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Featured researches published by Takuya Habara.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2006

The Rice Annotation Project Database (RAP-DB): hub for Oryza sativa ssp. japonica genome information.

Hajime Ohyanagi; Tsuyoshi Tanaka; Hiroaki Sakai; Yasumasa Shigemoto; Kaori Yamaguchi; Takuya Habara; Yasuyuki Fujii; Baltazar A. Antonio; Yoshiaki Nagamura; Tadashi Imanishi; Kazuho Ikeo; Takeshi Itoh; Takashi Gojobori; Takuji Sasaki

With the completion of the rice genome sequencing, a standardized annotation is necessary so that the information from the genome sequence can be fully utilized in understanding the biology of rice and other cereal crops. An annotation jamboree was held in Japan with the aim of annotating and manually curating all the genes in the rice genome. Here we present the Rice Annotation Project Database (RAP-DB), which has been developed to provide access to the annotation data. The RAP-DB has two different types of annotation viewers, BLAST and BLAT search, and other useful features. By connecting the annotations to other rice genomics data, such as full-length cDNAs and Tos17 mutant lines, the RAP-DB serves as a hub for rice genomics. All of the resources can be accessed through .


Mbio | 2012

Comparative Genome Analysis of Three Eukaryotic Parasites with Differing Abilities To Transform Leukocytes Reveals Key Mediators of Theileria-Induced Leukocyte Transformation

Kyoko Hayashida; Yuichiro Hara; Takashi Abe; Chisato Yamasaki; Atsushi Toyoda; Takehide Kosuge; Yutaka Suzuki; Yoshiharu Sato; Shuichi Kawashima; Toshiaki Katayama; Hiroyuki Wakaguri; Noboru Inoue; Keiichi Homma; Masahito Tada-Umezaki; Yukio Yagi; Yasuyuki Fujii; Takuya Habara; Minoru Kanehisa; Hidemi Watanabe; Kimihito Ito; Takashi Gojobori; Hideaki Sugawara; Tadashi Imanishi; William Weir; Malcolm J. Gardner; Arnab Pain; Brian Shiels; Masahira Hattori; Vishvanath Nene; Chihiro Sugimoto

ABSTRACT We sequenced the genome of Theileria orientalis, a tick-borne apicomplexan protozoan parasite of cattle. The focus of this study was a comparative genome analysis of T. orientalis relative to other highly pathogenic Theileria species, T. parva and T. annulata. T. parva and T. annulata induce transformation of infected cells of lymphocyte or macrophage/monocyte lineages; in contrast, T. orientalis does not induce uncontrolled proliferation of infected leukocytes and multiplies predominantly within infected erythrocytes. While synteny across homologous chromosomes of the three Theileria species was found to be well conserved overall, subtelomeric structures were found to differ substantially, as T. orientalis lacks the large tandemly arrayed subtelomere-encoded variable secreted protein-encoding gene family. Moreover, expansion of particular gene families by gene duplication was found in the genomes of the two transforming Theileria species, most notably, the TashAT/TpHN and Tar/Tpr gene families. Gene families that are present only in T. parva and T. annulata and not in T. orientalis, Babesia bovis, or Plasmodium were also identified. Identification of differences between the genome sequences of Theileria species with different abilities to transform and immortalize bovine leukocytes will provide insight into proteins and mechanisms that have evolved to induce and regulate this process. The T. orientalis genome database is available at http://totdb.czc.hokudai.ac.jp/. IMPORTANCE Cancer-like growth of leukocytes infected with malignant Theileria parasites is a unique cellular event, as it involves the transformation and immortalization of one eukaryotic cell by another. In this study, we sequenced the whole genome of a nontransforming Theileria species, Theileria orientalis, and compared it to the published sequences representative of two malignant, transforming species, T. parva and T. annulata. The genome-wide comparison of these parasite species highlights significant genetic diversity that may be associated with evolution of the mechanism(s) deployed by an intracellular eukaryotic parasite to transform its host cell. Cancer-like growth of leukocytes infected with malignant Theileria parasites is a unique cellular event, as it involves the transformation and immortalization of one eukaryotic cell by another. In this study, we sequenced the whole genome of a nontransforming Theileria species, Theileria orientalis, and compared it to the published sequences representative of two malignant, transforming species, T. parva and T. annulata. The genome-wide comparison of these parasite species highlights significant genetic diversity that may be associated with evolution of the mechanism(s) deployed by an intracellular eukaryotic parasite to transform its host cell.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

H-InvDB in 2009: extended database and data mining resources for human genes and transcripts

Chisato Yamasaki; Katsuhiko Murakami; Jun-ichi Takeda; Yoshiharu Sato; Akiko Ogura Noda; Ryuichi Sakate; Takuya Habara; Hajime Nakaoka; Fusano Todokoro; Akihiro Matsuya; Tadashi Imanishi; Takashi Gojobori

We report the extended database and data mining resources newly released in the H-Invitational Database (H-InvDB; http://www.h-invitational.jp/). H-InvDB is a comprehensive annotation resource of human genes and transcripts, and consists of two main views and six sub-databases. The latest release of H-InvDB (release 6.2) provides the annotation for 219 765 human transcripts in 43 159 human gene clusters based on human full-length cDNAs and mRNAs. H-InvDB now provides several new annotation features, such as mapping of microarray probes, new gene models, relation to known ncRNAs and information from the Glycogene database. H-InvDB also provides useful data mining resources—‘Navigation search’, ‘H-InvDB Enrichment Analysis Tool (HEAT)’ and web service APIs. ‘Navigation search’ is an extended search system that enables complicated searches by combining 16 different search options. HEAT is a data mining tool for automatically identifying features specific to a given human gene set. HEAT searches for H-InvDB annotations that are significantly enriched in a user-defined gene set, as compared with the entire H-InvDB representative transcripts. H-InvDB now has web service APIs of SOAP and REST to allow the use of H-InvDB data in programs, providing the users extended data accessibility.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

Evola : Ortholog database of all human genes in H-InvDB with manual curation of phylogenetic trees

Akihiro Matsuya; Ryuichi Sakate; Yoshihiro Kawahara; Kanako O. Koyanagi; Yoshiharu Sato; Yasuyuki Fujii; Chisato Yamasaki; Takuya Habara; Hajime Nakaoka; Fusano Todokoro; Kaori Yamaguchi; Toshinori Endo; Satoshi Oota; Wojciech Makalowski; Kazuho Ikeo; Yoshiyuki Suzuki; Kousuke Hanada; Katsuyuki Hashimoto; Momoki Hirai; Hisakazu Iwama; Naruya Saitou; Aiko T. Hiraki; Lihua Jin; Yayoi Kaneko; Masako Kanno; Katsuhiko S. Murakami; Akiko Ogura Noda; Naomi Saichi; Ryoko Sanbonmatsu; Mami Suzuki

Orthologs are genes in different species that evolved from a common ancestral gene by speciation. Currently, with the rapid growth of transcriptome data of various species, more reliable orthology information is prerequisite for further studies. However, detection of orthologs could be erroneous if pairwise distance-based methods, such as reciprocal BLAST searches, are utilized. Thus, as a sub-database of H-InvDB, an integrated database of annotated human genes (http://h-invitational.jp/), we constructed a fully curated database of evolutionary features of human genes, called ‘Evola’. In the process of the ortholog detection, computational analysis based on conserved genome synteny and transcript sequence similarity was followed by manual curation by researchers examining phylogenetic trees. In total, 18 968 human genes have orthologs among 11 vertebrates (chimpanzee, mouse, cow, chicken, zebrafish, etc.), either computationally detected or manually curated orthologs. Evola provides amino acid sequence alignments and phylogenetic trees of orthologs and homologs. In ‘dN/dS view’, natural selection on genes can be analyzed between human and other species. In ‘Locus maps’, all transcript variants and their exon/intron structures can be compared among orthologous gene loci. We expect the Evola to serve as a comprehensive and reliable database to be utilized in comparative analyses for obtaining new knowledge about human genes. Evola is available at http://www.h-invitational.jp/evola/.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2013

H-InvDB in 2013: an omics study platform for human functional gene and transcript discovery

Jun-ichi Takeda; Chisato Yamasaki; Katsuhiko S. Murakami; Yoko Nagai; Miho Sera; Yuichiro Hara; Nobuo Obi; Takuya Habara; Takashi Gojobori; Tadashi Imanishi

H-InvDB (http://www.h-invitational.jp/) is a comprehensive human gene database started in 2004. In the latest version, H-InvDB 8.0, a total of 244 709 human complementary DNA was mapped onto the hg19 reference genome and 43 829 gene loci, including nonprotein-coding ones, were identified. Of these loci, 35 631 were identified as potential protein-coding genes, and 22 898 of these were identical to known genes. In our analysis, 19 309 annotated genes were specific to H-InvDB and not found in RefSeq and Ensembl. In fact, 233 genes of the 19 309 turned out to have protein functions in this version of H-InvDB; they were annotated as unknown protein functions in the previous version. Furthermore, 11 genes were identified as known Mendelian disorder genes. It is advantageous that many biologically functional genes are hidden in the H-InvDB unique genes. As large-scale proteomic projects have been conducted to elucidate the functions of all human proteins, we have enhanced the proteomic information with an advanced protein view and new subdatabase of protein complexes (Protein Complex Database with quality index). We propose that H-InvDB is an important resource for finding novel candidate targets for medical care and drug development.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2013

Full-length transcriptome-based H-InvDB throws a new light on chromosome-centric proteomics.

Tadashi Imanishi; Yoko Nagai; Takuya Habara; Chisato Yamasaki; Jun-ichi Takeda; Sayaka Mikami; Yasuhiko Bando; Hiromasa Tojo; Toshihide Nishimura

H-Invitational Database (H-InvDB; http://hinv.jp/ ) is an integrated database of all human genes and transcripts that started in an international collaborative research project for establishing a functional annotation database of human full-length cDNAs. Because H-InvDB contains an abundance of information for human transcripts, including not only well-characterized protein-coding transcripts but also those without experimental evidence at the protein level, this will be a useful information resource for identifying novel and uncharacterized human proteins (so-called missing proteins). By extending predicted protein data in H-InvDB, we developed the H-Inv Extended Protein Database (H-EPD; http://hinv.jp/hinv/h-epd/ ). From now on, we plan to carry out a database-driven proteome research that makes full use of H-EPD to promote discoveries in the current and future C-HPP. Furthermore, we will push forward with the integration of genome, transcriptome, and proteome databases using a unique tool for connecting distributed databases and would like to develop a knowledge discovery system by incorporating data mining tools.


Genome Research | 2007

Curated genome annotation of Oryza sativa ssp. japonica and comparative genome analysis with Arabidopsis thaliana

Takeshi Itoh; Tsuyoshi Tanaka; Roberto A. Barrero; Chisato Yamasaki; Yasuyuki Fujii; Phillip Hilton; Baltazar A. Antonio; Hideo Aono; Rolf Apweiler; Richard Bruskiewich; Thomas E. Bureau; Frances A. Burr; Antonio Costa de Oliveira; Galina Fuks; Takuya Habara; Georg Haberer; Bin Han; Erimi Harada; Aiko T. Hiraki; Hirohiko Hirochika; Douglas R. Hoen; Hiroki Hokari; Satomi Hosokawa; Yue Hsing; Hiroshi Ikawa; Kazuho Ikeo; Tadashi Imanishi; Yukiyo Ito; Pankaj Jaiswal; Masako Kanno


Gene | 2005

A web tool for comparative genomics: G-compass.

Yasuyuki Fujii; Takeshi Itoh; Ryuichi Sakate; Kanako O. Koyanagi; Akihiro Matsuya; Takuya Habara; Kaori Yamaguchi; Yayoi Kaneko; Takashi Gojobori; Tadashi Imanishi


Nature Precedings | 2009

H-InvDB release 6, a comprehensive annotation resource for human genes and transcripts

Chisato Yamasaki; Katsuhiko S. Murakami; Jun-ichi Takeda; Yoshiharu Sato; Akiko Ogura Noda; Ryuichi Sakate; Takuya Habara; Hajime Nakaoka; Fusano Todokoro; Akihiro Matsuya; Tadashi Imanishi; Takashi Gojobori


The Molecular Biology Society of Japan | 2016

VaDE and GBOP : a database of disease-associated genomic polymorphisms and a disease-risk prediction tool

Tadashi Imanishi; Takuya Habara; Kentaro Mamiya; Miho Sera

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Tadashi Imanishi

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Chisato Yamasaki

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Takashi Gojobori

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Jun-ichi Takeda

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Ryuichi Sakate

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Yasuyuki Fujii

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Akiko Ogura Noda

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology

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Katsuhiko S. Murakami

Pennsylvania State University

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