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Featured researches published by Yuji Tomaru.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2015

Discovery of Two Novel Viruses Expands the Diversity of Single-Stranded DNA and Single-Stranded RNA Viruses Infecting a Cosmopolitan Marine Diatom

Kei Kimura; Yuji Tomaru

ABSTRACT Recent studies have suggested that diatom viruses are an important factor affecting diatom population dynamics, which in turn are important in considering marine primary productivity. The marine planktonic diatom Chaetoceros tenuissimus Meunier is a cosmopolitan species and often causes blooms off the western coast of Japan. To date, two viruses, C. tenuissimus DNA virus (CtenDNAV) type I and CtenRNAV type I, have been identified that potentially affect C. tenuissimus population dynamics in the natural environment. In this study, we successfully isolated and characterized two additional novel viruses (CtenDNAV type II and CtenRNAV type II). This paper reports the basic characteristics of these new viruses isolated from surface water or sediment from the Hiroshima Bay, Japan. The physiological and morphological characteristics of the two new viruses were similar to those of the previously isolated viruses. However, the amino acid sequences of the structural proteins of CtenDNAV type II and CtenRNAV type II were clearly distinct from those of both type I viruses, with identity scores of 38.3% and 27.6%, respectively. Our results suggest that at least four genetically distinct viruses sharing the same diatom host are present in western Japan and affect the population dynamics of C. tenuissimus. Moreover, the result that CtenRNAV type II lysed multiple diatom species indicates that RNA viruses may affect various diatom populations in the natural environment.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Characterization of marine diatom-infecting virus promoters in the model diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum

Takashi Kadono; Arisa Miyagawa-Yamaguchi; Nozomu Kira; Yuji Tomaru; Takuma Okami; Takamichi Yoshimatsu; Liyuan Hou; Takeshi Ohama; Kazunari Fukunaga; Masanori Okauchi; Haruo Yamaguchi; Kohei Ohnishi; Angela Falciatore; Masao Adachi

Viruses are considered key players in phytoplankton population control in oceans. However, mechanisms that control viral gene expression in prominent microalgae such as diatoms remain largely unknown. In this study, potential promoter regions isolated from several marine diatom-infecting viruses (DIVs) were linked to the egfp reporter gene and transformed into the Pennales diatom Phaeodactylum tricornutum. We analysed their activity in cells grown under different conditions. Compared to diatom endogenous promoters, novel DIV promoter (ClP1) mediated a significantly higher degree of reporter transcription and translation. Stable expression levels were observed in transformants grown under both light and dark conditions, and high levels of expression were reported in cells in the stationary phase compared to the exponential phase of growth. Conserved motifs in the sequence of DIV promoters were also found. These results allow the identification of novel regulatory regions that drive DIV gene expression and further examinations of the mechanisms that control virus-mediated bloom control in diatoms. Moreover, the identified ClP1 promoter can serve as a novel tool for metabolic engineering of diatoms. This is the first report describing a promoter of DIVs that may be of use in basic and applied diatom research.


Microbes and Environments | 2015

A New Fractionation and Recovery Method of Viral Genomes Based on Nucleic Acid Composition and Structure Using Tandem Column Chromatography.

Syun-ichi Urayama; Yukari Yoshida-Takashima; Mitsuhiro Yoshida; Yuji Tomaru; Hiromitsu Moriyama; Ken Takai; Takuro Nunoura

Metagenomic studies have revealed the unexplored diversity of the environmental virosphere. However, most studies are biased towards specific types of viral genomes due to the absence of universal methods to access all viral genome types. In the present study, we established a novel system to efficiently separate single- and double-stranded DNA/RNA viral genomes using hydroxyapatite and cellulose chromatography. This method will allow us to quantitatively and simultaneously access four types of viral genomes and will provide important clues to further understand previously unexplored environmental viral populations and obtain potentially unbiased libraries from environmental viral communities.


Protist | 2017

Bothrosome Formation in Schizochytrium aggregatum (Labyrinthulomycetes, Stramenopiles) during Zoospore Settlement

Izumi Iwata; Kei Kimura; Yuji Tomaru; Taizo Motomura; Kanae Koike; Kazuhiko Koike; Daiske Honda

Labyrinthulomycetes are characterized by the presence of ectoplasmic nets originating from an organelle known as the bothrosome, whose evolutionary origin is unclear. To address this issue, we investigated the developmental process from a zoospore to a vegetative cell in Schizochytrium aggregatum. After disappearance of the flagellum during zoospore settlement, the bothrosome emerged at the anterior-ventral pole of the cells. A new Golgi body also appeared at this stage, and the bothrosome was positioned close to both the new and the old Golgi bodies. This observation suggested that the Golgi body is related to the formation of the bothrosome. Actin appeared as a spot in the same location as the newly appeared bothrosome, as determined by immunofluorescence labeling. An immunoelectron microscopic analysis revealed that actin was present in the ectoplasmic nets and in the cytoplasm around the bothrosome, indicating that the electron-dense materials of the bothrosome are not the polar center of F-actin. This suggests that actin filaments pull the endoplasmic reticulum to the bothrosome and induce the membrane to become evaginated within ectoplasmic nets.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Ecological Dynamics of Two Distinct Viruses Infecting Marine Eukaryotic Decomposer Thraustochytrids (Labyrinthulomycetes, Stramenopiles)

Yoshitake Takao; Yuji Tomaru; Keizo Nagasaki; Daiske Honda

Thraustochytrids are cosmopolitan osmotrophic or heterotrophic microorganisms that are considered as important decomposers in coastal ecosystems. However, because of a lack of estimation method for each genus or systematic group of them, relatively little is known about their ecology in situ. Previously, we reported two distinct types of virus infecting thraustochytrids (AuRNAV: reported as SssRNAV, and SmDNAV) suggesting they have wide distributions in the host-virus systems of coastal environments. Here we conducted a field survey from 2004 through 2005 to show the fluctuation pattern of thraustochytrids and their viruses in Hiroshima Bay, Japan. During the field survey, we monitored the dynamics of the two types of thraustochytrid-infecting virus: small viruses causing lysis of Aurantiochytrium sp. NIBH N1-27 (identified as AuRNAV) and the large viruses of Sicyoidochytrium minutum NBRC 102975 (similar to SmDNAV in physiology and morphology). Fluctuation patterns of the two distinct types of virus were different from each other. This may reflect the difference in the preference of organic substrates; i.e., it may be likely the host of AuRNAV (Aurantiochytrium sp.) increases utilizing algal dead bodies or feeble cells as the virus shows a large increase in abundance following raphidophyte blooms; whereas, the trophic nutrient supply for S. minutum may primarily depend on other constantly-supplied organic compounds because it did not show any significant change in abundance throughout the survey. Further study concerning the population composition of thraustochytrids and their viruses may demonstrate the microbial ecology (especially concerning the detrital food web) of marine environments.


Aquatic Microbial Ecology | 2014

Coculture with marine bacteria confers resistance to complete viral lysis of diatom cultures

Kei Kimura; Yuji Tomaru


Aquatic Microbial Ecology | 2014

Temperature alters algicidal activity of DNA and RNA viruses infecting Chaetoceros tenuissimus

Yuji Tomaru; Kei Kimura; Haruo Yamaguchi


International Biodeterioration & Biodegradation | 2016

Phosphotriesterase activity in marine bacteria of the genera Phaeobacter, Ruegeria, and Thalassospira

Haruo Yamaguchi; Hiroshi Arisaka; Miki Seki; Masao Adachi; Kei Kimura; Yuji Tomaru


Aquatic Microbial Ecology | 2017

Effects of temperature and salinity on diatom cell lysis by DNA and RNA viruses

Kei Kimura; Yuji Tomaru


Perspectives in Phycology | 2015

Marine diatom viruses and their hosts: Resistance mechanisms and population dynamics

Yuji Tomaru; Kensuke Toyoda; Kei Kimura

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Hiromitsu Moriyama

Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology

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Keizo Nagasaki

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Ken Takai

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

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