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Featured researches published by Tomoaki Kouya.


Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering | 2010

Effect of steam explosion pretreatment on treatment with Pleurotus ostreatus for the enzymatic hydrolysis of rice straw.

Masayuki Taniguchi; Daisuke Takahashi; Daisuke Watanabe; Kenji Sakai; Kazuhiro Hoshino; Tomoaki Kouya; Takaaki Tanaka

The effects of steam explosion (1.5 MPa, 1 min) on the treatment of rice straw with Pleurotus ostreatus were evaluated in terms of the change in composition of the components and the susceptibility to enzymatic hydrolysis. When rice straw was pretreated with a steam explosion prior to biological treatment, the treatment time required for obtaining a 33% net glucose yield was reduced to 36 days from 60 days. The reduction is probably due to loosening of networks of Klason lignin with sugar moieties and partial collapse of the structure during the biological treatment.


Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering | 2008

Production of extracellular bifidogenic growth stimulator (BGS) from Propionibacterium shermanii using a bioreactor system with a microfiltration module and an on-line controller for lactic acid concentration.

Tomoaki Kouya; Kazuhiro Tobita; Masahito Horiuchi; Eri Nakayama; Hiroyoshi Deguchi; Takaaki Tanaka; Masayuki Taniguchi

Production of a bifidogenic growth stimulator (BGS) by Propionibacterium freudenreichii subsp. shermanii (Propionibacterium shermanii) using lactic acid as a carbon source was investigated using different cultivation methods. When a continuous bioreactor system with a filtration device was used at a dilution rate of 0.075 h(-1), the average BGS concentration was 2.4 mg/l, which corresponds to a BGS productivity per cultivation time of 1.8 x 10(-1) mg x l(-1) x h(-1). The BGS productivity per cultivation time in continuous cultivation with filtration was 1.9-fold that (9.4 x 10(-2) mg x l(-1).h(-1)) in a conventional batch cultivation. In fed-batch cultivation with feed-back control using an on-line lactic acid controller with a lactic acid biosensor, it was possible to prevent substrate inhibition by maintaining the lactic acid concentration in culture broth low at 3.3 g/l, and an enhanced BGS production (31 mg/l) was successfully attained. The BGS productivity per cultivation time (2.1x10(-1) mg x l(-1) x h(-1)) in the fed-batch cultivation with feed-back control was 2.2-fold that in the conventional batch cultivation. A new bioreactor system was developed by coupling a continuous bioreactor system with a filtration device to an on-line lactic acid controller. Using the new bioreactor system, we produced BGS continuously at a high level of 47 mg/l. The BGS productivities per cultivation time (3.5 mg.l(-1) x h(-1)) and the total volume of medium used (1.7 x 10(-1) mg x l(-1) x h(-1)) obtained in the new bioreactor system were 37-fold and 2.1-fold those in the conventional batch cultivation, respectively. These results described above clearly demonstrate the positive effects of both the continuous filtration for removal of metabolites (propionic and acetic acids) inhibitory to cell growth and feed-back control of lactic acid concentration in the culture broth on BGS production by P. shermanii. This paper is the first report on BGS production by the propionic acid bacterium using lactic acid as a carbon source.


Helicobacter | 2010

The Bifidogenic Growth Stimulator Inhibits the Growth and Respiration of Helicobacter pylori

Kumiko Nagata; Sakiko Inatsu; Mamoru Tanaka; Harumi Sato; Tomoaki Kouya; Masayuki Taniguchi; Yoshihiro Fukuda

Background:  Triple therapy with amoxicillin, clarithromycin, and a proton‐pump inhibitor is a common therapeutic strategy for the eradication of Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori). However, frequent appearance of clarithromycin‐resistant strains is a therapeutic challenge. While various quinones are known to specifically inhibit the growth of H. pylori, the quinone 1,4‐dihydroxy‐2‐naphthoic acid (DHNA) produced by Propionibacterium has strong stimulating effect on Bifidobacterium. We were interested to see whether DHNA could inhibit the growth of H. pylori in in vitro or in vivo experimental setting.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2012

A 50-kilodalton Cry2A peptide is lethal to Bombyx mori and Lymantria dispar.

Masataka Ohsawa; Miki Tanaka; Kenta Moriyama; Mitsuaki Shimazu; Shin-ichiro Asano; Kazuhisa Miyamoto; Kohsuke Haginoya; Toshiaki Mitsui; Tomoaki Kouya; Masayuki Taniguchi; Hidetaka Hori

ABSTRACT The Cry2Aa3 gene was introduced into asporogenic Bacillus thuringiensis, and the synthesized protoxin killed Bombyx mori and Lymantria dispar larvae. Chymotrypsin hydrolyzed the linkages between 49Tyr/Val50 and 145Lys/Ser146 in the protoxin, and 50- and 58-kDa fragments were generated, respectively. Both peptides killed the larvae of both insects.


Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering | 2010

Growth-inhibition of hiochi bacteria in namazake (raw sake) by bacteriocins from lactic acid bacteria

Masayuki Taniguchi; Yohei Ishiyama; Takeomi Takata; Toshihiro Nakanishi; Mitsuoki Kaneoke; Ken-ichi Watanabe; Fujitoshi Yanagida; Yi-sheng Chen; Tomoaki Kouya; Takaaki Tanaka

The bacteriocins produced by Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis C101910 (C101910) and NBRC 12007 (NBRC 12007) were used to prevent the growth of sake spoiling hiochi bacteria (Lactobacillus hilgardii, Lactobacillus fructivorans, and Lactobacillus paracasei) in namazake, which is raw (unpasteurized) sake. The bacteriocin concentrations required for decreasing the viable cell concentrations of L. hilgardii and L. fructivorans below the detection limit (1.0 x 10(2) cells/ml) in 24 h from the initial concentration of 4.0-9.5 x 10(5) cells/ml in the namazake at pH 4.5 and at 4 degrees C, were 18-35 U/ml and 5.6 U/ml for the bacteriocin from C101910 and NBRC 12007, respectively. To decrease the viable cell concentration of L. paracasei from the initial concentration of 7.5 x 10(5) cells/ml to below the detection limit (1.0 x 10(2) cells/ml) in 24 h, 350 U/ml bacteriocin from C101910 and 140 U/ml bacteriocin from NBRC 12007 were required. In experiments using McIlvaine buffer (pH 4.5) with 15% ethanol instead of namazake as the medium, the viable cell concentrations of L. hilgardii and L. paracasei decreased to less than 1.0 x 10(2) cells/ml, whereas those of L. fructivorans decreased to less than 1.0 x 10(3) cells/ml, when bacteriocins were added at the concentrations that had proven effective in namazake. The membrane depolarization assay using a fluorescent probe showed that the presence of ethanol stimulated the collapse of the membrane potential induced by bacteriocins. The ethanol induced collapse of the membrane potential suggests that the application of bacteriocins at the storage stage of namazake is more beneficial than when used in other stages of the sake brewing process.


Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering | 2013

Evaluation of positive interaction for cell growth between Bifidobacterium adolescentis and Propionibacterium freudenreichii using a co-cultivation system with two microfiltration modules

Tomoaki Kouya; Yohei Ishiyama; Takaaki Tanaka; Masayuki Taniguchi

Using a co-cultivation system developed previously, positive interaction for cell growth between Bifidobacterium adolescentis and Propionibacterium freudenreichii was evaluated. The total dry cell weight (DCW) of these two strains obtained in the co-cultivation system was 1.5-1.7-fold of the sum of the DCWs obtained in two single cultivations of each bacterium.


Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering | 2007

Production of extracellular bifidogenic growth stimulator by anaerobic and aerobic cultivations of several propionibacterial strains.

Tomoaki Kouya; Katsuhiro Misawa; Masahito Horiuchi; Eri Nakayama; Hiroyoshi Deguchi; Takaaki Tanaka; Masayuki Taniguchi


Journal of Membrane Science | 2012

Formation of depth filter microfiltration membranes of poly(l-lactic acid) via phase separation

Takaaki Tanaka; Takayuki Nishimoto; Kazuhiro Tsukamoto; Masaharu Yoshida; Tomoaki Kouya; Masayuki Taniguchi; Douglas R. Lloyd


Materials Letters | 2013

Microporous membranes of PLLA/PCL blends for periosteal tissue scaffold

Tomoaki Kouya; Shin Ichiro Tada; Hiromi Minbu; Yu Nakajima; Makoto Horimizu; Tomoyuki Kawase; Douglas R. Lloyd; Takaaki Tanaka


Journal of Chemical Engineering of Japan | 2011

Poly(L-lactic acid) Microfiltration Membrane Formation via Thermally Induced Phase Separation with Drying

Takaaki Tanaka; Masatou Ueno; Youhei Watanabe; Tomoaki Kouya; Masayuki Taniguchi; Douglas R. Lloyd

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Douglas R. Lloyd

University of Texas at Austin

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