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Featured researches published by Yasuji Sakube.


Genes to Cells | 2005

Tissue expression of four troponin I genes and their molecular interactions with two troponin C isoforms in Caenorhabditis elegans.

Razia Ruksana; Kazuki Kuroda; H. Terami; Tetsuya Bando; Shun Kitaoka; Tomohide Takaya; Yasuji Sakube; Hiroaki Kagawa

Gene duplication is a major genetic event that can produce multiple protein isoforms. Comparative sequence and functional analysis of related gene products can provide insights into protein family evolution. To characterize the Caenorhabditis elegans troponin I family, we analyzed gene structures, tissue expression patterns and RNAi phenotypes of four troponin I isoforms. Tissue expression patterns were determined using lacZ/gfp/rfp reporter gene assays. The tni‐1, tni‐2/unc‐27 and tni‐3 genes, each encoding a troponin I isoform, are uniquely expressed in body wall, vulval and anal muscles but at different levels; tni‐4 was expressed solely in the pharynx. Expressing tni‐1 and ‐2 gene RNAi caused motility defects similar to unc‐27 (e155) mutant, a tni‐2 null allele. The tni‐3 RNAi expression produced egg laying defects while the tni‐4 RNAi caused arrest at gastrulation. Overlay analyses were used to assay interactions between the troponin I and two troponin C isoforms. The three body wall troponin I isoforms interacted with body wall and pharyngeal troponin C isoforms; TNI‐4 interacted only with pharyngeal troponin C. Our results suggest the body wall genes have evolved following duplication of the pharynx gene and provide important data about gene duplication and functional differentiation of nematode troponin I isoforms.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2002

Molecular dissection, tissue localization and Ca2+ binding of the ryanodine receptor of Caenorhabditis elegans

Tomoyo Hamada; Yasuji Sakube; Joohong Ahnn; Do Han Kim; Hiroaki Kagawa

The ryanodine receptor of Caenorhabditis elegans (CeRyR) which contains 5,071 amino acid residues, is encoded by a single gene, ryr-1/unc-68. The unc-68(kh30) mutation, isolated in an animal showing abnormal response to the anesthetic ketamine, has the substitution Ser1444Asn in CeRyR, predicted to be a phosphorylation site. To elucidate the function of the region of CeRyR, and to determine the localization of CeRyR in this animal, ten region-peptides were produced in Escherichia coli by using expression plasmids and eight antisera were raised against these fusion peptides. One antibody against the region corresponding to the kh30 mutation site enabled detection of CeRyR from mutant animals both in Western analysis and in situ. Specificity of this antiserum was demonstrated using Western analysis, which showed the full size and the partial size bands in wild-type and in the Tc1-induced deletion mutant animals, respectively, but no corresponding bands in unc-68 null mutant animals. CeRyR was detected in I-bands of muscle sarcomeres by double immunostaining. CeRyR was found in the body wall, pharyngeal, vulval, anal and sex muscles of adult worms and also found to be present in embryonic muscle, but not in non-muscle cells. Two EF-hand motifs and the C terminus were demonstrated to be Ca(2+) binding regions. On the basis of these results, we propose a model for the functional domains of CeRyR, which agrees well with the model of mammalian skeletal RyR, which is based on proteolysis and cross-linking analysis. We discuss the usefulness and limitations of the molecular dissection approach, which uses peptides and peptide-specific antibodies to determine the local structure and function of individual domains within a large molecule.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2008

Transcription Factors GATA/ELT-2 and Forkhead/HNF-3/PHA-4 Regulate the Tropomyosin Gene Expression in the Pharynx and Intestine of Caenorhabditis elegans

Frederick Anokye-Danso; Akwasi Anyanful; Yasuji Sakube; Hiroaki Kagawa

Gene regulation during development is an important biological activity that leads to synthesis of biomolecules at specific locations and specific times. The single tropomyosin gene of Caenorhabditis elegans, tmy-1/lev-11, produces four isoforms of protein: two from the external promoter and two from the internal promoter. We investigated the internal promoter of tropomyosin to identify sequences that regulate expression of tmy-1 in the pharynx and intestine. By promoter deletion of tmy-1 reporters as well as by database analyses, a 100-bp fragment that contained binding sequences for a GATA factor, for a chicken CdxA homolog, and for a forkhead factor was identified. Both the forkhead and CdxA binding sequences contributed to pharyngeal and intestinal expression. In addition, the GATA site also influenced intestinal expression of tmy-1 reporter. We showed that ELT-2 and PHA-4 proteins interact directly with the GATA and forkhead binding sequences, respectively, in gel mobility shift assays. RNA interference knockdown of elt-2 diminished tmy-1::gfp expression in the intestine. In contrast to RNA interference knockdown of pha-4, expression of tmy-1::gfp in pha-4;smg-1 mutants was slightly weaker than that of the wild type. Ectopic expression of PHA-4 and ELT-2 by heat shock was sufficient to elicit widespread expression of tmy-1::lacZ reporter in embryos. We found no indication of a synergistic relation between ELT-2 and PHA-4. Based on our data, PHA-4 and CdxA function as general transcription factors for pharyngeal and intestinal regulation of tmy-1. We present models by which ELT-2, PHA-4, and CdxA orchestrate expression from the internal promoter of tmy-1.


Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering | 2010

Lactobacillus-mediated RNA interference in nematode.

Ai Kuwahara; Masashi Arita; Akira Kushiro; Yasuji Sakube; Masahiko Sisido; Takashi Ohtsuki

We engineered Lactobacillus paracasei to produce a dsRNA that would trigger RNAi-induced silencing of an essential gene in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. The dsRNA-expressing L. paracasei can be used in experiments conducted on culture plates and may also be used as an orally administrable dsRNA carrier for humans and other mammals.


Journal of Pharmacological Sciences | 2004

Molecular Mechanisms and Drug Development in Aquaporin Water Channel Diseases: Aquaporin Superfamily (Superaquaporins): Expansion of Aquaporins Restricted to Multicellular Organisms

Yoshiyuki Morishita; Yasuji Sakube; Sei Sasaki; Kenichi Ishibashi


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1997

AN ABNORMAL KETAMINE RESPONSE IN MUTANTS DEFECTIVE IN THE RYANODINE RECEPTOR GENE RYR-1 (UNC-68) OF CAENORHABDITIS ELEGANS

Yasuji Sakube; Hideki Ando; Hiroaki Kagawa


Journal of Cell Biology | 1999

Genomic Organization, Expression, and Analysis of the Troponin C Gene pat-10 of Caenorhabditis elegans

H. Terami; Benjamin D. Williams; Shin Ichi Kitamura; Yasuji Sakube; Shinji Matsumoto; Shima Doi; Takashi Obinata; Hiroaki Kagawa


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1995

Genome Structure, Mapping and Expression of the Tropomyosin Gene tmy-1 of Caenorhabditis elegans

Hiroaki Kagawa; Koken Sugimoto; Hiroshi Matsumoto; Takumi Inoue; Hirofumi Imadzu; Kyodo Takuwa; Yasuji Sakube


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2001

The third and fourth tropomyosin isoforms of Caenorhabditis elegans are expressed in the pharynx and intestines and are essential for development and morphology.

Akwasi Anyanful; Yasuji Sakube; Kyoko Takuwa; Hiroaki Kagawa


Cell Structure and Function | 1997

Mutations and Expressions of the Tropomyosin Gene and the Troponin C Gene of Caenorhabditis elegans

Hiroaki Kagawa; Kyoko Takuwa; Yasuji Sakube

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