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Dive into the research topics where Shojiro Tamaki is active.

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Featured researches published by Shojiro Tamaki.


Science | 2007

Hd3a Protein Is a Mobile Flowering Signal in Rice

Shojiro Tamaki; Shoichi Matsuo; Hann Ling Wong; Shuji Yokoi; Ko Shimamoto

Florigen, the mobile signal that moves from an induced leaf to the shoot apex and causes flowering, has eluded identification since it was first proposed 70 years ago. Understanding the nature of the mobile flowering signal would provide a key insight into the molecular mechanism of floral induction. Recent studies suggest that the Arabidopsis FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) gene is a candidate for encoding florigen. We show that the protein encoded by Hd3a, a rice ortholog of FT, moves from the leaf to the shoot apical meristem and induces flowering in rice. These results suggest that the Hd3a protein may be the rice florigen.


Nature | 2003

Adaptation of photoperiodic control pathways produces short-day flowering in rice

Ryosuke Hayama; Shuji Yokoi; Shojiro Tamaki; Masahiro Yano; Ko Shimamoto

The photoperiodic control of flowering is one of the important developmental processes of plants because it is directly related to successful reproduction. Although the molecular genetic analysis of Arabidopsis thaliana, a long-day (LD) plant, has provided models to explain the control of flowering time in this species, very little is known about its molecular mechanisms for short-day (SD) plants. Here we show how the photoperiodic control of flowering is regulated in rice, a SD plant. Overexpression of OsGI, an orthologue of the Arabidopsis GIGANTEA (GI) gene in transgenic rice, caused late flowering under both SD and LD conditions. Expression of the rice orthologue of the Arabidopsis CONSTANS (CO) gene was increased in the transgenic rice, whereas expression of the rice orthologue of FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) was suppressed. Our results indicate that three key regulatory genes for the photoperiodic control of flowering are conserved between Arabidopsis, a LD plant, and rice, a SD plant, but regulation of the FT gene by CO was reversed, resulting in the suppression of flowering in rice under LD conditions.


Development | 2008

Hd3a and RFT1 are essential for flowering in rice

Reina Komiya; Akiko Ikegami; Shojiro Tamaki; Shuji Yokoi; Ko Shimamoto

RICE FLOWERING LOCUS T 1 (RFT1/FT-L3) is the closest homologue of Heading date 3a (Hd3a), which is thought to encode a mobile flowering signal and promote floral transition under short-day (SD) conditions. RFT1 is located only 11.5 kb from Hd3a on chromosome 6. Although RFT1 RNAi plants flowered normally, double RFT1-Hd3a RNAi plants did not flower up to 300 days after sowing (DAS), indicating that Hd3a and RFT1 are essential for flowering in rice. RFT1 expression was very low in wild-type plants, but there was a marked increase in RFT1 expression by 70 DAS in Hd3a RNAi plants, which flowered 90 DAS. H3K9 acetylation around the transcription initiation site of the RFT1 locus had increased by 70 DAS but not at 35 DAS. In the absence of Hd3a and RFT1 expression, transcription of OsMADS14 and OsMADS15, two rice orthologues of Arabidopsis APETALA1, was strongly reduced, suggesting that they act downstream of Hd3a and RFT1. These results indicate that Hd3a and RFT1 act as floral activators under SD conditions, and that RFT1 expression is partly regulated by chromatin modification.


Nature | 2011

14-3-3 proteins act as intracellular receptors for rice Hd3a florigen

Ken Ichiro Taoka; Izuru Ohki; Hiroyuki Tsuji; Kyoko Furuita; Kokoro Hayashi; Tomoko Yanase; Midori Yamaguchi; Chika Nakashima; Yekti Asih Purwestri; Shojiro Tamaki; Yuka Ogaki; Chihiro Shimada; Atsushi Nakagawa; Chojiro Kojima; Ko Shimamoto

‘Florigen’ was proposed 75 years ago to be synthesized in the leaf and transported to the shoot apex, where it induces flowering. Only recently have genetic and biochemical studies established that florigen is encoded by FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT), a gene that is universally conserved in higher plants. Nonetheless, the exact function of florigen during floral induction remains poorly understood and receptors for florigen have not been identified. Here we show that the rice FT homologue Hd3a interacts with 14-3-3 proteins in the apical cells of shoots, yielding a complex that translocates to the nucleus and binds to the Oryza sativa (Os)FD1 transcription factor, a rice homologue of Arabidopsis thaliana FD. The resultant ternary ‘florigen activation complex’ (FAC) induces transcription of OsMADS15, a homologue of A. thaliana APETALA1 (AP1), which leads to flowering. We have determined the 2.4 Å crystal structure of rice FAC, which provides a mechanistic basis for florigen function in flowering. Our results indicate that 14-3-3 proteins act as intracellular receptors for florigen in shoot apical cells, and offer new approaches to manipulate flowering in various crops and trees.


Nature | 2011

Control of flowering and storage organ formation in potato by FLOWERING LOCUS T

Cristina Navarro; José A. Abelenda; Eduard Cruz-Oró; Carlos A. Cuéllar; Shojiro Tamaki; Javier Silva; Ko Shimamoto; Salomé Prat

Seasonal fluctuations in day length regulate important aspects of plant development such as the flowering transition or, in potato (Solanum tuberosum), the formation of tubers. Day length is sensed by the leaves, which produce a mobile signal transported to the shoot apex or underground stems to induce a flowering transition or, respectively, a tuberization transition. Work in Arabidopsis, tomato and rice (Oryza sativa) identified the mobile FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) protein as a main component of the long-range ‘florigen’, or flowering hormone, signal. Here we show that expression of the Hd3a gene, the FT orthologue in rice, induces strict short-day potato types to tuberize in long days. Tuber induction is graft transmissible and the Hd3a–GFP protein is detected in the stolons of grafted plants, transport of the fusion protein thus correlating with tuber formation. We provide evidence showing that the potato floral and tuberization transitions are controlled by two different FT-like paralogues (StSP3D and StSP6A) that respond to independent environmental cues, and show that an autorelay mechanism involving CONSTANS modulates expression of the tuberization-control StSP6A gene.


The Plant Cell | 2005

Suppression of the Floral Activator Hd3a Is the Principal Cause of the Night Break Effect in Rice

Ryo Ishikawa; Shojiro Tamaki; Shuji Yokoi; Noritoshi Inagaki; Tomoko Shinomura; Makoto Takano; Ko Shimamoto

A short exposure to light in the middle of the night causes inhibition of flowering in short-day plants. This phenomenon is called night break (NB) and has been used extensively as a tool to study the photoperiodic control of flowering for many years. However, at the molecular level, very little is known about this phenomenon. In rice (Oryza sativa), 10 min of light exposure in the middle of a 14-h night caused a clear delay in flowering. A single NB strongly suppressed the mRNA of Hd3a, a homolog of Arabidopsis thaliana FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT), whereas the mRNAs of OsGI and Hd1 were not affected. The NB effect on Hd3a mRNA was maximal in the middle of the 14-h night. The phyB mutation abolished the NB effect on flowering and Hd3a mRNA, indicating that the NB effect was mediated by phytochrome B. Because expression of the other FT-like genes was very low and not appreciably affected by NB, our results strongly suggest that the suppression of Hd3a mRNA is the principal cause of the NB effect on flowering in rice.


Plant and Cell Physiology | 2009

The 14-3-3 Protein GF14c Acts as a Negative Regulator of Flowering in Rice by Interacting with the Florigen Hd3a

Yekti Asih Purwestri; Yuka Ogaki; Shojiro Tamaki; Hiroyuki Tsuji; Ko Shimamoto

Hd3a and FT proteins have recently been proposed to act as florigens in rice and Arabidopsis, respectively; however, the molecular mechanisms of their function remain to be determined. In this study, we identified GF14c (a 14-3-3 protein) as an Hd3a-interacting protein in a yeast two-hybrid screen. In vitro and in vivo experiments, using a combination of pull-down assays and bimolecular fluorescence complementation, confirmed the interaction between Hd3a and GF14c. Functional analysis using either GF14c overexpression or knockout transgenic rice plants indicated that this interaction plays a role in the regulation of flowering. GF14c-overexpressing plants exhibited a delay in flowering and the knockout mutants displayed early flowering relative to the wild-type plants under short-day conditions. These results suggest that GF14c acts as a negative regulator of flowering by interacting with Hd3a. Since the 14-3-3 protein has been shown to interact with FT protein in tomato and Arabidopsis, our results in rice provide important findings about FT signaling in plants.


Rice | 2008

Florigen and the Photoperiodic Control of Flowering in Rice

Hiroyuki Tsuji; Shojiro Tamaki; Reina Komiya; Ko Shimamoto

Flowering time is a key trait for geographical and seasonal adaptation of plants and is an important consideration for rice breeders. Recently identified genetic factors provide new insights into this complex trait. The list of genes involved in flowering and their functions tells us that the molecular basis of day-length measurement includes both of the evolution of unique factors and the regulatory adaptation of conserved factors in rice. This information helped identify rice florigen, a mobile flowering signal. Our current view of flowering time regulation incorporates the presence of complex layers of gene networks integrated with the synthesis of florigen protein and its subsequent transport and perception.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

FT-like proteins induce transposon silencing in the shoot apex during floral induction in rice

Shojiro Tamaki; Hiroyuki Tsuji; Ayana Matsumoto; Akiko Fujita; Zenpei Shimatani; Rie Terada; Tomoaki Sakamoto; Tetsuya Kurata; Ko Shimamoto

Significance FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) acts as a mobile floral activator that is synthesized in leaf and transported to shoot apex. A Rice FT-like protein, Heading date 3a (Hd3a), requires interaction with 14-3-3 proteins and transcription factor FD to induce flowering. We confirm that Hd3a and its interactors, as well as their transcriptional target, coexist in the shoot apex at the appropriate time during floral transition. RNA-sequencing analysis of shoot apices from wild-type and RNA-interference plants for FT-like genes showed that 58% of classified transposable elements are transcribed, and >200 are down-regulated in response to FT-like. Our results indicate a link between reproductive development and transposon behavior in the shoot apical meristem, supporting and extending recent evidence for such a link during gametophyte development. Floral induction is a crucial developmental step in higher plants. Florigen, a mobile floral activator that is synthesized in the leaf and transported to the shoot apex, was recently identified as a protein encoded by FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) and its orthologs; the rice florigen is Heading date 3a (Hd3a) protein. The 14-3-3 proteins mediate the interaction of Hd3a with the transcription factor OsFD1 to form a ternary structure called the florigen activation complex on the promoter of OsMADS15, a rice APETALA1 ortholog. However, crucial information, including the spatiotemporal overlap among FT-like proteins and the components of florigen activation complex and downstream genes, remains unclear. Here, we confirm that Hd3a coexists, in the same regions of the rice shoot apex, with the other components of the florigen activation complex and its transcriptional targets. Unexpectedly, however, RNA-sequencing analysis of shoot apex from wild-type and RNA-interference plants depleted of florigen activity revealed that 4,379 transposable elements (TEs; 58% of all classifiable rice TEs) were expressed collectively in the vegetative and reproductive shoot apex. Furthermore, in the reproductive shoot apex, 214 TEs were silenced by florigen. Our results suggest a link between floral induction and regulation of TEs.


Plant Journal | 2015

Hd3a promotes lateral branching in rice

Hiroyuki Tsuji; Chika Tachibana; Shojiro Tamaki; Ken-ichiro Taoka; Junko Kyozuka; Ko Shimamoto

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Ko Shimamoto

Nara Institute of Science and Technology

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Hiroyuki Tsuji

Nara Institute of Science and Technology

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Shuji Yokoi

Nara Institute of Science and Technology

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Reina Komiya

National Institute of Genetics

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Tomoaki Sakamoto

Nara Institute of Science and Technology

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Yuka Ogaki

Nara Institute of Science and Technology

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Akiko Fujita

Nara Institute of Science and Technology

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