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Dive into the research topics where Tomonobu Kusano is active.

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Featured researches published by Tomonobu Kusano.


Transgenic Research | 2013

The polyamine spermine protects Arabidopsis from heat stress-induced damage by increasing expression of heat shock-related genes

G. H. M. Sagor; Thomas Berberich; Yoshihiro Takahashi; Masaru Niitsu; Tomonobu Kusano

It is known that the polyamine (PA) biosynthetic pathway is modulated at the transcriptional level during abiotic stresses. Here we studied the expression of PA biosynthetic pathway genes upon exposure to heat shock (HS) in Arabidopsis and showed that the spermine (Spm) synthase gene (SPMS) and S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase 2 gene are induced at the earliest stage, followed by the induction of the arginine decarboxylase 2 gene. Correspondingly, Spm content increased linearly upon HS, and putrescine (Put) and spermidine (Spd) content also increased but not thermospermine (T-Spm) content. Exogenously applied Spm had a potential to protect Arabidopsis plants from HS-induced damage. Such protection was also observed to the same extent with T-Spm and by Spd to a lesser extent but not by Put. Then we tested whether altered endogenous Spm content affects sensitivity to HS using both transgenic plants overexpressing SPMS and a Spm deficient (spms) mutant plant. The result revealed that the higher the Spm content the higher the thermotolerance. Even in the spms plant, representative genes encoding heat shock proteins (HSPs) and heat shock transcription factors were upregulated upon HS, while the expression of such genes was increased in a positively correlated manner with Spm content. Furthermore four kinds of HSPs (HSP101, HSP90, HSP70 and HSP17.6) were detected proportionally with the levels of their respective transcripts upon HS. We propose that Spm increases the HS response at transcriptional and translational levels and protects host plants from HS-induced damage.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2016

Reducing Cytoplasmic Polyamine Oxidase Activity in Arabidopsis Increases Salt and Drought Tolerance by Reducing Reactive Oxygen Species Production and Increasing Defense Gene Expression

G. H. M. Sagor; Siyuan Zhang; Seiji Kojima; Stefan Simm; Thomas Berberich; Tomonobu Kusano

The link between polyamine oxidases (PAOs), which function in polyamine catabolism, and stress responses remains elusive. Here, we address this issue using Arabidopsis pao mutants in which the expression of the five PAO genes is knocked-out or knocked-down. As the five single pao mutants and wild type (WT) showed similar response to salt stress, we tried to generate the mutants that have either the cytoplasmic PAO pathway (pao1 pao5) or the peroxisomal PAO pathway (pao2 pao3 pao4) silenced. However, the latter triple mutant was not obtained. Thus, in this study, we used two double mutants, pao1 pao5 and pao2 pao4. Of interest, pao1 pao5 mutant was NaCl- and drought-tolerant, whereas pao2 pao4 showed similar sensitivity to those stresses as WT. To reveal the underlying mechanism of salt tolerance, further analyses were performed. Na uptake of the mutant (pao1 pao5) decreased to 75% of WT. PAO activity of the mutant was reduced to 62% of WT. The content of reactive oxygen species (ROS) such as hydrogen peroxide, a reaction product of PAO action, and superoxide anion in the mutant became 81 and 72% of the levels in WT upon salt treatment. The mutant contained 2.8-fold higher thermospermine compared to WT. Moreover, the mutant induced the genes of salt overly sensitive-, abscisic acid (ABA)-dependent- and ABA-independent- pathways more strongly than WT upon salt treatment. The results suggest that the Arabidopsis plant silencing cytoplasmic PAOs shows salinity tolerance by reducing ROS production and strongly inducing subsets of stress-responsive genes under stress conditions.


FEBS Letters | 2015

The polyamine oxidase from lycophyte Selaginella lepidophylla (SelPAO5), unlike that of angiosperms, back-converts thermospermine to norspermidine

G. H. M. Sagor; Masataka Inoue; Dong Wook Kim; Seiji Kojima; Masaru Niitsu; Thomas Berberich; Tomonobu Kusano

In the phylogeny of plant polyamine oxidases (PAOs), clade III members from angiosperms, such asArabidopsis thaliana PAO5 andOryza sativa PAO1, prefer spermine and thermospermine as substrates and back‐convert both of these substrates to spermidine in vitro. A clade III representative of lycophytes, SelPAO5 fromSelaginella lepidophylla, also prefers spermine and thermospermine but instead back‐converts these substrates to spermidine and norspermidine, respectively. This finding indicates that the clade III PAOs of lycophytes and angiosperms oxidize thermospermine at different carbon positions. We discuss the physiological significance of this difference.


Plant Cell Reports | 2013

Longer uncommon polyamines have a stronger defense gene-induction activity and a higher suppressing activity of Cucumber mosaic virus multiplication compared to that of spermine in Arabidopsis thaliana

G. H. M. Sagor; Taibo Liu; Hideki Takahashi; Masaru Niitsu; Thomas Berberich; Tomonobu Kusano

Key messageOur work suggests that long chain polyamines and their derivatives are potential chemicals to control viral pathogens for crop production.AbstractPreviously we showed that two tetraamines, spermine (Spm) and thermospermine (T-Spm), induce the expression of a subset of defense-related genes and repress proliferation of Cucumber mosaic virus (CMV) in Arabidopsis. Here we tested whether the longer uncommon polyamines (LUPAs) such as caldopentamine, caldohexamine, homocaldopentamine and homocaldohexamine have such the activity. LUPAs had higher gene induction activity than Spm and T-Spm. Interestingly the genes induced by LUPAs could be classified into two groups: the one group was most responsive to caldohexamine while the other one was most responsive to homocaldopentamine. In both the cases, the inducing activity was dose-dependent. LUPAs caused local cell death and repressed CMV multiplication more efficiently as compared to Spm. LUPAs inhibited the viral multiplication of not only avirulent CMV but also of virulent CMV in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, LUPAs can activate the systemic acquired resistance against CMV more efficiently as compared to Spm. When Arabidopsis leaves were incubated with LUPAs, the putative polyamine oxidase (PAO)-mediated catabolites were detected even though the conversion rate was very low. In addition, we found that LUPAs induced the expression of three NADPH oxidase genes (rbohC, rbohE and rbohH) among ten isoforms. Taken together, we propose that LUPAs activate two alternative reactive oxygen species evoked pathways, a PAO-mediated one and an NADPH-oxidase-mediated one, which lead to induce defense-related genes and restrict CMV multiplication.


Plant Cell Reports | 2016

Spermine modulates the expression of two probable polyamine transporter genes and determines growth responses to cadaverine in Arabidopsis.

G. H. M. Sagor; Thomas Berberich; Seiji Kojima; Masaru Niitsu; Tomonobu Kusano

Key messageTwo genes,LAT1andOCT1, are likely to be involved in polyamine transport in Arabidopsis. Endogenous spermine levels modulate their expression and determine the sensitivity to cadaverine.AbstractArabidopsis spermine (Spm) synthase (SPMS) gene-deficient mutant was previously shown to be rather resistant to the diamine cadaverine (Cad). Furthermore, a mutant deficient in polyamine oxidase 4 gene, accumulating about twofold more of Spm than wild type plants, showed increased sensitivity to Cad. It suggests that endogenous Spm content determines growth responses to Cad in Arabidopsis thaliana. Here, we showed that Arabidopsis seedlings pretreated with Spm absorbs more Cad and has shorter root growth, and that the transgenic Arabidopsis plants overexpressing the SPMS gene are hypersensitive to Cad, further supporting the above idea. The transgenic Arabidopsis overexpressing L-Amino acid Transporter 1 (LAT1) absorbed more Cad and showed increased Cad sensitivity, suggesting that LAT1 functions as a Cad importer. Recently, other research group reported that Organic Cation Transporter 1 (OCT1) is a causal gene which determines the Cad sensitivity of various Arabidopsis accessions. Furthermore, their results suggested that OCT1 is involved in Cad efflux. Thus we monitored the expression of OCT1 and LAT1 during the above experiments. Based on the results, we proposed a model in which the level of Spm content modulates the expression of OCT1 and LAT1, and determines Cad sensitivity of Arabidopsis.


Annals of Botany | 2018

Scots pine aminopropyltransferases shed new light on evolution of the polyamine biosynthesis pathway in seed plants

Jaana Vuosku; Katja Karppinen; Riina Muilu-Mäkelä; Tomonobu Kusano; G. H. M. Sagor; Komlan Avia; Emmi Alakärppä; Johanna Kestilä; Marko Suokas; Kaloian Nickolov; Leena M. Hamberg; Outi Savolainen; Hely Häggman; Tytti Sarjala

Background and AimsnPolyamines are small metabolites present in all living cells and play fundamental roles in numerous physiological events in plants. The aminopropyltransferases (APTs), spermidine synthase (SPDS), spermine synthase (SPMS) and thermospermine synthase (ACL5), are essential enzymes in the polyamine biosynthesis pathway. In angiosperms, SPMS has evolved from SPDS via gene duplication, whereas in gymnosperms APTs are mostly unexplored and no SPMS gene has been reported. The present study aimed to investigate the functional properties of the SPDS and ACL5 proteins of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) in order to elucidate the role and evolution of APTs in higher plants.nnnMethodsnGerminating Scots pine seeds and seedlings were analysed for polyamines by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and the expression of PsSPDS and PsACL5 genes by in situ hybridization. Recombinant proteins of PsSPDS and PsACL5 were produced and investigated for functional properties. Also gene structures, promoter regions and phylogenetic relationships of PsSPDS and PsACL5 genes were analysed.nnnKey ResultsnScots pine tissues were found to contain spermidine, spermine and thermospermine. PsSPDS enzyme catalysed synthesis of both spermidine and spermine. PsACL5 was found to produce thermospermine, and PsACL5 gene expression was localized in the developing procambium in embryos and tracheary elements in seedlings.nnnConclusionsnContrary to previous views, our results demonstrate that SPMS activity is not a novel feature developed solely in the angiosperm lineage of seed plants but also exists as a secondary property in the Scots pine SPDS enzyme. The discovery of bifunctional SPDS from an evolutionarily old conifer reveals the missing link in the evolution of the polyamine biosynthesis pathway. The finding emphasizes the importance of pre-existing secondary functions in the evolution of new enzyme activities via gene duplication. Our results also associate PsACL5 with the development of vascular structures in Scots pine.


Plant Signaling & Behavior | 2017

Identification of the actual coding region for polyamine oxidase 6 from rice (OsPAO6) and its partial characterization

G. H. M. Sagor; Tomonobu Kusano; Thomas Berberich

ABSTRACT Polyamines (PA) in plant play roles in growth and development and in responses to environmental stresses. The family of polyamine oxidases (PAO) contributes to a balanced homeostasis of PAs catalyzing two different reactions, terminal catabolic (TC) and back-conversion (BC) pathway, in PA catabolism. From the seven PAOs encoded by the rice genome (OsPAO1 – OsPAO7) OsPAO6 could so far not be characterized due to failure in obtaining the coding cDNA based on accessions in the genomic databases. We report cloning and characterization of the correct OsPAO6 cDNA with a length of 1,742 bp. The 1,491 bp long open reading frame codes for a 497-amino acid protein from nine exons. The protein which has 92% identity to OsPAO7 localizes to plasma membrane.


Archive | 2018

Molecules for Sensing Polyamines and Transducing Their Action in Plants

Tomonobu Kusano; G. H. M. Sagor; Thomas Berberich

Polyamines play important roles in growth, development, and adaptive responses to various stresses. In the past two decades, progress in plant polyamine research has accelerated, and the key molecules and components involved in many biological events have been identified. Recently, polyamine sensors used to detect polyamine-enriched foods and polyamines derived from degrading flesh were identified in fly and zebrafish, respectively. Work has begun to identify such molecules in plants as well. Here, we summarize the current knowledge about polyamines in plants. Furthermore, we discuss the roles of key molecules, such as calcium ions, reactive oxygen species, nitric oxide, γ-aminobutyric acid, polyamine transporters, and the mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade, from the viewpoint of polyamine action.


Archive | 2018

Abiotic Stress Phenotyping of Polyamine Mutants

Thomas Berberich; G. H. M. Sagor; Tomonobu Kusano

Plant mutants in polyamine pathway genes are ideal for investigating their roles in stress responses. Here we describe easy-to-perform methods for phenotyping Arabidopsis mutants under abiotic stress. These include measurements of root growth, chlorophyll content, water loss, electrolyte leakage, and content of the reactive oxygen species hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and superoxide anion (O2-). Growth of Arabidopsis seedlings is described that enables transfer to different media for stress treatment without damaging roots.


Archive | 2015

Polyamines : a universal molecular nexus for growth, survival, and specialized metabolism

Tomonobu Kusano; Hideyuki Suzuki

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G. H. M. Sagor

Bangladesh Agricultural University

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G. H. M. Sagor

Bangladesh Agricultural University

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