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Dive into the research topics where Yoshiteru Hashimoto is active.

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Featured researches published by Yoshiteru Hashimoto.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Discovery of the curcumin metabolic pathway involving a unique enzyme in an intestinal microorganism

Azam Hassaninasab; Yoshiteru Hashimoto; Kaori Tomita-Yokotani; Michihiko Kobayashi

Polyphenol curcumin, a yellow pigment, derived from the rhizomes of a plant (Curcuma longa Linn) is a natural antioxidant exhibiting a variety of pharmacological activities and therapeutic properties. It has long been used as a traditional medicine and as a preservative and coloring agent in foods. Here, curcumin-converting microorganisms were isolated from human feces, the one exhibiting the highest activity being identified as Escherichia coli. We are thus unique in discovering that E. coli was able to act on curcumin. The curcumin-converting enzyme was purified from E. coli and characterized. The native enzyme had a molecular mass of about 82 kDa and consisted of two identical subunits. The enzyme has a narrow substrate spectrum, preferentially acting on curcumin. The microbial metabolism of curcumin by the purified enzyme was found to comprise a two-step reduction, curcumin being converted NADPH-dependently into an intermediate product, dihydrocurcumin, and then the end product, tetrahydrocurcumin. We named this enzyme “NADPH-dependent curcumin/dihydrocurcumin reductase” (CurA). The gene (curA) encoding this enzyme was also identified. A homology search with the BLAST program revealed that a unique enzyme involved in curcumin metabolism belongs to the medium-chain dehydrogenase/reductase superfamily.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2001

Extracellular Synthesis, Specific Recognition, and Intracellular Degradation of Cyclomaltodextrins by the Hyperthermophilic Archaeon Thermococcus sp. Strain B1001

Yoshiteru Hashimoto; Tomoko Yamamoto; Shinsuke Fujiwara; Masahiro Takagi; Tadayuki Imanaka

A unique extracellular and thermostable cyclomaltodextrin glucanotransferase (CGTase) from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermococcus sp. strain B1001 produces predominantly (>85%) alpha-cyclomaltodextrin (alpha-CD) from starch (Y. Tachibana, et al., Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 65:1991--1997, 1999). Nucleotide sequencing of the CGTase gene (cgtA) and its flanking region was performed, and a cluster of five genes was found, including a gene homolog encoding a cyclomaltodextrinase (CDase) involved in the degradation of CDs (cgtB), the gene encoding CGTase (cgtA), a gene homolog for a CD-binding protein (CBP) (cgtC), and a putative CBP-dependent ABC transporter involved in uptake of CDs (cgtDE). The CDase was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified. The optimum pH and temperature for CD hydrolysis were 5.5 and 95 degrees C, respectively. The molecular weight of the recombinant enzyme was estimated to be 79,000. The CDase hydrolyzed beta-CD most efficiently among other CDs. Maltose and pullulan were not utilized as substrates. Linear maltodextrins with a small glucose unit were very slowly hydrolyzed, and starch was hydrolyzed more slowly. Analysis by thin-layer chromatography revealed that glucose and maltose were produced as end products. The purified recombinant CBP bound to maltose as well as to alpha-CD. However, the CBP exhibited higher thermostability in the presence of alpha-CD. These results suggested that strain B1001 possesses a unique metabolic pathway that includes extracellular synthesis, transmembrane uptake, and intracellular degradation of CDs in starch utilization. Potential advantages of this starch metabolic pathway via CDs are discussed.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Discovery of posttranslational maturation by self-subunit swapping

Zhemin Zhou; Yoshiteru Hashimoto; Kentaro Shiraki; Michihiko Kobayashi

Several general mechanisms of metallocenter biosynthesis have been reported and reviewed, and in all cases, the components or subunits of an apoprotein remain in the final holoprotein. Here, we first discovered that one subunit of an apoenzyme did not remain in the functional holoenzyme. The cobalt-containing low-molecular-mass nitrile hydratase (L-NHase) of Rhodococcus rhodochrous J1 consists of β- and α-subunits encoded by the nhlBA genes, respectively. An ORF, nhlE, just downstream of nhlBA, was found to be necessary for L-NHase activation. In contrast to the cobalt-containing L-NHase (holo-L-NHase containing Cys-SO2− and Cys-SO− metal ligands) derived from nhlBAE, the gene products derived from nhlBA were cobalt-free L-NHase (apo-L-NHase lacking oxidized cysteine residues). We discovered an L-NHase maturation mediator, NhlAE, consisting of NhlE and the cobalt- and oxidized cysteine-containing α-subunit of L-NHase. The incorporation of cobalt into L-NHase was shown to depend on the exchange of the nonmodified cobalt-free α-subunit of apo-L-NHase with the cobalt-containing cysteine-modified α-subunit of NhlAE. This is a posttranslational maturation process different from general mechanisms of metallocenter biosynthesis known so far: the unexpected behavior of a protein in a protein complex, which we named “self-subunit swapping.”


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Discovery of Amide (Peptide) Bond Synthetic Activity in Acyl-CoA Synthetase

Tomoko Abe; Yoshiteru Hashimoto; Hideaki Hosaka; Kaori Tomita-Yokotani; Michihiko Kobayashi

Acyl-CoA synthetase, which is one of the acid-thiol ligases (EC 6.2.1), plays key roles in metabolic and regulatory processes. This enzyme forms a carbon-sulfur bond in the presence of ATP and Mg2+, yielding acyl-CoA thioesters from the corresponding free acids and CoA. This enzyme belongs to the superfamily of adenylate-forming enzymes, whose three-dimensional structures are analogous to one another. We here discovered a new reaction while studying the short-chain acyl-CoA synthetase that we recently reported (Hashimoto, Y., Hosaka, H., Oinuma, K., Goda, M., Higashibata, H., and Kobayashi, M. (2005) J. Biol. Chem. 280, 8660–8667). When l-cysteine was used as a substrate instead of CoA, N-acyl-l-cysteine was surprisingly detected as a reaction product. This finding demonstrated that the enzyme formed a carbon-nitrogen bond (EC 6.3.1 acid-ammonia (or amide) ligase (amide synthase); EC 6.3.2 acid-amino acid ligase (peptide synthase)) comprising the amino group of the cysteine and the carboxyl group of the acid. N-Acyl-d-cysteine, N-acyl-dl-homocysteine, and N-acyl-l-cysteine methyl ester were also synthesized from the corresponding cysteine analog substrates by the enzyme. Furthermore, this unexpected enzyme activity was also observed for acetyl-CoA synthetase and firefly luciferase, indicating the generality of the new reaction in the superfamily of adenylate-forming enzymes.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Self-subunit Swapping Chaperone Needed for the Maturation of Multimeric Metalloenzyme Nitrile Hydratase by a Subunit Exchange Mechanism Also Carries Out the Oxidation of the Metal Ligand Cysteine Residues and Insertion of Cobalt

Zhemin Zhou; Yoshiteru Hashimoto; Michihiko Kobayashi

The incorporation of cobalt into low molecular mass nitrile hydratase (L-NHase) of Rhodococcus rhodochrous J1 has been found to depend on the α-subunit exchange between cobalt-free L-NHase (apo-L-NHase lacking oxidized cysteine residues) and its cobalt-containing mediator (holo-NhlAE containing \batchmode \documentclass[fleqn,10pt,legalpaper]{article} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amsmath} \pagestyle{empty} \begin{document} \(\mathrm{Cys-SO}_{2}^{-}\) \end{document} and Cys-SO- metal ligands), this novel mode of post-translational maturation having been named self-subunit swapping, and NhlE having been recognized as a self-subunit swapping chaperone (Zhou, Z., Hashimoto, Y., Shiraki, K., and Kobayashi, M. (2008) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 105, 14849–14854). We discovered here that cobalt was inserted into both the cobalt-free NhlAE (apo-NhlAE) and the cobalt-free α-subunit (apo-α-subunit) in an NhlE-dependent manner in the presence of cobalt and dithiothreitol in vitro. Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectroscopy analysis revealed that the non-oxidized cysteine residues in apo-NhlAE were post-translationally oxidized after cobalt insertion. These findings suggested that NhlE has two activities, i.e. cobalt insertion and cysteine oxidation. NhlE not only functions as a self-subunit swapping chaperone but also a metallochaperone that includes a redox function. Cobalt insertion and cysteine oxidation occurred under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions when Co3+ was used as a cobalt donor, suggesting that the oxygen atoms in the oxidized cysteines were derived from water molecules but not from dissolved oxygen. Additionally, we isolated apo-NhlAE after the self-subunit swapping event and found that it was recycled for cobalt transfer into L-NHase.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Discovery of a Novel Enzyme, Isonitrile Hydratase, Involved in Nitrogen-Carbon Triple Bond Cleavage

Masahiko Goda; Yoshiteru Hashimoto; Sakayu Shimizu; Michihiko Kobayashi

Isonitrile containing an N≡C triple bond was degraded by microorganism sp. N19-2, which was isolated from soil through a 2-month acclimatization culture in the presence of this compound. The isonitrile-degrading microorganism was identified asPseudomonas putida. The microbial degradation was found to proceed through an enzymatic reaction, the isonitrile being hydrated to the corresponding N-substituted formamide. The enzyme, named isonitrile hydratase, was purified and characterized. The native enzyme had a molecular mass of about 59 kDa and consisted of two identical subunits. The enzyme stoichiometrically catalyzed the hydration of cyclohexyl isocyanide (an isonitrile) to N-cyclohexylformamide, but no formation of other compounds was detected. The apparent K m value for cyclohexyl isocyanide was 16.2 mm. Although the enzyme acted on various isonitriles, no nitriles or amides were accepted as substrates.


Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 2002

Site-directed mutagenesis for cysteine residues of cobalt-containing nitrile hydratase.

Yoshiteru Hashimoto; Satoshi Sasaki; Sachio Herai; Ken-Ichi Oinuma; Sakayu Shimizu; Michihiko Kobayashi

Three cysteine residues, which are completely conserved among alpha-subunits in all nitrile hydratases, are thought to be the ligands of a metal ion in the catalytic center of this enzyme. These cysteine residues (i.e. alpha C102, alpha C105 and alpha C107) in the high-molecular-mass nitrile hydratase (H-NHase) of Rhodococcus rhodochrous J1 were replaced with alanine by site-directed mutagenesis using the R. rhodochrous ATCC12674 host-vector system, and the resultant transformants were investigated. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) for the cell-free extracts of each mutant transformant revealed that four mutant transformants (i.e. alpha C105A, alpha C107A, alpha C102A/C105A and alpha C105A/C107A) showed predominant alpha- and beta-subunit protein bands with a mobility identical to those of the native H-NHase, while three mutant transformants (i.e. alpha C102A, alpha C102A/C107A and alpha C102A/C105A/C107A) did not produce the corresponding proteins. The purified former four mutant enzymes showed neither enzymatic activity nor the maximum absorption at 410 nm which was detected in the wild type H-NHase. They also did not contain cobalt ions. Based upon these findings, these three cysteine residues were found to be essential for the active expression of H-NHase.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Crystal structure of aldoxime dehydratase and its catalytic mechanism involved in carbon-nitrogen triple-bond synthesis

Junpei Nomura; Hiroshi Hashimoto; Takehiro Ohta; Yoshiteru Hashimoto; Koichi Wada; Yoshinori Naruta; Ken-Ichi Oinuma; Michihiko Kobayashi

Aldoxime dehydratase (OxdA), which is a unique heme protein, catalyzes the dehydration of an aldoxime to a nitrile even in the presence of water in the reaction mixture. Unlike the utilization of H2O2 or O2 as a mediator of catalysis by other heme-containing enzymes (e.g., P450), OxdA is notable for the direct binding of a substrate to the heme iron. Here, we determined the crystal structure of OxdA. We then constructed OxdA mutants in which each of the polar amino acids lying within ∼6 Å of the iron atom of the heme was converted to alanine. Among the purified mutant OxdAs, S219A had completely lost and R178A exhibited a reduction in the activity. Together with this finding, the crystal structural analysis of OxdA and spectroscopic and electrostatic potential analyses of the wild-type and mutant OxdAs suggest that S219 plays a key role in the catalysis, forming a hydrogen bond with the substrate. Based on the spatial arrangement of the OxdA active site and the results of a series of mutagenesis experiments, we propose the detailed catalytic mechanism of general aldoxime dehydratases: (i) S219 stabilizes the hydroxy group of the substrate to increase its basicity; (ii) H320 acts as an acid-base catalyst; and (iii) R178 stabilizes the heme, and would donate a proton to and accept one from H320.


Biochemistry | 2010

Unique Biogenesis of High-Molecular Mass Multimeric Metalloenzyme Nitrile Hydratase: Intermediates and a Proposed Mechanism for Self-Subunit Swapping Maturation

Zhemin Zhou; Yoshiteru Hashimoto; Tianwei Cui; Yumi Washizawa; Hiroyuki Mino; Michihiko Kobayashi

Rhodococcus rhodochrous J1 produces high- and low-molecular mass nitrile hydratases (H-NHase and L-NHase, respectively), depending on the inducer. The incorporation of cobalt into L-NHase has been found to depend on the α-subunit exchange between cobalt-free L-NHase (apo-L-NHase) and its cobalt-containing mediator, NhlAE (holo-NhlAE), this novel mode of post-translational maturation having been named self-subunit swapping and NhlE having been recognized as a self-subunit swapping chaperone. We discovered an H-NHase maturation mediator, NhhAG, consisting of NhhG and the α-subunit of H-NHase. The incorporation of cobalt into H-NHase was confirmed to be dependent on self-subunit swapping. For the first time, particles larger than apo-H-NHase were observed during the swapping process via dynamic light scattering measurements, suggesting the formation of intermediate complexes. On the basis of these findings, we initially proposed a possible mechanism for self-subunit swapping. Electron paramagnetic resonance analysis demonstrated that the coordination environment of a cobalt ion in holo-NhhAG is subtly different from that in H-NHase. Cobalt is inserted into cobalt-free NhhAG (apo-NhhAG) but not into apo-H-NHase, suggesting that NhhG functions not only as a self-subunit swapping chaperone but also as a metallochaperone. In addition, α-subunit swapping did not occur between apo-L-NHase and holo-NhhAG or between apo-H-NHase and holo-NhlAE in vitro. These findings revealed that self-subunit swapping is a subunit-specific reaction.


FEBS Letters | 2004

Heme environment in aldoxime dehydratase involved in carbon–nitrogen triple bond synthesis

Ken-Ichi Oinuma; Takehiro Ohta; Kazunobu Konishi; Yoshiteru Hashimoto; Hiroki Higashibata; Teizo Kitagawa; Michihiko Kobayashi

Resonance Raman spectra have been measured to characterize the heme environment in aldoxime dehydratase (OxdA), a novel hemoprotein, which catalyzes the dehydration of aldoxime into nitrile. The spectra showed that the ferric heme in the enzyme is six‐coordinate low spin, whereas the ferrous heme is five‐coordinate high spin. We assign a prominent vibration that occurs at 226 cm−1 in the ferrous enzyme to the Fe‐proximal histidine stretching vibration. In the CO‐bound form of OxdA, the correlation between the Fe–CO stretching (512 cm−1) and C–O stretching (1950 cm−1) frequencies also supports our assignment of proximal histidine coordination.

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