研究者業績

Seiji Negoro

  (根来 誠司)

Profile Information

Affiliation
University of Hyogo
Degree
工学博士(大阪大学)

J-GLOBAL ID
201801002810023628
researchmap Member ID
B000299987

Committee Memberships

 3

Awards

 1

Papers

 38
  • Masahiro Takeo, Kenta Yamamoto, Masashi Sonoyama, Kana Miyanaga, Nana Kanbara, Koichi Honda, Dai-ichiro Kato, Seiji Negoro
    JOURNAL OF BIOSCIENCE AND BIOENGINEERING, 126(3) 355-362, Sep, 2018  Peer-reviewed
    3-Methyl-4-nitrophenol (3M4NP) is formed in soil as a hydrolysis product of fenitrothion, one of the major organophosphorus pesticides. A Pseudomonas strain was isolated as a 3M4NP degrader from a crop soil and designated TSN1. This strain utilized 3M4NP as a sole carbon and energy source. To elucidate the biodegradation pathway, we performed transposon mutagenesis with pCro2a (mini-Tn5495) and obtained three mutants accumulating a dark pink compound(s) from 3M4NP. Rescue cloning and sequence analysis revealed that in all mutants, the transposon disrupted an identical aromatic compound meta-cleaving dioxygenase gene, and a monooxygenase gene was located just downstream of the dioxygenase gene. These two genes were designated mnpC and mnpB, respectively. The gene products showed high identity with the methylhydroquinone (MHQ) monooxygenase (58%) and the 3-methylcatechol 2,3-dioxygenase (54%) of a different 3M4NP degrader Burkholderia sp. NF100. The transposon mutants converted 3M4NP or MHQ into two identical metabolites, one of which was identified as 2-hydroxy-5-methyl-1,4-benzoquinone (2H5MBQ) by GC/MS analysis. Furthermore, two additional genes (named mnpAl and mnpA2), almost identical to the p-nitrophenol monooxygenase and the p-benzoquinone reductase genes of Pseudomonas sp. WBC-3, were isolated from the total DNA of strain TSN1. Disruption of mnpAl resulted in the complete loss of the 3M4NP degradation activity, demonstrating that mnpA1 encodes the initial monooxygenase for 3M4NP degradation. The purified mnpA2 gene product could efficiently reduce methyl p-benzoquinone (MBQ) into MHQ. These results suggest that strain TSN1 degrades 3M4NP via MBQ, MHQ, and 2H5MBQ in combination with mnpA1A2 and mnpCB, existing at different loci on the genome. (C) 2018, The Society for Biotechnology, Japan. All rights reserved.
  • Seiji Negoro, Naoki Shibata, Young-Ho Lee, Ikki Takehara, Ryo Kinugasa, Keisuke Nagai, Yusuke Tanaka, Dai-ichiro Kato, Masahiro Takeo, Yuji Goto, Yoshiki Higuchi
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 8(1) 9725, Jun, 2018  Peer-reviewed
    Nylon hydrolase (NylC) is initially expressed as an inactive precursor (36 kDa). The precursor is cleaved autocatalytically at Asn266/Thr267 to generate an active enzyme composed of an a subunit (27 kDa) and a beta subunit (9 kDa). Four alpha beta heterodimers (molecules A-D) form a doughnut-shaped quaternary structure. In this study, the thermostability of the parental NylC was altered by amino acid substitutions located at the A/D interface (D122G/H130Y/D36A/L137A) or the A/B interface (E263Q) and spanned a range of 47 degrees C. Considering structural, biophysical, and biochemical analyses, we discuss the structural basis of the stability of nylon hydrolase. From the analytical centrifugation data obtained regarding the various mutant enzymes, we conclude that the assembly of the monomeric units is dynamically altered by the mutations. Finally, we propose a model that can predict whether the fate of the nascent polypeptide will be correct subunit assembly, inappropriate protein-protein interactions causing aggregation, or intracellular degradation of the polypeptide.
  • Ikki Takehara, Tsubasa Fujii, Yuuki Tanimoto, Dai-Ichiro Kato, Masahiro Takeo, Seiji Negoro
    APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY AND BIOTECHNOLOGY, 102(2) 801-814, Jan, 2018  Peer-reviewed
    Arthrobacter sp. strain KI72 grows on a 6-aminohexanoate oligomer, which is a by-product of nylon-6 manufacturing, as a sole source of carbon and nitrogen. We cloned the two genes, nylD (1) and nylE (1) , responsible for 6-aminohexanoate metabolism on the basis of the draft genomic DNA sequence of strain KI72. We amplified the DNA fragments that encode these genes by polymerase chain reaction using a synthetic primer DNA homologous to the 4-aminobutyrate metabolic enzymes. We inserted the amplified DNA fragments into the expression vector pColdI in Escherichia coli, purified the His-tagged enzymes to homogeneity, and performed biochemical studies. We confirmed that 6-aminohexanoate aminotransferase (NylD(1)) catalyzes the reaction of 6-aminohexanoate to adipate semialdehyde using alpha-ketoglutarate, pyruvate, and glyoxylate as amino acceptors, generating glutamate, alanine, and glycine, respectively. The reaction requires pyridoxal phosphate (PLP) as a cofactor. For further metabolism, adipate semialdehyde dehydrogenase (NylE(1)) catalyzes the oxidative reaction of adipate semialdehyde to adipate using NADP(+) as a cofactor. Phylogenic analysis revealed that NylD(1) should be placed in a branch of the PLP-dependent aminotransferase sub III, while NylE(1) should be in a branch of the aldehyde dehydrogenase superfamily. In addition, we established a NylD(1)/NylE(1) coupled system to quantify the aminotransferase activity and to enable the conversion of 6-aminohexaoate to adipate via adipate semialdehyde with a yield of > 90%. In the present study, we demonstrate that 6-aminohexanoate produced from polymeric nylon-6 and nylon oligomers (i.e., a mixture of 6-aminohexaoate oligomers) by nylon hydrolase (NylC) and 6-aminohexanoate dimer hydrolase (NylB) reactions are sequentially converted to adipate by metabolic engineering technology.
  • Takehara I, Fujii T, Tanimoto Y, Kato DI, Takeo M, Negoro S
    Applied microbiology and biotechnology, 102(2) 815, Jan, 2018  Peer-reviewed
  • Juri Maeda, Dai-ichiro Kato, Masatoshi Okuda, Masahiro Takeo, Seiji Negoro, Kazunari Arima, Yuji Ito, Kazuki Niwa
    BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA-GENERAL SUBJECTS, 1861(8) 2112-2118, Aug, 2017  Peer-reviewed
    Due to the strict enantioselectivity of firefly luciferase, only D-luciferin can be used as a substrate for bioluminescence reactions. Unfortunately, luciferin racemizes easily and accumulation of nonluminous L-luciferin has negative influences on the light emitting reaction. Thus, maintaining the enantiopurity of luciferin in the reaction mixture is one of the most important demands in bioluminescence applications using firefly luciferase. In fireflies, however, L-luciferin is the biosynthetic precursor of D-luciferin, which is produced from the L-form undergoing deracemization. This deracemization consists of three successive reactions: L-enantiose-lective thioesterification by luciferase, in situ epimerization, and hydrolysis by thioesterase. In this work, we introduce a deracemizative luminescence system inspired by the biosynthetic pathway of D-luciferin using a combination of firefly luciferase from Luciola cruciata (LUC-G) and fatty acyl-CoA thioesterase II from Escherichia coli (TESB). The enzymatic reaction property analysis indicated the importance of the concentration balance between LUC-G and TESB for efficient D-luciferin production and light emission. Using this deracemizative luminescence system, a highly sensitive quantitative analysis method for L-cysteine was constructed. This LUC-G-TESB combination system can improve bioanalysis applications using the firefly bioluminescence reaction by efficient deracemization of D-luciferin.

Books and Other Publications

 9

Presentations

 13

Teaching Experience

 6

Research Projects

 7