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Featured researches published by Yuko Ohashi.


Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions | 2002

Enhanced Resistance to Seed-Transmitted Bacterial Diseases in Transgenic Rice Plants Overproducing an Oat Cell-Wall-Bound Thionin

Takayoshi Iwai; Hisatoshi Kaku; Ryoso Honkura; Shigeo Nakamura; H. Ochiai; Takuji Sasaki; Yuko Ohashi

Bacterial attack is a serious agricultural problem for growth of rice seedlings in the nursery and field. The thionins purified from seed and etiolated seedlings of barley are known to have antimicrobial activity against necrotrophic pathogens; however, we found that no endogenous rice thionin genes alone are enough for resistance to two major seed-transmitted phytopathogenic bacteria, Burkholderia plantarii and B. glumae, although rice thionin genes constitutively expressed in coleoptile, the target organ of the bacteria. Thus, we isolated thionin genes from oat, one of which was overexpressed in rice. When wild-type rice seed were germinated with these bacteria, all seedlings were wilted with severe blight. In the seedling infected with B. plantarii, bacterial staining was intensively marked around stomata and intercellular spaces. However, transgenic rice seedlings accumulating a high level of oat thionin in cell walls grew almost normally with bacterial staining only on the surface of stomata. These results indicate that the oat thionin effectively works in rice plants against bacterial attack.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Catalytic activation of the plant MAPK phosphatase NtMKP1 by its physiological substrate salicylic acid-induced protein kinase but not by calmodulins.

Shinpei Katou; Eri Karita; Hiromoto Yamakawa; Shigemi Seo; Ichiro Mitsuhara; Kazuyuki Kuchitsu; Yuko Ohashi

MAPK phosphatases (MKPs) are negative regulators of MAPKs. Previously, we identified NtMKP1 as a novel calmodulin (CaM)-binding protein (Yamakawa, H., Katou, S., Seo, S., Mitsuhara, I., Kamada, H., and Ohashi, Y. (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 279, 928-936). In this study, we characterized the interaction of NtMKP1 with substrate MAPKs and CaM. NtMKP1 (produced by in vitro transcription/translation) inactivated salicylic acid-induced protein kinase (SIPK) through dephosphorylation of the TEY motif of SIPK. CaM bound but unexpectedly did not activate the phosphatase activity of NtMKP1. NtMKP1 has four characteristic domains, viz. a dual-specificity phosphatase catalytic domain, a gelsolin homology domain, a CaM-binding domain, and C-terminal domain. Deletion analysis revealed that the N-terminal non-catalytic region of NtMKP1 bound SIPK and was essential for inactivating SIPK, whereas the CaM-binding and C-terminal domains were dispensable. Moreover, the phosphatase activity of NtMKP1 was increased strongly by the binding of SIPK, but weakly by another MAPK, wound-induced protein kinase. Swapping and site-directed mutagenesis of SIPK and wound-induced protein kinase revealed that the strong activation of NtMKP1 phosphatase activity by SIPK partially depended on the putative common docking domain of SIPK. On the other hand, conversion of Lys41 and Arg43 of NtMKP1 to Ala (K41A/R43A) abolished the interaction with SIPK. Expression of constitutively active MAPK kinase in Nicotiana benthamiana induced activation of SIPK and cell death. Simultaneous expression of either NtMKP1 or NtMKP1 L443R, which was unable to bind CaM, compromised the constitutively active MAPK kinase-induced responses, whereas that of NtMKP1 K41A/R43A did not. These results indicate that the regulation of NtMKP1 activity by SIPK binding, but not by CaM binding, is important for the function of NtMKP1.


Plant and Cell Physiology | 2004

Three types of tobacco calmodulins characteristically activate plant NAD kinase at different Ca2+ concentrations and pHs

Eri Karita; Hiromoto Yamakawa; Ichiro Mitsuhara; Kazuyuki Kuchitsu; Yuko Ohashi


Archive | 1998

Stress resistant plant

Kamal Malik; Ichiro Mitsuhara; Yuko Ohashi


Archive | 1997

Pathogen-resistant plants and method for production thereof

Ichiro Mitsuhara; Yuko Ohashi; Masahiro Ohshima


Archive | 1998

Stress resistant plant in which cell death suppressing gene is introduced and method for producing the same

Yuko Ohashi; Ichiro Mitsuhara; Kamal Malik


Archive | 2000

Rice peroxidases with various characteristics

Yuko Ohashi; Ichiro Mitsuhara; Takuji Sasaki; Hiroyuki Ito; Takayoshi Iwai; Susumu Hiraga


Archive | 1997

Pathogen-resistant plants transformed with a DNA encoding sarcotoxin 1A linked to a signal peptide and a method for production thereof

Ichiro Mitsuhara; Masahiro Ohshima; Yuko Ohashi


Archive | 1998

Disease resistant plant including thionin gene

Hirohiko Hirochika; Ryoso Honkura; Takayoshi Iwai; Ichiro Mitsuhara; Shigeo Nakamura; Yuko Ohashi; Masahiro Ohshima; Masashi Ugaki


Archive | 1999

Stress-resistant plant into which apoptosis inhibitor gene is transduced and its creation

A Malik Kamaru; Ichiro Mitsuhara; Yuko Ohashi; エイ.マリク カマル; 一朗 光原; 祐子 大橋

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Ichiro Mitsuhara

National Agriculture and Food Research Organization

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Kamal Malik

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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Eri Karita

Tokyo University of Science

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