Full Name
Yasuhisa Asano
Job Title
Head of Enzyme Chemistry Laboratory
Company
Toyama Prefectural University
Speaker Bio
Professor Asano earned his B.S. degree in Organic Chemistry from Kyoto University and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Applied Microbiology also from Kyoto University. His Ph.D. research was focused on the microbial degradation and transformation of nitrile compounds, where he worked with Professor Hideaki Yamada. Following postdoctoral research in Japan and the Ohio State University in the United States, with Professor Heinz Floss, Professor Asano began his career as a research chemist at the Sagami Chemical Research Center in Kanagawa, Japan. He moved to academia in 1990 as an associate professor at Toyama Prefectural University where he become a full professor in 1995. He currently serves as the Director of the university’s Biotechnology Research Center. His current research is broadly in the fields of Applied Microbiology, Biochemistry, Molecular Enzymology, and Organic Chemistry.

Dr. Asano has made profound contributions to our understanding and utilization of microbial and plant reactions and enzymes as biotechnological tools for practical large-scale production of amino acids, nucleic acids, amides, and cyanohydrins. He has engineered enzymes for biotransformations at large scale, thereby enhancing the commercial adoption of enzymes for a wide range of processes in the food, chemical, and pharmaceutical industries. His work on enzymatic phosphorylation of inosine has been adopted by Ajinomoto for the production of inosinic acid and guanylic acid in 10,000 tons/year scale. This work serves one of the first examples of the industrial use of enzymes developed by directed evolution. He was the discoverer of nitrile hydratase in the laboratory of Professor Yamada for the production of acrylamide. This process (>700,000 ton/year) remains a benchmark against which large scale enzymatic transformations are measured. Similar large scale biocatalytic acrylamide processes are now routine throughout the world. Professor Asano has also been a pioneer in the development of microscale assays for amino acids and their analogs, and in particular, his rapid and microscale detection of phenylketonuria in newborns has been used routinely in Japan for 5.4 million babies.
Yasuhisa Asano