Takahisa Nakai
Kaneka Corporation
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Takahisa Nakai.
Computational Biology and Chemistry | 1992
Kenji Morikami; Takahisa Nakai; Akinori Kidera; Minoru Saito; Haruki Nakamura
Abstract A highly vectorized program for the molecular mechanics computations of biopolymers, PRESTO (PRotein Engineering SimulaTOr) is presented. PRESTO was designed to provide high performance on many types of vector processors. A new algorithm called the localized constraints algorithm was developed in order to vectorize efficiently a constraint molecular dynamics simulation. In this algorithm holonomic constraints were limited to the bonds involving hydrogen atoms. Sufficient speedup was attained by vectorization on three types of supercomputers, the FACOM VP400E, the Convex C220 and the Stardent TITAN3000.
Structure | 2000
Takahisa Nakai; Tomokazu Hasegawa; Eiki Yamashita; Masaki Yamamoto; Takashi Kumasaka; Tatzuo Ueki; Hirokazu Nanba; Yasuhiro Ikenaka; Satomi Takahashi; Mamoru Sato; Tomitake Tsukihara
BACKGROUND N-carbamyl-D-amino acid amidohydrolase (DCase) catalyzes the hydrolysis of N-carbamyl-D-amino acids to the corresponding D-amino acids, which are useful intermediates in the preparation of beta-lactam antibiotics. To understand the catalytic mechanism of N-carbamyl-D-amino acid hydrolysis, the substrate specificity and thermostability of the enzyme, we have determined the structure of DCase from Agrobacterium sp. strain KNK712. RESULTS The crystal structure of DCase has been determined to 1.7 A resolution. The enzyme forms a homotetramer and each monomer consists of a variant of the alpha + beta fold. The topology of the enzyme comprises a sandwich of parallel beta sheets surrounded by two layers of alpha helices, this topology has not been observed in other amidohydrolases such as the N-terminal nucleophile (Ntn) hydrolases. CONCLUSIONS The catalytic center could be identified and consists of Glu46, Lys126 and Cys171. Cys171 was found to be the catalytic nucleophile, and its nucleophilic character appeared to be increased through general-base activation by Glu46. DCase shows only weak sequence similarity with a family of amidohydrolases, including beta-alanine synthase, aliphatic amidases and nitrilases, but might share highly conserved residues in a novel framework, which could provide a possible explanation for the catalytic mechanism for this family of enzymes.
Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 1993
Takahisa Nakai; Akinori Kidera; Haruki Nakamura
SummaryA protocol for distance geometry calculation is shown to have excellent sampling properties in the determination of three-dimensional structures of proteins from nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) data. This protocol uses a simulated annealing optimization employing mass-weighted molecular dynamics in four-dimensional space (Havel, T.F. (1991) Prog. Biophys. Mol. Biol., 56, 43–78). It attains an extremely large radius of convergence, allowing a random coil conformation to be used as the initial estimate for the succeeding optimization process. Computations are performed with four systems of simulated distance data as tests of the protocol, using an unconstrained l-alanine 30mer and three different types of proteins, bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor, the α-amylase inhibitor Tendamistat, and the N-terminal domain of the 434-repressor. The test of the unconstrained polypeptide confirms that the sampled conformational space is that of the statistical random coil. In the larger and more complicated systems of the three proteins, the protocol gives complete convergence of the optimization without any trace of initial structure dependence. As a result of an exhaustive conformational sampling by the protocol, the intrinsic nature of the structures generated with distance restraints derived from NMR data has been revealed. When the sampled structures are compared with the corresponding X-ray structures, we find that the averages of the sampled structures always show a certain pattern of discrepancy from the X-ray structure. This discrepancy is due to the short distance nature of the distance restraints, and correlates with the characteristic shape of the protein molecule.
Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2005
Souichi Morikawa; Takahisa Nakai; Yoshihiko Yasohara; Hirokazu Nanba; Noriyuki Kizaki; Junzo Hasegawa
A wild type NADPH-dependent carbonyl reductase from Candida magnoliae (reductase S1) has been found not to utilize NADH as a coenzyme. A mutation to exchange the coenzyme specificity in reductase S1 has been designed by computer-aided methods, including three-dimensional structure modeling and in silico screening of enzyme mutants. Site-directed mutagenesis has been used to introduce systematic substitutions of seven or eight amino acid residues onto the adenosine-binding pocket of the enzyme according to rational computational design. The resulting S1 mutants show NADH-dependency and have lost their ability to utilize NADPH as a coenzyme, but retain those catalytic activities. Kinetic parameter V max and K m values of those mutants for NADH are 1/3- to 1/10-fold those of the wild type enzyme for NADPH. As a model system for industrial production of optically active alcohols, the S1 mutants can be applied to an asymmetric reduction of ketones, cooperating with a coenzyme-regeneration system that uses an NAD-dependent formate dehydrogenase.
Proteins | 1993
Shin Saitoh; Takahisa Nakai; Ken Nishikawa
FEBS Journal | 1992
Shigenobu Kimura; Yasushi Oda; Takahisa Nakai; Katsuo Katayanagi; Eiichi Kitakuni; Chieko Nakai; Haruki Nakamura; Morio Ikehara; Shigenori Kanaya
Archive | 1997
Takamune Yasuda; Osamu Odawara; Eiji Ogino; Michio Nomura; Takahisa Nakai; Takashi Asahi; Nobutaka Tani
Archive | 2002
Takahisa Nakai; Souichi Morikawa; Noriyuki Kizaki; Yoshihiko Yasohara
Archive | 2002
Takahisa Nakai; Souichi Morikawa; Noriyuki Kizaki; Yoshihiko Yasohara
Journal of Biochemistry | 2002
Akio Sugihara; Yuji Shimada; Shigeo Sugihara; Takahisa Nakai; Tomisaburo Kakuno; Toshihiro Nagao; Yomi Watanabe; Yoshio Tominaga