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Featured researches published by Takeshi Izawa.


Science | 2006

An SNP Caused Loss of Seed Shattering During Rice Domestication

Saeko Konishi; Takeshi Izawa; Shaoyang Lin; Kaworu Ebana; Yoshimichi Fukuta; Takuji Sasaki; Masahiro Yano

Loss of seed shattering was a key event in the domestication of major cereals. We revealed that the qSH1 gene, a major quantitative trait locus of seed shattering in rice, encodes a BEL1-type homeobox gene and demonstrated that a single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in the 5′ regulatory region of the qSH1 gene caused loss of seed shattering owing to the absence of abscission layer formation. Haplotype analysis and association analysis in various rice collections revealed that the SNP was highly associated with shattering among japonica subspecies of rice, implying that it was a target of artificial selection during rice domestication.


The Plant Cell | 2004

Loss-of-Function Mutations of the Rice GAMYB Gene Impair α-Amylase Expression in Aleurone and Flower Development

Miyuki Kaneko; Yoshiaki Inukai; Miyako Ueguchi-Tanaka; Hironori Itoh; Takeshi Izawa; Yuhko Kobayashi; Tsukaho Hattori; Akio Miyao; Hirohiko Hirochika; Motoyuki Ashikari; Makoto Matsuoka

GAMYB was first isolated as a positive transcriptional regulator of gibberellin (GA)-dependent α-amylase expression in barley aleurone cells, and its molecular and biochemical properties have been well characterized. However, the role of GAMYB elsewhere in the plant is not well understood. To investigate the molecular function of GAMYB outside of the aleurone cells, we isolated loss-of-function mutants from a panel of rice mutants produced by the insertion of a retrotransposon, Tos17. Through PCR screening using primers for rice GAMYB (OsGAMYB) and Tos17, we isolated three independent mutant alleles that contained Tos17 inserted in the exon region. No α-amylase expression in the endosperm was induced in these mutants in response to GA treatment, indicating that the Tos17 insertion had knocked out OsGAMYB function. We found no significant defects in the growth and development of the mutants at the vegetative stage. After the phase transition to the reproductive stage, however, shortened internodes and defects in floral organ development, especially a defect in pollen development, were observed. On the other hand, no difference was detected in flowering time. High-level OsGAMYB expression was detected in the aleurone cells, inflorescence shoot apical region, stamen primordia, and tapetum cells of the anther, but only low-level expression occurred in organs at the vegetative stage or in the elongating stem. These results demonstrate that, in addition to its role in the induction of α-amylase in aleurone, OsGAMYB also is important for floral organ development and essential for pollen development.


Nature Genetics | 2010

A pair of floral regulators sets critical day length for Hd3a florigen expression in rice

Hironori Itoh; Yasunori Nonoue; Masahiro Yano; Takeshi Izawa

The critical day length triggering photoperiodic flowering is set as an acute, accurate threshold in many short-day plants, including rice. Here, we show that, unlike the Arabidopsis florigen gene FT, the rice florigen gene Hd3a (Heading date 3a) is toggled by only a 30-min day-length reduction. Hd3a expression is induced by Ehd1 (Early heading date 1) expression when blue light coincides with the morning phase set by OsGIGANTEA(OsGI)-dependent circadian clocks. Ehd1 expression is repressed by both night breaks under short-day conditions and morning light signals under long-day conditions. Ghd7 (Grain number, plant height and heading date 7) was acutely induced when phytochrome signals coincided with a photosensitive phase set differently by distinct photoperiods and this induction repressed Ehd1 the next morning. Thus, two distinct gating mechanisms—of the floral promoter Ehd1 and the floral repressor Ghd7—could enable manipulation of slight differences in day length to control Hd3a transcription with a critical day-length threshold.


Trends in Plant Science | 1996

Becoming a model plant: The importance of rice to plant science

Takeshi Izawa; Ko Shimamoto

Rice has been cultivated as a major crop for more than 7000 years, and it currently sustains more than half the world population. Rice and many other food plants are monocotyledons — such plants are of clear importance, and yet they are distinct from the dicotyledonous model plant Arabidopsis in many aspects of development. Recent advances in research on rice include efficient transformation, the creation of a highly saturated molecular map, and the large-scale analysis of expressed sequence tags. Indeed, the number of complementary DNAs analyzed in rice is approaching the number analyzed in Arabidopsis . Rice has reached the point where it can be usefully considered a model monocotyledonous plant.


Plant Molecular Biology | 1997

Transposon tagging in rice.

Takeshi Izawa; Tohru Ohnishi; Toshitsugu Nakano; Nobuhiro Ishida; Hiroyuki Enoki; Hisako Hashimoto; Kimiko Itoh; Rie Terada; Chuanyn Wu; Chikara Miyazaki; Tomoko Endo; Shigeru Iida; Ko Shimamoto

To develop an efficient gene isolation method for rice we introduced the maize Ac/Ds system into rice. Extensive analysis of their behavior in rice for several generations indicated that Ac and Ds in the presence of Ac transposase gene actively transpose in rice. A wide spectrum of mutations affecting growth, morphogenesis, flowering time and disease resistance have been obtained in the population carrying Ac/Ds and some of them were genetically analyzed. Main efforts are currently being made to isolate genes responsible these mutations. In addition, a number of Ac/Ds were mapped on chromosomes and mapped elements will be used in the future for directed tagging of genes with known chromosomal positions.


The Plant Cell | 2011

Os-GIGANTEA Confers Robust Diurnal Rhythms on the Global Transcriptome of Rice in the Field

Takeshi Izawa; Motohiro Mihara; Yuji Suzuki; Meenu Gupta; Hironori Itoh; Atsushi J. Nagano; Ritsuko Motoyama; Yuji Sawada; Masahiro Yano; Masami Yokota Hirai; Amane Makino; Yoshiaki Nagamura

An extensive analysis of a circadian clock–related mutant of rice in the field revealed that the circadian clock confers robust diurnal rhythms on the global transcriptome in the field. Net photosynthetic rates and grain yields, however, were not affected in the mutant. Thus, unexpectedly, net primary assimilation was still robust despite this circadian clock defect in the field. The circadian clock controls physiological traits such as flowering time, photosynthesis, and growth in plants under laboratory conditions. Under natural field conditions, however, little is known about the significance of the circadian clock in plants. By time-course transcriptome analyses of rice (Oryza sativa) leaves, using a newly isolated rice circadian clock–related mutant carrying a null mutation in Os-GIGANTEA (Os-GI), we show here that Os-GI controlled 75% (false discovery rate = 0.05) of genes among 27,201 genes tested and was required for strong amplitudes and fine-tuning of the diurnal rhythm phases of global gene expression in the field. However, transcripts involved in primary metabolism were not greatly affected by osgi. Time-course metabolome analyses of leaves revealed no trends of change in primary metabolites in osgi plants, and net photosynthetic rates and grain yields were not affected. By contrast, some transcripts and metabolites in the phenylpropanoid metabolite pathway were consistently affected. Thus, net primary assimilation of rice was still robust in the face of such osgi mutation-related circadian clock defects in the field, unlike the case with defects caused by Arabidopsis thaliana toc1 and ztl mutations in the laboratory.


Plant Journal | 2012

ABERRANT PANICLE ORGANIZATION 2/RFL, the rice ortholog of Arabidopsis LEAFY, suppresses the transition from inflorescence meristem to floral meristem through interaction with APO1

Kyoko Ikeda-Kawakatsu; Masahiko Maekawa; Takeshi Izawa; Jun Ichi Itoh; Yasuo Nagato

The temporal and spatial control of meristem identity is a key element in plant development. To better understand the molecular mechanisms that regulate inflorescence and flower architecture, we characterized the rice aberrant panicle organization 2 (apo2) mutant which exhibits small panicles with reduced number of primary branches due to the precocious formation of spikelet meristems. The apo2 mutants also display a shortened plastochron in the vegetative phase, late flowering, aberrant floral organ identities and loss of floral meristem determinacy. Map-based cloning revealed that APO2 is identical to previously reported RFL gene, the rice ortholog of the Arabidopsis LEAFY (LFY) gene. Further analysis indicated that APO2/RFL and APO1, the rice ortholog of Arabidopsis UNUSUAL FLORAL ORGANS, act cooperatively to control inflorescence and flower development. The present study revealed functional differences between APO2/RFL and LFY. In particular, APO2/RFL and LFY act oppositely on inflorescence development. Therefore, the genetic mechanisms for controlling inflorescence architecture have evolutionarily diverged between rice (monocots) and Arabidopsis (eudicots).


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1991

Introduction and transposition of the maize transposable element Ac in rice (Oryza sativa L.).

Takeshi Izawa; Chikara Miyazaki; Mikihiro Yamamoto; Rie Terada; Shigeru Iida; Ko Shimamoto

SummaryTo develop a transposon tagging system in an important cereal plant, rice (Oryza sativa L.), the maize transposable element Ac (Activator) was introduced into rice protoplasts by electroporation. We employed a phenotypic assay for excision of Ac from the selectable hph gene encoding resistance to hygromycin B. Southern blot analysis of hygromycin B-resistant calli showed that the Ac element can transpose from the introduced hph gene into the rice chromosomes. Sequence analysis of several Ac excision sites in the hph gene revealed sequence alterations characteristic of the excision sites of this plant transposable element. The Ac element appears to be active during development of transgenic rice plants from calli. Moreover, hybridization patterns of different leaves from the same plant indicated that some Ac elements are stable whereas others are able to transpose further during development of leaves. The results indicate that the introduced Ac element can transpose efficiently in transgenic rice plants.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1993

Trans-activation and stable integration of the maize transposable element Ds cotransfected with the Ac transposase gene in transgenic rice plants

Ko Shimamoto; Chikara Miyazaki; Hisako Hashimoto; Takeshi Izawa; Kimiko Itoh; Rie Terada; Yoshishige Inagaki; Shigeru Iida

To develop an efficient gene tagging system in rice, a plasmid was constructed carrying a non-autonomous maize Ds element in the untranslated leader sequence of a hygromycin B resistance gene fused with the 35S promoter of cauliflower mosaic virus. This plasmid was cotransfected by electroporation into rice protoplasts together with a plasmid containing the maize Ac transposase gene transcribed from the 35S promoter. Five lines of evidence obtained from the analyses of hygromycin B-resistant calli, regenerated plants and their progeny showed that the introduced Ds was trans-activated by the Ac transposase gene in rice. (1) Cotransfection of the two plasmids is necessary for generation of hygromycin B resistant transformants. (2) Ds excision sites are detected by Southern blot hybridization. (3) Characteristic sequence alterations are found at Ds excision sites. (4) Newly integrated Ds is detected in the rice genome. (5) Generation of 8 by target duplications is observed at the Ds integration sites on the rice chromosomes. Our results also show that Ds can be trans-activated by the transiently expressed Ac transposase at early stages of protoplast culture and integrated stably into the rice genome, while the cotransfected Ac transposase gene is not integrated. Segregation data from such a transgenic rice plant carrying no Ac transposase gene showed that four Ds copies were stably integrated into three different chromosomes, one of which also contained the functional hph gene restored by Ds excision. The results indicate that a dispersed distribution of Ds throughout genomes not bearing the active Ac transposase gene can be achieved by simultaneous transfection with Ds and the Ac transposase gene.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1991

Anaerobic induction and tissue-specific expression of maize Adh1 promoter in transgenic rice plants and their progeny

Junko Kyozuka; Hideya Fujimoto; Takeshi Izawa; Ko Shimamoto

SummaryIn order to analyze expression of the maize alcohol dehydrogenase 1 gene (Adh1), its promoter was fused with the gusA reporter gene and introduced into rice by protoplast transformation. Histochemical analysis of transgenic plants and their progeny showed that the maize Adh1 promoter is constitutively expressed in root caps, anthers, anther filaments, pollen, scutellum, endosperm and shoot and root meristem of the embryo. Induction of expression by the Adh1 promoter was examined using seedlings derived from selfed progeny of the transgenic plants. The results showed that expression of the Adh1 promoter was strongly induced (up to 81-fold) in roots of seedlings after 24 h of anaerobic treatment, concomitant with an increase in the level of gusA mRNA. 2,4-D also induced Adh1 promoter-directed expression of gusA to a similar extent. In contrast, little induction by anaerobic treatment was detected in transformed calli, leaves or roots of primary transformants or shoots of seedlings. A detailed examination of seedling roots during anaerobic treatment revealed that the induction started first at the meristem and after 3 h there was strong induction in the elongation zone which is located 1–2 mm above the meristem; the induction then progressed upward from this region. Our results suggest that transgenic rice plants carring the gusA reporter gene fused with promoters are useful for the study of anaerobic regulation of genes derived from graminaceous species.

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Ko Shimamoto

Nara Institute of Science and Technology

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Hiroyuki Enoki

Nara Institute of Science and Technology

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