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Dive into the research topics where Takako Yoshida is active.

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Featured researches published by Takako Yoshida.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2003

Complete nucleotide sequence of carbazole/dioxin-degrading plasmid pCAR1 in Pseudomonas resinovorans strain CA10 indicates its mosaicity and the presence of large catabolic transposon Tn4676.

Kana Maeda; Hideaki Nojiri; Masaki Shintani; Takako Yoshida; Hiroshi Habe; Toshio Omori

The car and ant operons originally isolated from Pseudomonas resinovorans strain CA10 contain the genes encoding the carbazole/dioxin-degrading enzymes and anthranilate 1,2-dioxygenase, respectively, and are located on the plasmid pCAR1. The entire nucleotide sequence of pCAR1 was determined to elucidate the mechanism by which the car operon may have been assembled and distributed in nature. pCAR1 is a 199,035-bp circular plasmid, and carries 190 open reading frames. Although the incompatibility group of pCAR1 is unclear, its potential origin for replication, OriP, and Rep and Par proteins appeared to be closely related to those of plasmid pL6.5 isolated from Pseudomonas fluorescens. The potential tellurite-resistance klaABC genes identified in the neighboring region of repA gene were also related to those in IncP plasmid originally identified from pseudomonads. On the other hand, we found genes encoding proteins that showed low but significant homology (20-45% identity) with Trh and Tra proteins from Enterobacteriaceae, which are potentially involved in conjugative transfer of plasmids or genomic island, suggesting that pCAR1 is also a conjugative plasmid. In pCAR1, we found tnpAcCST genes that encoded the proteins showing >70% length-wise identities with those are encoded by the toluene/xylene-degrading transposon Tn4651 of TOL plasmid pWW0. Both car and ant degradative operons were found within a 72.8-kb Tn4676 sequence defined by flanking tnpAcC and tnpST genes and bordered by a 46-bp inverted repeat (IR). Within Tn4676 and its flanking region, we found the remnants of numerous mobile genetic elements, such as the duplicated transposase genes that are highly homologous to tnpR of Tn4653 and the multiple candidates of IRs for Tn4676 and Tn4653-like element. We also found distinct regions with high and low G+C contents within Tn4676, which contain an ant operon and car operon, respectively. These results suggested that multiple step assembly could have taken place before the current structure of Tn4676 had been captured.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2002

Molecular detection and diversity of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria isolated from geographically diverse sites.

Jaka Widada; Hideaki Nojiri; Kano Kasuga; Takako Yoshida; Hiroshi Habe; Toshio Omori

Abstract. Nineteen polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH)-degrading bacteria were isolated from environmental samples in Kuwait, Indonesia, Thailand, and Japan by enrichment with either naphthalene or phenanthrene as a sole carbon source. Sequence analyses of the 16-S rRNA gene indicated that at least seven genera (Ralstonia, Sphingomonas, Burkholderia, Pseudomonas, Comamonas, Flavobacterium, and Bacillus) were present in this collection. Determination of the ability of the isolates to use PAH and its presumed catabolic intermediates suggests that the isolates showed multiple phenotypes in terms of utilization and degradation pathways. The large subunit of the terminal oxygenase gene (phnAc) from Burkholderia sp. strain RP007 hybridized to 32% (6/19) of the isolates, whilst gene probing using the large subunit of terminal oxygenase gene (pahAc) from Pseudomonas putida strain OUS82 revealed no pahAc-like genes amongst the isolates. Using three degenerated primer sets (pPAH-F/NR700, AJ025/26, and RieskeF/R), targeting a conserved region with the genes encoding the large subunit of terminal oxygenase successfully amplified material from 6 additional PAH-degrading isolates. Sequence analyses showed that the large subunit of terminal oxygenase in 4 isolates was highly homologous to the large subunit of naphthalene dioxygenase gene from Ralstonia sp. strain U2. However, we could not obtain any information on the oxygenase system involved in the naphthalene and/or phenathrene degradation by 7 other strains. These results suggest that PAH-degrading bacteria are diverse, and that there are still many unidentified PAH-degrading bacteria.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2001

Degradation of chlorinated dibenzofurans and dibenzo-p-dioxins by two types of bacteria having angular dioxygenases with different features.

Hiroshi Habe; Jin-Sung Chung; Jong-Hoon Lee; Kano Kasuga; Takako Yoshida; Hideaki Nojiri; Toshio Omori

ABSTRACT Two kinds of bacteria having different-structured angular dioxygenases—a dibenzofuran (DF)-utilizing bacterium,Terrabacter sp. strain DBF63, and a carbazole (CAR)-utilizing bacterium, Pseudomonas sp. strain CA10—were investigated for their ability to degrade some chlorinated dibenzofurans (CDFs) and chlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins (CDDs) (or, together, CDF/Ds) using either wild-type strains or recombinant Escherichia coli strains. First, it was shown that CAR 1,9a-dioxygenase (CARDO) catalyzed angular dioxygenation of all mono- to triCDF/Ds investigated in this study, but DF 4,4a-dioxygenase (DFDO) did not degrade 2,7-diCDD. Secondly, degradation of CDF/Ds by the sets of three enzymes (angular dioxygenase, extradiol dioxygenase, and meta-cleavage compound hydrolase) was examined, showing that these enzymes in both strains were able to convert 2-CDF to 5-chlorosalicylic acid but not other tested substrates to the corresponding chlorosalicylic acid (CSA) or chlorocatechol (CC). Finally, we tested the potential of both wild-type strains for cooxidation of CDF/Ds and demonstrated that both strains degraded 2-CDF, 2-CDD, and 2,3-diCDD to the corresponding CSA and CC. We investigated the sites for the attack of angular dioxygenases in each CDF/D congener, suggesting the possibility that the angular dioxygenation of 2-CDF, 2-CDD, 2,3-diCDD, and 1,2,3-triCDD (10 ppm each) by both DFDO and CARDO occurred mainly on the nonsubstituted aromatic nuclei.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2003

Identification of three novel salicylate 1-hydroxylases involved in the phenanthrene degradation of Sphingobium sp. strain P2

Onruthai Pinyakong; Hiroshi Habe; Takako Yoshida; Hideaki Nojiri; Toshio Omori

Five sets of large and small subunits of terminal oxygenase (ahdA1[a-e] and ahdA2[a-e]) and a single gene set encoding ferredoxin (ahdA3) and ferredoxin reductase (ahdA4) were found to be scattered through 15.8- and 14-kb DNA fragments of phenanthrene-degrading Sphingobium sp. strain P2. RT-PCR analysis indicated the inducible and specific expression of ahdA3, ahdA4, and three sets of genes for terminal oxygenase (ahdA1[c-e] and ahdA2[c-e]) in this strain grown on phenanthrene. The biotransformation experiments with resting cells of Escherichia coli JM109 harboring recombinant ahd genes revealed that AhdA2cA1c, AhdA1dA2d, and AhdA1eA2e can all function as a salicylate 1-hydroxylase which converts salicylate, a metabolic intermediate of phenanthrene, to catechol in cooperation with the electron transport proteins AhdA3A4. The first two oxygenases exhibited a broad range of substrate specificities such that they also catalyzed the hydroxylation of methyl- and chloro-substituted salicylates to produce their corresponding substituted catechols.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2002

Purification and Characterization of Carbazole 1,9a-Dioxygenase, a Three-Component Dioxygenase System of Pseudomonas resinovorans Strain CA10

Jeong-Won Nam; Hideaki Nojiri; Haruko Noguchi; Hiromasa Uchimura; Takako Yoshida; Hiroshi Habe; Hisakazu Yamane; Toshio Omori

ABSTRACT The carbazole 1,9a-dioxygenase (CARDO) system of Pseudomonas resinovorans strain CA10 consists of terminal oxygenase (CarAa), ferredoxin (CarAc), and ferredoxin reductase (CarAd). Each component of CARDO was expressed in Escherichia coli strain BL21(DE3) as a native form (CarAa) or a His-tagged form (CarAc and CarAd) and was purified to apparent homogeneity. CarAa was found to be trimeric and to have one Rieske type [2Fe-2S] cluster and one mononuclear iron center in each monomer. Both His-tagged proteins were found to be monomeric and to contain the prosthetic groups predicted from the deduced amino acid sequence (His-tagged CarAd, one FAD and one [2Fe-2S] cluster per monomer protein; His-tagged CarAc, one Rieske type [2Fe-2S] cluster per monomer protein). Both NADH and NADPH were effective as electron donors for His-tagged CarAd. However, since the kcat/Km for NADH is 22.3-fold higher than that for NADPH in the 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol reductase assay, NADH was supposed to be the physiological electron donor of CarAd. In the presence of NADH, His-tagged CarAc was reduced by His-tagged CarAd. Similarly, CarAa was reduced by His-tagged CarAc, His-tagged CarAd, and NADH. The three purified proteins could reconstitute the CARDO activity in vitro. In the reconstituted CARDO system, His-tagged CarAc seemed to be indispensable for electron transport, while His-tagged CarAd could be replaced by some unrelated reductases.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2003

Characterization and identification of genes essential for dimethyl sulfide utilization in Pseudomonas putida strain DS1

Takayuki Endoh; Kano Kasuga; M. Horinouchi; Takako Yoshida; Hiroshi Habe; Hideaki Nojiri; Toshio Omori

Microbial dimethyl sulfide (DMS) conversion is thought to be involved in the global sulfur cycle. We isolated Pseudomonas putida strain DS1 from soil as a bacterium utilizing DMS as a sole sulfur source, and tried to elucidate the DMS conversion mechanism of strain DS1 at biochemical and genetic level. Strain DS1 oxidized DMS to dimethyl sulfone (DMSO2) via dimethyl sulfoxide, whereas the oxidation was repressed in the presence of sulfate, suggesting that a sulfate starvation response is involved in DMS utilization by strain DS1. Two of the five DMS-utilization-defective mutants isolated by transposon5 (Tn5) mutagenesis had a Tn5 insertion in the ssuEADCBF operon, which has been reported to encode a two-component monooxygenase system (SsuED), an ABC-type transporter (SsuABC), and a small protein (SsuF), and also to play a key role in utilization of sulfonates and sulfate esters in another bacterium, P. putida strain S-313. Disruption of ssuD and SsuD enzymatic activity demonstrated that methanesulfonate is a metabolic intermediate of DMS and desulfonated by SsuD. Disruption of ssuC or ssuF also led to a DMS-utilization-defective phenotype. Another two mutants had a defect in a gene homologous to pa2354 from P. aeruginosa PAO1, which encodes a putative transcriptional regulator, while the remaining mutant had a defect in cysM encoding O-acetylserine (thiol)-lyase B.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2003

Phthalate catabolic gene cluster is linked to the angular dioxygenase gene in Terrabacter sp. strain DBF63.

Hiroshi Habe; Masatoshi Miyakoshi; Jin-Sung Chung; Kano Kasuga; Takako Yoshida; Hideaki Nojiri; Toshio Omori

Abstract. Phthalate is a metabolic intermediate of the pathway of fluorene (FN) degradation via angular dioxygenation. A gene cluster responsible for the conversion of phthalate to protocatechuate was cloned from the dibenzofuran (DF)- and FN-degrading bacterium Terrabacter sp. strain DBF63 and sequenced. The genes encoding seven catabolic enzymes, oxygenase large subunit of phthalate 3,4-dioxygenase (phtA1), oxygenase small subunit of phthalate 3,4-dioxygenase (phtA2), cis-3,4-dihydroxy-3,4-dihydrophthalate dehydrogenase (phtB), [3Fe-4S] or [4Fe-4S] type of ferredoxin (phtA3), ferredoxin reductase (phtA4), 3,4-dihydroxyphthalate decarboxylase (phtC) and putative regulatory protein (phtR), were found in the upstream region of the angular dioxygenase gene (dbfA1A2), encoded in this order. Escherichia coli carrying phtA1A2BA3A4 genes converted phthalate to 3,4-dihydroxyphthalate, and the 3,4-dihydroxyphthalate decarboxylase activity by E. coli cells carrying phtC was finally detected with the introduction of a Shine-Dalgarno sequence in the upstream region of its initiation codon. Homology analysis on the upstream region of the pht gene cluster revealed that there was an insertion sequence (IS) (ISTesp2; ORF14 and its flanking region), part of which was almost 100% identical to the orf1 and its flanking region adjacent to the extradiol dioxygenase gene (bphC1) involved in the DF degradation of Terrabacter sp. strain DPO360 [Schmid et al. (1997) J Bacteriol 179:53–62]. This suggests that ISTesp2 plays a role in the metabolism of aromatic compounds in Terrabacter sp. strains DBF63 and DPO360.


Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry | 2004

Divergent Structures of Carbazole Degradative car Operons Isolated from Gram-negative Bacteria

Kengo Inoue; Jaka Widada; Seiichiro Nakai; Takayuki Endoh; Masaaki Urata; Yuji Ashikawa; Masaki Shintani; Yuko Saiki; Takako Yoshida; Hiroshi Habe; Toshio Omori; Hideaki Nojiri

Southern hybridization analysis of the genomes from the newly-isolated 10 carbazole (CAR)-utilizing bacteria revealed that 8 of the isolates carried gene clusters homologous to the CAR-catabolic car operon of Pseudomonas resinovorans strain CA10. Sequencing analysis showed that two car operons and the neighboring regions of Pseudomonas sp. strain K23 are nearly identical to that of strain CA10. In contrast to strains CA10 and K23, carEF genes did not exist downstream of the car gene cluster of Janthinobacterium sp. strain J3. In the car gene clusters, strains CA10, K23 and J3 have Rieske-type ferredoxin as a component of carbazole dioxygenase, although Sphingomonas sp. strain KA1 possesses a putidaredoxin-type ferredoxin. We confirmed that this putidaredoxin-type ferredoxin CarAc can function as an electron mediator to CarAa of strain KA1. In the upstream regions of the carJ3 and carKA1 gene clusters, ORFs whose deduced amino acid sequences showed homology to GntR-family transcriptional regulators were identified.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2005

Large plasmid pCAR2 and class II transposon Tn4676 are functional mobile genetic elements to distribute the carbazole/dioxin-degradative car gene cluster in different bacteria

Masaki Shintani; Takako Yoshida; Hiroshi Habe; Toshio Omori; Hideaki Nojiri

The carbazole-catabolic plasmid pCAR1 isolated from Pseudomonas resinovorans strain CA10 was sequenced in its entirety; and it was found that pCAR1 carries the class II transposon Tn4676 containing carbazole-degradative genes. In this study, a new plasmid designated pCAR2 was isolated from P. putida strain HS01 that was a transconjugant from mating between the carbazole-degrader Pseudomonas sp. strain K23 and P. putida strain DS1. Southern hybridization and nucleotide sequence analysis of pCAR1 and pCAR2 revealed that the whole backbone structure was very similar in each. Plasmid pCAR2 was self-transmissible, because it was transferred from strain HS01 to P. fluorescens strain IAM12022 at the frequency of 2×10−7 per recipient cell. After the serial transfer of strain HS01 on rich medium, we detected the transposition of Tn4676 from pCAR2 to the HS01 chromosome. The chromosome-located copy of Tn4676 was flanked by a 6-bp target duplication, 5′-AACATC-3′. These results experimentally demonstrated the transferability of pCAR2 and the functionality of Tn4676 on pCAR2. It was clearly shown that plasmid pCAR2 and transposon Tn4676 are active mobile genetic elements that can mediate the horizontal transfer of genes for the catabolism of carbazole.


Proteins | 2005

Crystal structure of the ferredoxin component of carbazole 1,9a‐dioxygenase of Pseudomonas resinovorans strain CA10, a novel Rieske non‐heme iron oxygenase system

Jeong Won Nam; Haruko Noguchi; Zui Fujimoto; Hiroshi Mizuno; Yuji Ashikawa; Mitsuru Abo; Shinya Fushinobu; Nobuyuki Kobashi; Takayoshi Wakagi; Kenichi Iwata; Takako Yoshida; Hiroshi Habe; Hisakazu Yamane; Toshio Omori; Hideaki Nojiri

The carbazole 1,9a‐dioxygenase (CARDO) system of Pseudomonas resinovorans strain CA10 catalyzes the dioxygenation of carbazole; the 9aC carbon bonds to a nitrogen atom and its adjacent 1C carbon as the initial reaction in the mineralization pathway. The CARDO system is composed of ferredoxin reductase (CarAd), ferredoxin (CarAc), and terminal oxygenase (CarAa). CarAc acts as a mediator in the electron transfer from CarAd to CarAa. To understand the structural basis of the protein–protein interactions during electron transport in the CARDO system, the crystal structure of CarAc was determined at 1.9 Å resolution by molecular replacement using the structure of BphF, the biphenyl 2,3‐dioxygenase ferredoxin from Burkholderia cepacia strain LB400 as a search model. CarAc is composed of three β‐sheets, and the structure can be divided into two domains, a cluster‐binding domain and a basal domain. The Rieske [2Fe–2S] cluster is located at the tip of the cluster‐binding domain, where it is exposed to solvent. While the overall folding of CarAc and BphF is strongly conserved, the properties of their surfaces are very different from each other. The structure of the cluster‐binding domain of CarAc is more compact and protruding than that of BphF, and the distribution of electric charge on its molecular surface is very different. Such differences are thought to explain why these ferredoxins can act as electron mediators in respective electron transport chains composed of different‐featured components. Proteins 2005.

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Kano Kasuga

Akita Prefectural University

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