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Dive into the research topics where Setsuko Komatsu is active.

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Featured researches published by Setsuko Komatsu.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2012

Plant Cell Organelle Proteomics in Response to Abiotic Stress

Zahed Hossain; Mohammad-Zaman Nouri; Setsuko Komatsu

Proteomics is one of the finest molecular techniques extensively being used for the study of protein profiling of a given plant species experiencing stressed conditions. Plants respond to a stress by alteration in the pattern of protein expression, either by up-regulating of the existing protein pool or by the synthesizing novel proteins primarily associated with plants antioxidative defense mechanism. Improved protein extraction protocols and advance techniques for identification of novel proteins have been standardized in different plant species at both cellular and whole plant level for better understanding of abiotic stress sensing and intracellular stress signal transduction mechanisms. In contrast, an in-depth proteome study of subcellular organelles could generate much detail information about the intrinsic mechanism of stress response as it correlates the possible relationship between the protein abundance and plant stress tolerance. Although a wealth of reviews devoted to plant proteomics are available, review articles dedicated to plant cell organelle proteins response under abiotic stress are very scanty. In the present review, an attempt has been made to summarize all significant contributions related to abiotic stresses and their impacts on organelle proteomes for better understanding of plants abiotic stress tolerance mechanism at protein level. This review will not only provide new insights into the plants stress response mechanisms, which are necessary for future development of genetically engineered stress tolerant crop plants for the benefit of humankind, but will also highlight the importance of studying changes in protein abundance within the cell organelles in response to abiotic stress.


Proteomics | 2010

Comparative analysis of soybean plasma membrane proteins under osmotic stress using gel‐based and LC MS/MS‐based proteomics approaches

Mohammad-Zaman Nouri; Setsuko Komatsu

To study the soybean plasma membrane proteome under osmotic stress, two methods were used: a gel‐based and a LC MS/MS‐based proteomics method. Two‐day‐old seedlings were subjected to 10% PEG for 2 days. Plasma membranes were purified from seedlings using a two‐phase partitioning method and their purity was verified by measuring ATPase activity. Using the gel‐based proteomics, four and eight protein spots were identified as up‐ and downregulated, respectively, whereas in the nanoLC MS/MS approach, 11 and 75 proteins were identified as up‐ and downregulated, respectively, under PEG treatment. Out of osmotic stress responsive proteins, most of the transporter proteins and all proteins with high number of transmembrane helices as well as low‐abundance proteins could be identified by the LC MS/MS‐based method. Three homologues of plasma membrane H+‐ATPase, which are transporter proteins involved in ion efflux, were upregulated under osmotic stress. Gene expression of this protein was increased after 12u2009h of stress exposure. Among the identified proteins, seven proteins were mutual in two proteomics techniques, in which calnexin was the highly upregulated protein. Accumulation of calnexin in plasma membrane was confirmed by immunoblot analysis. These results suggest that under hyperosmotic conditions, calnexin accumulates in the plasma membrane and ion efflux accelerates by upregulation of plasma membrane H+‐ATPase protein.


Journal of Proteomics | 2012

Organ-specific proteomic analysis of drought-stressed soybean seedlings

Payam Pour Mohammadi; Ahmad Moieni; Susumu Hiraga; Setsuko Komatsu

Changes in protein levels in drought-stressed soybean seedlings were analyzed using a proteomics approach. Three-day-old soybean seedlings were subjected to drought stress or treated with 10% polyethylene glycol (PEG) as osmotic stress. After treatment, the proteins were extracted from the leaf, hypocotyl, and root and separated using two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The root was the most drought-responsive organ, with the levels of 32, 13, and 12 proteins changing in response to drought stress, PEG treatment, and both, respectively. In the leaves of PEG-treated and drought-stressed seedlings, metabolism-related proteins increased and energy production- and protein synthesis-related proteins decreased. For 3 proteins present in all organs in drought-stressed plants, mRNA was differentially regulated: heat shock protein 70 and actin isoform B were upregulated, and methionine synthase was downregulated. mRNA expression patterns reflected those of protein levels, suggesting transcriptional regulation of these proteins. Western blot analysis confirmed the increase in ascorbate peroxidase in drought-stressed plants. The downregulation of mRNA and decreased protein levels of methionine synthase in the leaves, hypocotyl, and roots of drought-stressed plants, but not in other treatments, indicated that methionine synthase is a drought response protein. These results also suggest that the decreased methionine synthase in response to drought stress can impair the soybean seedling growth.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2012

Mass Spectrometry-Based Analysis of Proteomic Changes in the Root Tips of Flooded Soybean Seedlings

Yohei Nanjo; Ludovit Skultety; Lubica Uvackova; Katarína Klubicová; Martin Hajduch; Setsuko Komatsu

Flooding injury is a major problem in soybean cultivation. A proteomics approach was used to clarify the occurrence of changes in protein expression level and phosphorylation in soybeans under flooding stress. Two-day-old seedlings were flooded for 1 day, proteins were extracted from root tips of the seedlings and digested with trypsin, and their expression levels and phosphorylation states were compared to those of untreated controls using mass spectrometry-based proteomics techniques. Phosphoproteins were enriched using a phosphoprotein purification column prior to digestion and mass spectrometry. The expression of proteins involved in energy production increased as a result of flooding, while expression of proteins involved in protein folding and cell structure maintenance decreased. Flooding induced changes of phosphorylation status of proteins involved in energy generation, protein synthesis and cell structure maintenance. The response to flooding stress may be regulated by both modulation of protein expression and phosphorylation state. Energy-demanding and production-related metabolic pathways may be particularly subject to regulation by changes in protein phosphorylation during flooding.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2012

Proteomics Techniques for the Development of Flood Tolerant Crops

Setsuko Komatsu; Susumu Hiraga; Yuki Yanagawa

Proteomics is a useful analytical approach for investigating crop responses to stress. Recent remarkable advances in proteomic techniques allow for the identification of a wider range of proteins than was previously possible. The application of proteomic techniques to clarify the molecular mechanisms underlying crop responses to flooding stress may facilitate the development of flood tolerant crops. Flooding is an environmental stress found worldwide and may increase in frequency due to changes in global climate. Waterlogging resulting from flooding causes significant reductions in the growth and yield of several crops. Transient flooding displaces gases in soil pores and often causes hypoxia in plants grown on land with poor drainage. Changes in protein expression and post-translational modification of proteins occur as plants activate their defense system in response to flooding stress. In this review, we discuss the contributions that proteomic studies have made toward increasing our understanding of the well-organized cellular response to flooding in soybean and other crops. The biological relevance of the proteins identified using proteomic techniques in regard to crop stress tolerance will be discussed as well.


Plant Science | 1993

Protein kinase activity and protein phosphorylation in rice (Oryza sativa L.) leaf

Setsuko Komatsu; Hisashi Hirano

Abstract Calcium-, phospholipid- and phorbol ester-dependent protein kinase (Ca2+-, PS- and PA-dependent protein kinase) has been found present in the rice (Oryza sativa L.) leaf. Ca2+, PS and PA dependent protein kinase activity was detected in the cytosol fraction of the leaf and root during the early stages of seedling growth in rice. In vitro phosphorylation experiments, using extract or cytosol fraction from rice leaf, showed that phosphorylation of two specific proteins with molecular masses of 45 000 and 43 000 was significantly stimulated by phorbol ester. In addition, despite cyclic AMP (cAMP) concentration being less than 1 pmol/g fresh weight, cAMP-dependent protein kinase activity was detected in both the leaf and root during seedling development in rice. In vitro phosphorylation of three proteins with molecular masses of 55 000, 50 000 and 40 000 was significantly stimulated by cAMP. It is suggested that Ca2+-, PS- and PA-dependent or cAMP-dependent protein kinase in the rice leaf might be involved in cell regulatory systems through phosphorylation.


Journal of Proteomics | 2012

Analysis of proteomic changes in roots of soybean seedlings during recovery after flooding.

Afshin Salavati; Amana Khatoon; Yohei Nanjo; Setsuko Komatsu

A proteomic approach was used to identify proteins involved in post-flooding recovery in soybean roots. Two-day-old soybean seedlings were flooded with water for up to 3 days. After the flooding treatment, seedlings were grown until 7 days after sowing and root proteins were then extracted and separated using two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (2-DE). Comparative analysis of 2-D gels of control and 3 day flooding-experienced soybean root samples revealed 70 differentially expressed protein spots, from which 80 proteins were identified. Many of the differentially expressed proteins are involved in protein destination/storage and metabolic processes. Clustering analysis based on the expression profiles of the 70 differentially expressed protein spots revealed that 3 days of flooding causes significant changes in protein expression, even during post-flooding recovery. Three days of flooding resulted in downregulation of ion transport-related proteins and upregulation of proteins involved in cytoskeletal reorganization, cell expansion, and programmed cell death. Furthermore, 7 proteins involved in cell wall modification and S-adenosylmethionine synthesis were identified in roots from seedlings recovering from 1 day of flooding. These results suggest that alteration of cell structure through changes in cell wall metabolism and cytoskeletal organization may be involved in post-flooding recovery processes in soybean seedlings.


Plant Science | 2012

Ubiquitin/proteasome-mediated proteolysis is involved in the response to flooding stress in soybean roots, independent of oxygen limitation

Yuki Yanagawa; Setsuko Komatsu

Ubiquitin/proteasome-mediated proteolysis plays an important role in the response to several environmental stresses. Here, we described the relationship of the proteolysis in the flooding stress in soybean (Glycine max L. cultivar Enrei). Immunoblot analyses were performed using antibodies against two subunits of 26S proteasome, Rpt5 and Rpn10, 20S proteasome and two subunits of COP9 signalosome (CSN), CSN4 and CSN5, to compare between flooded and untreated roots. We also examined their protein amounts in the condition of low oxygen. Moreover, crude extracts from flooded or untreated roots incubated with or without a proteasome inhibitor MG132 were analyzed by proteomics technique. We revealed that the amount of ubiquitinated proteins in soybean roots decreased after flooding treatment and increased to levels similar to controls after de-submergence. Both CSN4 and CSN5 accumulated following flooding treatment, although no significant difference was observed in proteasome. Low oxygen had no effect on the amount of ubiquitinated proteins or CSN4. By 2D-PAGE, the amount of 6 proteins changed significantly following MG132 treatment in flooding stressed plants. We conclude that the accumulation of CSN proteins might enhance the degradation of ubiquitinated proteins independent of hypoxia caused by flooding, thereby lowering their abundance during flooding stress.


Plant Molecular Biology | 2003

A novel brassinolide-enhanced gene identified by cDNA microarray is involved in the growth of rice.

Guangxiao Yang; Makoto Matsuoka; Yukimoto Iwasaki; Setsuko Komatsu

Brassinosteroids (BRs) are growth-promoting natural substances required for normal plant growth and development. To understand the molecular mechanism of BR action, a cDNA microarray containing 1265 rice genes was analyzed for expression differences in rice lamina joint treated with brassinolide (BL). A novel BL-enhanced gene, designated OsBLE2, was identified and cloned. The full-length cDNA is 3243xa0bp long, encoding a predicted polypeptide of 761 amino acid residues and nine possible transmembrane regions. OsBLE2 expression was most responsive to BL in the lamina joint and leaf sheath in rice seedlings. Besides, auxin and gibberellins also increased its expression. OsBLE2 expressed more, as revealed by inxa0situ hybridization, in vascular bundles and root primordia, where the cells are actively undergoing division, elongation, and differentiation. Transgenic rice expressing antisense OsBLE2 exhibits various degrees of repressed growth. BL could not enhance its expression in transgenic rice expressing antisense BRI1, a BR receptor, indicating that BR signaling to the enhanced expression of OsBLE2 is through BRI1. BL effect in the d1 mutant rice was much weaker than that in its wild-type control, indicating that heterotrimeric G protein may be a component of BRs signaling. These results suggest that OsBLE2 is involved in BL-regulated growth and development processes in rice.


Journal of Proteomics | 2015

Characterization of proteins in soybean roots under flooding and drought stresses

MyeongWon Oh; Setsuko Komatsu

UNLABELLEDnFlooding and drought affect soybean growth because soybean is a stress-sensitive crop. In 2-day-old plants exposed to 2-day flooding or drought, the fresh weight of roots was markedly suppressed, although the root morphology clearly differed between two conditions. To understand the response mechanisms of soybean to flooding and drought stresses, a gel-free proteomic technique was used. A total of 97 and 48 proteins were significantly changed in response to flooding and drought stresses, respectively. Proteins involved in protein synthesis were decreased by flooding stress and increased by drought. Glycolysis-related proteins were increased in roots by both flooding and drought stresses. Fermentation, stress, and cell wall-related proteins were increased in response to flooding stress, whereas cell organization and redox-related proteins were increased under drought stress. Among the identified proteins, three S-adenosylmethionine synthetases were commonly decreased and increased in response to flooding and drought stresses, respectively. The mRNA expression levels of S-adenosylmethionine synthetase genes displayed a similar tendency to the changes in protein abundance. These results suggest that S-adenosylmethionine synthetase is involved in the regulation of stress response because it was changed in response to flooding and drought stresses.nnnBIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCEnThis study reported on the response mechanisms of soybean to flooding and drought stresses using the gel-free proteomic technique. Proteins involved in protein synthesis were decreased by flooding stress and increased by drought. Glycolysis-related proteins were increased in roots by both flooding and drought stresses. Fermentation, stress, and cell wall-related proteins were increased in response to flooding stress, whereas cell organization and redox-related proteins were increased under drought stress. Among the identified proteins, three S-adenosylmethionine synthetases were commonly decreased and increased in response to flooding and drought stresses, respectively. The mRNA expression levels of S-adenosylmethionine synthetase genes displayed a similar tendency to the changes in protein abundance. These results suggest that S-adenosylmethionine synthetase is involved in the regulation of stress response because it was changed in response to flooding and drought stresses.

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Hisashi Hirano

Yokohama City University

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Katsumi Sakata

Maebashi Institute of Technology

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Xin Wang

University of Tsukuba

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Yohei Nanjo

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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