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result(s) for
"Ishibashi, Matsujiro"
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Microbial Community Analysis of Digested Liquids Exhibiting Different Methane Production Potential in Methane Fermentation of Swine Feces
by
Ishibashi Matsujiro
,
Tsurumaru Hirohito
,
Kamitani Yoshinori
in
Abundance
,
Acetic acid
,
Acetogenesis
2020
Batch methane fermentation was conducted using seed sludge collected from six methane fermentation facilities. Swine feces were centrifuged and autoclaved, followed by its use as a substrate for methanogenesis. This “swine feces supernatant medium” facilitates the cultivation of the microbes of the seed sludge, sampling of the digested liquid using a syringe, and subculturing of the digested liquid in a subsequent medium using a syringe. Through 15 subcultures, digested liquids with high and low methane production potential were obtained, which were named “H-DS” and “L-DS,” respectively. On the day 10 of cultivation, chemical oxygen demand (COD) of H-DS significantly decreased by 31% and that of L-DS did not differ significantly compared with that on the day 0 of cultivation. Acetic acid concentration of H-DS (1009 mg/L) was significantly lower than that of L-DS (2686 mg/L). These chemical characteristics indicate that organics decomposition in L-DS was not successful and suggest that H-DS has high relative abundance of bacteria decomposing organic matter and methanogen utilizing acetic acid compared with those in L-DS. Microbial community analysis revealed that Shannon index of H-DS was significantly higher than that of L-DS, and the relative abundance of acetogenic bacteria (e.g., Syntrophomonas) and acetic acid-utilizing methanogen (Methanosarcina) in H-DS was significantly higher than that in L-DS. Thus, the high methane production potential of H-DS might be attributable to the smooth flow from acetogenesis to methanogenesis step in the methane fermentation, compared with the case of L-DS.
Journal Article
Gallbladder microbiota composition is associated with pancreaticobiliary and gallbladder cancer prognosis
by
Kirishima, Mari
,
Higashi, Michiyo
,
Hayashi, Chihiro
in
Abundance
,
Adenocarcinoma
,
Alpha diversity
2022
Background
The microbial population of the intestinal tract and its relationship to specific diseases has been extensively studied during the past decade. However, reports characterizing the bile microbiota are rare. This study aims to investigate the microbiota composition in patients with pancreaticobiliary cancers and benign diseases by 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing and to evaluate its potential value as a biomarker for the cancer of the bile duct, pancreas, and gallbladder.
Results
We enrolled patients who were diagnosed with cancer, cystic lesions, and inflammation of the pancreaticobiliary tract. The study cohort comprised 244 patients. We extracted microbiome-derived DNA from the bile juice in surgically resected gallbladders. The microbiome composition was not significantly different according to lesion position and cancer type in terms of alpha and beta diversity. We found a significant difference in the relative abundance of
Campylobacter
,
Citrobacter
,
Leptotrichia
,
Enterobacter
,
Hungatella
,
Mycolicibacterium
,
Phyllobacterium
and
Sphingomonas
between patients without and with lymph node metastasis.
Conclusions
There was a significant association between the relative abundance of certain microbes and overall survival prognosis. These microbes showed association with good prognosis in cholangiocarcinoma, but with poor prognosis in pancreatic adenocarcinoma, and vice versa. Our findings suggest that pancreaticobiliary tract cancer patients have an altered microbiome composition, which might be a biomarker for distinguishing malignancy.
Journal Article
Salt Mediated Modulation of Autolysis of Thermolysin-Like Proteinase, Salilysin, Isolated from a Moderate Halophile, Chromohalobacter salexigens DSM3043
by
Ishibashi Matsujiro
,
Tokunaga Hiroko
,
Tanaka Ryoichi
in
Amino acids
,
Ammonium sulfate
,
Autolysis
2021
Halophilic salilysin is first synthesized as a pro-form, which has been shown autolysis activity to process pro-region (55 amino acids long) three times to form intermediate 1 (I1), intermediate 2 (I2) and final mature (M) salilysin. The autolysis of I1- to M-form salilysin in vitro was significantly accelerated with increasing NaCl concentration up to 4 M. Strong salting-out salts, (NH4)2SO4, Na2SO4 and MgSO4, were more effective, suggesting that autolysis is enhanced by inter-molecular association or structure compaction or both. However, MgCl2, a salting-in salt, was also effective, suggesting that other mechanisms, such as charge shielding and ionic binding to this halophilic protein, operated. Autolytic cleavage at site 3 resulted in mixed formation of correctly and incorrectly processed mature forms in the absence of salt, indicating that salt affected the accuracy of autolytic cleavage reaction. Far UV circular dichroism (CD) measurements indicated that E167A pro-salilysin showed an identical CD spectrum to the wild-type mature salilysin, suggesting pro-form has a proper fold for proteolytic activity. Thermal scanning indicated that E167A pro-salilysin was more heat-stable by ~ 10 °C than mature form. The CD spectra, thermal stability and modeling structure of salilysin clearly suggested that pro-salilysin is folded to the same structure as native form and is functional for autolysis.
Journal Article
Expression, Folding, and Activation of Halophilic Alkaline Phosphatase in Non-Halophilic Brevibacillus choshinensis
by
Laksmi Fina Amreta
,
Ishibashi Matsujiro
,
Imamura Hikari
in
Alkaline phosphatase
,
Amino acids
,
Dimers
2020
Halophilic enzymes contain a large number of acidic amino acids and marginal large hydrophobic amino acids, which make them highly soluble even under strongly hydrophobic conditions. This characteristic of halophilic enzymes provides potential for their industrial application. However, halophilic enzymes easily degrade when used for industrial applications compared with enzymes from other extremophiles because of their instability in low-salt environments. We aimed to clarify the stabilization mechanism of halophilic enzymes. We previously attempted to express halophilic alkaline phosphatase from Halomonas (HaALP) in non-halophilic E. coli. However, the expressed HaALP showed little activity. Therefore, we overexpressed HaALP in Gram-positive non-halophilic Brevibacillus choshinensis in this study, which was successfully expressed and purified in its active form. HaALP was denatured in 6 M urea, refolded using various salts and the non-ionic osmolyte trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO), and assessed by native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. HaALP refolded in 3 M NaCl or 3 M TMAO containing Na+ ions. Hydrophobic interactions due to a high salt concentration or TMAO enhanced the formation of the folding intermediate (the monomer precursor), and only Na+ ions activated the dimer form. This insight into the stabilization mechanism of HaALP may lead to the development of industrial applications of halophilic enzymes under low-salt conditions.
Journal Article
Homodimeric Cross-Over Structure of the Human Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor (GCSF) Receptor Signaling Complex
by
Ishibashi, Matsujiro
,
Tamada, Taro
,
Okamoto, Tomoyuki
in
Amino Acid Sequence
,
Atoms
,
Binding Sites
2006
A crystal structure of the signaling complex between human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (GCSF) and a ligand binding region of GCSF receptor (GCSF-R), has been determined to 2.8 Å resolution. The GCSF:GCSF-R complex formed a 2:2 stoichiometry by means of a cross-over interaction between the Ig-like domains of GCSF-R and GCSF. The conformation of the complex is quite different from that between human GCSF and the cytokine receptor homologous domain of mouse GCSF-R, but similar to that of the IL-6/gp130 signaling complex. The Ig-like domain cross-over structure necessary for GCSF-R activation is consistent with previously reported thermodynamic and mutational analyses.
Journal Article
Secretory production of single-chain antibody (scFv) in Brevibacillus choshinensis using novel fusion partner
2013
Halophilic β-lactamase (BLA) has been successfully used as a novel fusion partner for soluble expression of aggregation-prone foreign proteins in
Escherichia coli
cytoplasm (Appl Microbiol Biotechnol 86:649–658,
2010b
). This halophilic BLA fusion technology was applied here for secretory expression in
Brevibacillus
. The “
Brevibacillus
in vivo cloning” method, recently developed by Higeta Shoyu group, for the construction and transformation of
Brevibacillus
expression vectors facilitates efficient screening of the production conditions of
Brevibacillus
expression system. Two single-chain antibodies (scFv), HyHEL-10 single chain scFv (scFvHEL) and anti-fluorescein single chain scFv (scFvFLU), were successfully secreted to culture supernatant as a fusion protein with halophilic BLA. The scFvHEL-His, purified after cleavage of BLA portion with thrombin, was fully active: it formed a stoichiometric complex with the antigen, lysozyme, and inhibited the enzymatic activity. The scFvFLU-His, similarly expressed and purified, stoichiometrically inhibited fluorescence intensity of fluorescein. The molecular mass of scFvHEL-His was determined to be 27,800 Da by light scattering measurements, indicating its monomeric structure in solution.
Journal Article
Increase of salt dependence of halophilic nucleoside diphosphate kinase caused by a single amino acid substitution
by
Ishibashi, Matsujiro
,
Hayashi, Tomoe
,
Tokunaga, Masao
in
Amino Acid Sequence
,
Amino Acid Substitution
,
Amino acids
2013
Nucleoside diphosphate kinase (HsNDK) from an extremely halophilic archaea,
Halobacterium salinarum
, is composed of a homo hexamer, assembled as a trimer of basic dimeric units. It requires >2 M NaCl for refolding, although it does not require NaCl for stability or enzymatic activity below 30 °C. A HisN111L mutant with an N-terminal extension sequence containing hexa-His tag, in which Asn111 was replaced with Leu, was designed to be less stable between basic dimeric units. This mutant can lose between 6 and 12 hydrogen bonds between basic dimeric units in the hexamer structure. The HisN111L mutant had enhanced salt requirements for enzymatic activity and refolding even though the secondary structure of the HisN111L mutant was confirmed to be similar to the control, HisNDK, in low and high salt solutions using circular dichroism. We reported previously that G114R and D148C mutants, which had enhanced interactions between basic dimeric units, showed facilitated refolding and stabilization in low salt solution. The results of this study help to elucidate the process for engineering industrial enzymes by controlling subunit–subunit interactions through mutations.
Journal Article
Nucleoside Diphosphate Kinase from Psychrophilic Pseudoalteromonas sp. AS-131 Isolated from Antarctic Ocean
by
Arakawa, Tsutomu
,
Yonezawa, Yasushi
,
Arai, Shigeki
in
Animal Anatomy
,
Biochemistry
,
Bioorganic Chemistry
2015
Nucleoside diphosphate kinase isolated from psychrophilic
Pseudoalteromonas
sp. AS-131 (ASNDK) was expressed in
Escherichia coli
and purified to homogeneity. Comparing to mesophilic NDK isolated from
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
, ASNDK exhibited highly elevated thermolability:
E. coli
expression at 37 °C as a denatured insoluble form, 30 °C lower optimum temperature of enzymatic activity, and greatly reduced heat stability with 38 °C lower Tm value, fourfold higher Km and reduced Kcat/Km by 0.4-fold upon reaction temperature increase from 20 to 37 °C. The subunit structure of ASNDK was suggested to be dimer, as in NDKs isolated from moderate halophiles.
Journal Article
Isolation and characterization of mung bean (Vigna radiata L.) rhizobia in Myanmar
by
Yamakawa, Takeo
,
Htwe, Aung Zaw
,
Ishibashi, Matsujiro
in
Acetylene reduction
,
Beans
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2024
We collected soil samples from six major mung bean cropping regions in Myanmar: Sagaing, Mandalay, Nay Pyi Taw, and Magway in the tropical savanna climate zone and Bago and Yangon in the tropical monsoon climate zone. All fields grew mung bean for at least 5 years and had no history of rhizobial inoculation. Mung bean ‘Yezin-11’, a popular cultivar in Myanmar, was inoculated with soil suspensions. From the nodules formed on the roots, we isolated 55 rhizobial strains. Identification of the isolates revealed the dominant species of indigenous rhizobia in each region. We identified 53
Bradyrhizobium
strains and 2
Ensifer
strains.
Bradyrhizobium yuanmingense
was dominant in the tropical savanna zone and
Bradyrhizobium
sp. (
B. liaoningense
or
B. diversitatis
) and
B. centrosematis
were dominant in the tropical monsoon zone. Principal component analysis indicates that the dominance of
B. yuanmingense
in the tropical savanna zone might be due to high concentration of NO
3
-N and P
2
O
5
in the soil. It also indicates that the dominance of
B. centrosematis
in the tropical monsoon zone might be caused by drastically low pH and high concentration of NH
4
in the soil.
Bradyrhizobium centrosematis
YGN-M9,
B. yuanmingense
SGG-M3, and
Bradyrhizobium
sp. BGO-M5 significantly increased nodulation (nodule number and nodule dry weight), acetylene reduction activity, and shoot dry weight, respectively, relative to
Ensifer terangae
MDY-M6. Co-inoculation with these three strains increased nodulation significantly compared with single inoculation of BGO-M5. The characterization of mung bean rhizobia and selection of microbial inoculant candidates will be useful for the development of microbial inoculants in Myanmar.
Journal Article
Distinct Characteristics of Single Starch-Binding Domain SBD1 Derived from Tandem Domains SBD1-SBD2 of Halophilic Kocuria varians Alpha-Amylase
by
Tokunaga, Hiroko
,
Ishibashi, Matsujiro
,
Arakawa, Tsutomu
in
Animal Anatomy
,
Binding sites
,
Biochemistry
2012
Kocuria varians
alpha-amylase contains tandem starch-binding domains SBD1-SBD2 (SBD12) that possess typical halophilic characteristics. Recombinant tandem domains SBD12 and single domain SBD1, both with amino-terminal hexa-His tag, were expressed in and purified to homogeneity from
Escherichia coli
. The circular dichroism (CD) spectrum of His-SBD12 was characterized by a positive peak at 233 nm ascribed to the aromatic stacking. Although the signal occurred in the far UV region, it is an indication of tertiary structure folding. CD spectrum of single domain His-SBD1 exhibited the same peak position, signal intensity and spectral shape as those of His-SBD12, suggesting that the aromatic stacking must occur within the domain, and that two SBD domains in SBD12 and SBD1 has a similar folded structure. This structural observation was consistent with the biological activity that His-SBD1 showed binding activity against raw starch granules and amylose resin with 70–80% efficiency compared with binding of equimolar His-SBD12. Although the thermal unfolding rate of SBD12 and SBD1 were similar, the refolding rates of SBD12 and SBD1 from thermal melting were greatly different: His-SBD12 refolded slowly (T
1/2
= ~84 min), while refolding of single domain His-SBD1 was found to be 20-fold faster (T
1/2
= 4.2 min). The possible mechanism of this large difference in refolding rate was discussed. Maltose at 20 mM showed 5–6 °C increase in thermal melting of both His-SBD12 and His-SBD1, while its effects on the time course of unfolding and refolding were insignificant.
Journal Article