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Featured researches published by Takashi Hamaji.


Science | 2010

Evolution of an Expanded Sex-Determining Locus in Volvox

Patrick J. Ferris; Bradley J.S.C. Olson; Peter L. De Hoff; Stephen Douglass; David Casero; Simon Prochnik; Sa Geng; Rhitu Rai; Jane Grimwood; Jeremy Schmutz; Ichiro Nishii; Takashi Hamaji; Hisayoshi Nozaki; Matteo Pellegrini; James G. Umen

Revealing Volvox Female and male gametes of the green alga, Volvox, significantly differ in size. Those of Chlamydomonas, another green algae from a lineage that separated from Volvox some 200 million years ago, are the same size. We know sex in Chlamydomonas is governed by a sex-determining locus called MT. In a detailed comparison of the MT loci of Volvox and Chlamydomonas, Ferris et al. (p. 351) found that although MT has retained some similarity in gene order, its composition has greatly changed between the two species. In Volvox, new genes have been coopted into this locus and show sex-specific expression. Mating loci among green algae show conserved gene order, but also have many unique features that may explain gamete size differences. Although dimorphic sexes have evolved repeatedly in multicellular eukaryotes, their origins are unknown. The mating locus (MT) of the sexually dimorphic multicellular green alga Volvox carteri specifies the production of eggs and sperm and has undergone a remarkable expansion and divergence relative to MT from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, which is a closely related unicellular species that has equal-sized gametes. Transcriptome analysis revealed a rewired gametic expression program for Volvox MT genes relative to Chlamydomonas and identified multiple gender-specific and sex-regulated transcripts. The retinoblastoma tumor suppressor homolog MAT3 is a Volvox MT gene that displays sexually regulated alternative splicing and evidence of gender-specific selection, both of which are indicative of cooption into the sexual cycle. Thus, sex-determining loci affect the evolution of both sex-related and non–sex-related genes.


Nature Communications | 2016

The Gonium pectorale genome demonstrates co-option of cell cycle regulation during the evolution of multicellularity

Erik R. Hanschen; Tara N. Marriage; Patrick J. Ferris; Takashi Hamaji; Atsushi Toyoda; Asao Fujiyama; Rafik Neme; Hideki Noguchi; Yohei Minakuchi; Masahiro Suzuki; Hiroko Kawai-Toyooka; David Roy Smith; Halle Sparks; Jaden Anderson; Robert Bakarić; Victor Luria; Amir Karger; Marc W. Kirschner; Pierre M. Durand; Richard E. Michod; Hisayoshi Nozaki; Bradley J. S. C. Olson

The transition to multicellularity has occurred numerous times in all domains of life, yet its initial steps are poorly understood. The volvocine green algae are a tractable system for understanding the genetic basis of multicellularity including the initial formation of cooperative cell groups. Here we report the genome sequence of the undifferentiated colonial alga, Gonium pectorale, where group formation evolved by co-option of the retinoblastoma cell cycle regulatory pathway. Significantly, expression of the Gonium retinoblastoma cell cycle regulator in unicellular Chlamydomonas causes it to become colonial. The presence of these changes in undifferentiated Gonium indicates extensive group-level adaptation during the initial step in the evolution of multicellularity. These results emphasize an early and formative step in the evolution of multicellularity, the evolution of cell cycle regulation, one that may shed light on the evolutionary history of other multicellular innovations and evolutionary transitions.


Genetics | 2008

Identification of the Minus-Dominance Gene Ortholog in the Mating-Type Locus of Gonium pectorale

Takashi Hamaji; Patrick J. Ferris; Annette W. Coleman; Sabine Waffenschmidt; Fumio Takahashi; Ichiro Nishii; Hisayoshi Nozaki

The evolution of anisogamy/oogamy in the colonial Volvocales might have occurred in an ancestral isogamous colonial organism like Gonium pectorale. The unicellular, close relative Chlamydomonas reinhardtii has a mating-type (MT) locus harboring several mating-type-specific genes, including one involved in mating-type determination and another involved in the function of the tubular mating structure in only one of the two isogametes. In this study, as the first step in identifying the G. pectorale MT locus, we isolated from G. pectorale the ortholog of the C. reinhardtii mating-type-determining minus-dominance (CrMID) gene, which is localized only in the MT− locus. 3′- and 5′-RACE RT–PCR using degenerate primers identified a CrMID-orthologous 164-amino-acid coding gene (GpMID) containing a leucine-zipper RWP-RK domain near the C-terminal, as is the case with CrMID. Genomic Southern blot analysis showed that GpMID was coded only in the minus strain of G. pectorale. RT–PCR revealed that GpMID expression increased during nitrogen starvation. Analysis of F1 progeny suggested that GpMID and isopropylmalate dehydratase LEU1S are tightly linked, suggesting that they are harbored in a chromosomal region under recombinational suppression that is comparable to the C. reinhardtii MT locus. However, two other genes present in the C. reinhardtii MT locus are not linked to the G. pectorale LEU1S/MID, suggesting that the gene content of the volvocalean MT loci is not static over time. Inheritance of chloroplast and mitochondria genomes in G. pectorale is uniparental from the plus and minus parents, respectively, as is also the case in C. reinhardtii.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2013

Organelle Genome Complexity Scales Positively with Organism Size in Volvocine Green Algae

David Roy Smith; Takashi Hamaji; Bradley J. S. C. Olson; Pierre M. Durand; Patrick J. Ferris; Richard E. Michod; Jonathan Featherston; Hisayoshi Nozaki; Patrick J. Keeling

It has been argued that for certain lineages, noncoding DNA expansion is a consequence of the increased random genetic drift associated with long-term escalations in organism size. But a lack of data has prevented the investigation of this hypothesis in most plastid-bearing protists. Here, using newly sequenced mitochondrial and plastid genomes, we explore the relationship between organelle DNA noncoding content and organism size within volvocine green algae. By looking at unicellular, colonial, and differentiated multicellular algae, we show that organelle DNA complexity scales positively with species size and cell number across the volvocine lineage. Moreover, silent-site genetic diversity data suggest that the volvocine species with the largest cell numbers and most bloated organelle genomes have the smallest effective population sizes. Together, these findings support the view that nonadaptive processes, like random genetic drift, promote the expansion of noncoding regions in organelle genomes.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Molecular Identification of Rickettsial Endosymbionts in the Non-Phagotrophic Volvocalean Green Algae

Kaoru Kawafune; Yuichi Hongoh; Takashi Hamaji; Hisayoshi Nozaki

Background The order Rickettsiales comprises Gram-negative obligate intracellular bacteria (also called rickettsias) that are mainly associated with arthropod hosts. This group is medically important because it contains human-pathogenic species that cause dangerous diseases. Until now, there has been no report of non-phagotrophic photosynthetic eukaryotes, such as green plants, harboring rickettsias. Methodology/Principal Findings We examined the bacterial endosymbionts of two freshwater volvocalean green algae: unicellular Carteria cerasiformis and colonial Pleodorina japonica. Epifluorescence microscopy using 4′-6-deamidino-2-phenylindole staining revealed the presence of endosymbionts in all C. cerasiformis NIES-425 cells, and demonstrated a positive correlation between host cell size and the number of endosymbionts. Strains both containing and lacking endosymbionts of C. cerasiformis (NIES-425 and NIES-424) showed a >10-fold increase in cell number and typical sigmoid growth curves over 192 h. A phylogenetic analysis of 16 S ribosomal (r)RNA gene sequences from the endosymbionts of C. cerasiformis and P. japonica demonstrated that they formed a robust clade (hydra group) with endosymbionts of various non-arthropod hosts within the family Rickettsiaceae. There were significantly fewer differences in the 16 S rRNA sequences of the rickettsiacean endosymbionts between C. cerasiformis and P. japonica than in the chloroplast 16 S rRNA or 18 S rRNA of the host volvocalean cells. Fluorescence in situ hybridization demonstrated the existence of the rickettsiacean endosymbionts in the cytoplasm of two volvocalean species. Conclusions/Significance The rickettsiacean endosymbionts are likely not harmful to their volvocalean hosts and may have been recently transmitted from other non-arthropod organisms. Because rickettsias are the closest relatives of mitochondria, incipient stages of mitochondrial endosymbiosis may be deduced using both strains with and without C. cerasiformis endosymbionts.


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2013

The Evolution of Male-Female Sexual Dimorphism Predates the Gender-Based Divergence of the Mating Locus Gene MAT3/RB

Rintaro Hiraide; Hiroko Kawai-Toyooka; Takashi Hamaji; Ryo Matsuzaki; Kaoru Kawafune; Jun Abe; Hiroyuki Sekimoto; James G. Umen; Hisayoshi Nozaki

The molecular bases for the evolution of male-female sexual dimorphism are possible to study in volvocine algae because they encompass the entire range of reproductive morphologies from isogamy to oogamy. In 1978, Charlesworth suggested the model of a gamete size gene becoming linked to the sex-determining or mating type locus (MT) as a mechanism for the evolution of anisogamy. Here, we carried out the first comprehensive study of a candidate MT-linked oogamy gene, MAT3/RB, across the volvocine lineage. We found that evolution of anisogamy/oogamy predates the extremely high male-female divergence of MAT3 that characterizes the Volvox carteri lineage. These data demonstrate very little sex-linked sequence divergence of MAT3 between the two sexes in other volvocine groups, though linkage between MAT3 and the mating locus appears to be conserved. These data implicate genetic determinants other than or in addition to MAT3 in the evolution of anisogamy in volvocine algae.


Phycologia | 2010

Morphology, molecular phylogeny and taxonomy of Gonium maiaprilis sp. nov. (Goniaceae, Chlorophyta) from Japan

Mahoko Hayama; Takashi Nakada; Takashi Hamaji; Hisayoshi Nozaki

Hayama M., Nakada T., Hamaji T. and Nozaki H. 2010. Morphology, molecular phylogeny and taxonomy of Gonium maiaprilis sp. nov. (Goniaceae, Chlorophyta) from Japan. Phycologia 49: 221–234. DOI: 10.2216/09-56.1 The morphology, molecular phylogeny and taxonomy of Gonium maiaprilis Hayama et al. sp. nov. (Goniaceae, Chlorophyta) were studied using clonal cultured material originating from Fukuoka Prefecture, Japan. This species is similar to G. pectorale O. F. Müller and G. viridistellatum M. Watanabe in having one to three stable pyrenoids in the chloroplasts of eight- or 16-celled vegetative colonies. However, it is distinguished from G. pectorale and G. viridistellatum by the cell arrangement of the eight-celled colonies and from G. pectorale by aplanozygote morphology. Sexual reproduction of G. maiaprilis is heterothallic and isogamous, and the germinating zygote gives rise to a four-cell germ colony. Phylogenetic analyses based on the plastid large subunit of Rubisco genes and sequences for the internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of nuclear ribosomal DNA (rDNA) (ITS-1, 5.8S rDNA and ITS-2) suggest that G. maiaprilis is separate from other species of Gonium.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Mitochondrial and plastid genomes of the colonial green alga Gonium pectorale give insights into the origins of organelle DNA architecture within the Volvocales

Takashi Hamaji; David Roy Smith; Hideki Noguchi; Atsushi Toyoda; Masahiro Suzuki; Hiroko Kawai-Toyooka; Asao Fujiyama; Ichiro Nishii; Tara N. Marriage; Bradley J. S. C. Olson; Hisayoshi Nozaki

Volvocalean green algae have among the most diverse mitochondrial and plastid DNAs (mtDNAs and ptDNAs) from the eukaryotic domain. However, nearly all of the organelle genome data from this group are restricted to unicellular species, like Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, and presently only one multicellular species, the ∼4,000-celled Volvox carteri, has had its organelle DNAs sequenced. The V. carteri organelle genomes are repeat rich, and the ptDNA is the largest plastome ever sequenced. Here, we present the complete mtDNA and ptDNA of the colonial volvocalean Gonium pectorale, which is comprised of ∼16 cells and occupies a phylogenetic position closer to that of V. carteri than C. reinhardtii within the volvocine line. The mtDNA and ptDNA of G. pectorale are circular-mapping AT-rich molecules with respective lengths and coding densities of 16 and 222.6 kilobases and 73 and 44%. They share some features with the organelle DNAs of V. carteri, including palindromic repeats within the plastid compartment, but show more similarities with those of C. reinhardtii, such as a compact mtDNA architecture and relatively low organelle DNA intron contents. Overall, the G. pectorale organelle genomes raise several interesting questions about the origin of linear mitochondrial chromosomes within the Volvocales and the relationship between multicellularity and organelle genome expansion.


Plant Physiology | 2015

Dynamic Changes in the Transcriptome and Methylome of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii throughout Its Life Cycle.

David Adrian Lopez; Takashi Hamaji; Janette Kropat; Peter L. De Hoff; Marco Morselli; Liudmilla Rubbi; Sorel Fitz-Gibbon; Sean D. Gallaher; Sabeeha S. Merchant; James G. Umen; Matteo Pellegrini

Secretory and alga-specific genes are induced during gamete and zygote development in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, concurrent with a dramatic increase in chloroplast cytosine methylation. The green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii undergoes gametogenesis and mating upon nitrogen starvation. While the steps involved in its sexual reproductive cycle have been extensively characterized, the genome-wide transcriptional and epigenetic changes underlying different life cycle stages have yet to be fully described. Here, we performed transcriptome and methylome sequencing to quantify expression and DNA methylation from vegetative and gametic cells of each mating type and from zygotes. We identified 361 gametic genes with mating type-specific expression patterns and 627 genes that are specifically induced in zygotes; furthermore, these sex-related gene sets were enriched for secretory pathway and alga-specific genes. We also examined the C. reinhardtii nuclear methylation map with base-level resolution at different life cycle stages. Despite having low global levels of nuclear methylation, we detected 23 hypermethylated loci in gene-poor, repeat-rich regions. We observed mating type-specific differences in chloroplast DNA methylation levels in plus versus minus mating type gametes followed by chloroplast DNA hypermethylation in zygotes. Lastly, we examined the expression of candidate DNA methyltransferases and found three, DMT1a, DMT1b, and DMT4, that are differentially expressed during the life cycle and are candidate DNA methylases. The expression and methylation data we present provide insight into cell type-specific transcriptional and epigenetic programs during key stages of the C. reinhardtii life cycle.


Eukaryotic Cell | 2014

Sex-Specific Posttranslational Regulation of the Gamete Fusogen GCS1 in the Isogamous Volvocine Alga Gonium pectorale

Hiroko Kawai-Toyooka; Toshiyuki Mori; Takashi Hamaji; Masahiro Suzuki; Bradley J. S. C. Olson; Tomohiro Uemura; Takashi Ueda; Akihiko Nakano; Atsushi Toyoda; Asao Fujiyama; Hisayoshi Nozaki

ABSTRACT Male and female, generally defined based on differences in gamete size and motility, likely have multiple independent origins, appearing to have evolved from isogamous organisms in various eukaryotic lineages. Recent studies of the gamete fusogen GCS1/HAP2 indicate that this protein is deeply conserved across eukaryotes, and its exclusive and/or functional expression generally resides in males or in male homologues. However, little is known regarding the conserved or primitive molecular traits of males and females within eukaryotes. Here, using morphologically indistinguishable isogametes of the colonial volvocine Gonium pectorale, we demonstrated that GCS1 is differently regulated between the sexes. G. pectorale GCS1 molecules in one sex (homologous to male) are transported from the gamete cytoplasm to the protruded fusion site, whereas those of the other sex (females) are quickly degraded within the cytoplasm upon gamete activation. This molecular trait difference might be conserved across various eukaryotic lineages and may represent male and female prototypes originating from a common eukaryotic ancestor.

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Asao Fujiyama

National Institute of Genetics

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Atsushi Toyoda

National Institute of Genetics

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James G. Umen

Donald Danforth Plant Science Center

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Hideki Noguchi

National Institute of Genetics

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