLP, and phylogenetic analyses. Strains in genomic group I (related to Rhizobium leguminosarum) were divided into two subgroups (Ia and Ib) and subgroup Ia was related to biovar viciae. Strains in subgroup Ib, which were all isolated from Japanese sea pea, belonged to a distinct group from other rhizobial groups in the recA phylogeny and PCR-based grouping, and were more tolerant to salt than the isolate from an inland legume. Test strains in genomic groups II and III belonged to a single clade with the reference strains of R. pisi, R. etli, and R. phaseoli in the 16S rRNA phylogeny. The PCR-based method and phylogenetic analysis of recA revealed that genomic group II was related to R. pisi. The analyses also showed that genomic group III harbored a mixed chromosomal sequence of different genomic groups, suggesting a recent horizontal gene transfer between diverse rhizobia. Although two Canadian strains belonged to subgroup Ia, molecular and physiological analyses showed the divergence between Canadian and Japanese strains. Phylogenetic analysis of nod genes divided the rhizobial strains into several groups that reflected the host range of rhizobia. Symbiosis between dispersing legumes and rhizobia at seashore is discussed.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Evolutionary Dynamics of Nitrogen Fixation in the Legume–Rhizobia Symbiosis

Hironori Fujita; Seishiro Aoki; Masayoshi Kawaguchi

The stabilization of host–symbiont mutualism against the emergence of parasitic individuals is pivotal to the evolution of cooperation. One of the most famous symbioses occurs between legumes and their colonizing rhizobia, in which rhizobia extract nutrients (or benefits) from legume plants while supplying them with nitrogen resources produced by nitrogen fixation (or costs). Natural environments, however, are widely populated by ineffective rhizobia that extract benefits without paying costs and thus proliferate more efficiently than nitrogen-fixing cooperators. How and why this mutualism becomes stabilized and evolutionarily persists has been extensively discussed. To better understand the evolutionary dynamics of this symbiosis system, we construct a simple model based on the continuous snowdrift game with multiple interacting players. We investigate the model using adaptive dynamics and numerical simulations. We find that symbiotic evolution depends on the cost–benefit balance, and that cheaters widely emerge when the cost and benefit are similar in strength. In this scenario, the persistence of the symbiotic system is compatible with the presence of cheaters. This result suggests that the symbiotic relationship is robust to the emergence of cheaters, and may explain the prevalence of cheating rhizobia in nature. In addition, various stabilizing mechanisms, such as partner fidelity feedback, partner choice, and host sanction, can reinforce the symbiotic relationship by affecting the fitness of symbionts in various ways. This result suggests that the symbiotic relationship is cooperatively stabilized by various mechanisms. In addition, mixed nodule populations are thought to encourage cheater emergence, but our model predicts that, in certain situations, cheaters can disappear from such populations. These findings provide a theoretical basis of the evolutionary dynamics of legume–rhizobia symbioses, which is extendable to other single-host, multiple-colonizer systems.


Protoplasma | 2010

Dynamic morphologies of pollen plastids visualised by vegetative-specific FtsZ1-GFP in Arabidopsis thaliana

Makoto T. Fujiwara; Haruki Hashimoto; Yusuke Kazama; Tomonari Hirano; Yasushi Yoshioka; Seishiro Aoki; Naoki Sato; Ryuuichi D. Itoh; Tomoko Abe

The behaviour and multiplication of pollen plastids have remained elusive despite their crucial involvement in cytoplasmic inheritance. Here, we present live images of plastids in pollen grains and growing tubes from transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana lines expressing stroma-localised FtsZ1–green-fluorescent protein fusion in a vegetative cell-specific manner. Vegetative cells in mature pollen contained a morphologically heterogeneous population of round to ellipsoidal plastids, whilst those in late-developing (maturing) pollen included plastids that could have one or two constriction sites. Furthermore, plastids in pollen tubes exhibited remarkable tubulation, stromule (stroma-filled tubule) extension, and back-and-forth movement along the direction of tube growth. Plastid division, which involves the FtsZ1 ring, was rarely observed in mature pollen grains.


DNA Research | 2016

Function and evolution of a Lotus japonicus AP2/ERF family transcription factor that is required for development of infection threads.

Koji Yano; Seishiro Aoki; Meng Liu; Yosuke Umehara; Norio Suganuma; Wataru Iwasaki; Shusei Sato; Takashi Soyano; Hiroshi Kouchi; Masayoshi Kawaguchi

Abstract Legume-rhizobium symbiosis is achieved by two major events evolutionarily acquired: root hair infection and organogenesis. Infection thread (IT) development is a distinct element for rhizobial infection. Through ITs, rhizobia are efficiently transported from infection foci on root hairs to dividing meristematic cortical cells. To unveil this process, we performed genetic screening using Lotus japonicus MG-20 and isolated symbiotic mutant lines affecting nodulation, root hair morphology, and IT development. Map-based cloning identified an AP2/ERF transcription factor gene orthologous to Medicago truncatula ERN1. LjERN1 was activated in response to rhizobial infection and depended on CYCLOPS and NSP2. Legumes conserve an ERN1 homolog, ERN2, that functions redundantly with ERN1 in M. truncatula. Phylogenetic analysis showed that the lineages of ERN1 and ERN2 genes originated from a gene duplication event in the common ancestor of legume plants. However, genomic analysis suggested the lack of ERN2 gene in the L. japonicus genome, consistent with Ljern1 mutants exhibited a root hair phenotype that is observed in ern1/ern2 double mutants in M. truncatula. Molecular evolutionary analysis suggested that the nonsynonymous/synonymous rate ratios of legume ERN1 genes was almost identical to that of non-legume plants, whereas the ERN2 genes experienced a relaxed selective constraint.


Plant Science | 2000

The roles of Rirol and Ngrol genes in hairy root induction in Nicotiana debneyi.

Seishiro Aoki; Kunihiko Syōno

The function of Rirol genes in TL-DNA of the Ri plasmid of Agrobacterium rhizogenes has been previously studied in Nicotiana tabacum and Daucus carota, but it was reported that these plants have a TL-DNA-similar sequence in their genome. We investigated the function of Rirol genes in N. debneyi by infection with A. tumefaciens harboring these genes, because the genome of N. debneyi does not contain a TL-DNA-similar sequence. The single gene RirolB induced adventitious roots in N. debneyi. Introduction of a DNA fragment that contained RirolB, RirolC, RiORF13 and RiORF14 resulted in more intense and earlier root formation than that of RirolB. Ngrol genes (NgrolB, NgrolC, NgORF13, and NgORF14) in the genome of Nicotiana glauca that are similar in sequence to Rirol genes were also examined. In contrast with Rirol genes, Ngrol genes did not induce adventitious roots on leaf segments of N. debneyi. Further infection analysis revealed that one of the reasons for this diversity of their functions might be the difference in the rolB region between the sequence of bacteria and plants. The difference in function between the genes of plants and bacteria is analyzed and the molecular evolution of Ngrol genes is discussed.


Plant Systematics and Evolution | 2015

Phylogenetic analysis of NAP, an unconventional actin of the Volvocales

Takako Kato-Minoura; Kumiko Karino; Nobuyuki Akimoto; Norito Yoshiga; Mika Ehara; Seishiro Aoki

The unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii has two actin genes, one encoding a conventional actin and the other an unconventional actin called novel actin-like protein (NAP). These actins apparently differ in their ability to polymerize, but their specific functions in the cell are unknown. To understand their evolutionary relationship, we investigated the molecular phylogeny of the actin/NAP family in Volvocales, using fully identified sequences (Chlamydomonas moewusii, Gonium pectorale, and Volvox carteri) and newly determined partial sequences (Eudorina elegans, and Volvulina steinii). Although the origin of the NAP clade remains ambiguous, the inferred phylogenetic trees strongly support the monophyly of NAP genes and show that only the genomes of volvocine species contain NAP genes. The nonsynonymous substitution rate of the NAP gene is, in consistence with its long branch length in the phylogeny, relatively high compared with that of the actin gene. NAP is thus apparently unique to volvocine species and most likely performs a cellular function with fewer constraints.


Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek International Journal of General and Molecular Microbiology | 2016

Wide distribution range of rhizobial symbionts associated with pantropical sea-dispersed legumes.

Masaru Bamba; Sayuri Nakata; Seishiro Aoki; Koji Takayama; Juan Núñez-Farfán; Motomi Ito; Masaki Miya; Tadashi Kajita

To understand the geographic distributions of rhizobia that associated with widely distributed wild legumes, 66 nodules obtained from 41 individuals including three sea-dispersed legumes (Vigna marina, Vigna luteola, and Canavalia rosea) distributed across the tropical and subtropical coastal regions of the world were studied. Partial sequences of 16S rRNA and nodC genes extracted from the nodules showed that only Bradyrhizobium and Sinorhizobium were associated with the pantropical legumes, and some of the symbiont strains were widely distributed over the Pacific. Horizontal gene transfer of nodulation genes were observed within the Bradyrhizobium and Sinorhizobium lineages. BLAST searches in GenBank also identified records of these strains from various legumes across the world, including crop species. However, one of the rhizobial strains was not found in GenBank, which implies the strain may have adapted to the littoral environment. Our results suggested that some rhizobia, which associate with the widespread sea-dispersed legume, distribute across a broad geographic range. By establishing symbiotic relationships with widely distributed rhizobia, the pantropical legumes may also be able to extend their range much further than other legume species.

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Danielle Prévost

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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