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Dive into the research topics where Teruya Komano is active.

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Featured researches published by Teruya Komano.


Molecular Microbiology | 2002

The transfer region of IncI1 plasmid R64: similarities between R64 tra and Legionella icm/dot genes

Teruya Komano; Tetsu Yoshida; Koji Narahara; Nobuhisa Furuya

The entire nucleotide sequence of the transfer region of IncI1 plasmid R64 was determined together with previously reported sequences. Twenty‐two transfer genes, traE–Y and nuc, were newly identified in the present study. The protein products of 17 genes were detected by maxicell experiments or by the T7 RNA polymerase expression system. Mutagenesis experiments indicated that 16 genes were indispensable for R64 transfer both in liquid and on surfaces. In summary, the R64 transfer region located within an ≈u200a54u2003kb DNA segment was shown to encode the most complex transfer system so far studied. It contains at least 49 genes and may produce 58 different proteins as a result of shufflon DNA rearrangement and overlapping genes. Among the 49 genes, 23 tra, trb and nik genes have been shown to be indispensable for R64 conjugal transfer in liquid and on surfaces. Twelve additional pil genes are required only for liquid matings. The amino acid sequences of 10 R64 tra/trb products share similarity with those of the icm/dot products of Legionella pneumophila that are responsible for its virulence, suggesting that the R64 transfer and L. pneumophila icm/dot systems have evolved from a common ancestral genetic system.


Molecular Microbiology | 1996

FruA, a putative transcription factor essential for the development of Myxococcus xanthus

Mari Ogawa; Shoji Fujitani; Xiaohua Mao; Sumiko Inouye; Teruya Komano

A new developmental gene, fruA, of Myxococcus xanthus was cloned using a one‐step cloning vector, TnV. DNA sequencing of the wild‐type allele of the fruA gene indicated that the fruA gene encodes a protein of 229 amino acid residues with a calculated molecular weight of 24u2003672. The deduced amino acid sequence of FruA protein showed similarity to those of many bacterial regulatory proteins carrying a DNA‐binding helix‐turn‐helix motif. The transcription‐initiation site of the fruA gene was determined by a primer‐extension experiment. Development of M. xanthus cells with a disrupted fruA gene stopped at the stage of mound formation. Although cells were able to aggregate to form mounds, myxospores were not formed. By Northern and Western blot analysis, it was found that the fruA expression was not detected during vegetative growth but initiated at around 6u2003h and reached the highest level at 12u2003h after the onset of development. Expression of the fruA gene was dependent on the expression of asg, bsg, csg, dsg, and esg genes, indicating that a series of intercellular signalling is necessary for the expression of the fruA gene. The effects of the fruA mutation on ‐galactosidase expression of various developmentally regulated genes fused with the lacZ gene were analysed; three developmental lacZ fusions (Ω4469, Ω4273 and Ω4500) were either poorly induced or not induced at all, while three other lacZ fusions (Ω4408, Ω4521 and Ω4455) expressed at the early stage of development were normally induced but were unable to be repressed at a later stage of development as in the wild‐type strain. Interestingly, in the fruA mutant, tps (the gene for protein S) was not activated. From these results together with analysis of the amino acid sequence of FruA, we propose that FruA is a putative transcription factor required for the development of M. xanthus.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

ATPase Activity and Multimer Formation of PilQ Protein Are Required for Thin Pilus Biogenesis in Plasmid R64

Daisuke Sakai; Takayuki Horiuchi; Teruya Komano

Plasmid R64 pilQ gene is essential for the formation of thin pilus, a type IV pilus. The pilQproduct contains NTP binding motifs and belongs to the PulE-VirB11 family of NTPases. The pilQ gene was overexpressed with an N-terminal His tag, and PilQ protein was purified. Purified His tag PilQ protein displayed ATPase activity with aV max of 0.71 nmol/min/mg of protein and aKm of 0.26 mm at pH 6.5. By gel filtration chromatography, PilQ protein was eluted at the position corresponding to 460 kDa, suggesting that PilQ protein forms a homooctamer. To analyze the relationship between structure and function of PilQ protein, amino acid substitutions were introduced within several conserved motifs. Among 11 missense mutants, 7 mutants exhibited various levels of reduced DNA transfer frequencies in liquid matings. Four mutant genes (T234I, K238Q,D263N, and H328A) were overexpressed with a His tag. The purified mutant PilQ proteins contained various levels of reduced ATPase activity. Three mutant PilQ proteins formed stable multimers similar to wild-type PilQ, whereas the PilQ D263N multimer was unstable. PilQ D263N monomer exhibited low ATPase activity, while PilQ D263N multimer did not. These results indicate that ATPase activity of the PilQ multimer is essential for R64 thin pilus biogenesis.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2002

Genes required for plasmid R64 thin-pilus biogenesis: identification and localization of products of the pilK, pilM, pilO, pilP, pilR, and pilT genes.

Daisuke Sakai; Teruya Komano

We have previously shown that the pilL, pilN, pilQ, pilS, pilU, and pilV genes of plasmid R64 encode outer membrane lipoprotein, secretin, cytoplasmic ATPase, major pilin, prepilin peptidase, and minor pilin, respectively, which are required for thin-pilus formation. In this work, we characterized the products of the remaining essential genes, pilK, pilM, pilO, pilP, pilR, and pilT, with regard to their localization and processing. Overexpression systems containing pilM, pilO, and pilP genes fused with N-terminal glutathione S-transferase (GST) or a His tag were constructed. Overproduced proteins were purified and used to raise specific antibodies. Localization of PilM, PilO, and PilP proteins was performed by Western blot analysis with anti-GST-PilM, anti-PilO, and anti-PilP antibodies, respectively. The pilK, pilR, and pilT products were produced with a C-terminal His tag and then detected by anti-His tag antibody. Subcellular fractionation experiments with Escherichia coli cells producing R64 thin pili revealed that PilK, PilM, and PilR are inner membrane proteins, and PilP and PilT are periplasmic proteins. PilO protein was localized to the outer membrane in the presence of other Pil proteins, whereas it was localized to the cytoplasm in the absence of these proteins. Furthermore, the cleavage site of PilP protein was determined by N-terminal amino acid sequencing of purified mature PilP protein. We predict that PilK, PilM, PilO, PilP, and PilT proteins function as the components of the pilin transport apparatus and thin-pilus basal body.


Advances in Biophysics | 2004

Structure and function of the shufflon in plasmid R64.

Atsuko Gyohda; Nobuhisa Furuya; Akiko Ishiwa; Shujuan Zhu; Teruya Komano

Conservative site-specific recombination plays key roles in creating biological diversity in prokaryotes. Most site-specific inversion systems consist of two recombination sites and a recombinase gene. In contrast, the shufflon multiple inversion system of plasmid R64 consists of seven sfx recombination sites, which separate four invertible DNA segments, and the rci gene encoding a site-specific recombinase of the integrase family. The rci product mediates recombination between any two inverted sfx sites, resulting in the inversion of four DNA segments independently or in groups. Random shufflon inversions construct seven pilV genes encoding constant N-terminal segment with different C-terminal segments. The pilV products are tip-located adhesins of the type IV pilus, called the thin pilus, of R64 and recognize lipopolysaccharides of recipient bacterial cells during R64 liquid matings. Thus, the shufflon determines the recipient specificity of liquid matings. Rci protein of R64 was overexpressed, purified, and used for in vitro recombination reactions. The cleavage and rejoining of DNA strands in shufflon recombinations were found to take place in the form of a 5 protruding 7-bp staggered cut within sfx sequences. Thus, the sfx sequence is asymmetric: only the 7-bp spacer sequence and the right arm sequence are conserved among various R64 sfxs, whereas the sfx left arm sequences are not conserved. Rci protein was shown to bind to entire sfx sequences, suggesting that it binds to the right arms of the sfx sequences in a sequence-specific manner and to their left arms in a non-sequence-specific manner. The sfx left arm sequences greatly affected the shufflon inversion frequency. The artificial symmetric sfx sequence, in which the sfx left arm was changed to the inverted repeat sequence of the right arm, exhibited the highest inversion frequency. Rci-dependent deletion of a DNA segment flanked by two symmetric sfx sequences in direct orientation was observed, suggesting that the asymmetry of sfx sequences may prevent recombination between sfx sequences in direct orientation in the R64 shufflon. The Rci C-terminal domain was not required for recombination using the symmetric sfx sequence. A model, where the C-terminal domain of Rci protein plays a key role in the sequence-specific and non-specific binding of Rci to asymmetric sfx sites, was proposed. Site-specific recombination in the temperate phage Mx8 of M. xanthus was also described. The Mx8 attP site is located within the coding sequence of the Mx8 intP gene. Therefore, the integration of Mx8 into the M. xanthus chromosome results in the conversion of the intP gene into a new gene, intR. As a result of this conversion, the 112-amino-acid C-terminal sequence of the intP product is replaced with a 13-amino acid sequence of the intR product. The C-terminal domain of Mx8 IntP recombinase is only required for integration and not for excision.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2003

NikAB- or NikB-Dependent Intracellular Recombination between Tandemly Repeated oriT Sequences of Plasmid R64 in Plasmid or Single-Stranded Phage Vectors

Nobuhisa Furuya; Teruya Komano

The origin of transfer (oriT) of a bacterial plasmid plays a key role in both the initiation and termination of conjugative DNA transfer. We have previously shown that a conjugation-dependent recombination between the tandem R64 oriT sequences cloned into pHSG398 occurred, resulting in the deletion of the intervening sequence during DNA transfer. In this study, we tandemly cloned two oriT sequences of IncI1 plasmid R64 into pUC18. Specific recombination between the two oriT sequences in pUC18 was observed within Escherichia coli cells harboring mini-R64. This recombination was found to be independent of both the recA gene and conjugative DNA transfer. The R64 genes nikA and nikB, required for conjugal DNA processing, were essential for this recombination. Although a fully active 92-bp oriT sequence was required at one site for the recombination, the 44-bp oriT core sequence was sufficient at the other site. Furthermore, when two oriT sequences were tandemly cloned into the single-stranded phage vector M13 and propagated within E. coli cells, recombination between the two oriT sequences was observed, depending on the nikB gene. These results suggest that the R64 relaxase protein NikB can execute cleavage and rejoining of single-stranded oriT DNA within E. coli cells, whereas such a reaction in double-stranded oriT DNA requires collaboration of the two relaxosome proteins, NikA and NikB.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2000

Purification and characterization of the R64 shufflon-specific recombinase.

Atsuko Gyohda; Teruya Komano

The shufflon, a multiple DNA inversion system in plasmid R64, consists of four invertible DNA segments which are separated and flanked by seven 19-bp repeat sequences. The product of a site-specific recombinase gene, rci, promotes site-specific recombination between any two of the inverted 19-bp repeat sequences of the shufflon. To analyze the molecular mechanism of this recombination reaction, Rci protein was overproduced and purified. The purified Rci protein promoted the in vitro recombination reaction between the inverted 19-bp repeats of supercoiled DNA of a plasmid carrying segment A of the R64 shufflon. The recombination reaction was enhanced by the bacterial host factor HU. Gel electrophoretic analysis indicated that the Rci protein specifically binds to the DNA segments carrying the 19-bp sequences. The binding affinity of the Rci protein to the four shufflon segments as well as four synthetic 19-bp sequences differed greatly: among the four 19-bp repeat sequences, the repeat-a and -d sequences displayed higher affinity to Rci protein. These results suggest that the differences in the affinity of Rci protein for the 19-bp repeat sequences determine the inversion frequencies of the four segments.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2002

Sequence-specific and non-specific binding of the Rci protein to the asymmetric recombination sites of the R64 shufflon.

Atsuko Gyohda; Nobuhisa Furuya; Nozomi Kogure; Teruya Komano

Specific cleavages within the shufflon-specific recombination site of plasmid R64 were detected by primer extension when a DNA fragment carrying the recombination site was incubated with the shufflon-specific Rci recombinase. Rci-dependent cleavages occurred in the form of a 5 protruding 7 bp staggered cut, suggesting that DNA cleavage and rejoining in the shufflon system take place at these positions. As a result, shufflon crossover sites were designated as sfx sequences consisting of a central 7 bp spacer sequence, and left and right 12 bp arms. R64 sfx sequences are unique among various site-specific recombination sites, since only the spacer sequence and the right arm sequence are conserved among various R64 sfxs, whereas the left arm sequence is not conserved and is not related to the right arm sequence. From nuclease protection analyses, Rci protein was shown to bind to entire R64 and artificial sfx sequences, suggesting that one Rci molecule binds to the conserved sfx right arm in a sequence-specific manner and the second to the sfx left arm in a non-specific manner. The sfx left arm sequences as well as the right arm sequences were shown to determine affinity to Rci and subsequently inversion frequency. Asymmetry of the sfx sequence may be the reason why Rci protein acts only on the inverted sfx sequences.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 2000

The lipopolysaccharide of recipient cells is a specific receptor for PilV proteins, selected by shufflon DNA rearrangement, in liquid matings with donors bearing the R64 plasmid.

Akiko Ishiwa; Teruya Komano

Abstract Shufflon DNA rearrangement selects one of seven PilV proteins with different C-terminal segments, which then becomes a minor component of the thin pili of Escherichia coli strains bearing the plasmid R64. The PilV proteins determine the recipient specificity in liquid matings. A recipient Escherichia coli K-12 strain was specifically recognized by the PilVA′, -C, and -C′ proteins, while E. coli B was recognized only by the PilVA′ protein. To identify specific PilV receptors in the recipient bacterial cells, R64 liquid matings were performed using various E. coli K-12 waa (rfa) mutants and E. coli B transformants as recipient cells. E. coli K-12 waa mutants lack receptors for specific PilV proteins. E. coli B cells carrying waaJ or waaJKL genes of E. coli K-12 were recognized by donors expressing the PilVC′ protein or the PilVC and -C′ proteins, respectively, in addition to the PilVA′ protein. Addition of E. coli K-12 or B lipopolysaccharide (LPS) specifically inhibited liquid matings. We conclude that the PilV proteins of the thin pili of R64-bearing donors recognize LPS molecules located on the surface of various recipient bacterial cells in liquid matings.


Journal of Molecular Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2003

Regulation of fruA Expression during Vegetative Growth and Development of Myxococcus xanthus

Takayuki Horiuchi; Takuya Akiyama; Sumiko Inouye; Teruya Komano

Expression of the fruA gene, encoding a putative transcription factor essential for fruiting body formation of Myxococcus xanthus, is specifically activated during development. In the present study, we have analyzed the mechanism of the transcriptional regulation of fruA expression. From gel retardation and footprinting assays using various fruA regulatory regions as probes and competitors, a protein designated factor X was found to specifically bind to a sequence (xbs) located downstream of the transcription-initiation site (+78 to +94) of the fruA gene. Factor X activity was present during vegetative growth and decreased during early development. Analysis of promoter activities of various segments of the fruA regulatory region using the lacZ reporter gene in vivo indicated that a DNA segment extending 45-bp upstream from the transcription-initiation site was required for developmentally regulated fruA expression at a low level. In addition, cis-acting regulatory regions located upstream and downstream of the fruA promoter region and including C-box and xbs, were found to be involved in regulation of fruA expression during development. When inserted into the vegA gene, the xbs element inhibited vegA expression during vegetative growth. Together with previously reported results, our studies reveal that fruA expression is regulated by both positive and negative mechanisms during the M. xanthus life cycle.

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Nobuhisa Furuya

Tokyo Metropolitan University

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Atsuko Gyohda

Tokyo Metropolitan University

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Takayuki Horiuchi

Tokyo Metropolitan University

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Tetsu Yoshida

Tokyo Metropolitan University

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Daisuke Sakai

Tokyo Metropolitan University

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Su-Ryang Kim

Tokyo Metropolitan University

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Akiko Ishiwa

Tokyo Metropolitan University

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Hanae Koiwai

Tokyo Metropolitan University

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Mitsunori Seo

Tokyo Metropolitan University

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