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Dive into the research topics where Toyotaka Ishibashi is active.

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Featured researches published by Toyotaka Ishibashi.


Cell | 2012

Nucleosomal Elements that Control the Topography of the Barrier to Transcription

Lacramioara Bintu; Toyotaka Ishibashi; Manchuta Dangkulwanich; Yueh-Yi Wu; Lucyna Lubkowska; Mikhail Kashlev; Carlos Bustamante

The nucleosome represents a mechanical barrier to transcription that operates as a general regulator of gene expression. We investigate how each nucleosomal component-the histone tails, the specific histone-DNA contacts, and the DNA sequence-contributes to the strength of the barrier. Removal of the tails favors progression of RNA polymerase II into the entry region of the nucleosome by locally increasing the wrapping-unwrapping rates of the DNA around histones. In contrast, point mutations that affect histone-DNA contacts at the dyad abolish the barrier to transcription in the central region by decreasing the local wrapping rate. Moreover, we show that the nucleosome amplifies sequence-dependent transcriptional pausing, an effect mediated through the structure of the nascent RNA. Each of these nucleosomal elements controls transcription elongation by affecting distinctly the density and duration of polymerase pauses, thus providing multiple and alternative mechanisms for control of gene expression by chromatin remodeling and transcription factors.


Biochemistry | 2009

H2A.Z and H3.3 histone variants affect nucleosome structure: biochemical and biophysical studies.

Amit Thakar; Pooja Gupta; Toyotaka Ishibashi; Ron M. Finn; Begonia Silva-Moreno; Susumu Uchiyama; Kiichi Fukui; Miroslav Tomschik; Juan Ausió; Jordanka Zlatanova

Histone variants play important roles in regulation of chromatin structure and function. To understand the structural role played by histone variants H2A.Z and H3.3, both of which are implicated in transcription regulation, we conducted extensive biochemical and biophysical analysis on mononucleosomes reconstituted from either random-sequence DNA derived from native nucleosomes or a defined DNA nucleosome positioning sequence and recombinant human histones. Using established electrophoretic and sedimentation analysis methods, we compared the properties of nucleosomes containing canonical histones and histone variants H2A.Z and H3.3 (in isolation or in combination). We find only subtle differences in the compaction and stability of the particles. Interestingly, both H2A.Z and H3.3 affect nucleosome positioning, either creating new positions or altering the relative occupancy of the existing nucleosome position space. On the other hand, only H2A.Z-containing nucleosomes exhibit altered linker histone binding. These properties could be physiologically significant as nucleosome positions and linker histone binding partly determine factor binding accessibility.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

H2A.Z Stabilizes Chromatin in a Way That Is Dependent on Core Histone Acetylation

Anita A. Thambirajah; Deanna Dryhurst; Toyotaka Ishibashi; Andra Li; Allison H. Maffey; Juan Ausió

The functional and structural chromatin roles of H2A.Z are still controversial. This work represents a further attempt to resolve the current functional and structural dichotomy by characterizing chromatin structures containing native H2A.Z. We have analyzed the role of this variant in mediating the stability of the histone octamer in solution using gel-filtration chromatography at different pH. It was found that decreasing the pH from neutral to acidic conditions destabilized the histone complex. Furthermore, it was shown that the H2A.Z-H2B dimer had a reduced stability. Sedimentation velocity analysis of nucleosome core particles (NCPs) reconstituted from native H2A.Z-containing octamers indicated that these particles exhibit a very similar behavior to that of native NCPs consisting of canonical H2A. Sucrose gradient fractionation of native NCPs under different ionic strengths indicated that H2A.Z had a subtle tendency to fractionate with more stabilized populations. An extensive analysis of the salt-dependent dissociation of histones from hydroxyapatite-adsorbed chromatin revealed that, whereas H2A.Z co-elutes with H3–H4, hyperacetylation of histones (by treatment of chicken MSB cells with sodium butyrate) resulted in a significant fraction of this variant eluting with the canonical H2A. These studies also showed that the late elution of this variant (correlated to enhanced binding stability) was independent of the chromatin size and of the presence or absence of linker histones.


Biochemistry | 2009

Acetylation of vertebrate H2A.Z and its effect on the structure of the nucleosome.

Toyotaka Ishibashi; Deanna Dryhurst; Kristie L. Rose; Jeffrey Shabanowitz; Donald F. Hunt; Juan Ausió

Purified histone H2A.Z from chicken erythrocytes and a sodium butyrate-treated chicken erythroleukemic cell line was used as a model system to identify the acetylation sites (K4, K7, K11, K13, and K15) and quantify their distribution in this vertebrate histone variant. To understand the role played by acetylation in the modulation of the H2A.Z nucleosome core particle (NCP) stability and conformation, an extensive analysis was conducted on NCPs reconstituted from acetylated forms of histones, including H2A.Z and recombinant H2A.Z (K/Q) acetylation mimic mutants. Although the overall global acetylation of core histones destabilizes the NCP, we found that H2A.Z stabilizes the NCP regardless of its state of acetylation. Interestingly and quite unexpectedly, we found that the change in NCP conformation induced by global histone acetylation is dependent on H2A/H2A.Z acetylation. This suggests that acetylated H2A variants act synergistically with the acetylated forms of the core histone complement to alter the particle conformation. Furthermore, the simultaneous occurrence of H2A.Z and H2A in heteromorphic NCPs that most likely occurs in vivo slightly destabilizes the NCP, but only in the presence of acetylation.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2010

H2A.Bbd: an X-chromosome-encoded histone involved in mammalian spermiogenesis

Toyotaka Ishibashi; Andra Li; José M. Eirín-López; Ming Zhao; Kristal Missiaen; D. Wade Abbott; Marvin L. Meistrich; Michael J. Hendzel; Juan Ausió

Despite the identification of H2A.Bbd as a new vertebrate-specific replacement histone variant several years ago, and despite the many in vitro structural characterizations using reconstituted chromatin complexes consisting of this variant, the existence of H2A.Bbd in the cell and its location has remained elusive. Here, we report that the native form of this variant is present in highly advanced spermiogenic fractions of mammalian testis at the time when histones are highly acetylated and being replaced by protamines. It is also present in the nucleosomal chromatin fraction of mature human sperm. The ectopically expressed non-tagged version of the protein is associated with micrococcal nuclease-refractory insoluble fractions of chromatin and in mouse (20T1/2) cell line, H2A.Bbd is enriched at the periphery of chromocenters. The exceedingly rapid evolution of this unique X-chromosome-linked histone variant is shared with other reproductive proteins including those associated with chromatin in the mature sperm (protamines) of many vertebrates. This common rate of evolution provides further support for the functional and structural involvement of this protein in male gametogenesis in mammals.


eLife | 2013

Complete dissection of transcription elongation reveals slow translocation of RNA polymerase II in a linear ratchet mechanism

Manchuta Dangkulwanich; Toyotaka Ishibashi; Shixin Liu; Maria L. Kireeva; Lucyna Lubkowska; Mikhail Kashlev; Carlos Bustamante

During transcription elongation, RNA polymerase has been assumed to attain equilibrium between pre- and post-translocated states rapidly relative to the subsequent catalysis. Under this assumption, recent single-molecule studies proposed a branched Brownian ratchet mechanism that necessitates a putative secondary nucleotide binding site on the enzyme. By challenging individual yeast RNA polymerase II with a nucleosomal barrier, we separately measured the forward and reverse translocation rates. Surprisingly, we found that the forward translocation rate is comparable to the catalysis rate. This finding reveals a linear, non-branched ratchet mechanism for the nucleotide addition cycle in which translocation is one of the rate-limiting steps. We further determined all the major on- and off-pathway kinetic parameters in the elongation cycle. The resulting translocation energy landscape shows that the off-pathway states are favored thermodynamically but not kinetically over the on-pathway states, conferring the enzyme its propensity to pause and furnishing the physical basis for transcriptional regulation. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.00971.001


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Nascent RNA structure modulates the transcriptional dynamics of RNA polymerases

Bradley Zamft; Lacramioara Bintu; Toyotaka Ishibashi; Carlos Bustamante

RNA polymerase pausing represents an important mechanism of transcriptional regulation. In this study, we use a single-molecule transcription assay to investigate the effect of template base-pair composition on pausing by RNA polymerase II and the evolutionarily distinct mitochondrial polymerase Rpo41. For both enzymes, pauses are shorter and less frequent on GC-rich templates. Significantly, incubation with RNase abolishes the template dependence of pausing. A kinetic model, wherein the secondary structure of the nascent RNA poses an energetic barrier to pausing by impeding backtracking along the template, quantitatively predicts the pause densities and durations observed. The energy barriers extracted from the data correlate well with RNA folding energies obtained from cotranscriptional folding simulations. These results reveal that RNA secondary structures provide a cis-acting mechanism by which sequence modulates transcriptional elongation.


BMC Biology | 2009

Characterization of the histone H2A.Z-1 and H2A.Z-2 isoforms in vertebrates.

Deanna Dryhurst; Toyotaka Ishibashi; Kristie L. Rose; José M. Eirín-López; Darin McDonald; Begonia Silva-Moreno; Nik Veldhoen; Caren C. Helbing; Michael J. Hendzel; Jeffrey Shabanowitz; Donald F. Hunt; Juan Ausió

BackgroundWithin chromatin, the histone variant H2A.Z plays a role in many diverse nuclear processes including transcription, preventing the spread of heterochromatin and epigenetic transcriptional memory. The molecular mechanisms of how H2A.Z mediates its effects are not entirely understood. However, it is now known that H2A.Z has two protein isoforms in vertebrates, H2A.Z-1 and H2A.Z-2, which are encoded by separate genes and differ by 3 amino acid residues.ResultsWe report that H2A.Z-1 and H2A.Z-2 are expressed across a wide range of human tissues, they are both acetylated at lysine residues within the N-terminal region and they exhibit similar, but nonidentical, distributions within chromatin. Our results suggest that H2A.Z-2 preferentially associates with H3 trimethylated at lysine 4 compared to H2A.Z-1. The phylogenetic analysis of the promoter regions of H2A.Z-1 and H2A.Z-2 indicate that they have evolved separately during vertebrate evolution.ConclusionsOur biochemical, gene expression, and phylogenetic data suggest that the H2A.Z-1 and H2A.Z-2 variants function similarly yet they may have acquired a degree of functional independence.


The FASEB Journal | 2008

H2A.Bbd: a quickly evolving hypervariable mammalian histone that destabilizes nucleosomes in an acetylation-independent way

José M. Eirín-López; Toyotaka Ishibashi; Juan Ausió

Molecular evolutionary analyses revealed that histone H2A.Bbd is a highly variable quickly evolving mammalian replacement histone variant, in striking contrast to all other histones. At the nucleotide level’ this variability appears to be the result of a larger amount of nonsynonymous variation, which affects to a lesser extent, the structural domain of the protein comprising the histone fold. The resulting amino acid sequence diversity can be predicted to affect the internucleosomal and intranucleosomal histone interactions. Our phylogenetic analysis has allowed us to identify several of the residues involved. The biophysical characterization of nucleo‐somes reconstituted with recombinant mouse H2A.Bbd and their comparison to similar data obtained with human H2A.Bbd clearly support this notion. Despite the high interspecific amino acid sequence variability, all of the H2A.Bbd variants exert similar structural effects at the nucleosome level, which result in an unfolded highly unstable nucleoprotein complex. Such structure resembles that previously described for the highly dynami‐cally acetylated nucleosomes associated with transcriptionally active regions of the genome. Nevertheless, the structure of nucleosome core particles reconstituted from H2A.Bbd is not affected by the presence of a hyperacetylated histone complement. This suggests that replacement by H2A.Bbd provides an alternative mechanism to unfold chromatin structure, possibly in euchromatic regions, in a way that is not dependent on acetylation.— Eirin‐Lopez, J. M., Ishibashi, T., and Ausio, J. H2A.Bbd: a quickly evolving hypervariable mammalian histone that destabilizes nucleosomes in an acetylation‐independent way. FASEB J. 22, 316–326 (2008)


FEBS Journal | 2009

The multi‐replication protein A (RPA) system – a new perspective

Kengo Sakaguchi; Toyotaka Ishibashi; Yukinobu Uchiyama; Kazuki Iwabata

Replication protein A (RPA) complex has been shown, using both in vivo and in vitro approaches, to be required for most aspects of eukaryotic DNA metabolism: replication, repair, telomere maintenance and homologous recombination. Here, we review recent data concerning the function and biological importance of the multi‐RPA complex. There are distinct complexes of RPA found in the biological kingdoms, although for a long time only one type of RPA complex was believed to be present in eukaryotes. Each complex probably serves a different role. In higher plants, three distinct large and medium subunits are present, but only one species of the smallest subunit. Each of these protein subunits forms stable complexes with their respective partners. They are paralogs as complex. Humans possess two paralogs and one analog of RPA. The multi‐RPA system can be regarded as universal in eukaryotes. Among eukaryotic kingdoms, paralogs, orthologs, analogs and heterologs of many DNA synthesis‐related factors, including RPA, are ubiquitous. Convergent evolution seems to be ubiquitous in these processes. Using recent findings, we review the composition and biological functions of RPA complexes.

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Kengo Sakaguchi

Tokyo University of Science

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Juan Ausió

University of Victoria

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Junji Hashimoto

Tokyo University of Science

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Taichi Yamamoto

Tokyo University of Science

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Yukinobu Uchiyama

Tokyo University of Science

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Yoko Mori

Tokyo University of Science

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Tomoyuki Furukawa

Tokyo University of Science

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