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Dive into the research topics where Yoshinori Fujiyoshi is active.

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Featured researches published by Yoshinori Fujiyoshi.


Nature | 2000

Structural determinants of water permeation through aquaporin-1.

Kazuyoshi Murata; Kaoru Mitsuoka; Teruhisa Hirai; Thomas Walz; Peter Agre; J.B Heymann; Andreas Engel; Yoshinori Fujiyoshi

Human red cell AQP1 is the first functionally defined member of the aquaporin family of membrane water channels. Here we describe an atomic model of AQP1 at 3.8 Å resolution from electron crystallographic data. Multiple highly conserved amino-acid residues stabilize the novel fold of AQP1. The aqueous pathway is lined with conserved hydrophobic residues that permit rapid water transport, whereas the water selectivity is due to a constriction of the pore diameter to about 3 Å over a span of one residue. The atomic model provides a possible molecular explanation to a longstanding puzzle in physiology—how membranes can be freely permeable to water but impermeable to protons.


Nature | 2003

Structure and Gating Mechanism of the Acetylcholine Receptor Pore.

Atsuo Miyazawa; Yoshinori Fujiyoshi; Nigel Unwin

The nicotinic acetylcholine receptor controls electrical signalling between nerve and muscle cells by opening and closing a gated, membrane-spanning pore. Here we present an atomic model of the closed pore, obtained by electron microscopy of crystalline postsynaptic membranes. The pore is shaped by an inner ring of 5 α-helices, which curve radially to create a tapering path for the ions, and an outer ring of 15 α-helices, which coil around each other and shield the inner ring from the lipids. The gate is a constricting hydrophobic girdle at the middle of the lipid bilayer, formed by weak interactions between neighbouring inner helices. When acetylcholine enters the ligand-binding domain, it triggers rotations of the protein chains on opposite sides of the entrance to the pore. These rotations are communicated through the inner helices, and open the pore by breaking the girdle apart.


The Journal of Physiology | 2002

Aquaporin water channels – from atomic structure to clinical medicine

Peter Agre; Landon S. King; Masato Yasui; Wm B. Guggino; Ole Petter Ottersen; Yoshinori Fujiyoshi; Andreas Engel; Søren Nielsen

The water permeability of biological membranes has been a longstanding problem in physiology, but the proteins responsible for this remained unknown until discovery of the aquaporin 1 (AQP1) water channel protein. AQP1 is selectively permeated by water driven by osmotic gradients. The atomic structure of human AQP1 has recently been defined. Each subunit of the tetramer contains an individual aqueous pore that permits single‐file passage of water molecules but interrupts the hydrogen bonding needed for passage of protons. At least 10 mammalian aquaporins have been identified, and these are selectively permeated by water (aquaporins) or water plus glycerol (aquaglyceroporins). The sites of expression coincide closely with the clinical phenotypes ‐ ranging from congenital cataracts to nephrogenic diabetes insipidus. More than 200 members of the aquaporin family have been found in plants, microbials, invertebrates and vertebrates, and their importance to the physiology of these organisms is being uncovered.


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

Functional role of internal water molecules in rhodopsin revealed by X-ray crystallography.

Tetsuji Okada; Yoshinori Fujiyoshi; Maria Silow; Javier Navarro; Ehud M. Landau; Yoshinori Shichida

Activation of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) is triggered and regulated by structural rearrangement of the transmembrane heptahelical bundle containing a number of highly conserved residues. In rhodopsin, a prototypical GPCR, the helical bundle accommodates an intrinsic inverse-agonist 11-cis-retinal, which undergoes photo-isomerization to the all-trans form upon light absorption. Such a trigger by the chromophore corresponds to binding of a diffusible ligand to other GPCRs. Here we have explored the functional role of water molecules in the transmembrane region of bovine rhodopsin by using x-ray diffraction to 2.6 Å. The structural model suggests that water molecules, which were observed in the vicinity of highly conserved residues and in the retinal pocket, regulate the activity of rhodopsin-like GPCRs and spectral tuning in visual pigments, respectively. To confirm the physiological relevance of the structural findings, we conducted single-crystal microspectrophotometry on rhodopsin packed in our three-dimensional crystals and show that its spectroscopic properties are similar to those previously found by using bovine rhodopsin in suspension or membrane environment.


Nature | 2005

Lipid-protein interactions in double-layered two-dimensional AQP0 crystals.

Tamir Gonen; Yifan Cheng; Piotr Sliz; Yoko Hiroaki; Yoshinori Fujiyoshi; Stephen C. Harrison; Thomas Walz

Lens-specific aquaporin-0 (AQP0) functions as a specific water pore and forms the thin junctions between fibre cells. Here we describe a 1.9 Å resolution structure of junctional AQP0, determined by electron crystallography of double-layered two-dimensional crystals. Comparison of junctional and non-junctional AQP0 structures shows that junction formation depends on a conformational switch in an extracellular loop, which may result from cleavage of the cytoplasmic amino and carboxy termini. In the centre of the water pathway, the closed pore in junctional AQP0 retains only three water molecules, which are too widely spaced to form hydrogen bonds with each other. Packing interactions between AQP0 tetramers in the crystalline array are mediated by lipid molecules, which assume preferred conformations. We were therefore able to build an atomic model for the lipid bilayer surrounding the AQP0 tetramers, and we describe lipid–protein interactions.Membrane organizationAquaporin-0 (AQP0) is the most abundant protein in the membranes of fibre cells in the lens of the mammalian eye, acting both as a water-conducting channel and as an adhesion molecule at cell junctions. The structure of AQP0 unbound (shown on the cover), and together with the lipids that surround it in the membrane, has now been determined at high resolution by electron microscopy — high enough to resolve single water molecules. The structure gives us the first close look at how a membrane protein is embedded in a lipid bilayer. When junctions form between lens fibre cells, the associated lipids, already partly immobilized by interaction with AQP0, mediate the lattice contacts. AQP0 mutations are known to cause cataracts; these mutations may be interfering with AQP0s interaction with the lipids, preventing the integration of AQP0 into a bilayerLens-specific aquaporin-0 (AQP0) functions as a specific water pore and forms the thin junctions between fibre cells. Here we describe a 1.9 Å resolution structure of junctional AQP0, determined by electron crystallography of double-layered two-dimensional crystals. Comparison of junctional and non-junctional AQP0 structures shows that junction formation depends on a conformational switch in an extracellular loop, which may result from cleavage of the cytoplasmic amino and carboxy termini. In the centre of the water pathway, the closed pore in junctional AQP0 retains only three water molecules, which are too widely spaced to form hydrogen bonds with each other. Packing interactions between AQP0 tetramers in the crystalline array are mediated by lipid molecules, which assume preferred conformations. We were therefore able to build an atomic model for the lipid bilayer surrounding the AQP0 tetramers, and we describe lipid–protein interactions.


Nature | 2009

Structure of the connexin 26 gap junction channel at 3.5 Å resolution

Shoji Maeda; So Nakagawa; Michihiro Suga; Eiki Yamashita; Atsunori Oshima; Yoshinori Fujiyoshi; Tomitake Tsukihara

Gap junctions consist of arrays of intercellular channels between adjacent cells that permit the exchange of ions and small molecules. Here we report the crystal structure of the gap junction channel formed by human connexin 26 (Cx26, also known as GJB2) at 3.5 Å resolution, and discuss structural determinants of solute transport through the channel. The density map showed the two membrane-spanning hemichannels and the arrangement of the four transmembrane helices of the six protomers forming each hemichannel. The hemichannels feature a positively charged cytoplasmic entrance, a funnel, a negatively charged transmembrane pathway, and an extracellular cavity. The pore is narrowed at the funnel, which is formed by the six amino-terminal helices lining the wall of the channel, which thus determines the molecular size restriction at the channel entrance. The structure of the Cx26 gap junction channel also has implications for the gating of the channel by the transjunctional voltage.


Nature | 1997

The three-dimensional structure of aquaporin-1

Thomas Walz; Teruhisa Hirai; Kazuyoshi Murata; J. Bernard Heymann; Kaoru Mitsuoka; Yoshinori Fujiyoshi; Barbara L. Smith; Peter Agre; Andreas Engel

The entry and exit of water from cells is a fundamental process of life. Recognition of the high water permeability of red blood cells led to the proposal that specialized water pores exist in the plasma membrane. Expression in Xenopus oocytes and functional studies of an erythrocyte integral membrane protein of relative molecular mass 28,000, identified it as the mercury-sensitive water channel, aquaporin-1 (AQP1). Many related proteins, all belonging to the major intrinsic protein (MIP) family, are found throughout nature. AQP1 is a homotetramer containing four independent aqueous channels. When reconstituted into lipid bilayers, the protein forms two-dimensional lattices with a unit cell containing two tetramers in opposite orientation. Here we present the three-dimensional structure of AQP1 determined at 6Å resolution by cryo-electron microscopy. Each AQP1 monomer has six tilted, bilayer-spanning α-helices which form a right-handed bundle surrounding a central density. These results, together with functional studies, provide a model that identifies the aqueous pore in the AQP1 molecule and indicates the organization of the tetrameric complex in the membrane.


Nature | 1997

Surface of bacteriorhodopsin revealed by high-resolution electron crystallography

Yoshiaki Kimura; Dmitry G. Vassylyev; Atsuo Miyazawa; Akinori Kidera; Masaaki Matsushima; Kaoru Mitsuoka; Kazuyoshi Murata; Teruhisa Hirai; Yoshinori Fujiyoshi

Bacteriorhodopsin is a transmembrane protein that uses light energy, absorbed by its chromophore retinal, to pump protons from the cytoplasm of bacteria such as Halobacterium salinarium into the extracellular space,. It is made up of seven α-helices, and in the bacterium forms natural, two-dimensional crystals called purple membranes. We have analysed these crystals by electron cryo-microscopy to obtain images of bacteriorhodopsin at 3.0 å resolution. The structure covers nearly all 248 amino acids, including loops outside the membrane, and reveals the distribution of charged residues on both sides of the membrane surface. In addition, analysis of the electron-potential map produced by this method allows the determination of the charge status of these residues. On the extracellular side, four glutamate residues surround the entrance to the proton channel, whereas on the cytoplasmic side, four aspartic acids occur in a plane at the boundary of the hydrophobic–hydrophilic interface. The negative charges produced by these aspartate residues is encircled by areas of positive charge that may facilitate accumulation and lateral movement of protons on this surface.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Unique multipotent cells in adult human mesenchymal cell populations

Yasumasa Kuroda; Masaaki Kitada; Shohei Wakao; Kouki Nishikawa; Yukihiro Tanimura; Hideki Makinoshima; Makoto Goda; Hideo Akashi; Ayumu Inutsuka; Akira Niwa; Taeko Shigemoto; Yoko Nabeshima; Tatsutoshi Nakahata; Yo-ichi Nabeshima; Yoshinori Fujiyoshi; Mari Dezawa

We found adult human stem cells that can generate, from a single cell, cells with the characteristics of the three germ layers. The cells are stress-tolerant and can be isolated from cultured skin fibroblasts or bone marrow stromal cells, or directly from bone marrow aspirates. These cells can self-renew; form characteristic cell clusters in suspension culture that express a set of genes associated with pluripotency; and can differentiate into endodermal, ectodermal, and mesodermal cells both in vitro and in vivo. When transplanted into immunodeficient mice by local or i.v. injection, the cells integrated into damaged skin, muscle, or liver and differentiated into cytokeratin 14-, dystrophin-, or albumin-positive cells in the respective tissues. Furthermore, they can be efficiently isolated as SSEA-3(+) cells. Unlike authentic ES cells, their proliferation activity is not very high and they do not form teratomas in immunodeficient mouse testes. Thus, nontumorigenic stem cells with the ability to generate the multiple cell types of the three germ layers can be obtained through easily accessible adult human mesenchymal cells without introducing exogenous genes. These unique cells will be beneficial for cell-based therapy and biomedical research.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2002

Activation of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor involves a switch in conformation of the α subunits

Nigel Unwin; Atsuo Miyazawa; Jade Li; Yoshinori Fujiyoshi

The nicotinic acetylcholine (ACh) receptor belongs to a superfamily of synaptic ion channels that open in response to the binding of chemical transmitters. Their mechanism of activation is not known in detail, but a time-resolved electron microscopic study of the muscle-type ACh receptor had suggested that a local disturbance in the ligand-binding region and consequent rotations in the ligand-binding alpha subunits, connecting to the transmembrane portion, are involved. A more precise interpretation of this structural change is given here, based on comparison of the extracellular domain of the ACh receptor with an ACh-binding protein (AChBP) to which a putative agonist is bound. We find that, to a good approximation, there are two alternative extended conformations of the ACh receptor subunits, one characteristic of either alpha subunit before activation, and the other characteristic of all three non-alpha subunits and the protomer of AChBP. Substitution in the three-dimensional maps of alpha by non-alpha subunits mimics the changes seen on activation, suggesting that the structures of the alpha subunits are modified initially by their interactions with neighbouring subunits and switch to the non-alpha form when ACh binds. This structural change, which entails 15-16 degrees rotations of the inner pore-facing parts of the alpha subunits, most likely acts as the trigger that opens the gate in the membrane-spanning pore.

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