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29
result(s) for
"Shin-i, Tadasu"
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Large-scale analysis of full-length cDNAs from the tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) cultivar Micro-Tom, a reference system for the Solanaceae genomics
by
Yamamoto, Naoki
,
Ichinose, Yuki
,
Shin-i, Tadasu
in
Animal Genetics and Genomics
,
Arabidopsis
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
2010
Background
The Solanaceae family includes several economically important vegetable crops. The tomato (
Solanum lycopersicum
) is regarded as a model plant of the Solanaceae family. Recently, a number of tomato resources have been developed in parallel with the ongoing tomato genome sequencing project. In particular, a miniature cultivar, Micro-Tom, is regarded as a model system in tomato genomics, and a number of genomics resources in the Micro-Tom-background, such as ESTs and mutagenized lines, have been established by an international alliance.
Results
To accelerate the progress in tomato genomics, we developed a collection of fully-sequenced 13,227 Micro-Tom full-length cDNAs. By checking redundant sequences, coding sequences, and chimeric sequences, a set of 11,502 non-redundant full-length cDNAs (nrFLcDNAs) was generated. Analysis of untranslated regions demonstrated that tomato has longer 5'- and 3'-untranslated regions than most other plants but rice. Classification of functions of proteins predicted from the coding sequences demonstrated that nrFLcDNAs covered a broad range of functions. A comparison of nrFLcDNAs with genes of sixteen plants facilitated the identification of tomato genes that are not found in other plants, most of which did not have known protein domains. Mapping of the nrFLcDNAs onto currently available tomato genome sequences facilitated prediction of exon-intron structure. Introns of tomato genes were longer than those of Arabidopsis and rice. According to a comparison of exon sequences between the nrFLcDNAs and the tomato genome sequences, the frequency of nucleotide mismatch in exons between Micro-Tom and the genome-sequencing cultivar (Heinz 1706) was estimated to be 0.061%.
Conclusion
The collection of Micro-Tom nrFLcDNAs generated in this study will serve as a valuable genomic tool for plant biologists to bridge the gap between basic and applied studies. The nrFLcDNA sequences will help annotation of the tomato whole-genome sequence and aid in tomato functional genomics and molecular breeding. Full-length cDNA sequences and their annotations are provided in the database KaFTom
http://www.pgb.kazusa.or.jp/kaftom/
via the website of the National Bioresource Project Tomato
http://tomato.nbrp.jp
.
Journal Article
Co-option of Sox3 as the male-determining factor on the Y chromosome in the fish Oryzias dancena
2014
Sex chromosomes harbour a primary sex-determining signal that triggers sexual development of the organism. However, diverse sex chromosome systems have been evolved in vertebrates. Here we use positional cloning to identify the sex-determining locus of a medaka-related fish,
Oryzias dancena
, and find that the locus on the Y chromosome contains a
cis
-regulatory element that upregulates neighbouring
Sox3
expression in developing gonad. Sex-reversed phenotypes in
Sox3
Y
transgenic fish, and
Sox3
Y
loss-of-function mutants all point to its critical role in sex determination. Furthermore, we demonstrate that
Sox3
initiates testicular differentiation by upregulating expression of downstream
Gsdf
, which is highly conserved in fish sex differentiation pathways. Our results not only provide strong evidence for the independent recruitment of
Sox3
to male determination in distantly related vertebrates, but also provide direct evidence that a novel sex determination pathway has evolved through co-option of a transcriptional regulator potentially interacted with a conserved downstream component.
Sex chromosomes harbour specific sequences that determine the sexual development of the organism; yet these sequences remain unknown for many species. Here, Takehana
et al.
show that, similarly to mammals,
Sox3
on the Y chromosome is the male-determining factor in the medaka-related fish
Oryzias dancena
.
Journal Article
Extremotolerant tardigrade genome and improved radiotolerance of human cultured cells by tardigrade-unique protein
2016
Tardigrades, also known as water bears, are small aquatic animals. Some tardigrade species tolerate almost complete dehydration and exhibit extraordinary tolerance to various physical extremes in the dehydrated state. Here we determine a high-quality genome sequence of
Ramazzottius varieornatus
, one of the most stress-tolerant tardigrade species. Precise gene repertoire analyses reveal the presence of a small proportion (1.2% or less) of putative foreign genes, loss of gene pathways that promote stress damage, expansion of gene families related to ameliorating damage, and evolution and high expression of novel tardigrade-unique proteins. Minor changes in the gene expression profiles during dehydration and rehydration suggest constitutive expression of tolerance-related genes. Using human cultured cells, we demonstrate that a tardigrade-unique DNA-associating protein suppresses X-ray-induced DNA damage by ∼40% and improves radiotolerance. These findings indicate the relevance of tardigrade-unique proteins to tolerability and tardigrades could be a bountiful source of new protection genes and mechanisms.
Tardigrades are resistant to extreme environmental conditions including dehydration, radiation and the vacuum of space. Here the authors present a high-quality genome which displays minimal horizontal gene transfer, and identify the unique tardigrade protein Dsup which suppresses DNA damage.
Journal Article
A genomic overview of short genetic variations in a basal chordate, Ciona intestinalis
by
Satoh, Nori
,
Shin-i, Tadasu
,
Chiba, Shota
in
Amino Acid Substitution - genetics
,
Analysis
,
Animal experimentation
2012
Background
Although the
Ciona intestinalis
genome contains many allelic polymorphisms, there is only limited data analyzed systematically. Establishing a dense map of genetic variations in
C. intestinalis
is necessary not only for linkage analysis, but also for other experimental biology including molecular developmental and evolutionary studies, because animals from natural populations are typically used for experiments.
Results
Here, we identified over three million candidate short genomic variations within a 110 Mb euchromatin region among five
C. intestinalis
individuals. The average nucleotide diversity was approximately 1.1%. Genetic variations were found at a similar density in intergenic and gene regions. Non-synonymous and nonsense nucleotide substitutions were found in 12,493 and 1,214 genes accounting for 81.9% and 8.0% of the entire gene set, respectively, and over 60% of genes in the single animal encode non-identical proteins between maternal and paternal alleles.
Conclusions
Our results provide a framework for studying evolution of the animal genome, as well as a useful resource for a wide range of
C. intestinalis
researchers.
Journal Article
Idiotope-Driven T-Cell/B-Cell Collaboration-Based T-Cell Epitope Prediction Using B-Cell Receptor Repertoire Sequences in Infectious Diseases
by
Moi, Meng Ling
,
Shiina, Takashi
,
Nakamura, Yukio
in
anti-idiotypic antibody
,
Antibodies
,
antigen
2023
T-cell recognition of antigen epitopes is a crucial step for the induction of adaptive immune responses, and the identification of such T-cell epitopes is, therefore, important for understanding diverse immune responses and controlling T-cell immunity. A number of bioinformatic tools exist that predict T-cell epitopes; however, many of these methods highly rely on evaluating conventional peptide presentation by major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecules, but they ignore epitope sequences recognized by T-cell receptor (TCR). Immunogenic determinant idiotopes are present on the variable regions of immunoglobulin molecules expressed on and secreted by B-cells. In idiotope-driven T-cell/B-cell collaboration, B-cells present the idiotopes on MHC molecules for recognition by idiotope-specific T-cells. According to the idiotype network theory formulated by Niels Jerne, such idiotopes found on anti-idiotypic antibodies exhibit molecular mimicry of antigens. Here, by combining these concepts and defining the patterns of TCR-recognized epitope motifs (TREMs), we developed a T-cell epitope prediction method that identifies T-cell epitopes derived from antigen proteins by analyzing B-cell receptor (BCR) sequences. This method allowed us to identify T-cell epitopes that contain the same TREM patterns between BCR and viral antigen sequences in two different infectious diseases caused by dengue virus and SARS-CoV-2 infection. The identified epitopes were among the T-cell epitopes detected in previous studies, and T-cell stimulatory immunogenicity was confirmed. Thus, our data support this method as a powerful tool for the discovery of T-cell epitopes from BCR sequences.
Journal Article
Highly functional T-cell receptor repertoires are abundant in stem memory T cells and highly shared among individuals
2017
To expand our knowledge of the ontogeny of the T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoire of antigen-specific T-cell subsets, we combined next-generation deep sequencing and single-cell multiplex clonotype analysis to evaluate the diversity and frequency of paired TCRs, their functions and whether clonotypic TCRs are shared among different individuals. Using an HLA-A*02-restricted cytomegalovirus (CMV) pp65-derived immunogenic peptide, we found that the more dominant pp65-specific TCR clonotypes in the blood of healthy donors have higher binding affinities for the CMV peptide and arise from clonotypes that are highly shared among individuals. Interestingly, these highly shared HLA-A*02-restricted CMV-specific TCRs were detected in a CMV-seronegative individual as well as in HLA-A*02-negative donors albeit at lower frequency. More intriguingly, these shared TCR clonotypes were abundant in the stem memory T-cell subset, and TCR diversity of the stem memory T-cell repertoire was significantly lower than in the central memory and effector memory T-cell repertoires. These results suggest that the stem memory T-cell subset may serve as a reservoir of highly shared and highly functional memory T-cells.
Journal Article
Axial patterning in cephalochordates and the evolution of the organizer
by
Yu, Jr-Kai
,
Satou, Yutaka
,
Satoh, Noriyuki
in
Animals
,
Biological and medical sciences
,
Biological Evolution
2007
The organizer of the vertebrate gastrula is an important signalling centre that induces and patterns dorsal axial structures. Although a topic of long-standing interest, the evolutionary origin of the organizer remains unclear. Here we show that the gastrula of the cephalochordate amphioxus expresses dorsal/ventral (D/V) patterning genes (for example, bone morphogenetic proteins (
BMP
s),
Nodal
and their antagonists) in patterns reminiscent of those of their vertebrate orthlogues, and that amphioxus embryos, like those of vertebrates, are ventralized by exogenous BMP protein. In addition, Wnt-antagonists (for example,
Dkk
s and
sFRP2-like
) are expressed anteriorly, whereas
Wnt
genes themselves are expressed posteriorly, consistent with a role for Wnt signalling in anterior/posterior (A/P) patterning. These results suggest evolutionary conservation of the mechanisms for both D/V and A/P patterning of the early gastrula. In light of recent phylogenetic analyses placing cephalochordates basally in the chordate lineage, we propose that separate signalling centres for patterning the D/V and A/P axes may be an ancestral chordate character.
We go back a long way
The organizer of the gastrula stage in the vertebrate embryo is a signalling centre that disposes the major body axes of the adult. As gastrulation varies considerably between vertebrates and involves extensive tissue movements, the origins of the gastrula organizer are obscure. In contrast, the embryo of amphioxus, a chordate distantly related to vertebrates, is quite simple with minimal tissue movement in gastrulation. A study of the embryo of the amphioxus
Branchiostoma
reveals a set of homologues of vertebrate organizer and axial patterning genes that is expressed during gastrulation in patterns very like those in vertebrates. This suggests that organization in vertebrates has deep evolutionary roots.
Journal Article
Construction of complete Tupaia belangeri transcriptome database by whole-genome and comprehensive RNA sequencing
2019
The northern tree shrew (
Tupaia belangeri
) possesses high potential as an animal model of human diseases and biology, given its genetic similarity to primates. Although genetic information on the tree shrew has already been published, some of the entire coding sequences (CDSs) of tree shrew genes remained incomplete, and the reliability of these CDSs remained difficult to determine. To improve the determination of tree shrew CDSs, we performed sequencing of the whole-genome, mRNA, and total RNA and integrated the resulting data. Additionally, we established criteria for the selection of reliable CDSs and annotated these sequences by comparison to the human transcriptome, resulting in the identification of complete CDSs for 12,612 tree shrew genes and yielding a more accurate tree shrew genome database (TupaiaBase:
http://tupaiabase.org
). Transcriptome profiles in hepatitis B virus infected tree shrew livers were analyzed for validation. Gene ontology analysis showed enriched transcriptional regulation at 1 day post-infection, namely in the “type I interferon signaling pathway”. Moreover, a negative regulator of type I interferon,
SOCS3
, was induced. This work, which provides a tree shrew CDS database based on genomic DNA and RNA sequencing, is expected to serve as a powerful tool for further development of the tree shrew model.
Journal Article
Next-Generation Immune Repertoire Sequencing as a Clue to Elucidate the Landscape of Immune Modulation by Host–Gut Microbiome Interactions
2018
The human immune system is a fine network consisted of the innumerable numbers of functional cells that balance the immunity and tolerance against various endogenous and environmental challenges. Although advances in modern immunology have revealed a role of many unique immune cell subsets, technologies that enable us to capture the whole landscape of immune responses against specific antigens have been not available to date. Acquired immunity against various microorganisms including host microbiome is principally founded on T cell and B cell populations, each of which expresses antigen-specific receptors that define a unique clonotype. Over the past several years, high-throughput next-generation sequencing has been developed as a powerful tool to profile T- and B-cell receptor repertoires in a given individual at the single-cell level. Sophisticated immuno-bioinformatic analyses by use of this innovative methodology have been already implemented in clinical development of antibody engineering, vaccine design, and cellular immunotherapy. In this article, we aim to discuss the possible application of high-throughput immune receptor sequencing in the field of nutritional and intestinal immunology. Although there are still unsolved caveats, this emerging technology combined with single-cell transcriptomics/proteomics provides a critical tool to unveil the previously unrecognized principle of host-microbiome immune homeostasis. Accumulation of such knowledge will lead to the development of effective ways for personalized immune modulation through deeper understanding of the mechanisms by which the intestinal environment affects our immune ecosystem.
Journal Article
Epstein–Barr virus-related diffuse large B-cell lymphoma in mogamulizumab-treated adult T-cell leukemia with incomplete T-cell reconstitution
by
Miyahara, Masaharu
,
Oshima, Koichi
,
Kimura, Shinya
in
Antibodies
,
B-cell lymphoma
,
Central nervous system
2019
Adult T-cell leukemia (ATL) is an aggressive mature T-cell malignancy with a poor prognosis. The anti-C–C motif chemokine receptor 4 (CCR4) antibody mogamulizumab (moga) reduces ATL cells and induces reconstitution of polyclonal T cells; however, ATL cases often remain resistant and moga sometimes causes fatal immunopathology. Epstein–Barr virus (EBV)-related B-cell lymphoma develops in severely immunocompromised subjects, and is particularly associated with impaired T-cell immunity. Here, we report an ATL patient who had received conventional chemotherapy plus moga, and subsequently developed EBV-related diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) of the central nervous system. Next-generation sequencing-based T-cell receptor repertoire analyses identified residual abnormal clones and revealed that reconstitution of polyclonal T cells was incomplete, even after moga treatment. Furthermore, a skin rash that developed after moga treatment was found to contain ATL clones. This case suggests that the limited therapeutic effects of moga and incomplete T-cell reconstitution are associated with severely impaired T-cell immunity and subsequent development of EBV-related DLBCL.
Journal Article