M

Manabu Takahara

Institute of Livestock and Grassland Science

Publishes on Photosynthetic Processes and Mechanisms, Protist diversity and phylogeny, Plant Taxonomy and Phylogenetics. 27 papers and 2.1k citations.

27Publications
2.1kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Dynamic recruitment of dynamin for final mitochondrial severance in a primitive red alga
Keiji Nishida, Manabu Takahara, Shin‐ya Miyagishima et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2003
Cited by 153

Dynamins are a eukaryote-specific family of GTPases. Some family members are involved in diverse and varied cellular activities. Here, we report that the primitive red alga Cyanidioschyzon merolae retains only one dynamin homolog, CmDnm1, belonging to the mitochondrial division subfamily. Previously, the bacterial cell division protein, FtsZ, was shown to localize at the mitochondrial division site in the alga. We showed that FtsZ and dynamin coexist as mitochondrial division-associated proteins that act during different phases of division. CmDnm1 was recruited from 10-20 cytoplasmic patches (dynamin patches) to the midpoint of the constricted mitochondrion-dividing ring (MD ring), which was observed as an electron-dense structure on the cytoplasmic side. CmDnm1 is probably not required for early constriction; it forms a ring or spiral when the outer mitochondrial membrane is finally severed, whereas the FtsZ and MD rings are formed before constriction. It is thought that the FtsZ, MD, and dynamin rings are involved in scaffolding, constriction, and final separation, respectively. In eukaryotes, mitochondrial severance is probably the most conserved role for the dynamin family.

Plastid Division Is Driven by a Complex Mechanism That Involves Differential Transition of the Bacterial and Eukaryotic Division Rings
Cited by 107Open Access

During plastid division, two structures have been detected at the division site in separate analyses. The plastid-dividing ring can be detected by transmission electron microscopy as two (or three) electron-dense rings: an outer ring on the cytosolic face of the outer envelope, occasionally a middle ring in the intermembrane space, and an inner ring on the stromal face of the inner envelope. The FtsZ ring, which plays a central role in bacterial division, also is involved in plastid division and is believed to have descended to plastids from cyanobacterial endosymbiosis. The relationship between the two structures is not known, although there is discussion regarding whether they are identical. Biochemical and immunocytochemical investigations, using synchronized chloroplasts of the red alga Cyanidioschyzon merolae, showed that the plastid FtsZ ring is distinct and separable from the plastid-dividing ring. The FtsZ ring localizes in stroma and faces the inner plastid-dividing ring at the far side from the inner envelope. The FtsZ ring and the inner and outer plastid-dividing rings form in that order before plastid division. The FtsZ ring disappears at the late stage of constriction before dissociation of the plastid-dividing ring, when the constriction is still in progress. Our results suggest that the FtsZ ring;-based system, which originated from a plastid ancestor, cyanobacteria, and the plastid-dividing ring;-based system, which probably originated from host eukaryotic cells, form a complex and are involved in plastid division by distinct modes.