Shigeki Kawakami
Osaka University
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Featured researches published by Shigeki Kawakami.
Journal of General Virology | 2000
Yasuhiko Matsushita; Kohtaro Hanazawa; Kuniaki Yoshioka; Taichi Oguchi; Shigeki Kawakami; Yuichiro Watanabe; Masamichi Nishiguchi; Hiroshi Nyunoya
The movement protein (MP) of tomato mosaic virus (ToMV) was produced in E. coli as a soluble fusion protein with glutathione S-transferase. When immobilized on glutathione affinity beads, the recombinant protein was phosphorylated in vitro by incubating with cell extracts of Nicotiana tabacum and tobacco suspension culture cells (BY-2) in the presence of [gamma-(32)P]ATP. Phosphorylation occurred even after washing the beads with a detergent-containing buffer, indicating that the recombinant MP formed a stable complex with some protein kinase(s) during incubation with the cell extract. Phosphoamino acid analysis revealed that the MP was phosphorylated on serine and threonine residues. Phosphorylation of the MP was decreased by addition of kinase inhibitors such as heparin, suramin and quercetin, which are known to be effective for casein kinase II (CK II). The phosphorylation level was not changed by other types of inhibitor. In addition, as shown for animal and plant CK II, [gamma-(32)P]GTP was efficiently used as a phosphoryl donor. Phosphorylation was not affected by amino acid replacements at serine-37 and serine-238, but was completely inhibited by deletion of the carboxy-terminal 9 amino acids, including threonine-256, serine-257, serine-261 and serine-263. These results suggest that the MP of ToMV could be phosphorylated in plant cells by a host protein kinase that is closely related to CK II.
Optics Express | 2006
Keisuke Isobe; Shogo Kataoka; Rena Murase; Wataru Watanabe; Tsunehito Higashi; Shigeki Kawakami; Sachihiro Matsunaga; Kiichi Fukui; Kazuyoshi Itoh
We propose a novel microscopy technique based on the four-wave mixing (FWM) process that is enhanced by two-photon electronic resonance induced by a pump pulse along with stimulated emission induced by a dump pulse. A Ti:sapphire laser and an optical parametric oscillator are used as light sources for the pump and dump pulses, respectively. We demonstrate that our proposed FWM technique can be used to obtain a one-dimensional image of ethanol-thinned Coumarin 120 solution sandwiched between a hole-slide glass and a cover slip, and a two-dimensional image of a leaf of Camellia sinensis.
Molecular Plant Pathology | 2009
Nobumitsu Sasaki; Takuya Ogata; Masakazu Deguchi; Shoko Nagai; Atsushi Tamai; Tetsuo Meshi; Shigeki Kawakami; Yuichiro Watanabe; Yasuhiko Matsushita; Hiroshi Nyunoya
Tomato mosaic virus (ToMV) encodes a movement protein (MP) that is necessary for virus cell-to-cell movement. We have demonstrated previously that KELP, a putative transcriptional coactivator of Arabidopsis thaliana, and its orthologue from Brassica campestris can bind to ToMV MP in vitro. In this study, we examined the effects of the transient over-expression of KELP on ToMV infection and the intracellular localization of MP in Nicotiana benthamiana, an experimental host of the virus. In co-bombardment experiments, the over-expression of KELP inhibited virus cell-to-cell movement. The N-terminal half of KELP (KELPdC), which had been shown to bind to MP, was sufficient for inhibition. Furthermore, the over-expression of KELP and KELPdC, both of which were co-localized with ToMV MP, led to a reduction in the plasmodesmal association of MP. In the absence of MP expression, KELP was localized in the nucleus and the cytoplasm by the localization signal in its N-terminal half. It was also shown that ToMV amplified normally in protoplasts prepared from leaf tissue that expressed KELP transiently. These results indicate that over-expressed KELP interacts with MP in vivo and exerts an inhibitory effect on MP function for virus cell-to-cell movement, but not on virus amplification in individual cells.
Journal of Virology | 2003
Shigeki Kawakami; Koichi Hori; Daijiro Hosokawa; Yoshimi Okada; Yuichiro Watanabe
ABSTRACT We reported previously that the movement protein (MP) of tomato mosaic tobamovirus is phosphorylated, and we proposed that MP phosphorylation is important for viral pathogenesis. Experimental data indicated that phosphorylation enhances the stability of MP in vivo and enables the protein to assume the correct intracellular location to perform its function. A mutant virus designated 37A238A was constructed; this virus lacked two serine residues within the MP, which prevented its phosphorylation. In the present study, we inoculated plants with the 37A238A mutant, and as expected, it was unable to produce local lesions on the leaves. However, after an extended period, we found that lesions did occur, which were due to revertant viruses. Several revertants were isolated, and the genetic changes in their MPs were examined together with any changes in their in vivo characteristics. We found that reversion to virulence was associated first with increased MP stability in infected cells and second with a shift in MP intracellular localization over time. In one case, the revertant MP was not phosphorylated in vivo, but it was functional.
Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering | 2008
Tomoko Murakawa; Shin-ichiro Kajiyama; Tomohiko Ikeuchi; Shigeki Kawakami; Kiichi Fukui
The efficiency of bioactive-beads-mediated plant transformation was improved using DNA-lipofectin complex as the entrapped genetic material instead of naked DNA used in the conventional method. In the improved method, beads aggregated and formed clusters around the protoplasts resulting in a 4-fold higher transformation efficiency than that by the conventional method.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2006
Shigeki Kawakami; Satoshi Harashima; Akio Kobayashi; Kiichi Fukui
Yeast artificial chromosomes (YACs) are useful cloning vectors with the capacity to carry large DNA inserts. The largest barrier using such large DNA molecules in transformation experiments has been their physical instability in a solution. We developed a new method for transforming yeast with chromosome-sized DNA. The method uses bioactive beads composed of calcium alginate to immobilize yeast chromosomal DNAs. Chromosomal DNA immobilized on bioactive beads is physically stable when compared with naked chromosomal DNAs. The bead-mediated transformation performed well, not only with respect to the transformation frequency, but also in successful transformation using split chromosomal DNA that exceeded 450 kb in size. In this chapter we introduce a new method for transforming yeast using bioactive beads. In conjunction with genomic YAC libraries and the yeast chromosome-splitting method, this technique will pave the way to stable and effective transfer of YACs into yeast cells.
lasers and electro optics society meeting | 2005
Keisuke Isobe; R. Murase; Shogo Kataoka; Wataru Watanabe; Shigeki Kawakami; Sachihiro Matsunaga; Tsunehito Higashi; Kiichi Fukui; Kazuyoshi Itoh
We propose a novel technique of four-wave mixing (FWM) microspectroscopy enhanced by a two-photon electronic resonance of pump pulses along with the stimulated emission induced by a dump pulse
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004
Shigeki Kawakami; Yuichiro Watanabe; Roger N. Beachy
Journal of Virology | 1999
Shigeki Kawakami; Hal S. Padgett; Daijiro Hosokawa; Yoshimi Okada; Roger N. Beachy; Yuichiro Watanabe
Nucleic Acids Research | 2000
Yukio Okamura; Satoshi Kondo; Ichiro Sase; Takayuki Suga; Kazuyuki Mise; Iwao Furusawa; Shigeki Kawakami; Yuichiro Watanabe