» Authors » Michio Homma

Michio Homma

Explore the profile of Michio Homma including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles. Areas
Snapshot
Articles 185
Citations 2754
Followers 0
Related Specialties
Top 10 Co-Authors
Published In
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Recent Articles
1.
Nakatani H, Homma M
Nihon Saikingaku Zasshi . 2025 Mar; 80(1):1-13. PMID: 40044155
Heterocyclic triazines and their derivatives have excellent biological activity and have been used as herbicides and anticancer drugs. A large number of derivatives were synthesized and their biological activity was...
2.
Ishikawa F, Takahashi K, Takaya A, Tanabe G, Homma M, Uchihashi T
ACS Omega . 2025 Mar; 10(7):7381-7388. PMID: 40028094
Bacterial ClpPs are a highly conserved family of serine proteases that associate with members of the AAA+ ATPase (ATPase associated with diverse cellular activities) family to degrade protein substrates. The...
3.
Nishikino T, Hatano A, Kojima S, Homma M
Biomolecules . 2025 Feb; 15(2). PMID: 40001515
A flagellar motor can rotate either counterclockwise (CCW) or clockwise (CW), and rotational switching is triggered by conformational changes in FliG, although the molecular mechanism is still unknown. Here, we...
4.
Nishikino T, Takekawa N, Kishikawa J, Hirose M, Kojima S, Homma M, et al.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A . 2025 Jan; 122(1):e2415713122. PMID: 39793043
Many bacteria swim in liquid or swarm on surface using the flagellum rotated by a motor driven by specific ion flow. The motor consists of the rotor and stator, and...
5.
Takekawa N, Nishikino T, Kishikawa J, Hirose M, Kinoshita M, Kojima S, et al.
mBio . 2024 Sep; 15(10):e0126124. PMID: 39240115
The marine bacterium possesses a polar flagellum driven by a sodium ion flow. The main components of the flagellar motor are the stator and rotor. The C-ring and MS-ring, which...
6.
Ishikawa F, Homma M, Tanabe G, Uchihashi T
Genes Cells . 2024 Jul; 29(9):695-709. PMID: 38965067
In cells, proteins are synthesized, function, and degraded (dead). Protein synthesis (spring) is important for the life of proteins. However, how proteins die is equally important for organisms. Proteases are...
7.
Uesaka K, Inaba K, Nishioka N, Kojima S, Homma M, Ihara K
PeerJ . 2024 Mar; 12:e17126. PMID: 38515459
The motility of species plays a pivotal role in their survival and adaptation to diverse environments and is intricately associated with pathogenicity in both humans and aquatic animals. Numerous mutant...
8.
Takahashi K, Nishikino T, Kajino H, Kojima S, Uchihashi T, Homma M
Biophys Physicobiol . 2024 Mar; 20(2):e200028. PMID: 38496245
The marine bacterium has a single flagellum as a locomotory organ at the cell pole, which is rotated by the Na-motive force to swim in a liquid. The base of...
9.
Ishikawa F, Homma M, Tanabe G, Uchihashi T
Nihon Saikingaku Zasshi . 2024 Feb; 79(1):1-13. PMID: 38382970
Proteins in the cells are born (synthesized), work, and die (decomposed). In the life of a protein, its birth is obviously important, but how it dies is equally important in...
10.
Miyamura Y, Nishikino T, Koiwa H, Homma M, Kojima S
Genes Cells . 2024 Feb; 29(4):282-289. PMID: 38351850
The flagellar components of Vibrio spp., PomA and PomB, form a complex that transduces sodium ion and contributes to rotate flagella. The transmembrane protein PomB is attached to the basal...