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Dive into the research topics where Tomoko Miyata is active.

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Featured researches published by Tomoko Miyata.


The EMBO Journal | 1985

Close structural resemblance between putative polymerase of a Drosophila transposable genetic element 17.6 and pol gene product of Moloney murine leukaemia virus.

Hiroyuki Toh; Reiko Kikuno; Hidenori Hayashida; Tomoko Miyata; W Kugimiya; Satoshi Inouye; S Yuki; Kaoru Saigo

We have made a computer‐assisted search for homology among polymerases or putative polymerases of various viruses and a transposable element, the Drosophila copia‐like element 17.6. The search revealed that the putative polymerase (second open reading frame) of the copia‐like element 17.6 bears close resemblance in overall structural organization to the pol gene product of Moloney murine leukaemia virus (M‐MuLV): they show significant homology to each other at both the N‐ and C‐terminal portions, suggesting that the 17.6 putative polymerase carries two enzymatic activities, related to reverse transcriptase and DNA endonuclease. The putative polymerase of cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) shows striking homology with the putative polymerase of 17.6 over almost its entire length, but it lacks the DNA endonuclease‐related sequence. Furthermore, it was shown that the N‐terminal ends of the M‐MuLV pol product and the CaMV and 17.6 putative polymerases exhibit strong sequence homology with the gag‐specific protease (p15) of Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) as well as the amino acid sequence predicted from the gag/pol spacer sequence of human adult T‐cell leukaemia virus (HTLV). These p15‐related sequences contain a highly conserved stretch of amino acids which show a close similarity with sequences around the active site amino acids Asp‐Thr‐Gly of the acid protease family, suggesting that they have an activity similar to acid protease. On the basis of the alignment of reverse transcriptase‐related sequences, a dendrogram representing phylogenetic relationships among all the viruses compared together with 17.6 was constructed and its evolutionary implication is discussed.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Both RadA and RadB are involved in homologous recombination in Pyrococcus furiosus.

Kayoko Komori; Tomoko Miyata; Jocelyne DiRuggiero; Rhonda Holley-Shanks; Ikuko Hayashi; Isaac K O Cann; Kota Mayanagi; Hideo Shinagawa; Yoshizumi Ishino

RecA and Rad51 proteins are essential for homologous recombination in Bacteria andEukarya, respectively. Homologous proteins, called RadA, have been described for Archaea. Here we present the characterization of two RecA/Rad51 family proteins, RadA and RadB, fromPyrococcus furiosus. The radA andradB genes were not induced by DNA damage resulting from exposure of the cells to γ and UV irradiation and heat shock, suggesting that they might be constitutively expressed in this hyperthermophile. RadA had DNA-dependent ATPase, D-loop formation, and strand exchange activities. In contrast, RadB had a very weak ATPase activity that is not stimulated by DNA. This protein had a strong binding affinity for DNA, but little strand exchange activity could be detected. A direct interaction between RadA and RadB was detected by an immunoprecipitation assay. Moreover, RadB, but not RadA, coprecipitated with Hjc, a Holliday junction resolvase found inP. furiosus, in the absence of ATP. This interaction was suppressed in the presence of ATP. The Holliday junction cleavage activity of Hjc was inhibited by RadB in the absence, but not in the presence, of ATP. These results suggest that RadB has important roles in homologous recombination in Archaea and may regulate the cleavage reactions of the branch-structured DNA.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2011

Common architecture of the flagellar type III protein export apparatus and F- and V-type ATPases

Tatsuya Ibuki; Katsumi Imada; Tohru Minamino; Takayuki Kato; Tomoko Miyata; Keiichi Namba

The proteins that form the bacterial flagellum are translocated to its distal end through the central channel of the growing flagellum by the flagellar-specific protein export apparatus, a family of the type III protein secretion system. FliI and FliJ are soluble components of this apparatus. FliI is an ATPase that has extensive structural similarity to the α and β subunits of FoF1-ATP synthase. FliJ is essential for export, but its function remains obscure. Here we show that the structure of FliJ derived from Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium is remarkably similar to that of the two-stranded α-helical coiled-coil part of the γ subunit of FoF1-ATP synthase and that FliJ promotes the formation of FliI hexamer rings by binding to the center of the ring. These results suggest that the type III protein export system and F- and V-type ATPases share a similar mechanism and an evolutionary relationship.


Molecular Cell | 2002

Crystal Structure of the RuvA-RuvB Complex: A Structural Basis for the Holliday Junction Migrating Motor Machinery

Kazuhiro Yamada; Tomoko Miyata; Daisuke Tsuchiya; Takuji Oyama; Yoshie Fujiwara; Takayuki Ohnishi; Hiroshi Iwasaki; Hideo Shinagawa; Mariko Ariyoshi; Kouta Mayanagi; Kosuke Morikawa

We present the X-ray structure of the RuvA-RuvB complex, which plays a crucial role in ATP-dependent branch migration. Two RuvA tetramers form the symmetric and closed octameric shell, where four RuvA domain IIIs spring out in the two opposite directions to be individually caught by a single RuvB. The binding of domain III deforms the protruding beta hairpin in the N-terminal domain of RuvB and thereby appears to induce a functional and less symmetric RuvB hexameric ring. The model of the RuvA-RuvB junction DNA ternary complex, constructed by fitting the X-ray structure into the averaged electron microscopic images of the RuvA-RuvB junction, appears to be more compatible with the branch migration mode of a fixed RuvA-RuvB interaction than with a rotational interaction mode.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Common and distinct structural features of Salmonella injectisome and flagellar basal body

Akihiro Kawamoto; Yusuke V. Morimoto; Tomoko Miyata; Tohru Minamino; Kelly T. Hughes; Takayuki Kato; Keiichi Namba

Bacterial pathogens use an injectisome to deliver virulence proteins into eukaryotic host cells. The bacterial flagellum and injectisome export their component proteins for self-assembly. These two systems show high structural similarities and are classified as the type III secretion system, but it remains elusive how similar they are in situ because the structures of these complexes isolated from cells and visualized by electron cryomicroscopy have shown only the export channel and housing for the export apparatus. Here we report in situ structures of Salmonella injectisome and flagellum by electron cryotomography. The injectisome lacks the flagellar basal body C-ring, but a wing-like disc and a globular density corresponding to the export gate platform and ATPase hexamer ring, respectively, are stably attached through thin connectors, revealing yet unidentified common architectures of the two systems. The ATPase ring is far from the disc, suggesting that both apparatuses are observed in an export-off state.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2004

The clamp-loading complex for processive DNA replication

Tomoko Miyata; Takuji Oyama; Kouta Mayanagi; Sonoko Ishino; Yoshizumi Ishino; Kosuke Morikawa

DNA polymerase requires two processing factors, sliding clamps and clamp loaders, to direct rapid and accurate duplication of genomic DNA. In eukaryotes, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), the ring-shaped sliding clamp, encircles double-stranded DNA within its central hole and tethers the DNA polymerases onto DNA. Replication factor C (RFC) acts as the clamp loader, which correctly installs the sliding clamp onto DNA strands in an ATP-dependent manner. Here we report the three-dimensional structure of an archaeal clamp-loading complex (RFC–PCNA–DNA) determined by single-particle EM. The three-dimensional structure of the complex, reconstituted in vitro using a nonhydrolyzable ATP analog, reveals two components, a closed ring and a horseshoe-shaped element, which correspond to PCNA and RFC, respectively. The atomic structure of PCNA fits well into the closed ring, suggesting that this ternary complex represents a state just after the PCNA ring has closed to encircle the DNA duplex.


Structure | 2010

Structure of the 100S Ribosome in the Hibernation Stage Revealed by Electron Cryomicroscopy

Takayuki Kato; Hideji Yoshida; Tomoko Miyata; Yasushi Maki; Akira Wada; Keiichi Namba

In the stationary growth phase of bacteria, protein biosynthesis on ribosomes is suppressed, and the ribosomes are preserved in the cell by the formation of the 100S ribosome. The 100S ribosome is a dimer of the 70S ribosome and is formed by the binding of the ribosome modulation factor and the hibernation promoting factor. However, the binding mode between the two 70S ribosomes and the mechanism of complex formation are still poorly understood. Here, we report the structure of the 100S ribosome by electron cryomicroscopy and single-particle image analysis. The 100S ribosome purified from the cell in the stationary growth phase is composed of two transfer RNA-free 70S ribosomes, has two-fold symmetry, and is formed through interactions between their 30S subunits, where interactions between small subunit proteins, S2, S3 and S5, appear to be critical for the dimerization.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2009

ATP-induced FliI hexamerization facilitates bacterial flagellar protein export.

Ken-ichi Kazetani; Tohru Minamino; Tomoko Miyata; Takayuki Kato; Keiichi Namba

FliI ATPase forms a homo-hexamer to fully exert its ATPase activity, facilitating bacterial flagellar protein export. However, it remains unknown how FliI hexamerization is linked to protein export. Here, we analyzed the capability of ring formation by FliI and its catalytic mutant variants. Compared to ATP a non-hydrolysable ATP analog increased the probability of FliI hexamerization. In contrast, FliI(E221Q), which retained the affinity for ATP but has lost ATPase activity, efficiently formed the hexamer even in the presence of ATP. The mutations, which reduced the binding affinity for ATP, significantly abolished the ring formation. These results indicate that ATP-binding induces FliI hexamerization and that the release of ADP and Pi destabilizes the ring structure. FliI(E221Q) facilitated flagellar protein export in the absence of the FliH regulator of the export apparatus although not at the wild-type FliI level while the other did not. We propose that FliI couples ATP binding and hydrolysis to its assembly-disassembly cycle to efficiently initiate the flagellar protein export cycle.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014

Photoresponsive DNA nanocapsule having an open/close system for capture and release of nanomaterials.

Tomohiro Takenaka; Masayuki Endo; Yangyang Yang; Tomoko Emura; Kumi Hidaka; Takayuki Kato; Tomoko Miyata; Keiichi Namba; Hiroshi Sugiyama

A photofunctionalized square bipyramidal DNA nanocapsule (NC) was designed and prepared for the creation of a nanomaterial carrier. Photocontrollable open/close system and toehold system were introduced into the NC for the inclusion and release of a gold nanoparticle (AuNP) by photoirradiation and strand displacement. The reversible open and closed states were examined by gel electrophoresis and atomic force microscopy (AFM), and the open behavior was directly observed by high-speed AFM. The encapsulation of the DNA-modified AuNP within the NC was carried out by hybridization of a specific DNA strand (capture strand), and the release of the AuNP was examined by addition of toehold-containing complementary DNA strand (release strand). The release of the AuNP from the NC was achieved by the opening of the NC and subsequent strand displacement.


Genes to Cells | 2013

Conservation of two distinct types of 100S ribosome in bacteria

Masami Ueta; Chieko Wada; Takashi Daifuku; Yoshihiko Sako; Yoshitaka Bessho; Aya Kitamura; Ryosuke L. Ohniwa; Kazuya Morikawa; Hideji Yoshida; Takayuki Kato; Tomoko Miyata; Keiichi Namba; Akira Wada

In bacteria, 70S ribosomes (consisting of 30S and 50S subunits) dimerize to form 100S ribosomes, which were first discovered in Escherichia coli. Ribosome modulation factor (RMF) and hibernation promoting factor (HPF) mediate this dimerization in stationary phase. The 100S ribosome is translationally inactive, but it dissociates into two translationally active 70S ribosomes after transfer from starvation to fresh medium. Therefore, the 100S ribosome is called the ‘hibernating ribosome’. The gene encoding RMF is found widely throughout the Gammaproteobacteria class, but is not present in any other bacteria. In this study, 100S ribosome formation in six species of Gammaproteobacteria and eight species belonging to other bacterial classes was compared. There were several marked differences between the two groups: (i) Formation of 100S ribosomes was mediated by RMF and short HPF in Gammaproteobacteria species, similar to E. coli, whereas it was mediated only by long HPF in the other bacterial species; (ii) RMF/short HPF‐mediated 100S ribosome formation occurred specifically in stationary phase, whereas long HPF‐mediated 100S ribosome formation occurred in all growth phases; and (iii) 100S ribosomes formed by long HPF were much more stable than those formed by RMF and short HPF.

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Hideyuki Matsunami

Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology

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