Yoshiki Takesue
Nagoya University
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FEBS Letters | 1986
Yoshiki Takesue; Kunio Yokota; Yoshimi Nishi; Ryo Taguchi; Hiroh Ikezawa
Trehalase (EC 3.2.1.28) associated with renal and intestinal brush‐border membranes was solubilized by highly purified phosphatidylinositol‐specific phospholipase C (EC 3.1.4.10) from Bacillus thuringiensis, but not by phosphatidylcholine‐hydrolyzing phospholipase C (EC 3.1.4.3) from Clostridium welchii or phospholipase D (EC 3.1.4.4) from cabbage. The solubilized trehalase was not adsorbed on phenyl‐sepharose, indicating that it was hydrophilic. Phosphatidylinositol‐specific phospholipase C also converted Triton X‐100‐solubilized amphipathic trehalase into a hydrophilic form. These results suggest that trehalase is bound to the membrane through a direct and specific interaction with phosphatidylinositol.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1976
Ryoko Goto-Tamura; Yoshiki Takesue; Sachiko Takesue
In a number of animal species soluble NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase of erythrocytes was compared with membrane-bound NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase of liver microsomes by using an antibody to purified NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase from rat liver microsomes. The results obtained indicated clearly that they are immunologically very similar to each other. The data with erythrocyte ghosts suggested that cytochrome b5 and NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase are also present in the ghost.
Journal of Molecular Biology | 1968
Yoshimi Nishi; Takato O. Yoshida; Yoshiki Takesue
Abstract Negatively stained preparations of sucrase purified from rabbit small-intestinal mucosal cells were found to consist of doughnut-shaped structures with outer and inner diameters of about 110 and 40 A, respectively, at a concentration of 10 mg/ml. At higher magnification, a subunit structure was seen in electron micrographs of purified sucrase. When diluted to 1 mg/ml., the structure dissociates into paired smaller units each of which has a dimension of 45 A × 65 A. These were converted into separated smaller units upon further dilution to 0.1 mg/ml. This process is reversed by concentrating the diluted preparation. Negatively stained specimens of isolated microvilli were characterized by the presence on their surfaces of a great number of ring particles, the dimension and shape of which resembled closely the doughnut structure of purified sucrase. A possible relationship between the two structures is discussed.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1977
Yoshiki Takesue; Ryoko Tamura; Yoshimi Nishi
Purified sucrase-isomaltase complex sucrose alpha-glucohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.48 - dextrin 6-alpha-glycanohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.10) solubilized by papain from rabbit intestine was dissociated by citraconylation into its subunits, sucrase and isomaltase, which were then isolated in a form active immunologically as well as enzymatically by affinity chromatography on Sephadex G-200 and gel-filtration on Bio-gel P-300. Antibodies against the purified complex inhibited isomaltase but not sucrase and formed precipitation lines, crossing each other, with isolated sucrase and isomaltase, showing that the two enzymes differ in antigenicity from each other. By absorbing the antibodies with isolated sucrase and isomaltase, antibodies specific for isomaltase and sucrase, respectively, were obtained. Like the original antibodies, both of the specific antibodies quantitatively agglutinated microvillous vesicles. Sucrase was inhibited by neither of the antibodies. In contrast, isomaltase was greatly inhibited by the isomaltase-specific antibodies, but not by the sucrase-specific ones.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1986
Kunio Yokota; Yoshimi Nishi; Yoshiki Takesue
Rabbit intestinal trehalase (alpha,alpha-trehalose glucohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.28) was solubilized with Triton X-100 and purified in the presence of EDTA. The purified enzyme was homogeneous on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of Triton X-100 or SDS. It showed amphiphilic properties on gel filtration. polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, charge-shift electrophoresis and phenyl-Sepharose chromatography. Its molecular weight was estimated to be about 330 000 by gel filtration under nondenaturing conditions and in the presence of Triton X-100, the value being in satisfactory agreement with the sum of the weight of one Triton X-100 micelle and twice the molecular weight (105 000) of purified hydrophilic trehalase which had been deprived of the anchor segment. The two purified trehalases gave almost the same molecular weights (about 75 000) on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. These results suggest that intestinal trehalase consists of two subunits with a molecular weight of 75 000 and that its anchor segment is small (less than 5000). Triton X-100 extracts freshly prepared from intestinal microvilli essentially showed one form of trehalase, which behaved on phenyl-Sepharose and Con A-Sepharose chromatography in the same manner as purified amphiphilic trehalase.
Development Genes and Evolution | 1983
Sachiko Takesue; Kazuo Onitake; Hiroomi Keino; Yoshiki Takesue
SummaryVitellin was purified from eggs of the silkworm,Bombyx mori, by a new method in which vitellin was extracted from isolated yolk granules. The purified vitellin had a molecular weight of 540,000. An antibody against purified vitellin was prepared in rabbits. It reacted with the hemolymph vitellogenin as well as with purified vitellin, but not with other proteins in the hemolymph or in the extract from yolk granules. The anti-vitellin IgG was used to immunocytochemically locate vitellin in theBombyx non-diapause egg during early developmental stages. In the egg, just after oviposition, vitellin was located in internal yolk granules and in small yolk granules of the periplasm. During the early developmental stages studied, vitellin was not metabolized uniformly throughout the egg. The vitellin of the internal yolk granules located at the posterior-dorsal part and of the small peripheral yolk granules was utilized in 16 h and 2 days, respectively, after oviposition. A thin, very vitellin-poor layer was located between the periplasm and the vitellin-rich interior in the newly laid egg. it was always in close contact with the periphery where blastoderm and germ-band cells developed.
Journal of Ultrastructure Research | 1978
Yoshimi Nishi; Yoshiki Takesue
Triton-solubilized sucrase from rabbit intestine was examined by negative-staining electron microscopy. It has the dimeric structure in which two subunits similar in shape and size (about 45 × 65 A) are united to each other at their long axes. In aqueous solution a certain number (10–15 in most cases) of the enzyme molecules gather together to form an aggregate usually 400 to 435 A in diameter, in which they align radially around a core, the identity of which is unknown at present. Neither of Triton-solubilized sucrase digested by papain nor papain-solubilized sucrase forms any aggregates. The detergent-solubilized sucrase is adsorbed on the hydrophobic surface of fragmented polystyrene latex, and the adsorbed sucrase is released by papain. These results indicate that the Triton-solubilized sucrase has a hydrophobic portion at or near an end of its elongated molecule. Anti-sucrase immunoglobulin G and monovalent fragments from it bind to the aggregate and enlarge its diameter by at most 120 A.
The Journal of Membrane Biology | 1978
Yoshiki Takesue; Yoshimi Nishi
SummaryThe location of leucine β-naphthylamidase on the outer surface of the microvillous membrane of rabbit small intestine was examined by analyzing the interaction of antibodies against leucine β-naphthylamidase or another microvillous enzyme, sucrase-isomaltase complex, with microvillous vesicles having different relative amounts of these enzymes, in respect to vesicle agglutination, inhibition of enzyme activity, and electron-microscopic morphology. The results obtained indicate that leucine β-naphthylamidase, or at least its antigenic sites, protrude about 10 nm from the outer surface of the microvillous membrane.
Analytical Biochemistry | 1985
Yoshiki Takesue; Yasuko Nakase-Kozaki
This paper presents a competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for Met-enkephalin, in which there is no need for preparing any special derivative of Met-enkephalin for its optimal function as a solid-phase antigen. Immunoplate wells were first coated with free Met-enkephalin, and then incubated with antiserum and free Met-enkephalin. The antibodies bound to the solid-phase Met-enkephalin were determined by using anti-IgG conjugated to horseradish peroxidase. The detection limit of the assay was 44 fmol Met-enkephalin per well. The results also showed that Met-enkephalin bound to the solid phase can be titrated directly.
Experimental Cell Research | 1984
Ryoko Tamura; Yoshimi Nishi; Yoshiki Takesue
Rabbit small-intestinal microvilli isolated by a Ca2+ precipitation method contain a 33 kD protein, which has not been observed in microvilli isolated in the presence of Ca2+-chelators. The intracellular localization of this protein in rabbit intestinal epithelial cells was studied by immunofluorescence and immunoperoxidase microscopy, and was compared with that of aminopeptidase M, a well-known microvillus membrane-bound enzyme. The results obtained show that the 33 kD protein is located in the inside of the microvillus, but not in the terminal web of the epithelial cell. The protein may also be located on the basolateral surface of the cell.