Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Toshihiro Omura is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Toshihiro Omura.


Plant and Cell Physiology | 2011

Gene Structures, Classification, and Expression Models of the AP2/EREBP Transcription Factor Family in Rice

Akhter Most Sharoni; Mohammed Nuruzzaman; Kouji Satoh; Takumi Shimizu; Hiroaki Kondoh; Takahide Sasaya; Il-Ryong Choi; Toshihiro Omura; Shoshi Kikuchi

We identified 163 AP2/EREBP (APETALA2/ethylene-responsive element-binding protein) genes in rice. We analyzed gene structures, phylogenies, domain duplication, genome localizations and expression profiles. Conserved amino acid residues and phylogeny construction using the AP2/ERF conserved domain sequence suggest that in rice the OsAP2/EREBP gene family can be classified broadly into four subfamilies [AP2, RAV (related to ABI3/VP1), DREB (dehydration-responsive element-binding protein) and ERF (ethylene-responsive factor)]. The chromosomal localizations of the OsAP2/EREBP genes indicated 20 segmental duplication events involving 40 genes; 58 redundant OsAP2/EREBP genes were involved in tandem duplication events. There were fewer introns after segmental duplication. We investigated expression profiles of this gene family under biotic stresses [infection with rice viruses such as rice stripe virus (RSV), rice tungro spherical virus (RTSV) and rice dwarf virus (RDV, three virus strains S, O and D84)], and various abiotic stresses. Symptoms of virus infection were more severe in RSV infection than in RTSV and RDV infection. Responses to biotic stresses are novel findings and these stresses enhance the ability to identify the best candidate genes for further functional analysis. The genes of subgroup B-5 were not induced under abiotic treatments whereas they were activated by the three RDV strains. None of the genes of subgroups A-3 were differentially expressed by any of the biotic stresses. Our 44K and 22K microarray results suggest that 53 and 52 non-redundant genes in this family were up-regulated in response to biotic and abiotic stresses, respectively. We further examined the stress responsiveness of most genes by reverse transcription-PCR. The study results should be useful in selecting candidate genes from specific subgroups for functional analysis.


Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2009

Silencing by RNAi of the gene for Pns12, a viroplasm matrix protein of Rice dwarf virus, results in strong resistance of transgenic rice plants to the virus

Takumi Shimizu; Motoyasu Yoshii; Taiyun Wei; Hirohiko Hirochika; Toshihiro Omura

The non-structural protein Pns12 of Rice dwarf virus is one of the early proteins expressed in cultured insect cells, and it is one of 12 proteins that initiate the formation of the viroplasm, the putative site of viral replication. Pns4 is also a non-structural protein, visible as minitubules after nucleation of the viroplasm. We introduced Pns12- and Pns4-specific RNA interference (RNAi) constructs into rice plants. The resultant transgenic plants accumulated short interfering RNAs specific to the constructs. The progeny of rice plants with Pns12-specific RNAi constructs, after self-fertilization, were strongly resistant to viral infection. By contrast, resistance was less apparent in the case of rice plants with Pns4-specific RNAi constructs, and delayed symptoms appeared in some plants of each line. Our results suggest that interference with the expression of a protein that is critical for viral replication, such as the viroplasm matrix protein Pns12, might be a practical and effective way to control viral infection in crop plants.


Journal of Virology | 2006

The Spread of Rice Dwarf Virus among Cells of Its Insect Vector Exploits Virus-Induced Tubular Structures

Taiyun Wei; Akira Kikuchi; Yusuke Moriyasu; Nobuhiro Suzuki; Takumi Shimizu; Kyoji Hagiwara; Hongyan Chen; Mami Takahashi; Tamaki Ichiki-Uehara; Toshihiro Omura

ABSTRACT Various cytopathological structures, known as inclusion bodies, are formed upon infection of cultured leafhopper cells by Rice dwarf virus, a member of the family Reoviridae. These structures include tubules of approximately 85 nm in diameter which are composed of the nonstructural viral protein Pns10 and contain viral particles. Such tubular structures were produced in heterologous non-host insect cells that expressed Pns10 of the virus. These tubules, when associated with actin-based filopodia, were able to protrude from the surface of cells and to penetrate neighboring cells. A binding assay in vitro revealed the specific binding of Pns10 to actin. Infection of clusters of cells was readily apparent 5 days after inoculation at a low multiplicity of infection with the virus, even in the presence of neutralizing antibodies. However, treatment of host cells with drugs that inhibited the elongation of actin filaments abolished the extension of Pns10 tubules from the surface of cells, with a significant simultaneous decrease in the extent of infection of neighboring cells. These results together revealed a previously undescribed aspect of the intercellular spread of Rice dwarf virus, wherein the virus exploits tubules composed of a nonstructural viral protein and actin-based filopodia to move into neighboring cells.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2007

The repression of cell wall- and plastid-related genes and the induction of defense-related genes in rice plants infected with Rice dwarf virus.

Takumi Shimizu; Kouji Satoh; Shoshi Kikuchi; Toshihiro Omura

An analysis, using microarrays, of gene expression in rice plants infected with Rice dwarf virus revealed significant decreases in levels of expression of genes that are involved in the formation of cell walls, reflecting the stunted growth of diseased plants. The expression of plastid-related genes also was suppressed, as anticipated from the white chlorotic appearance of infected leaves. By contrast, the expression of defense- and stress-related genes was enhanced after viral infection. These results suggest that virus-infected rice plants attempt to survive viral infection and replication by raising the levels of expression of defense- and stress-related genes while suppressing the expression of genes required for the elongation of cells and photosynthesis.


Journal of General Virology | 2010

Selective modification of rice (Oryza sativa) gene expression by rice stripe virus infection

Kouji Satoh; Hiroaki Kondoh; Takahide Sasaya; Takumi Shimizu; Il-Ryong Choi; Toshihiro Omura; Shoshi Kikuchi

Rice stripe disease, caused by rice stripe virus (RSV), is one of the major virus diseases in east Asia. Rice plants infected with RSV usually show symptoms such as chlorosis, weakness, necrosis in newly emerged leaves and stunting. To reveal rice cellular systems influenced by RSV infection, temporal changes in the transcriptome of RSV-infected plants were monitored by a customized rice oligoarray system. The transcriptome changes in RSV-infected plants indicated that protein-synthesis machineries and energy production in the mitochondrion were activated by RSV infection, whereas energy production in the chloroplast and synthesis of cell-structure components were suppressed. The transcription of genes related to host-defence systems under hormone signals and those for gene silencing were not activated at the early infection phase. Together with concurrent observation of virus concentration and symptom development, such transcriptome changes in RSV-infected plants suggest that different sets of various host genes are regulated depending on the development of disease symptoms and the accumulation of RSV.


Plant Journal | 2009

Disruption of a novel gene for a NAC‐domain protein in rice confers resistance to Rice dwarf virus

Motoyasu Yoshii; Takumi Shimizu; Muneo Yamazaki; Takahiko Higashi; Akio Miyao; Hirohiko Hirochika; Toshihiro Omura

Rice dwarf virus (RDV) is a serious viral pest that is transmitted to rice plants (Oryza sativa L.) by leafhoppers and causes a dwarfism in infected plants. To identify host factors involved in the multiplication of RDV, we screened Tos17 insertion mutant lines of rice for mutants with reduced susceptibility to RDV. One mutant, designated rim1-1, did not show typical disease symptoms upon infection with RDV. The accumulation of RDV capsid proteins was also drastically reduced in inoculated rim1-1 mutant plants. Co-segregation and complementation analyses revealed that the rim1-1 mutation had been caused by insertion of Tos17 in an intron of a novel NAC gene. The rim1-1 mutant remained susceptible to the two other viruses tested, one of which is also transmitted by leafhoppers, suggesting that the multiplication rather than transmission of RDV is specifically impaired in this mutant. We propose that RIM1 functions as a host factor that is required for multiplication of RDV in rice.


Journal of General Virology | 1989

The Outer Capsid Protein of Rice Dwarf Virus Is Encoded by Genome Segment S8

Toshihiro Omura; Koichi Ishikawa; Hisashi Hirano; Masashi Ugaki; Yuzo Minobe; Tsuneo Tsuchizaki; Hajime Kato

The nucleotide sequence of DNA complementary to the eighth largest (S8) of the 12 genome segments of rice dwarf virus was determined. This genome segment is 1424 nucleotides in length and has a single long open reading frame extending 1260 nucleotides from the first AUG triplet (residues 24 to 26). The predicted translational product comprises 420 amino acids and has an Mr of 46,422. The amino acid sequences of several peptide fragments of the major outer capsid protein were found to be contained in the predicted translational product of the above nucleotide sequence. This protein, previously reported to be 43K, is encoded by genome segment S8 and therefore renamed the 46K protein.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Entry of Rice Dwarf Virus into Cultured Cells of Its Insect Vector Involves Clathrin-Mediated Endocytosis

Taiyun Wei; Hongyan Chen; Tamaki Ichiki-Uehara; Hiroyuki Hibino; Toshihiro Omura

ABSTRACT Electron microscopy revealed that the entry of Rice dwarf virus (RDV) into insect vector cells involved endocytosis via coated pits. The treatment of cells with drugs that block receptor-mediated or clathrin-mediated endocytosis significantly reduced RDV infectivity. However, the drug that blocks caveola-mediated endocytosis had a negligible effect on such infection. Infection was also inhibited when cells had been pretreated with bafilomycin A1, which interferes with acidification of endosomes. Moreover, immunofluorescence staining indicated that the virus is internalized into early endosomes. Together, our data indicate that RDV enters insect vector cells through receptor-mediated, clathrin-dependent endocytosis and is sequestered in early endosomes.


PLOS Pathogens | 2012

Tubular Structure Induced by a Plant Virus Facilitates Viral Spread in Its Vector Insect

Qian Chen; Hongyan Chen; Qianzhuo Mao; Qifei Liu; Takumi Shimizu; Tamaki Uehara-Ichiki; Zujian Wu; Lianhui Xie; Toshihiro Omura; Taiyun Wei

Rice dwarf virus (RDV) replicates in and is transmitted by a leafhopper vector in a persistent-propagative manner. Previous cytopathologic and genetic data revealed that tubular structures, constructed by the nonstructural viral protein Pns10, contain viral particles and are directly involved in the intercellular spread of RDV among cultured leafhopper cells. Here, we demonstrated that RDV exploited these virus-containing tubules to move along actin-based microvilli of the epithelial cells and muscle fibers of visceral muscle tissues in the alimentary canal, facilitating the spread of virus in the body of its insect vector leafhoppers. In cultured leafhopper cells, the knockdown of Pns10 expression due to RNA interference (RNAi) induced by synthesized dsRNA from Pns10 gene strongly inhibited tubule formation and prevented the spread of virus among insect vector cells. RNAi induced after ingestion of dsRNA from Pns10 gene strongly inhibited formation of tubules, preventing intercellular spread and transmission of the virus by the leafhopper. All these results, for the first time, show that a persistent-propagative virus exploits virus-containing tubules composed of a nonstructural viral protein to traffic along actin-based cellular protrusions, facilitating the intercellular spread of the virus in the vector insect. The RNAi strategy and the insect vector cell culture provide useful tools to investigate the molecular mechanisms enabling efficient transmission of persistent-propagative plant viruses by vector insects.


Journal of General Virology | 1987

Changes in a nucleic acid and a protein component of rice dwarf virus particles associated with an increase in symptom severity.

Ikuo Kimura; Yuzo Minobe; Toshihiro Omura

Summary Repeated selection of plants with unusually severe symptoms after their inoculation by insect vectors which had been injected with dilute inoculum from crude extracts of a stock culture (O strain) of rice dwarf virus (RDV) resulted in the emergence of a severe isolate (S strain). Of the 12 segments of RDV RNA, the fourth largest RNA of the S strain had an apparent M r about 20000 larger than that of the corresponding segment of the O strain. The M r of the protein corresponding to the M r 43000 protein of the O strain, which is located on the outside of the outer capsid, was 44000 in the S strain. The implication of the differences in the RNA and protein components between the S and O strains is discussed.

Collaboration


Dive into the Toshihiro Omura's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Takumi Shimizu

Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Takahide Sasaya

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Taiyun Wei

Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tamaki Uehara-Ichiki

Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge