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Featured researches published by Yoko Harada.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

An engineered Escherichia coli tyrosyl–tRNA synthetase for site-specific incorporation of an unnatural amino acid into proteins in eukaryotic translation and its application in a wheat germ cell-free system

Daisuke Kiga; Kensaku Sakamoto; Koichiro Kodama; Takanori Kigawa; Takayoshi Matsuda; Takashi Yabuki; Mikako Shirouzu; Yoko Harada; Hiroshi Nakayama; Koji Takio; Yoshinori Hasegawa; Yaeta Endo; Ichiro Hirao; Shigeyuki Yokoyama

Tyrosyl–tRNA synthetase (TyrRS) from Escherichia coli was engineered to preferentially recognize 3-iodo-l-tyrosine rather than l-tyrosine for the site-specific incorporation of 3-iodo-l-tyrosine into proteins in eukaryotic translation systems. The wild-type TyrRS does not recognize 3-iodo-l-tyrosine, because of the bulky iodine substitution. On the basis of the reported crystal structure of Bacillus stearothermophilus TyrRS, three residues, Y37, Q179, and Q195, in the l-tyrosine-binding site were chosen for mutagenesis. Thirty-four single amino acid replacements and 16 of their combinations were screened by in vitro biochemical assays. A combination of the Y37V and Q195C mutations changed the amino acid specificity in such a way that the variant TyrRS activates 3-iodo-l-tyrosine 10-fold more efficiently than l-tyrosine. This engineered enzyme, TyrRS(V37C195), was tested for use in the wheat germ cell-free translation system, which has recently been significantly improved, and is now as productive as conventional recombinant systems. During the translation in the wheat germ system, an E. coli suppressor tRNATyr was not aminoacylated by the wheat germ enzymes, but was aminoacylated by the E. coli TyrRS(V37C195) variant with 3-iodo-l-tyrosine. After the use of the 3-iodotyrosyl–tRNA in translation, the resultant uncharged tRNA could be aminoacylated again in the system. A mass spectrometric analysis of the produced protein revealed that more than 95% of the amino acids incorporated for an amber codon were iodotyrosine, whose concentration was only twice that of l-tyrosine in the translation. Therefore, the variant enzyme, 3-iodo-l-tyrosine, and the suppressor tRNA can serve as an additional set orthogonal to the 20 endogenous sets in eukaryotic in vitro translation systems.


Nature Methods | 2006

An unnatural hydrophobic base pair system: site-specific incorporation of nucleotide analogs into DNA and RNA

Ichiro Hirao; Michiko Kimoto; Tsuneo Mitsui; Tsuyoshi Fujiwara; Rie Kawai; Akira Sato; Yoko Harada; Shigeyuki Yokoyama

Methods for the site-specific incorporation of extra components into nucleic acids can be powerful tools for creating DNA and RNA molecules with increased functionality. We present an unnatural base pair system in which DNA containing an unnatural base pair can be amplified and function as a template for the site-specific incorporation of base analog substrates into RNA via transcription. The unnatural base pair is formed by specific hydrophobic shape complementation between the bases, but lacks hydrogen bonding interactions. In replication, this unnatural base pair exhibits high selectivity in combination with the usual triphosphates and modified triphosphates, γ-amidotriphosphates, as substrates of 3′ to 5′ exonuclease-proficient DNA polymerases, allowing PCR amplification. In transcription, the unnatural base pair complementarity mediates the incorporation of these base substrates and their analogs, such as a biotinylated substrate, into RNA by T7 RNA polymerase (RNAP). With this system, functional components can be site-specifically incorporated into a large RNA molecule.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

Fluorescent probing for RNA molecules by an unnatural base-pair system

Michiko Kimoto; Tsuneo Mitsui; Yoko Harada; Akira Sato; Shigeyuki Yokoyama; Ichiro Hirao

Fluorescent labeling of nucleic acids is widely used in basic research and medical applications. We describe the efficient site-specific incorporation of a fluorescent base analog, 2-amino-6-(2-thienyl)purine (s), into RNA by transcription mediated by an unnatural base pair between s and pyrrole-2-carbaldehyde (Pa). The ribonucleoside 5′-triphosphate of s was site-specifically incorporated into RNA, by T7 RNA polymerase, opposite Pa in DNA templates. The fluorescent intensity of s in RNA molecules changes according to the structural environment. The site-specific s labeling of RNA hairpins and tRNA molecules provided characteristic fluorescent profiles, depending on the labeling sites, temperature and Mg2+ concentration. The Pa-containing DNA templates can be amplified by PCR using 7-(2-thienyl)imidazo[4,5-b]pyridine (Ds), another pairing partner of Pa. This site-specific fluorescent probing by the unnatural pair system including the s-Pa and Ds-Pa pairs provides a powerful tool for studying the dynamics of the local structural features of 3D RNA molecules and their intra- and intermolecular interactions.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2008

Phosphoserine aminoacylation of tRNA bearing an unnatural base anticodon.

Ryuya Fukunaga; Yoko Harada; Ichiro Hirao; Shigeyuki Yokoyama

An unnatural base pair between 7-(2-thienyl)-imidazo[4,5-b]pyridine (Ds) and pyrrole-2-carbaldehyde (Pa) could expand the genetic alphabet and allow the incorporation of non-standard amino acids into proteins at defined positions. For this purpose, we synthesized tRNAs bearing Pa at the anticodon and tested non-standard amino acid phosphoserine aminoacylation by the wild-type and various engineered phosphoseryl-tRNA synthetases (SepRSs). The D418N D420N T423V triple mutant of SepRS efficiently charged phosphoserine to tRNA containing the PaUA anticodon with a K(m)=47.1muM and a k(cat)=0.151s(-1), which are comparable to the values of the wild-type SepRS for its cognate substrate, tRNA(Cys) with the GCA anticodon (26.9muM and 0.111s(-1)). The triple mutant SepRS and the tRNA with the PaUA anticodon represent a specific pair for the site-specific incorporation of phosphoserine into proteins in response to the UADs codon within mRNA.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2004

A Two-Unnatural-Base-Pair System toward the Expansion of the Genetic Code

Ichiro Hirao; Yoko Harada; Michiko Kimoto; Tsuneo Mitsui; Tsuyoshi Fujiwara; Shigeyuki Yokoyama


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2005

An efficient unnatural base pair for a base-pair-expanded transcription system

Tsuneo Mitsui; Michiko Kimoto; Yoko Harada; Shigeyuki Yokoyama; Ichiro Hirao


Biochemistry | 2004

In Vitro Selection of RNA Aptamers that Bind to Colicin E3 and Structurally Resemble the Decoding Site of 16S Ribosomal RNA

Ichiro Hirao; Yoko Harada; Takahiko Nojima; Yutaka Osawa; Haruhiko Masaki; Shigeyuki Yokoyama


Nucleic acids research. Supplement (2001) | 2002

Enzymatic incorporation of an unnatural base pair between 4-propynyl-pyrrole-2-carbaldehyde and 9-methyl-imidazo ((4,5)-b)pyridine into nucleic acids

Tsuneo Mitsui; Michiko Kimoto; Yoko Harada; Akira Sato; Aya Kitamura; Taiko To; Ichiro Hirao; Shigeyuki Yokoyama


Archive | 2009

Modified trna containing non-natural nucleotide and use thereof

Shun-ichi Sekine; Ryuya Fukunaga; Shigeyuki Yokoyama; Ichiro Hirao; Yoko Harada


Nucleic acids symposium series (2004) | 2005

Site-specific incorporation of fluorescent probes into RNA by specific transcription using unnatural base pairs.

Michiko Kimoto; Rie Kawai; Tsuneo Mitsui; Yoko Harada; Akira Sato; Shigeyuki Yokoyama; Ichiro Hirao

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Akira Sato

Tokyo University of Science

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Ryuya Fukunaga

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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