Curriculum Vitaes

Masahiro Takeo

  (武尾 正弘)

Profile Information

Affiliation
Professor, Lab. of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Graduate School of Engineering, Department of Applied Chemistry, University of Hyogo
Degree
Master(Engineering)(Osaka University)
Doctor(Engineering)(Osaka University)

J-GLOBAL ID
200901027729174169
researchmap Member ID
1000057675

External link

Research Interests

 2

Papers

 125
  • Ryugo Nishimine, Yuna Kaneko, Shinpei Fujiwara, Daisuke Inoue, Masahiro Takeo, Michihiko Ike
    Journal of Bioscience and Bioengineering, 141(2) 116-124, Feb, 2026  Peer-reviewed
  • Hidehiro Ishizawa, Sunao Noguchi, Miku Kito, Yui Nomura, Kodai Kimura, Masahiro Takeo
    The ISME Journal, 19(1) wraf236, Oct 23, 2025  Peer-reviewed
    Abstract The functions of microbial communities, including substrate conversion and pathogen suppression, arise not as a simple sum of individual species’ capabilities but through complex interspecies interactions. Understanding how such functions arise from individual species and their interactions remains a major challenge, limiting efforts to rationally understand microbial roles in both natural and engineered ecosystems. Because current holistic (meta-omics) and reductionist (isolation- or single-cell-based) approaches struggle to capture these emergent microbial community functions, this study explores an intermediate strategy: analyzing simple sub-community combinations to enable a bottom-up understanding of community-level functions. To examine the validity of this approach, we used a nine-member synthetic microbial community capable of degrading the environmental pollutant aniline, and systematically generated a dataset of 256 sub-community combinations and their associated functions. Analyses using random forest models revealed that the sub-community combinations of just three to four species enabled the quantitative prediction of functions in larger communities (5–9-member; Pearson’s r = 0.78–0.80). Prediction performance remained robust even with limited sub-community data, suggesting applicability to more diverse microbial communities where exhaustive sub-community observation is infeasible. Moreover, interpreting models trained on these simple sub-community combinations enabled the identification of key species and interspecies interactions that strongly influence the overall community function. These findings provide a methodological framework for mechanistically dissecting complex microbial community functions through sub-community-based analysis.
  • 三木悠平, 江口智己, 中村雅基, 石澤秀紘, 武尾正弘, 竹内雅耶, 秦隆志, 西内悠祐, 多田佳織, 鈴木哲
    X線分析の進歩, 56 79-85, Mar, 2025  Peer-reviewed
  • Masahiro Takeo, Seiwa Ohtaki, Hidehiro Ishizawa
    Microbiology Resource Announcements, 14(issue 2) 1-3, Dec 27, 2024  Peer-reviewedLead authorCorresponding author
    ABSTRACT We report the complete genome assembly of a hydroquinonesulfonate-assimilating bacterium, Delftia lacustris strain HQS1. This strain contains one circular chromosome (6,979,964 bp) and one circular plasmid (39,999 bp). The chromosomal sequence contained 6,359 coding sequences and a gene cluster involved in the degradation of gentisate, which is structurally similar to hydroquinonesulfonate.
  • MASAHIRO TAKEO, RYOTA INO, SEIWA OHTAKI, MAYU KUROE, YOTA KOMAKI, HIDEHIRO ISHIZAWA
    Japanese Journal of Water Treatment Biology, 60(4) 73-86, Dec 15, 2024  Peer-reviewedInvitedLead authorCorresponding author

Misc.

 39

Books and Other Publications

 2

Presentations

 165

Teaching Experience

 11

Research Projects

 33