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Kai Tahara

Bio: Kai Tahara is an academic researcher from Nagoya Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Protein subcellular localization prediction & Fusion protein. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 3 publications receiving 3 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The rational design of an improved system for intracellular synthetic lipidation-induced PM anchoring of SNAP-tag fusion proteins is described, offering a new and useful research tool in chemical biology and synthetic biology.
Abstract: The ability to chemically introduce lipid modifications to specific intracellular protein targets would enable the conditional control of protein localization and activity in living cells. We recently developed a chemical-genetic approach in which an engineered SNAP-tag fusion protein can be rapidly relocated and anchored from the cytoplasm to the plasma membrane (PM) upon post-translational covalent lipopeptide conjugation in cells. However, the first-generation system achieved only low to moderate protein anchoring (recruiting) efficiencies and lacked wide applicability. Herein, we describe the rational design of an improved system for intracellular synthetic lipidation-induced PM anchoring of SNAP-tag fusion proteins. In the new system, the SNAPf protein engineered to contain an N-terminal hexalysine (K6) sequence and a C-terminal 10-amino acid deletion, termed K6-SNAPΔ, is fused to a protein of interest. In addition, a SNAP-tag substrate containing a metabolic-resistant myristoyl-DCys lipopeptidomimetic, called mDcBCP, is used as a cell-permeable chemical probe for intracellular SNAP-tag lipidation. The use of this combination allows significantly improved conditional PM anchoring of SNAP-tag fusion proteins. This second-generation system was applied to activate various signaling proteins, including Tiam1, cRaf, PI3K, and Sos, upon synthetic lipidation-induced PM anchoring/recruitment, offering a new and useful research tool in chemical biology and synthetic biology.

5 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a photoactivatable self-localizing ligand (paSL) is used to recruit tag-fused proteins of interest from the cytoplasm to the plasma membrane within seconds upon light illumination.
Abstract: Manipulating subcellular protein localization using light is a powerful approach for controlling signaling processes with high spatiotemporal precision. The most widely used strategy for this is based on light-induced protein heterodimerization. The use of small synthetic molecules that can control the localization of target proteins in response to light without the need for a second protein has several advantages. However, such methods have not been well established. Herein, we present a chemo-optogenetic approach for controlling protein localization using a photoactivatable self-localizing ligand (paSL). We developed a paSL that can recruit tag-fused proteins of interest from the cytoplasm to the plasma membrane within seconds upon light illumination. This paSL-induced protein translocation (paSLIPT) is reversible and enables the spatiotemporal control of signaling processes in living cells, even in a local region. paSLIPT can also be used to implement simultaneous optical stimulation and multiplexed imaging of molecular processes in a single cell, offering an attractive and novel chemo-optogenetic platform for interrogating and engineering dynamic cellular functions.

3 citations

Posted ContentDOI
10 Apr 2020-bioRxiv
TL;DR: An improved synthetic lipidation system is presented that enables efficient plasma membrane translocation of SNAP-tag fusion proteins in cells and is applicable to the control of various cell-signaling molecules, offering a new and useful research tool in chemical biology and synthetic biology.
Abstract: The ability to artificially attach lipids to specific intracellular protein targets would be a valuable approach for controlling protein localization and function in cells. We recently devised a chemogenetic method in which a SNAP-tag fusion protein can be translocated from the cytoplasm to the plasma membrane by post-translationally and covalently conjugating a synthetic lipopeptide in cells. However, the first-generation system lacked general applicability. Herein, we present an improved synthetic lipidation system that enables efficient plasma membrane translocation of SNAP-tag fusion proteins in cells. This second-generation system is now applicable to the control of various cell-signaling molecules, offering a new and useful research tool in chemical biology and synthetic biology.

Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a modular combination of a tandem fusion of two oligomeric proteins, which forms phase-separated synthetic protein condensates in cells, with a chemically induced dimerization tool, was presented.
Abstract: Compartmentation of proteins into biomolecular condensates or membraneless organelles formed by phase separation is an emerging principle for the regulation of cellular processes. Creating synthetic condensates that accommodate specific intracellular proteins on demand would have various applications in chemical biology, cell engineering, and synthetic biology. Here, we report the construction of synthetic protein condensates capable of recruiting and/or releasing proteins of interest in living mammalian cells in response to a small molecule or light. By a modular combination of a tandem fusion of two oligomeric proteins, which forms phase-separated synthetic protein condensates in cells, with a chemically induced dimerization tool, we first created a chemogenetic protein condensate system that can rapidly recruit target proteins from the cytoplasm to the condensates by addition of a small-molecule dimerizer. We next coupled the protein-recruiting condensate system with an engineered proximity-dependent protease, which gave a second protein condensate system wherein target proteins previously expressed inside the condensates are released into the cytoplasm by small-molecule-triggered protease recruitment. Furthermore, an optogenetic condensate system that allows reversible release and sequestration of protein activity in a repeatable manner using light was constructed successfully. These condensate systems were applicable to control protein activity and cellular processes such as membrane ruffling and ERK signaling in a time scale of minutes. This proof-of-principle work provides a new platform for chemogenetic and optogenetic control of protein activity in mammalian cells and represents a step toward tailor-made engineering of synthetic protein condensate-based soft materials with various functionalities for biological and biomedical applications.

34 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Synthetic ligands that specifically localize to the Golgi surface are presented, offering a new useful chemical tool for the study and control of Golgi/cell functions.

6 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The developing chemogenetic methods of transmembrane receptors for cell-specific regulation of receptor signaling are summarized and the prospects of chemogenetics for clinical applications are discussed.
Abstract: Cell surface receptors transmit extracellular information into cells. Spatiotemporal regulation of receptor signaling is crucial for cellular functions, and dysregulation of signaling causes various diseases. Thus, it is highly desired to control receptor functions with high spatial and/or temporal resolution. Conventionally, genetic engineering or chemical ligands have been used to control receptor functions in cells. As the alternative, chemogenetics has been proposed, in which target proteins are genetically engineered to interact with a designed chemical partner with high selectivity. The engineered receptor dissects the function of one receptor member among a highly homologous receptor family in a cell-specific manner. Notably, some chemogenetic strategies have been used to reveal the receptor signaling of target cells in living animals. In this review, we summarize the developing chemogenetic methods of transmembrane receptors for cell-specific regulation of receptor signaling. We also discuss the prospects of chemogenetics for clinical applications.

3 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , a universal myristoyl-d-cys-tethered trimethoprim (mDcTMP) ligand was used for protein translocation to the plasma membrane.
Abstract: Chemogenetic methods enabling the rapid translocation of specific proteins to the plasma membrane (PM) in a single protein-single ligand manner are useful tools in cell biology. We recently developed a technique, in which proteins fused to an Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase (eDHFR) variant carrying N-terminal hexalysine residues are recruited from the cytoplasm to the PM using the synthetic myristoyl-d-Cys-tethered trimethoprim (mDcTMP) ligand. However, this system achieved PM-specific translocation only when the eDHFR tag was fused to the N terminus of proteins, thereby limiting its application. In this report, we engineered a universal PM-targeting tag for mDcTMP-induced protein translocation by grafting the hexalysine motif into an intra-loop region of eDHFR. We demonstrate the broad applicability of the new loop-engineered eDHFR tag and mDcTMP pair for conditional PM recruitment and activation of various tag-fused signaling proteins with different fusion configurations and for reversibly and repeatedly controlling protein localization to generate synthetic signal oscillations.

3 citations

Posted ContentDOI
10 Nov 2020-bioRxiv
TL;DR: This proof-of-principle work provides a new platform for chemogenetic and optogenetic control of protein activity in mammalian cells and represents a step towards tailor-made engineering of synthetic protein condensates with various functionalities.
Abstract: Compartmentation of proteins into biomolecular condensates or membraneless organelles formed by phase separation is an emerging principle for the regulation of cellular processes. Creating synthetic condensates that accommodate specific intracellular proteins on demand would have various applications in chemical biology, cell engineering and synthetic biology. Here, we report the construction of synthetic protein condensates capable of recruiting and/or releasing proteins of interest in living mammalian cells in response to a small molecule or light. We first present chemogenetic protein-recruiting and -releasing condensates, which rapidly inhibited and activated signaling proteins, respectively. An optogenetic condensate system was successfully constructed that enables reversible release and sequestration of protein activity using light. This proof-of-principle work provides a new platform for chemogenetic and optogenetic control of protein activity in mammalian cells and represents a step towards tailor-made engineering of synthetic protein condensates with various functionalities.

1 citations