@article{15048, abstract = {Embryogenesis results from the coordinated activities of different signaling pathways controlling cell fate specification and morphogenesis. In vertebrate gastrulation, both Nodal and BMP signaling play key roles in germ layer specification and morphogenesis, yet their interplay to coordinate embryo patterning with morphogenesis is still insufficiently understood. Here, we took a reductionist approach using zebrafish embryonic explants to study the coordination of Nodal and BMP signaling for embryo patterning and morphogenesis. We show that Nodal signaling triggers explant elongation by inducing mesendodermal progenitors but also suppressing BMP signaling activity at the site of mesendoderm induction. Consistent with this, ectopic BMP signaling in the mesendoderm blocks cell alignment and oriented mesendoderm intercalations, key processes during explant elongation. Translating these ex vivo observations to the intact embryo showed that, similar to explants, Nodal signaling suppresses the effect of BMP signaling on cell intercalations in the dorsal domain, thus allowing robust embryonic axis elongation. These findings suggest a dual function of Nodal signaling in embryonic axis elongation by both inducing mesendoderm and suppressing BMP effects in the dorsal portion of the mesendoderm.}, author = {Schauer, Alexandra and Pranjic-Ferscha, Kornelija and Hauschild, Robert and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J}, issn = {1477-9129}, journal = {Development}, number = {4}, pages = {1--18}, publisher = {The Company of Biologists}, title = {{Robust axis elongation by Nodal-dependent restriction of BMP signaling}}, doi = {10.1242/dev.202316}, volume = {151}, year = {2024}, } @misc{14926, author = {Hauschild, Robert}, publisher = {ISTA}, title = {{Matlab script for analysis of clone dispersal}}, doi = {10.15479/AT:ISTA:14926}, year = {2024}, } @article{15146, abstract = {The extracellular matrix (ECM) serves as a scaffold for cells and plays an essential role in regulating numerous cellular processes, including cell migration and proliferation. Due to limitations in specimen preparation for conventional room-temperature electron microscopy, we lack structural knowledge on how ECM components are secreted, remodeled, and interact with surrounding cells. We have developed a 3D-ECM platform compatible with sample thinning by cryo-focused ion beam milling, the lift-out extraction procedure, and cryo-electron tomography. Our workflow implements cell-derived matrices (CDMs) grown on EM grids, resulting in a versatile tool closely mimicking ECM environments. This allows us to visualize ECM for the first time in its hydrated, native context. Our data reveal an intricate network of extracellular fibers, their positioning relative to matrix-secreting cells, and previously unresolved structural entities. Our workflow and results add to the structural atlas of the ECM, providing novel insights into its secretion and assembly.}, author = {Zens, Bettina and Fäßler, Florian and Hansen, Jesse and Hauschild, Robert and Datler, Julia and Hodirnau, Victor-Valentin and Zheden, Vanessa and Alanko, Jonna H and Sixt, Michael K and Schur, Florian KM}, issn = {1540-8140}, journal = {Journal of Cell Biology}, number = {6}, publisher = {Rockefeller University Press}, title = {{Lift-out cryo-FIBSEM and cryo-ET reveal the ultrastructural landscape of extracellular matrix}}, doi = {10.1083/jcb.202309125}, volume = {223}, year = {2024}, } @article{12830, abstract = {Interstitial fluid (IF) accumulation between embryonic cells is thought to be important for embryo patterning and morphogenesis. Here, we identify a positive mechanical feedback loop between cell migration and IF relocalization and find that it promotes embryonic axis formation during zebrafish gastrulation. We show that anterior axial mesendoderm (prechordal plate [ppl]) cells, moving in between the yolk cell and deep cell tissue to extend the embryonic axis, compress the overlying deep cell layer, thereby causing IF to flow from the deep cell layer to the boundary between the yolk cell and the deep cell layer, directly ahead of the advancing ppl. This IF relocalization, in turn, facilitates ppl cell protrusion formation and migration by opening up the space into which the ppl moves and, thereby, the ability of the ppl to trigger IF relocalization by pushing against the overlying deep cell layer. Thus, embryonic axis formation relies on a hydraulic feedback loop between cell migration and IF relocalization.}, author = {Huljev, Karla and Shamipour, Shayan and Nunes Pinheiro, Diana C and Preusser, Friedrich and Steccari, Irene and Sommer, Christoph M and Naik, Suyash and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J}, issn = {1878-1551}, journal = {Developmental Cell}, number = {7}, pages = {582--596.e7}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{A hydraulic feedback loop between mesendoderm cell migration and interstitial fluid relocalization promotes embryonic axis formation in zebrafish}}, doi = {10.1016/j.devcel.2023.02.016}, volume = {58}, year = {2023}, } @article{13033, abstract = {Current methods for assessing cell proliferation in 3D scaffolds rely on changes in metabolic activity or total DNA, however, direct quantification of cell number in 3D scaffolds remains a challenge. To address this issue, we developed an unbiased stereology approach that uses systematic-random sampling and thin focal-plane optical sectioning of the scaffolds followed by estimation of total cell number (StereoCount). This approach was validated against an indirect method for measuring the total DNA (DNA content); and the Bürker counting chamber, the current reference method for quantifying cell number. We assessed the total cell number for cell seeding density (cells per unit volume) across four values and compared the methods in terms of accuracy, ease-of-use and time demands. The accuracy of StereoCount markedly outperformed the DNA content for cases with ~ 10,000 and ~ 125,000 cells/scaffold. For cases with ~ 250,000 and ~ 375,000 cells/scaffold both StereoCount and DNA content showed lower accuracy than the Bürker but did not differ from each other. In terms of ease-of-use, there was a strong advantage for the StereoCount due to output in terms of absolute cell numbers along with the possibility for an overview of cell distribution and future use of automation for high throughput analysis. Taking together, the StereoCount method is an efficient approach for direct cell quantification in 3D collagen scaffolds. Its major benefit is that automated StereoCount could accelerate research using 3D scaffolds focused on drug discovery for a wide variety of human diseases.}, author = {Zavadakova, Anna and Vistejnova, Lucie and Belinova, Tereza and Tichanek, Filip and Bilikova, Dagmar and Mouton, Peter R.}, issn = {2045-2322}, journal = {Scientific Reports}, keywords = {Multidisciplinary}, number = {1}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Novel stereological method for estimation of cell counts in 3D collagen scaffolds}}, doi = {10.1038/s41598-023-35162-z}, volume = {13}, year = {2023}, } @article{13342, abstract = {Motile cells moving in multicellular organisms encounter microenvironments of locally heterogeneous mechanochemical composition. Individual compositional parameters like chemotactic signals, adhesiveness, and pore sizes are well known to be sensed by motile cells, providing individual guidance cues for cellular pathfinding. However, motile cells encounter diverse mechanochemical signals at the same time, raising the question of how cells respond to locally diverse and potentially competing signals on their migration routes. Here, we reveal that motile amoeboid cells require nuclear repositioning, termed nucleokinesis, for adaptive pathfinding in heterogeneous mechanochemical microenvironments. Using mammalian immune cells and the amoebaDictyostelium discoideum, we discover that frequent, rapid and long-distance nucleokinesis is a basic component of amoeboid pathfinding, enabling cells to reorientate quickly between locally competing cues. Amoeboid nucleokinesis comprises a two-step cell polarity switch and is driven by myosin II-forces, sliding the nucleus from a ‘losing’ to the ‘winning’ leading edge to re-adjust the nuclear to the cellular path. Impaired nucleokinesis distorts fast path adaptions and causes cellular arrest in the microenvironment. Our findings establish that nucleokinesis is required for amoeboid cell navigation. Given that motile single-cell amoebae, many immune cells, and some cancer cells utilize an amoeboid migration strategy, these results suggest that amoeboid nucleokinesis underlies cellular navigation during unicellular biology, immunity, and disease.}, author = {Kroll, Janina and Hauschild, Robert and Kuznetcov, Arthur and Stefanowski, Kasia and Hermann, Monika D. and Merrin, Jack and Shafeek, Lubuna B and Müller-Taubenberger, Annette and Renkawitz, Jörg}, issn = {1460-2075}, journal = {EMBO Journal}, publisher = {Embo Press}, title = {{Adaptive pathfinding by nucleokinesis during amoeboid migration}}, doi = {10.15252/embj.2023114557}, year = {2023}, } @article{12747, abstract = {Muscle degeneration is the most prevalent cause for frailty and dependency in inherited diseases and ageing. Elucidation of pathophysiological mechanisms, as well as effective treatments for muscle diseases, represents an important goal in improving human health. Here, we show that the lipid synthesis enzyme phosphatidylethanolamine cytidyltransferase (PCYT2/ECT) is critical to muscle health. Human deficiency in PCYT2 causes a severe disease with failure to thrive and progressive weakness. pcyt2-mutant zebrafish and muscle-specific Pcyt2-knockout mice recapitulate the participant phenotypes, with failure to thrive, progressive muscle weakness and accelerated ageing. Mechanistically, muscle Pcyt2 deficiency affects cellular bioenergetics and membrane lipid bilayer structure and stability. PCYT2 activity declines in ageing muscles of mice and humans, and adeno-associated virus-based delivery of PCYT2 ameliorates muscle weakness in Pcyt2-knockout and old mice, offering a therapy for individuals with a rare disease and muscle ageing. Thus, PCYT2 plays a fundamental and conserved role in vertebrate muscle health, linking PCYT2 and PCYT2-synthesized lipids to severe muscle dystrophy and ageing.}, author = {Cikes, Domagoj and Elsayad, Kareem and Sezgin, Erdinc and Koitai, Erika and Ferenc, Torma and Orthofer, Michael and Yarwood, Rebecca and Heinz, Leonhard X. and Sedlyarov, Vitaly and Darwish-Miranda, Nasser and Taylor, Adrian and Grapentine, Sophie and al-Murshedi, Fathiya and Abot, Anne and Weidinger, Adelheid and Kutchukian, Candice and Sanchez, Colline and Cronin, Shane J. F. and Novatchkova, Maria and Kavirayani, Anoop and Schuetz, Thomas and Haubner, Bernhard and Haas, Lisa and Hagelkruys, Astrid and Jackowski, Suzanne and Kozlov, Andrey and Jacquemond, Vincent and Knauf, Claude and Superti-Furga, Giulio and Rullman, Eric and Gustafsson, Thomas and McDermot, John and Lowe, Martin and Radak, Zsolt and Chamberlain, Jeffrey S. and Bakovic, Marica and Banka, Siddharth and Penninger, Josef M.}, issn = {2522-5812}, journal = {Nature Metabolism}, keywords = {Cell Biology, Physiology (medical), Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, Internal Medicine}, pages = {495--515}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{PCYT2-regulated lipid biosynthesis is critical to muscle health and ageing}}, doi = {10.1038/s42255-023-00766-2}, volume = {5}, year = {2023}, } @article{14041, abstract = {Tissue morphogenesis and patterning during development involve the segregation of cell types. Segregation is driven by differential tissue surface tensions generated by cell types through controlling cell-cell contact formation by regulating adhesion and actomyosin contractility-based cellular cortical tensions. We use vertebrate tissue cell types and zebrafish germ layer progenitors as in vitro models of 3-dimensional heterotypic segregation and developed a quantitative analysis of their dynamics based on 3D time-lapse microscopy. We show that general inhibition of actomyosin contractility by the Rho kinase inhibitor Y27632 delays segregation. Cell type-specific inhibition of non-muscle myosin2 activity by overexpression of myosin assembly inhibitor S100A4 reduces tissue surface tension, manifested in decreased compaction during aggregation and inverted geometry observed during segregation. The same is observed when we express a constitutively active Rho kinase isoform to ubiquitously keep actomyosin contractility high at cell-cell and cell-medium interfaces and thus overriding the interface-specific regulation of cortical tensions. Tissue surface tension regulation can become an effective tool in tissue engineering.}, author = {Méhes, Elod and Mones, Enys and Varga, Máté and Zsigmond, Áron and Biri-Kovács, Beáta and Nyitray, László and Barone, Vanessa and Krens, Gabriel and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J and Vicsek, Tamás}, issn = {2399-3642}, journal = {Communications Biology}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{3D cell segregation geometry and dynamics are governed by tissue surface tension regulation}}, doi = {10.1038/s42003-023-05181-7}, volume = {6}, year = {2023}, } @article{13267, abstract = {Three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction of living brain tissue down to an individual synapse level would create opportunities for decoding the dynamics and structure–function relationships of the brain’s complex and dense information processing network; however, this has been hindered by insufficient 3D resolution, inadequate signal-to-noise ratio and prohibitive light burden in optical imaging, whereas electron microscopy is inherently static. Here we solved these challenges by developing an integrated optical/machine-learning technology, LIONESS (live information-optimized nanoscopy enabling saturated segmentation). This leverages optical modifications to stimulated emission depletion microscopy in comprehensively, extracellularly labeled tissue and previous information on sample structure via machine learning to simultaneously achieve isotropic super-resolution, high signal-to-noise ratio and compatibility with living tissue. This allows dense deep-learning-based instance segmentation and 3D reconstruction at a synapse level, incorporating molecular, activity and morphodynamic information. LIONESS opens up avenues for studying the dynamic functional (nano-)architecture of living brain tissue.}, author = {Velicky, Philipp and Miguel Villalba, Eder and Michalska, Julia M and Lyudchik, Julia and Wei, Donglai and Lin, Zudi and Watson, Jake and Troidl, Jakob and Beyer, Johanna and Ben Simon, Yoav and Sommer, Christoph M and Jahr, Wiebke and Cenameri, Alban and Broichhagen, Johannes and Grant, Seth G.N. and Jonas, Peter M and Novarino, Gaia and Pfister, Hanspeter and Bickel, Bernd and Danzl, Johann G}, issn = {1548-7105}, journal = {Nature Methods}, pages = {1256--1265}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Dense 4D nanoscale reconstruction of living brain tissue}}, doi = {10.1038/s41592-023-01936-6}, volume = {20}, year = {2023}, } @article{14781, abstract = {Germ granules, condensates of phase-separated RNA and protein, are organelles that are essential for germline development in different organisms. The patterning of the granules and their relevance for germ cell fate are not fully understood. Combining three-dimensional in vivo structural and functional analyses, we study the dynamic spatial organization of molecules within zebrafish germ granules. We find that the localization of RNA molecules to the periphery of the granules, where ribosomes are localized, depends on translational activity at this location. In addition, we find that the vertebrate-specific Dead end (Dnd1) protein is essential for nanos3 RNA localization at the condensates’ periphery. Accordingly, in the absence of Dnd1, or when translation is inhibited, nanos3 RNA translocates into the granule interior, away from the ribosomes, a process that is correlated with the loss of germ cell fate. These findings highlight the relevance of sub-granule compartmentalization for post-transcriptional control and its importance for preserving germ cell totipotency.}, author = {Westerich, Kim Joana and Tarbashevich, Katsiaryna and Schick, Jan and Gupta, Antra and Zhu, Mingzhao and Hull, Kenneth and Romo, Daniel and Zeuschner, Dagmar and Goudarzi, Mohammad and Gross-Thebing, Theresa and Raz, Erez}, issn = {1534-5807}, journal = {Developmental Cell}, keywords = {Developmental Biology, Cell Biology, General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology, Molecular Biology}, number = {17}, pages = {1578--1592.e5}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Spatial organization and function of RNA molecules within phase-separated condensates in zebrafish are controlled by Dnd1}}, doi = {10.1016/j.devcel.2023.06.009}, volume = {58}, year = {2023}, } @article{14257, abstract = {Mapping the complex and dense arrangement of cells and their connectivity in brain tissue demands nanoscale spatial resolution imaging. Super-resolution optical microscopy excels at visualizing specific molecules and individual cells but fails to provide tissue context. Here we developed Comprehensive Analysis of Tissues across Scales (CATS), a technology to densely map brain tissue architecture from millimeter regional to nanometer synaptic scales in diverse chemically fixed brain preparations, including rodent and human. CATS uses fixation-compatible extracellular labeling and optical imaging, including stimulated emission depletion or expansion microscopy, to comprehensively delineate cellular structures. It enables three-dimensional reconstruction of single synapses and mapping of synaptic connectivity by identification and analysis of putative synaptic cleft regions. Applying CATS to the mouse hippocampal mossy fiber circuitry, we reconstructed and quantified the synaptic input and output structure of identified neurons. We furthermore demonstrate applicability to clinically derived human tissue samples, including formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded routine diagnostic specimens, for visualizing the cellular architecture of brain tissue in health and disease.}, author = {Michalska, Julia M and Lyudchik, Julia and Velicky, Philipp and Korinkova, Hana and Watson, Jake and Cenameri, Alban and Sommer, Christoph M and Amberg, Nicole and Venturino, Alessandro and Roessler, Karl and Czech, Thomas and Höftberger, Romana and Siegert, Sandra and Novarino, Gaia and Jonas, Peter M and Danzl, Johann G}, issn = {1546-1696}, journal = {Nature Biotechnology}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Imaging brain tissue architecture across millimeter to nanometer scales}}, doi = {10.1038/s41587-023-01911-8}, year = {2023}, } @article{13044, abstract = {Singlet oxygen (1O2) formation is now recognised as a key aspect of non-aqueous oxygen redox chemistry. For identifying 1O2, chemical trapping via 9,10-dimethylanthracene (DMA) to form the endoperoxide (DMA-O2) has become the mainstay method due to its sensitivity, selectivity, and ease of use. While DMA has been shown to be selective for 1O2, rather than forming DMA-O2 with a wide variety of potentially reactive O-containing species, false positives might hypothetically be obtained in the presence of previously overlooked species. Here, we first give unequivocal direct spectroscopic proof by the 1O2-specific near infrared (NIR) emission at 1270 nm for the previously proposed 1O2 formation pathways, which centre around superoxide disproportionation. We then show that peroxocarbonates, common intermediates in metal-O2 and metal carbonate electrochemistry, do not produce false-positive DMA-O2. Moreover, we identify a previously unreported 1O2-forming pathway through the reaction of CO2 with superoxide. Overall, we give unequivocal proof for 1O2 formation in non-aqueous oxygen redox and show that chemical trapping with DMA is a reliable method to assess 1O2 formation.}, author = {Mondal, Soumyadip and Jethwa, Rajesh B and Pant, Bhargavi and Hauschild, Robert and Freunberger, Stefan Alexander}, issn = {1364-5498}, journal = {Faraday Discussions}, keywords = {Physical and Theoretical Chemistry}, publisher = {Royal Society of Chemistry}, title = {{Singlet oxygen in non-aqueous oxygen redox: Direct spectroscopic evidence for formation pathways and reliability of chemical probes}}, doi = {10.1039/d3fd00088e}, year = {2023}, } @article{9794, abstract = {Lymph nodes (LNs) comprise two main structural elements: fibroblastic reticular cells that form dedicated niches for immune cell interaction and capsular fibroblasts that build a shell around the organ. Immunological challenge causes LNs to increase more than tenfold in size within a few days. Here, we characterized the biomechanics of LN swelling on the cellular and organ scale. We identified lymphocyte trapping by influx and proliferation as drivers of an outward pressure force, causing fibroblastic reticular cells of the T-zone (TRCs) and their associated conduits to stretch. After an initial phase of relaxation, TRCs sensed the resulting strain through cell matrix adhesions, which coordinated local growth and remodeling of the stromal network. While the expanded TRC network readopted its typical configuration, a massive fibrotic reaction of the organ capsule set in and countered further organ expansion. Thus, different fibroblast populations mechanically control LN swelling in a multitier fashion.}, author = {Assen, Frank P and Abe, Jun and Hons, Miroslav and Hauschild, Robert and Shamipour, Shayan and Kaufmann, Walter and Costanzo, Tommaso and Krens, Gabriel and Brown, Markus and Ludewig, Burkhard and Hippenmeyer, Simon and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J and Weninger, Wolfgang and Hannezo, Edouard B and Luther, Sanjiv A. and Stein, Jens V. and Sixt, Michael K}, issn = {1529-2916}, journal = {Nature Immunology}, pages = {1246--1255}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Multitier mechanics control stromal adaptations in swelling lymph nodes}}, doi = {10.1038/s41590-022-01257-4}, volume = {23}, year = {2022}, } @article{10766, abstract = {Tension of the actomyosin cell cortex plays a key role in determining cell–cell contact growth and size. The level of cortical tension outside of the cell–cell contact, when pulling at the contact edge, scales with the total size to which a cell–cell contact can grow [J.-L. Maître et al., Science 338, 253–256 (2012)]. Here, we show in zebrafish primary germ-layer progenitor cells that this monotonic relationship only applies to a narrow range of cortical tension increase and that above a critical threshold, contact size inversely scales with cortical tension. This switch from cortical tension increasing to decreasing progenitor cell–cell contact size is caused by cortical tension promoting E-cadherin anchoring to the actomyosin cytoskeleton, thereby increasing clustering and stability of E-cadherin at the contact. After tension-mediated E-cadherin stabilization at the contact exceeds a critical threshold level, the rate by which the contact expands in response to pulling forces from the cortex sharply drops, leading to smaller contacts at physiologically relevant timescales of contact formation. Thus, the activity of cortical tension in expanding cell–cell contact size is limited by tension-stabilizing E-cadherin–actin complexes at the contact.}, author = {Slovakova, Jana and Sikora, Mateusz K and Arslan, Feyza N and Caballero Mancebo, Silvia and Krens, Gabriel and Kaufmann, Walter and Merrin, Jack and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J}, issn = {10916490}, journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America}, number = {8}, publisher = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences}, title = {{Tension-dependent stabilization of E-cadherin limits cell-cell contact expansion in zebrafish germ-layer progenitor cells}}, doi = {10.1073/pnas.2122030119}, volume = {119}, year = {2022}, } @article{12239, abstract = {Biological systems are the sum of their dynamic three-dimensional (3D) parts. Therefore, it is critical to study biological structures in 3D and at high resolution to gain insights into their physiological functions. Electron microscopy of metal replicas of unroofed cells and isolated organelles has been a key technique to visualize intracellular structures at nanometer resolution. However, many of these methods require specialized equipment and personnel to complete them. Here, we present novel accessible methods to analyze biological structures in unroofed cells and biochemically isolated organelles in 3D and at nanometer resolution, focusing on Arabidopsis clathrin-coated vesicles (CCVs). While CCVs are essential trafficking organelles, their detailed structural information is lacking due to their poor preservation when observed via classical electron microscopy protocols experiments. First, we establish a method to visualize CCVs in unroofed cells using scanning transmission electron microscopy tomography, providing sufficient resolution to define the clathrin coat arrangements. Critically, the samples are prepared directly on electron microscopy grids, removing the requirement to use extremely corrosive acids, thereby enabling the use of this method in any electron microscopy lab. Secondly, we demonstrate that this standardized sample preparation allows the direct comparison of isolated CCV samples with those visualized in cells. Finally, to facilitate the high-throughput and robust screening of metal replicated samples, we provide a deep learning analysis method to screen the “pseudo 3D” morphologies of CCVs imaged with 2D modalities. Collectively, our work establishes accessible ways to examine the 3D structure of biological samples and provide novel insights into the structure of plant CCVs.}, author = {Johnson, Alexander J and Kaufmann, Walter and Sommer, Christoph M and Costanzo, Tommaso and Dahhan, Dana A. and Bednarek, Sebastian Y. and Friml, Jiří}, issn = {1674-2052}, journal = {Molecular Plant}, keywords = {Plant Science, Molecular Biology}, number = {10}, pages = {1533--1542}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Three-dimensional visualization of planta clathrin-coated vesicles at ultrastructural resolution}}, doi = {10.1016/j.molp.2022.09.003}, volume = {15}, year = {2022}, } @article{12122, abstract = {Centrosomes play a crucial role during immune cell interactions and initiation of the immune response. In proliferating cells, centrosome numbers are tightly controlled and generally limited to one in G1 and two prior to mitosis. Defects in regulating centrosome numbers have been associated with cell transformation and tumorigenesis. Here, we report the emergence of extra centrosomes in leukocytes during immune activation. Upon antigen encounter, dendritic cells pass through incomplete mitosis and arrest in the subsequent G1 phase leading to tetraploid cells with accumulated centrosomes. In addition, cell stimulation increases expression of polo-like kinase 2, resulting in diploid cells with two centrosomes in G1-arrested cells. During cell migration, centrosomes tightly cluster and act as functional microtubule-organizing centers allowing for increased persistent locomotion along gradients of chemotactic cues. Moreover, dendritic cells with extra centrosomes display enhanced secretion of inflammatory cytokines and optimized T cell responses. Together, these results demonstrate a previously unappreciated role of extra centrosomes for regular cell and tissue homeostasis.}, author = {Weier, Ann-Kathrin and Homrich, Mirka and Ebbinghaus, Stephanie and Juda, Pavel and Miková, Eliška and Hauschild, Robert and Zhang, Lili and Quast, Thomas and Mass, Elvira and Schlitzer, Andreas and Kolanus, Waldemar and Burgdorf, Sven and Gruß, Oliver J. and Hons, Miroslav and Wieser, Stefan and Kiermaier, Eva}, issn = {1540-8140}, journal = {Journal of Cell Biology}, keywords = {Cell Biology}, number = {12}, publisher = {Rockefeller University Press}, title = {{Multiple centrosomes enhance migration and immune cell effector functions of mature dendritic cells}}, doi = {10.1083/jcb.202107134}, volume = {221}, year = {2022}, } @article{8582, abstract = {Cell and tissue polarization is fundamental for plant growth and morphogenesis. The polar, cellular localization of Arabidopsis PIN‐FORMED (PIN) proteins is crucial for their function in directional auxin transport. The clustering of PIN polar cargoes within the plasma membrane has been proposed to be important for the maintenance of their polar distribution. However, the more detailed features of PIN clusters and the cellular requirements of cargo clustering remain unclear. Here, we characterized PIN clusters in detail by means of multiple advanced microscopy and quantification methods, such as 3D quantitative imaging or freeze‐fracture replica labeling. The size and aggregation types of PIN clusters were determined by electron microscopy at the nanometer level at different polar domains and at different developmental stages, revealing a strong preference for clustering at the polar domains. Pharmacological and genetic studies revealed that PIN clusters depend on phosphoinositol pathways, cytoskeletal structures and specific cell‐wall components as well as connections between the cell wall and the plasma membrane. This study identifies the role of different cellular processes and structures in polar cargo clustering and provides initial mechanistic insight into the maintenance of polarity in plants and other systems.}, author = {Li, Hongjiang and von Wangenheim, Daniel and Zhang, Xixi and Tan, Shutang and Darwish-Miranda, Nasser and Naramoto, Satoshi and Wabnik, Krzysztof T and de Rycke, Riet and Kaufmann, Walter and Gütl, Daniel J and Tejos, Ricardo and Grones, Peter and Ke, Meiyu and Chen, Xu and Dettmer, Jan and Friml, Jiří}, issn = {14698137}, journal = {New Phytologist}, number = {1}, pages = {351--369}, publisher = {Wiley}, title = {{Cellular requirements for PIN polar cargo clustering in Arabidopsis thaliana}}, doi = {10.1111/nph.16887}, volume = {229}, year = {2021}, } @article{9259, abstract = {Gradients of chemokines and growth factors guide migrating cells and morphogenetic processes. Migration of antigen-presenting dendritic cells from the interstitium into the lymphatic system is dependent on chemokine CCL21, which is secreted by endothelial cells of the lymphatic capillary, binds heparan sulfates and forms gradients decaying into the interstitium. Despite the importance of CCL21 gradients, and chemokine gradients in general, the mechanisms of gradient formation are unclear. Studies on fibroblast growth factors have shown that limited diffusion is crucial for gradient formation. Here, we used the mouse dermis as a model tissue to address the necessity of CCL21 anchoring to lymphatic capillary heparan sulfates in the formation of interstitial CCL21 gradients. Surprisingly, the absence of lymphatic endothelial heparan sulfates resulted only in a modest decrease of CCL21 levels at the lymphatic capillaries and did neither affect interstitial CCL21 gradient shape nor dendritic cell migration toward lymphatic capillaries. Thus, heparan sulfates at the level of the lymphatic endothelium are dispensable for the formation of a functional CCL21 gradient.}, author = {Vaahtomeri, Kari and Moussion, Christine and Hauschild, Robert and Sixt, Michael K}, issn = {1664-3224}, journal = {Frontiers in Immunology}, publisher = {Frontiers}, title = {{Shape and function of interstitial chemokine CCL21 gradients are independent of heparan sulfates produced by lymphatic endothelium}}, doi = {10.3389/fimmu.2021.630002}, volume = {12}, year = {2021}, } @article{9361, abstract = {The multimeric matrix (M) protein of clinically relevant paramyxoviruses orchestrates assembly and budding activity of viral particles at the plasma membrane (PM). We identified within the canine distemper virus (CDV) M protein two microdomains, potentially assuming α-helix structures, which are essential for membrane budding activity. Remarkably, while two rationally designed microdomain M mutants (E89R, microdomain 1 and L239D, microdomain 2) preserved proper folding, dimerization, interaction with the nucleocapsid protein, localization at and deformation of the PM, the virus-like particle formation, as well as production of infectious virions (as monitored using a membrane budding-complementation system), were, in sharp contrast, strongly impaired. Of major importance, raster image correlation spectroscopy (RICS) revealed that both microdomains contributed to finely tune M protein mobility specifically at the PM. Collectively, our data highlighted the cornerstone membrane budding-priming activity of two spatially discrete M microdomains, potentially by coordinating the assembly of productive higher oligomers at the PM.}, author = {Gast, Matthieu and Kadzioch, Nicole P. and Milius, Doreen and Origgi, Francesco and Plattet, Philippe}, issn = {23795042}, journal = {mSphere}, number = {2}, publisher = {American Society for Microbiology}, title = {{Oligomerization and cell egress controlled by two microdomains of canine distemper virus matrix protein}}, doi = {10.1128/mSphere.01024-20}, volume = {6}, year = {2021}, } @article{9822, abstract = {Attachment of adhesive molecules on cell culture surfaces to restrict cell adhesion to defined areas and shapes has been vital for the progress of in vitro research. In currently existing patterning methods, a combination of pattern properties such as stability, precision, specificity, high-throughput outcome, and spatiotemporal control is highly desirable but challenging to achieve. Here, we introduce a versatile and high-throughput covalent photoimmobilization technique, comprising a light-dose-dependent patterning step and a subsequent functionalization of the pattern via click chemistry. This two-step process is feasible on arbitrary surfaces and allows for generation of sustainable patterns and gradients. The method is validated in different biological systems by patterning adhesive ligands on cell-repellent surfaces, thereby constraining the growth and migration of cells to the designated areas. We then implement a sequential photopatterning approach by adding a second switchable patterning step, allowing for spatiotemporal control over two distinct surface patterns. As a proof of concept, we reconstruct the dynamics of the tip/stalk cell switch during angiogenesis. Our results show that the spatiotemporal control provided by our “sequential photopatterning” system is essential for mimicking dynamic biological processes and that our innovative approach has great potential for further applications in cell science.}, author = {Zisis, Themistoklis and Schwarz, Jan and Balles, Miriam and Kretschmer, Maibritt and Nemethova, Maria and Chait, Remy P and Hauschild, Robert and Lange, Janina and Guet, Calin C and Sixt, Michael K and Zahler, Stefan}, issn = {19448252}, journal = {ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces}, number = {30}, pages = {35545–35560}, publisher = {American Chemical Society}, title = {{Sequential and switchable patterning for studying cellular processes under spatiotemporal control}}, doi = {10.1021/acsami.1c09850}, volume = {13}, year = {2021}, } @article{9911, abstract = {A modern day light microscope has evolved from a tool devoted to making primarily empirical observations to what is now a sophisticated , quantitative device that is an integral part of both physical and life science research. Nowadays, microscopes are found in nearly every experimental laboratory. However, despite their prevalent use in capturing and quantifying scientific phenomena, neither a thorough understanding of the principles underlying quantitative imaging techniques nor appropriate knowledge of how to calibrate, operate and maintain microscopes can be taken for granted. This is clearly demonstrated by the well-documented and widespread difficulties that are routinely encountered in evaluating acquired data and reproducing scientific experiments. Indeed, studies have shown that more than 70% of researchers have tried and failed to repeat another scientist's experiments, while more than half have even failed to reproduce their own experiments. One factor behind the reproducibility crisis of experiments published in scientific journals is the frequent underreporting of imaging methods caused by a lack of awareness and/or a lack of knowledge of the applied technique. Whereas quality control procedures for some methods used in biomedical research, such as genomics (e.g. DNA sequencing, RNA-seq) or cytometry, have been introduced (e.g. ENCODE), this issue has not been tackled for optical microscopy instrumentation and images. Although many calibration standards and protocols have been published, there is a lack of awareness and agreement on common standards and guidelines for quality assessment and reproducibility. In April 2020, the QUality Assessment and REProducibility for instruments and images in Light Microscopy (QUAREP-LiMi) initiative was formed. This initiative comprises imaging scientists from academia and industry who share a common interest in achieving a better understanding of the performance and limitations of microscopes and improved quality control (QC) in light microscopy. The ultimate goal of the QUAREP-LiMi initiative is to establish a set of common QC standards, guidelines, metadata models and tools, including detailed protocols, with the ultimate aim of improving reproducible advances in scientific research. This White Paper (1) summarizes the major obstacles identified in the field that motivated the launch of the QUAREP-LiMi initiative; (2) identifies the urgent need to address these obstacles in a grassroots manner, through a community of stakeholders including, researchers, imaging scientists, bioimage analysts, bioimage informatics developers, corporate partners, funding agencies, standards organizations, scientific publishers and observers of such; (3) outlines the current actions of the QUAREP-LiMi initiative and (4) proposes future steps that can be taken to improve the dissemination and acceptance of the proposed guidelines to manage QC. To summarize, the principal goal of the QUAREP-LiMi initiative is to improve the overall quality and reproducibility of light microscope image data by introducing broadly accepted standard practices and accurately captured image data metrics.}, author = {Nelson, Glyn and Boehm, Ulrike and Bagley, Steve and Bajcsy, Peter and Bischof, Johanna and Brown, Claire M. and Dauphin, Aurélien and Dobbie, Ian M. and Eriksson, John E. and Faklaris, Orestis and Fernandez-Rodriguez, Julia and Ferrand, Alexia and Gelman, Laurent and Gheisari, Ali and Hartmann, Hella and Kukat, Christian and Laude, Alex and Mitkovski, Miso and Munck, Sebastian and North, Alison J. and Rasse, Tobias M. and Resch-Genger, Ute and Schuetz, Lucas C. and Seitz, Arne and Strambio-De-Castillia, Caterina and Swedlow, Jason R. and Alexopoulos, Ioannis and Aumayr, Karin and Avilov, Sergiy and Bakker, Gert Jan and Bammann, Rodrigo R. and Bassi, Andrea and Beckert, Hannes and Beer, Sebastian and Belyaev, Yury and Bierwagen, Jakob and Birngruber, Konstantin A. and Bosch, Manel and Breitlow, Juergen and Cameron, Lisa A. and Chalfoun, Joe and Chambers, James J. and Chen, Chieh Li and Conde-Sousa, Eduardo and Corbett, Alexander D. and Cordelieres, Fabrice P. and Nery, Elaine Del and Dietzel, Ralf and Eismann, Frank and Fazeli, Elnaz and Felscher, Andreas and Fried, Hans and Gaudreault, Nathalie and Goh, Wah Ing and Guilbert, Thomas and Hadleigh, Roland and Hemmerich, Peter and Holst, Gerhard A. and Itano, Michelle S. and Jaffe, Claudia B. and Jambor, Helena K. and Jarvis, Stuart C. and Keppler, Antje and Kirchenbuechler, David and Kirchner, Marcel and Kobayashi, Norio and Krens, Gabriel and Kunis, Susanne and Lacoste, Judith and Marcello, Marco and Martins, Gabriel G. and Metcalf, Daniel J. and Mitchell, Claire A. and Moore, Joshua and Mueller, Tobias and Nelson, Michael S. and Ogg, Stephen and Onami, Shuichi and Palmer, Alexandra L. and Paul-Gilloteaux, Perrine and Pimentel, Jaime A. and Plantard, Laure and Podder, Santosh and Rexhepaj, Elton and Royon, Arnaud and Saari, Markku A. and Schapman, Damien and Schoonderwoert, Vincent and Schroth-Diez, Britta and Schwartz, Stanley and Shaw, Michael and Spitaler, Martin and Stoeckl, Martin T. and Sudar, Damir and Teillon, Jeremie and Terjung, Stefan and Thuenauer, Roland and Wilms, Christian D. and Wright, Graham D. and Nitschke, Roland}, issn = {1365-2818}, journal = {Journal of Microscopy}, number = {1}, pages = {56--73}, publisher = {Wiley}, title = {{QUAREP-LiMi: A community-driven initiative to establish guidelines for quality assessment and reproducibility for instruments and images in light microscopy}}, doi = {10.1111/jmi.13041}, volume = {284}, year = {2021}, } @article{10179, abstract = {Inhibitory GABAergic interneurons migrate over long distances from their extracortical origin into the developing cortex. In humans, this process is uniquely slow and prolonged, and it is unclear whether guidance cues unique to humans govern the various phases of this complex developmental process. Here, we use fused cerebral organoids to identify key roles of neurotransmitter signaling pathways in guiding the migratory behavior of human cortical interneurons. We use scRNAseq to reveal expression of GABA, glutamate, glycine, and serotonin receptors along distinct maturation trajectories across interneuron migration. We develop an image analysis software package, TrackPal, to simultaneously assess 48 parameters for entire migration tracks of individual cells. By chemical screening, we show that different modes of interneuron migration depend on distinct neurotransmitter signaling pathways, linking transcriptional maturation of interneurons with their migratory behavior. Altogether, our study provides a comprehensive quantitative analysis of human interneuron migration and its functional modulation by neurotransmitter signaling.}, author = {Bajaj, Sunanjay and Bagley, Joshua A. and Sommer, Christoph M and Vertesy, Abel and Nagumo Wong, Sakurako and Krenn, Veronica and Lévi-Strauss, Julie and Knoblich, Juergen A.}, issn = {1460-2075}, journal = {EMBO Journal}, number = {23}, publisher = {Embo Press}, title = {{Neurotransmitter signaling regulates distinct phases of multimodal human interneuron migration}}, doi = {10.15252/embj.2021108714}, volume = {40}, year = {2021}, } @article{10836, author = {Pranger, Christina L. and Fazekas-Singer, Judit and Köhler, Verena K. and Pali‐Schöll, Isabella and Fiocchi, Alessandro and Karagiannis, Sophia N. and Zenarruzabeitia, Olatz and Borrego, Francisco and Jensen‐Jarolim, Erika}, issn = {1398-9995}, journal = {Allergy}, keywords = {Immunology, Immunology and Allergy}, number = {5}, pages = {1553--1556}, publisher = {Wiley}, title = {{PIPE‐cloned human IgE and IgG4 antibodies: New tools for investigating cow's milk allergy and tolerance}}, doi = {10.1111/all.14604}, volume = {76}, year = {2021}, } @article{8910, abstract = {A semiconducting nanowire fully wrapped by a superconducting shell has been proposed as a platform for obtaining Majorana modes at small magnetic fields. In this study, we demonstrate that the appearance of subgap states in such structures is actually governed by the junction region in tunneling spectroscopy measurements and not the full-shell nanowire itself. Short tunneling regions never show subgap states, whereas longer junctions always do. This can be understood in terms of quantum dots forming in the junction and hosting Andreev levels in the Yu-Shiba-Rusinov regime. The intricate magnetic field dependence of the Andreev levels, through both the Zeeman and Little-Parks effects, may result in robust zero-bias peaks—features that could be easily misinterpreted as originating from Majorana zero modes but are unrelated to topological superconductivity.}, author = {Valentini, Marco and Peñaranda, Fernando and Hofmann, Andrea C and Brauns, Matthias and Hauschild, Robert and Krogstrup, Peter and San-Jose, Pablo and Prada, Elsa and Aguado, Ramón and Katsaros, Georgios}, issn = {10959203}, journal = {Science}, number = {6550}, publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science}, title = {{Nontopological zero-bias peaks in full-shell nanowires induced by flux-tunable Andreev states}}, doi = {10.1126/science.abf1513}, volume = {373}, year = {2021}, } @article{9429, abstract = {De novo loss of function mutations in the ubiquitin ligase-encoding gene Cullin3 lead to autism spectrum disorder (ASD). In mouse, constitutive haploinsufficiency leads to motor coordination deficits as well as ASD-relevant social and cognitive impairments. However, induction of Cul3 haploinsufficiency later in life does not lead to ASD-relevant behaviors, pointing to an important role of Cul3 during a critical developmental window. Here we show that Cul3 is essential to regulate neuronal migration and, therefore, constitutive Cul3 heterozygous mutant mice display cortical lamination abnormalities. At the molecular level, we found that Cul3 controls neuronal migration by tightly regulating the amount of Plastin3 (Pls3), a previously unrecognized player of neural migration. Furthermore, we found that Pls3 cell-autonomously regulates cell migration by regulating actin cytoskeleton organization, and its levels are inversely proportional to neural migration speed. Finally, we provide evidence that cellular phenotypes associated with autism-linked gene haploinsufficiency can be rescued by transcriptional activation of the intact allele in vitro, offering a proof of concept for a potential therapeutic approach for ASDs.}, author = {Morandell, Jasmin and Schwarz, Lena A and Basilico, Bernadette and Tasciyan, Saren and Dimchev, Georgi A and Nicolas, Armel and Sommer, Christoph M and Kreuzinger, Caroline and Dotter, Christoph and Knaus, Lisa and Dobler, Zoe and Cacci, Emanuele and Schur, Florian KM and Danzl, Johann G and Novarino, Gaia}, issn = {2041-1723}, journal = {Nature Communications}, keywords = {General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology}, number = {1}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Cul3 regulates cytoskeleton protein homeostasis and cell migration during a critical window of brain development}}, doi = {10.1038/s41467-021-23123-x}, volume = {12}, year = {2021}, } @article{8931, abstract = {Auxin is a major plant growth regulator, but current models on auxin perception and signaling cannot explain the whole plethora of auxin effects, in particular those associated with rapid responses. A possible candidate for a component of additional auxin perception mechanisms is the AUXIN BINDING PROTEIN 1 (ABP1), whose function in planta remains unclear. Here we combined expression analysis with gain- and loss-of-function approaches to analyze the role of ABP1 in plant development. ABP1 shows a broad expression largely overlapping with, but not regulated by, transcriptional auxin response activity. Furthermore, ABP1 activity is not essential for the transcriptional auxin signaling. Genetic in planta analysis revealed that abp1 loss-of-function mutants show largely normal development with minor defects in bolting. On the other hand, ABP1 gain-of-function alleles show a broad range of growth and developmental defects, including root and hypocotyl growth and bending, lateral root and leaf development, bolting, as well as response to heat stress. At the cellular level, ABP1 gain-of-function leads to impaired auxin effect on PIN polar distribution and affects BFA-sensitive PIN intracellular aggregation. The gain-of-function analysis suggests a broad, but still mechanistically unclear involvement of ABP1 in plant development, possibly masked in abp1 loss-of-function mutants by a functional redundancy.}, author = {Gelová, Zuzana and Gallei, Michelle C and Pernisová, Markéta and Brunoud, Géraldine and Zhang, Xixi and Glanc, Matous and Li, Lanxin and Michalko, Jaroslav and Pavlovicova, Zlata and Verstraeten, Inge and Han, Huibin and Hajny, Jakub and Hauschild, Robert and Čovanová, Milada and Zwiewka, Marta and Hörmayer, Lukas and Fendrych, Matyas and Xu, Tongda and Vernoux, Teva and Friml, Jiří}, issn = {0168-9452}, journal = {Plant Science}, keywords = {Agronomy and Crop Science, Plant Science, Genetics, General Medicine}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Developmental roles of auxin binding protein 1 in Arabidopsis thaliana}}, doi = {10.1016/j.plantsci.2020.110750}, volume = {303}, year = {2021}, } @misc{8181, author = {Hauschild, Robert}, publisher = {IST Austria}, title = {{Amplified centrosomes in dendritic cells promote immune cell effector functions}}, doi = {10.15479/AT:ISTA:8181}, year = {2020}, } @misc{8294, abstract = {Automated root growth analysis and tracking of root tips. }, author = {Hauschild, Robert}, publisher = {IST Austria}, title = {{RGtracker}}, doi = {10.15479/AT:ISTA:8294}, year = {2020}, } @article{7875, abstract = {Cells navigating through complex tissues face a fundamental challenge: while multiple protrusions explore different paths, the cell needs to avoid entanglement. How a cell surveys and then corrects its own shape is poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that spatially distinct microtubule dynamics regulate amoeboid cell migration by locally promoting the retraction of protrusions. In migrating dendritic cells, local microtubule depolymerization within protrusions remote from the microtubule organizing center triggers actomyosin contractility controlled by RhoA and its exchange factor Lfc. Depletion of Lfc leads to aberrant myosin localization, thereby causing two effects that rate-limit locomotion: (1) impaired cell edge coordination during path finding and (2) defective adhesion resolution. Compromised shape control is particularly hindering in geometrically complex microenvironments, where it leads to entanglement and ultimately fragmentation of the cell body. We thus demonstrate that microtubules can act as a proprioceptive device: they sense cell shape and control actomyosin retraction to sustain cellular coherence.}, author = {Kopf, Aglaja and Renkawitz, Jörg and Hauschild, Robert and Girkontaite, Irute and Tedford, Kerry and Merrin, Jack and Thorn-Seshold, Oliver and Trauner, Dirk and Häcker, Hans and Fischer, Klaus Dieter and Kiermaier, Eva and Sixt, Michael K}, issn = {1540-8140}, journal = {The Journal of Cell Biology}, number = {6}, publisher = {Rockefeller University Press}, title = {{Microtubules control cellular shape and coherence in amoeboid migrating cells}}, doi = {10.1083/jcb.201907154}, volume = {219}, year = {2020}, } @article{7888, abstract = {Embryonic stem cell cultures are thought to self-organize into embryoid bodies, able to undergo symmetry-breaking, germ layer specification and even morphogenesis. Yet, it is unclear how to reconcile this remarkable self-organization capacity with classical experiments demonstrating key roles for extrinsic biases by maternal factors and/or extraembryonic tissues in embryogenesis. Here, we show that zebrafish embryonic tissue explants, prepared prior to germ layer induction and lacking extraembryonic tissues, can specify all germ layers and form a seemingly complete mesendoderm anlage. Importantly, explant organization requires polarized inheritance of maternal factors from dorsal-marginal regions of the blastoderm. Moreover, induction of endoderm and head-mesoderm, which require peak Nodal-signaling levels, is highly variable in explants, reminiscent of embryos with reduced Nodal signals from the extraembryonic tissues. Together, these data suggest that zebrafish explants do not undergo bona fide self-organization, but rather display features of genetically encoded self-assembly, where intrinsic genetic programs control the emergence of order.}, author = {Schauer, Alexandra and Nunes Pinheiro, Diana C and Hauschild, Robert and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J}, issn = {2050-084X}, journal = {eLife}, publisher = {eLife Sciences Publications}, title = {{Zebrafish embryonic explants undergo genetically encoded self-assembly}}, doi = {10.7554/elife.55190}, volume = {9}, year = {2020}, } @article{7864, abstract = {Purpose of review: Cancer is one of the leading causes of death and the incidence rates are constantly rising. The heterogeneity of tumors poses a big challenge for the treatment of the disease and natural antibodies additionally affect disease progression. The introduction of engineered mAbs for anticancer immunotherapies has substantially improved progression-free and overall survival of cancer patients, but little efforts have been made to exploit other antibody isotypes than IgG. Recent findings: In order to improve these therapies, ‘next-generation antibodies’ were engineered to enhance a specific feature of classical antibodies and form a group of highly effective and precise therapy compounds. Advanced antibody approaches include among others antibody-drug conjugates, glyco-engineered and Fc-engineered antibodies, antibody fragments, radioimmunotherapy compounds, bispecific antibodies and alternative (non-IgG) immunoglobulin classes, especially IgE. Summary: The current review describes solutions for the needs of next-generation antibody therapies through different approaches. Careful selection of the best-suited engineering methodology is a key factor in developing personalized, more specific and more efficient mAbs against cancer to improve the outcomes of cancer patients. We highlight here the large evidence of IgE exploiting a highly cytotoxic effector arm as potential next-generation anticancer immunotherapy.}, author = {Singer, Judit and Singer, Josef and Jensen-Jarolim, Erika}, issn = {14736322}, journal = {Current opinion in allergy and clinical immunology}, number = {3}, pages = {282--289}, publisher = {Wolters Kluwer}, title = {{Precision medicine in clinical oncology: the journey from IgG antibody to IgE}}, doi = {10.1097/ACI.0000000000000637}, volume = {20}, year = {2020}, } @unpublished{9750, abstract = {Tension of the actomyosin cell cortex plays a key role in determining cell-cell contact growth and size. The level of cortical tension outside of the cell-cell contact, when pulling at the contact edge, scales with the total size to which a cell-cell contact can grow1,2. Here we show in zebrafish primary germ layer progenitor cells that this monotonic relationship only applies to a narrow range of cortical tension increase, and that above a critical threshold, contact size inversely scales with cortical tension. This switch from cortical tension increasing to decreasing progenitor cell-cell contact size is caused by cortical tension promoting E-cadherin anchoring to the actomyosin cytoskeleton, thereby increasing clustering and stability of E-cadherin at the contact. Once tension-mediated E-cadherin stabilization at the contact exceeds a critical threshold level, the rate by which the contact expands in response to pulling forces from the cortex sharply drops, leading to smaller contacts at physiologically relevant timescales of contact formation. Thus, the activity of cortical tension in expanding cell-cell contact size is limited by tension stabilizing E-cadherin-actin complexes at the contact.}, author = {Slovakova, Jana and Sikora, Mateusz K and Caballero Mancebo, Silvia and Krens, Gabriel and Kaufmann, Walter and Huljev, Karla and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J}, booktitle = {bioRxiv}, pages = {41}, publisher = {Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory}, title = {{Tension-dependent stabilization of E-cadherin limits cell-cell contact expansion}}, doi = {10.1101/2020.11.20.391284}, year = {2020}, } @article{7885, abstract = {Eukaryotic cells migrate by coupling the intracellular force of the actin cytoskeleton to the environment. While force coupling is usually mediated by transmembrane adhesion receptors, especially those of the integrin family, amoeboid cells such as leukocytes can migrate extremely fast despite very low adhesive forces1. Here we show that leukocytes cannot only migrate under low adhesion but can also transmit forces in the complete absence of transmembrane force coupling. When confined within three-dimensional environments, they use the topographical features of the substrate to propel themselves. Here the retrograde flow of the actin cytoskeleton follows the texture of the substrate, creating retrograde shear forces that are sufficient to drive the cell body forwards. Notably, adhesion-dependent and adhesion-independent migration are not mutually exclusive, but rather are variants of the same principle of coupling retrograde actin flow to the environment and thus can potentially operate interchangeably and simultaneously. As adhesion-free migration is independent of the chemical composition of the environment, it renders cells completely autonomous in their locomotive behaviour.}, author = {Reversat, Anne and Gärtner, Florian R and Merrin, Jack and Stopp, Julian A and Tasciyan, Saren and Aguilera Servin, Juan L and De Vries, Ingrid and Hauschild, Robert and Hons, Miroslav and Piel, Matthieu and Callan-Jones, Andrew and Voituriez, Raphael and Sixt, Michael K}, issn = {14764687}, journal = {Nature}, pages = {582–585}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Cellular locomotion using environmental topography}}, doi = {10.1038/s41586-020-2283-z}, volume = {582}, year = {2020}, } @article{6052, abstract = {Expansion microscopy is a relatively new approach to super-resolution imaging that uses expandable hydrogels to isotropically increase the physical distance between fluorophores in biological samples such as cell cultures or tissue slices. The classic gel recipe results in an expansion factor of ~4×, with a resolution of 60–80 nm. We have recently developed X10 microscopy, which uses a gel that achieves an expansion factor of ~10×, with a resolution of ~25 nm. Here, we provide a step-by-step protocol for X10 expansion microscopy. A typical experiment consists of seven sequential stages: (i) immunostaining, (ii) anchoring, (iii) polymerization, (iv) homogenization, (v) expansion, (vi) imaging, and (vii) validation. The protocol presented here includes recommendations for optimization, pitfalls and their solutions, and detailed guidelines that should increase reproducibility. Although our protocol focuses on X10 expansion microscopy, we detail which of these suggestions are also applicable to classic fourfold expansion microscopy. We exemplify our protocol using primary hippocampal neurons from rats, but our approach can be used with other primary cells or cultured cell lines of interest. This protocol will enable any researcher with basic experience in immunostainings and access to an epifluorescence microscope to perform super-resolution microscopy with X10. The procedure takes 3 d and requires ~5 h of actively handling the sample for labeling and expansion, and another ~3 h for imaging and analysis.}, author = {Truckenbrodt, Sven M and Sommer, Christoph M and Rizzoli, Silvio O and Danzl, Johann G}, journal = {Nature Protocols}, number = {3}, pages = {832–863}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{A practical guide to optimization in X10 expansion microscopy}}, doi = {10.1038/s41596-018-0117-3}, volume = {14}, year = {2019}, } @article{6867, abstract = {A novel magnetic scratch method achieves repeatability, reproducibility and geometric control greater than pipette scratch assays and closely approximating the precision of cell exclusion assays while inducing the cell injury inherently necessary for wound healing assays. The magnetic scratch is affordable, easily implemented and standardisable and thus may contribute toward better comparability of data generated in different studies and laboratories.}, author = {Fenu, M. and Bettermann, T. and Vogl, C. and Darwish-Miranda, Nasser and Schramel, J. and Jenner, F. and Ribitsch, I.}, issn = {20452322}, journal = {Scientific Reports}, number = {1}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{A novel magnet-based scratch method for standardisation of wound-healing assays}}, doi = {10.1038/s41598-019-48930-7}, volume = {9}, year = {2019}, } @article{7406, abstract = {Background Synaptic vesicles (SVs) are an integral part of the neurotransmission machinery, and isolation of SVs from their host neuron is necessary to reveal their most fundamental biochemical and functional properties in in vitro assays. Isolated SVs from neurons that have been genetically engineered, e.g. to introduce genetically encoded indicators, are not readily available but would permit new insights into SV structure and function. Furthermore, it is unclear if cultured neurons can provide sufficient starting material for SV isolation procedures. New method Here, we demonstrate an efficient ex vivo procedure to obtain functional SVs from cultured rat cortical neurons after genetic engineering with a lentivirus. Results We show that ∼108 plated cortical neurons allow isolation of suitable SV amounts for functional analysis and imaging. We found that SVs isolated from cultured neurons have neurotransmitter uptake comparable to that of SVs isolated from intact cortex. Using total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy, we visualized an exogenous SV-targeted marker protein and demonstrated the high efficiency of SV modification. Comparison with existing methods Obtaining SVs from genetically engineered neurons currently generally requires the availability of transgenic animals, which is constrained by technical (e.g. cost and time) and biological (e.g. developmental defects and lethality) limitations. Conclusions These results demonstrate the modification and isolation of functional SVs using cultured neurons and viral transduction. The ability to readily obtain SVs from genetically engineered neurons will permit linking in situ studies to in vitro experiments in a variety of genetic contexts.}, author = {Mckenzie, Catherine and Spanova, Miroslava and Johnson, Alexander J and Kainrath, Stephanie and Zheden, Vanessa and Sitte, Harald H. and Janovjak, Harald L}, issn = {0165-0270}, journal = {Journal of Neuroscience Methods}, pages = {114--121}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Isolation of synaptic vesicles from genetically engineered cultured neurons}}, doi = {10.1016/j.jneumeth.2018.11.018}, volume = {312}, year = {2019}, } @article{6093, abstract = {Blebs are cellular protrusions observed in migrating cells and in cells undergoing spreading, cytokinesis, and apoptosis. Here we investigate the flow of cytoplasm during bleb formation and the concurrent changes in cell volume using zebrafish primordial germ cells (PGCs) as an in vivo model. We show that bleb inflation occurs concomitantly with cytoplasmic inflow into it and that during this process the total cell volume does not change. We thus show that bleb formation in primordial germ cells results primarily from redistribution of material within the cell rather than being driven by flow of water from an external source.}, author = {Goudarzi, Mohammad and Boquet-Pujadas, Aleix and Olivo-Marin, Jean Christophe and Raz, Erez}, journal = {PLOS ONE}, number = {2}, publisher = {Public Library of Science}, title = {{Fluid dynamics during bleb formation in migrating cells in vivo}}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0212699}, volume = {14}, year = {2019}, } @article{6328, abstract = {During metazoan development, immune surveillance and cancer dissemination, cells migrate in complex three-dimensional microenvironments1,2,3. These spaces are crowded by cells and extracellular matrix, generating mazes with differently sized gaps that are typically smaller than the diameter of the migrating cell4,5. Most mesenchymal and epithelial cells and some—but not all—cancer cells actively generate their migratory path using pericellular tissue proteolysis6. By contrast, amoeboid cells such as leukocytes use non-destructive strategies of locomotion7, raising the question how these extremely fast cells navigate through dense tissues. Here we reveal that leukocytes sample their immediate vicinity for large pore sizes, and are thereby able to choose the path of least resistance. This allows them to circumnavigate local obstacles while effectively following global directional cues such as chemotactic gradients. Pore-size discrimination is facilitated by frontward positioning of the nucleus, which enables the cells to use their bulkiest compartment as a mechanical gauge. Once the nucleus and the closely associated microtubule organizing centre pass the largest pore, cytoplasmic protrusions still lingering in smaller pores are retracted. These retractions are coordinated by dynamic microtubules; when microtubules are disrupted, migrating cells lose coherence and frequently fragment into migratory cytoplasmic pieces. As nuclear positioning in front of the microtubule organizing centre is a typical feature of amoeboid migration, our findings link the fundamental organization of cellular polarity to the strategy of locomotion.}, author = {Renkawitz, Jörg and Kopf, Aglaja and Stopp, Julian A and de Vries, Ingrid and Driscoll, Meghan K. and Merrin, Jack and Hauschild, Robert and Welf, Erik S. and Danuser, Gaudenz and Fiolka, Reto and Sixt, Michael K}, journal = {Nature}, pages = {546--550}, publisher = {Springer Nature}, title = {{Nuclear positioning facilitates amoeboid migration along the path of least resistance}}, doi = {10.1038/s41586-019-1087-5}, volume = {568}, year = {2019}, } @article{308, abstract = {Migrating cells penetrate tissue barriers during development, inflammatory responses, and tumor metastasis. We study if migration in vivo in such three-dimensionally confined environments requires changes in the mechanical properties of the surrounding cells using embryonic Drosophila melanogaster hemocytes, also called macrophages, as a model. We find that macrophage invasion into the germband through transient separation of the apposing ectoderm and mesoderm requires cell deformations and reductions in apical tension in the ectoderm. Interestingly, the genetic pathway governing these mechanical shifts acts downstream of the only known tumor necrosis factor superfamily member in Drosophila, Eiger, and its receptor, Grindelwald. Eiger-Grindelwald signaling reduces levels of active Myosin in the germband ectodermal cortex through the localization of a Crumbs complex component, Patj (Pals-1-associated tight junction protein). We therefore elucidate a distinct molecular pathway that controls tissue tension and demonstrate the importance of such regulation for invasive migration in vivo.}, author = {Ratheesh, Aparna and Biebl, Julia and Smutny, Michael and Veselá, Jana and Papusheva, Ekaterina and Krens, Gabriel and Kaufmann, Walter and György, Attila and Casano, Alessandra M and Siekhaus, Daria E}, journal = {Developmental Cell}, number = {3}, pages = {331 -- 346}, publisher = {Elsevier}, title = {{Drosophila TNF modulates tissue tension in the embryo to facilitate macrophage invasive migration}}, doi = {10.1016/j.devcel.2018.04.002}, volume = {45}, year = {2018}, } @article{437, abstract = {Dendritic cells (DCs) are sentinels of the adaptive immune system that reside in peripheral organs of mammals. Upon pathogen encounter, they undergo maturation and up-regulate the chemokine receptor CCR7 that guides them along gradients of its chemokine ligands CCL19 and 21 to the next draining lymph node. There, DCs present peripherally acquired antigen to naïve T cells, thereby triggering adaptive immunity.}, author = {Leithner, Alexander F and Renkawitz, Jörg and De Vries, Ingrid and Hauschild, Robert and Haecker, Hans and Sixt, Michael K}, journal = {European Journal of Immunology}, number = {6}, pages = {1074 -- 1077}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, title = {{Fast and efficient genetic engineering of hematopoietic precursor cells for the study of dendritic cell migration}}, doi = {10.1002/eji.201747358}, volume = {48}, year = {2018}, } @article{275, abstract = {Lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs) release extracellular chemokines to guide the migration of dendritic cells. In this study, we report that LECs also release basolateral exosome-rich endothelial vesicles (EEVs) that are secreted in greater numbers in the presence of inflammatory cytokines and accumulate in the perivascular stroma of small lymphatic vessels in human chronic inflammatory diseases. Proteomic analyses of EEV fractions identified > 1,700 cargo proteins and revealed a dominant motility-promoting protein signature. In vitro and ex vivo EEV fractions augmented cellular protrusion formation in a CX3CL1/fractalkine-dependent fashion and enhanced the directional migratory response of human dendritic cells along guidance cues. We conclude that perilymphatic LEC exosomes enhance exploratory behavior and thus promote directional migration of CX3CR1-expressing cells in complex tissue environments.}, author = {Brown, Markus and Johnson, Louise and Leone, Dario and Májek, Peter and Vaahtomeri, Kari and Senfter, Daniel and Bukosza, Nora and Schachner, Helga and Asfour, Gabriele and Langer, Brigitte and Hauschild, Robert and Parapatics, Katja and Hong, Young and Bennett, Keiryn and Kain, Renate and Detmar, Michael and Sixt, Michael K and Jackson, David and Kerjaschki, Dontscho}, journal = {Journal of Cell Biology}, number = {6}, pages = {2205 -- 2221}, publisher = {Rockefeller University Press}, title = {{Lymphatic exosomes promote dendritic cell migration along guidance cues}}, doi = {10.1083/jcb.201612051}, volume = {217}, year = {2018}, } @article{15, abstract = {Although much is known about the physiological framework of T cell motility, and numerous rate-limiting molecules have been identified through loss-of-function approaches, an integrated functional concept of T cell motility is lacking. Here, we used in vivo precision morphometry together with analysis of cytoskeletal dynamics in vitro to deconstruct the basic mechanisms of T cell migration within lymphatic organs. We show that the contributions of the integrin LFA-1 and the chemokine receptor CCR7 are complementary rather than positioned in a linear pathway, as they are during leukocyte extravasation from the blood vasculature. Our data demonstrate that CCR7 controls cortical actin flows, whereas integrins mediate substrate friction that is sufficient to drive locomotion in the absence of considerable surface adhesions and plasma membrane flux.}, author = {Hons, Miroslav and Kopf, Aglaja and Hauschild, Robert and Leithner, Alexander F and Gärtner, Florian R and Abe, Jun and Renkawitz, Jörg and Stein, Jens and Sixt, Michael K}, journal = {Nature Immunology}, number = {6}, pages = {606 -- 616}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{Chemokines and integrins independently tune actin flow and substrate friction during intranodal migration of T cells}}, doi = {10.1038/s41590-018-0109-z}, volume = {19}, year = {2018}, } @article{442, abstract = {The rapid auxin-triggered growth of the Arabidopsis hypocotyls involves the nuclear TIR1/AFB-Aux/IAA signaling and is accompanied by acidification of the apoplast and cell walls (Fendrych et al., 2016). Here, we describe in detail the method for analysis of the elongation and the TIR1/AFB-Aux/IAA-dependent auxin response in hypocotyl segments as well as the determination of relative values of the cell wall pH.}, author = {Li, Lanxin and Krens, Gabriel and Fendrych, Matyas and Friml, Jirí}, issn = {2331-8325}, journal = {Bio-protocol}, number = {1}, publisher = {Bio-protocol}, title = {{Real-time analysis of auxin response, cell wall pH and elongation in Arabidopsis thaliana Hypocotyls}}, doi = {10.21769/BioProtoc.2685}, volume = {8}, year = {2018}, } @article{672, abstract = {Trafficking cells frequently transmigrate through epithelial and endothelial monolayers. How monolayers cooperate with the penetrating cells to support their transit is poorly understood. We studied dendritic cell (DC) entry into lymphatic capillaries as a model system for transendothelial migration. We find that the chemokine CCL21, which is the decisive guidance cue for intravasation, mainly localizes in the trans-Golgi network and intracellular vesicles of lymphatic endothelial cells. Upon DC transmigration, these Golgi deposits disperse and CCL21 becomes extracellularly enriched at the sites of endothelial cell-cell junctions. When we reconstitute the transmigration process in vitro, we find that secretion of CCL21-positive vesicles is triggered by a DC contact-induced calcium signal, and selective calcium chelation in lymphatic endothelium attenuates transmigration. Altogether, our data demonstrate a chemokine-mediated feedback between DCs and lymphatic endothelium, which facilitates transendothelial migration.}, author = {Vaahtomeri, Kari and Brown, Markus and Hauschild, Robert and De Vries, Ingrid and Leithner, Alexander F and Mehling, Matthias and Kaufmann, Walter and Sixt, Michael K}, issn = {22111247}, journal = {Cell Reports}, number = {5}, pages = {902 -- 909}, publisher = {Cell Press}, title = {{Locally triggered release of the chemokine CCL21 promotes dendritic cell transmigration across lymphatic endothelia}}, doi = {10.1016/j.celrep.2017.04.027}, volume = {19}, year = {2017}, } @article{674, abstract = {Navigation of cells along gradients of guidance cues is a determining step in many developmental and immunological processes. Gradients can either be soluble or immobilized to tissues as demonstrated for the haptotactic migration of dendritic cells (DCs) toward higher concentrations of immobilized chemokine CCL21. To elucidate how gradient characteristics govern cellular response patterns, we here introduce an in vitro system allowing to track migratory responses of DCs to precisely controlled immobilized gradients of CCL21. We find that haptotactic sensing depends on the absolute CCL21 concentration and local steepness of the gradient, consistent with a scenario where DC directionality is governed by the signal-to-noise ratio of CCL21 binding to the receptor CCR7. We find that the conditions for optimal DC guidance are perfectly provided by the CCL21 gradients we measure in vivo. Furthermore, we find that CCR7 signal termination by the G-protein-coupled receptor kinase 6 (GRK6) is crucial for haptotactic but dispensable for chemotactic CCL21 gradient sensing in vitro and confirm those observations in vivo. These findings suggest that stable, tissue-bound CCL21 gradients as sustainable “roads” ensure optimal guidance in vivo.}, author = {Schwarz, Jan and Bierbaum, Veronika and Vaahtomeri, Kari and Hauschild, Robert and Brown, Markus and De Vries, Ingrid and Leithner, Alexander F and Reversat, Anne and Merrin, Jack and Tarrant, Teresa and Bollenbach, Tobias and Sixt, Michael K}, issn = {09609822}, journal = {Current Biology}, number = {9}, pages = {1314 -- 1325}, publisher = {Cell Press}, title = {{Dendritic cells interpret haptotactic chemokine gradients in a manner governed by signal to noise ratio and dependent on GRK6}}, doi = {10.1016/j.cub.2017.04.004}, volume = {27}, year = {2017}, } @article{727, abstract = {Actin filaments polymerizing against membranes power endocytosis, vesicular traffic, and cell motility. In vitro reconstitution studies suggest that the structure and the dynamics of actin networks respond to mechanical forces. We demonstrate that lamellipodial actin of migrating cells responds to mechanical load when membrane tension is modulated. In a steady state, migrating cell filaments assume the canonical dendritic geometry, defined by Arp2/3-generated 70° branch points. Increased tension triggers a dense network with a broadened range of angles, whereas decreased tension causes a shift to a sparse configuration dominated by filaments growing perpendicularly to the plasma membrane. We show that these responses emerge from the geometry of branched actin: when load per filament decreases, elongation speed increases and perpendicular filaments gradually outcompete others because they polymerize the shortest distance to the membrane, where they are protected from capping. This network-intrinsic geometrical adaptation mechanism tunes protrusive force in response to mechanical load.}, author = {Mueller, Jan and Szep, Gregory and Nemethova, Maria and De Vries, Ingrid and Lieber, Arnon and Winkler, Christoph and Kruse, Karsten and Small, John and Schmeiser, Christian and Keren, Kinneret and Hauschild, Robert and Sixt, Michael K}, issn = {00928674}, journal = {Cell}, number = {1}, pages = {188 -- 200}, publisher = {Cell Press}, title = {{Load adaptation of lamellipodial actin networks}}, doi = {10.1016/j.cell.2017.07.051}, volume = {171}, year = {2017}, } @article{665, abstract = {The molecular mechanisms underlying phenotypic variation in isogenic bacterial populations remain poorly understood.We report that AcrAB-TolC, the main multidrug efflux pump of Escherichia coli, exhibits a strong partitioning bias for old cell poles by a segregation mechanism that is mediated by ternary AcrAB-TolC complex formation. Mother cells inheriting old poles are phenotypically distinct and display increased drug efflux activity relative to daughters. Consequently, we find systematic and long-lived growth differences between mother and daughter cells in the presence of subinhibitory drug concentrations. A simple model for biased partitioning predicts a population structure of long-lived and highly heterogeneous phenotypes. This straightforward mechanism of generating sustained growth rate differences at subinhibitory antibiotic concentrations has implications for understanding the emergence of multidrug resistance in bacteria.}, author = {Bergmiller, Tobias and Andersson, Anna M and Tomasek, Kathrin and Balleza, Enrique and Kiviet, Daniel and Hauschild, Robert and Tkacik, Gasper and Guet, Calin C}, issn = {00368075}, journal = {Science}, number = {6335}, pages = {311 -- 315}, publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science}, title = {{Biased partitioning of the multidrug efflux pump AcrAB TolC underlies long lived phenotypic heterogeneity}}, doi = {10.1126/science.aaf4762}, volume = {356}, year = {2017}, } @article{946, abstract = {Roots navigate through soil integrating environmental signals to orient their growth. The Arabidopsis root is a widely used model for developmental, physiological and cell biological studies. Live imaging greatly aids these efforts, but the horizontal sample position and continuous root tip displacement present significant difficulties. Here, we develop a confocal microscope setup for vertical sample mounting and integrated directional illumination. We present TipTracker – a custom software for automatic tracking of diverse moving objects usable on various microscope setups. Combined, this enables observation of root tips growing along the natural gravity vector over prolonged periods of time, as well as the ability to induce rapid gravity or light stimulation. We also track migrating cells in the developing zebrafish embryo, demonstrating the utility of this system in the acquisition of high-resolution data sets of dynamic samples. We provide detailed descriptions of the tools enabling the easy implementation on other microscopes.}, author = {Von Wangenheim, Daniel and Hauschild, Robert and Fendrych, Matyas and Barone, Vanessa and Benková, Eva and Friml, Jirí}, journal = {eLife}, publisher = {eLife Sciences Publications}, title = {{Live tracking of moving samples in confocal microscopy for vertically grown roots}}, doi = {10.7554/eLife.26792}, volume = {6}, year = {2017}, } @article{1078, abstract = {One of the key questions in understanding plant development is how single cells behave in a larger context of the tissue. Therefore, it requires the observation of the whole organ with a high spatial- as well as temporal resolution over prolonged periods of time, which may cause photo-toxic effects. This protocol shows a plant sample preparation method for light-sheet microscopy, which is characterized by mounting the plant vertically on the surface of a gel. The plant is mounted in such a way that the roots are submerged in a liquid medium while the leaves remain in the air. In order to ensure photosynthetic activity of the plant, a custom-made lighting system illuminates the leaves. To keep the roots in darkness the water surface is covered with sheets of black plastic foil. This method allows long-term imaging of plant organ development in standardized conditions. }, author = {Von Wangenheim, Daniel and Hauschild, Robert and Friml, Jirí}, journal = {Journal of visualized experiments JoVE}, number = {119}, publisher = {Journal of Visualized Experiments}, title = {{Light sheet fluorescence microscopy of plant roots growing on the surface of a gel}}, doi = {10.3791/55044}, volume = {2017}, year = {2017}, } @article{676, abstract = {The segregation of different cell types into distinct tissues is a fundamental process in metazoan development. Differences in cell adhesion and cortex tension are commonly thought to drive cell sorting by regulating tissue surface tension (TST). However, the role that differential TST plays in cell segregation within the developing embryo is as yet unclear. Here, we have analyzed the role of differential TST for germ layer progenitor cell segregation during zebrafish gastrulation. Contrary to previous observations that differential TST drives germ layer progenitor cell segregation in vitro, we show that germ layers display indistinguishable TST within the gastrulating embryo, arguing against differential TST driving germ layer progenitor cell segregation in vivo. We further show that the osmolarity of the interstitial fluid (IF) is an important factor that influences germ layer TST in vivo, and that lower osmolarity of the IF compared with standard cell culture medium can explain why germ layers display differential TST in culture but not in vivo. Finally, we show that directed migration of mesendoderm progenitors is required for germ layer progenitor cell segregation and germ layer formation.}, author = {Krens, Gabriel and Veldhuis, Jim and Barone, Vanessa and Capek, Daniel and Maître, Jean-Léon and Brodland, Wayne and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J}, issn = {09501991}, journal = {Development}, number = {10}, pages = {1798 -- 1806}, publisher = {Company of Biologists}, title = {{Interstitial fluid osmolarity modulates the action of differential tissue surface tension in progenitor cell segregation during gastrulation}}, doi = {10.1242/dev.144964}, volume = {144}, year = {2017}, } @article{661, abstract = {During embryonic development, mechanical forces are essential for cellular rearrangements driving tissue morphogenesis. Here, we show that in the early zebrafish embryo, friction forces are generated at the interface between anterior axial mesoderm (prechordal plate, ppl) progenitors migrating towards the animal pole and neurectoderm progenitors moving in the opposite direction towards the vegetal pole of the embryo. These friction forces lead to global rearrangement of cells within the neurectoderm and determine the position of the neural anlage. Using a combination of experiments and simulations, we show that this process depends on hydrodynamic coupling between neurectoderm and ppl as a result of E-cadherin-mediated adhesion between those tissues. Our data thus establish the emergence of friction forces at the interface between moving tissues as a critical force-generating process shaping the embryo.}, author = {Smutny, Michael and Ákos, Zsuzsa and Grigolon, Silvia and Shamipour, Shayan and Ruprecht, Verena and Capek, Daniel and Behrndt, Martin and Papusheva, Ekaterina and Tada, Masazumi and Hof, Björn and Vicsek, Tamás and Salbreux, Guillaume and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J}, issn = {14657392}, journal = {Nature Cell Biology}, pages = {306 -- 317}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{Friction forces position the neural anlage}}, doi = {10.1038/ncb3492}, volume = {19}, year = {2017}, } @article{1154, abstract = {Cellular locomotion is a central hallmark of eukaryotic life. It is governed by cell-extrinsic molecular factors, which can either emerge in the soluble phase or as immobilized, often adhesive ligands. To encode for direction, every cue must be present as a spatial or temporal gradient. Here, we developed a microfluidic chamber that allows measurement of cell migration in combined response to surface immobilized and soluble molecular gradients. As a proof of principle we study the response of dendritic cells to their major guidance cues, chemokines. The majority of data on chemokine gradient sensing is based on in vitro studies employing soluble gradients. Despite evidence suggesting that in vivo chemokines are often immobilized to sugar residues, limited information is available how cells respond to immobilized chemokines. We tracked migration of dendritic cells towards immobilized gradients of the chemokine CCL21 and varying superimposed soluble gradients of CCL19. Differential migratory patterns illustrate the potential of our setup to quantitatively study the competitive response to both types of gradients. Beyond chemokines our approach is broadly applicable to alternative systems of chemo- and haptotaxis such as cells migrating along gradients of adhesion receptor ligands vs. any soluble cue. }, author = {Schwarz, Jan and Bierbaum, Veronika and Merrin, Jack and Frank, Tino and Hauschild, Robert and Bollenbach, Mark Tobias and Tay, Savaş and Sixt, Michael K and Mehling, Matthias}, journal = {Scientific Reports}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{A microfluidic device for measuring cell migration towards substrate bound and soluble chemokine gradients}}, doi = {10.1038/srep36440}, volume = {6}, year = {2016}, } @article{1321, abstract = {Most migrating cells extrude their front by the force of actin polymerization. Polymerization requires an initial nucleation step, which is mediated by factors establishing either parallel filaments in the case of filopodia or branched filaments that form the branched lamellipodial network. Branches are considered essential for regular cell motility and are initiated by the Arp2/3 complex, which in turn is activated by nucleation-promoting factors of the WASP and WAVE families. Here we employed rapid amoeboid crawling leukocytes and found that deletion of the WAVE complex eliminated actin branching and thus lamellipodia formation. The cells were left with parallel filaments at the leading edge, which translated, depending on the differentiation status of the cell, into a unipolar pointed cell shape or cells with multiple filopodia. Remarkably, unipolar cells migrated with increased speed and enormous directional persistence, while they were unable to turn towards chemotactic gradients. Cells with multiple filopodia retained chemotactic activity but their migration was progressively impaired with increasing geometrical complexity of the extracellular environment. These findings establish that diversified leading edge protrusions serve as explorative structures while they slow down actual locomotion.}, author = {Leithner, Alexander F and Eichner, Alexander and Müller, Jan and Reversat, Anne and Brown, Markus and Schwarz, Jan and Merrin, Jack and De Gorter, David and Schur, Florian and Bayerl, Jonathan and De Vries, Ingrid and Wieser, Stefan and Hauschild, Robert and Lai, Frank and Moser, Markus and Kerjaschki, Dontscho and Rottner, Klemens and Small, Victor and Stradal, Theresia and Sixt, Michael K}, journal = {Nature Cell Biology}, pages = {1253 -- 1259}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{Diversified actin protrusions promote environmental exploration but are dispensable for locomotion of leukocytes}}, doi = {10.1038/ncb3426}, volume = {18}, year = {2016}, } @article{1862, abstract = {The prominent and evolutionarily ancient role of the plant hormone auxin is the regulation of cell expansion. Cell expansion requires ordered arrangement of the cytoskeleton but molecular mechanisms underlying its regulation by signalling molecules including auxin are unknown. Here we show in the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana that in elongating cells exogenous application of auxin or redistribution of endogenous auxin induces very rapid microtubule re-orientation from transverse to longitudinal, coherent with the inhibition of cell expansion. This fast auxin effect requires auxin binding protein 1 (ABP1) and involves a contribution of downstream signalling components such as ROP6 GTPase, ROP-interactive protein RIC1 and the microtubule-severing protein katanin. These components are required for rapid auxin-and ABP1-mediated re-orientation of microtubules to regulate cell elongation in roots and dark-grown hypocotyls as well as asymmetric growth during gravitropic responses.}, author = {Chen, Xu and Grandont, Laurie and Li, Hongjiang and Hauschild, Robert and Paque, Sébastien and Abuzeineh, Anas and Rakusova, Hana and Benková, Eva and Perrot Rechenmann, Catherine and Friml, Jirí}, issn = {1476-4687}, journal = {Nature}, number = {729}, pages = {90 -- 93}, publisher = {Nature Publishing Group}, title = {{Inhibition of cell expansion by rapid ABP1-mediated auxin effect on microtubules}}, doi = {10.1038/nature13889}, volume = {516}, year = {2014}, } @article{2022, abstract = {Radial glial progenitors (RGPs) are responsible for producing nearly all neocortical neurons. To gain insight into the patterns of RGP division and neuron production, we quantitatively analyzed excitatory neuron genesis in the mouse neocortex using Mosaic Analysis with Double Markers, which provides single-cell resolution of progenitor division patterns and potential in vivo. We found that RGPs progress through a coherent program in which their proliferative potential diminishes in a predictable manner. Upon entry into the neurogenic phase, individual RGPs produce ∼8–9 neurons distributed in both deep and superficial layers, indicating a unitary output in neuronal production. Removal of OTX1, a transcription factor transiently expressed in RGPs, results in both deep- and superficial-layer neuron loss and a reduction in neuronal unit size. Moreover, ∼1/6 of neurogenic RGPs proceed to produce glia. These results suggest that progenitor behavior and histogenesis in the mammalian neocortex conform to a remarkably orderly and deterministic program.}, author = {Gao, Peng and Postiglione, Maria P and Krieger, Teresa and Hernandez, Luisirene and Wang, Chao and Han, Zhi and Streicher, Carmen and Papusheva, Ekaterina and Insolera, Ryan and Chugh, Kritika and Kodish, Oren and Huang, Kun and Simons, Benjamin and Luo, Liqun and Hippenmeyer, Simon and Shi, Song}, journal = {Cell}, number = {4}, pages = {775 -- 788}, publisher = {Cell Press}, title = {{Deterministic progenitor behavior and unitary production of neurons in the neocortex}}, doi = {10.1016/j.cell.2014.10.027}, volume = {159}, year = {2014}, } @article{2839, abstract = {Directional guidance of cells via gradients of chemokines is considered crucial for embryonic development, cancer dissemination, and immune responses. Nevertheless, the concept still lacks direct experimental confirmation in vivo. Here, we identify endogenous gradients of the chemokine CCL21 within mouse skin and show that they guide dendritic cells toward lymphatic vessels. Quantitative imaging reveals depots of CCL21 within lymphatic endothelial cells and steeply decaying gradients within the perilymphatic interstitium. These gradients match the migratory patterns of the dendritic cells, which directionally approach vessels from a distance of up to 90-micrometers. Interstitial CCL21 is immobilized to heparan sulfates, and its experimental delocalization or swamping the endogenous gradients abolishes directed migration. These findings functionally establish the concept of haptotaxis, directed migration along immobilized gradients, in tissues.}, author = {Weber, Michele and Hauschild, Robert and Schwarz, Jan and Moussion, Christine and De Vries, Ingrid and Legler, Daniel and Luther, Sanjiv and Bollenbach, Mark Tobias and Sixt, Michael K}, journal = {Science}, number = {6117}, pages = {328 -- 332}, publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science}, title = {{Interstitial dendritic cell guidance by haptotactic chemokine gradients}}, doi = {10.1126/science.1228456}, volume = {339}, year = {2013}, } @article{2950, abstract = {Contractile actomyosin rings drive various fundamental morphogenetic processes ranging from cytokinesis to wound healing. Actomyosin rings are generally thought to function by circumferential contraction. Here, we show that the spreading of the enveloping cell layer (EVL) over the yolk cell during zebrafish gastrulation is driven by a contractile actomyosin ring. In contrast to previous suggestions, we find that this ring functions not only by circumferential contraction but also by a flow-friction mechanism. This generates a pulling force through resistance against retrograde actomyosin flow. EVL spreading proceeds normally in situations where circumferential contraction is unproductive, indicating that the flow-friction mechanism is sufficient. Thus, actomyosin rings can function in epithelial morphogenesis through a combination of cable-constriction and flow-friction mechanisms.}, author = {Behrndt, Martin and Salbreux, Guillaume and Campinho, Pedro and Hauschild, Robert and Oswald, Felix and Roensch, Julia and Grill, Stephan and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J}, journal = {Science}, number = {6104}, pages = {257 -- 260}, publisher = {American Association for the Advancement of Science}, title = {{Forces driving epithelial spreading in zebrafish gastrulation}}, doi = {10.1126/science.1224143}, volume = {338}, year = {2012}, } @inproceedings{9943, abstract = {Segmentation is the process of partitioning digital images into meaningful regions. The analysis of biological high content images often requires segmentation as a first step. We propose ilastik as an easy-to-use tool which allows the user without expertise in image processing to perform segmentation and classification in a unified way. ilastik learns from labels provided by the user through a convenient mouse interface. Based on these labels, ilastik infers a problem specific segmentation. A random forest classifier is used in the learning step, in which each pixel's neighborhood is characterized by a set of generic (nonlinear) features. ilastik supports up to three spatial plus one spectral dimension and makes use of all dimensions in the feature calculation. ilastik provides realtime feedback that enables the user to interactively refine the segmentation result and hence further fine-tune the classifier. An uncertainty measure guides the user to ambiguous regions in the images. Real time performance is achieved by multi-threading which fully exploits the capabilities of modern multi-core machines. Once a classifier has been trained on a set of representative images, it can be exported and used to automatically process a very large number of images (e.g. using the CellProfiler pipeline). ilastik is an open source project and released under the BSD license at www.ilastik.org.}, author = {Sommer, Christoph M and Straehle, Christoph and Köthe, Ullrich and Hamprecht, Fred A.}, booktitle = {2011 IEEE International Symposium on Biomedical Imaging: from Nano to Micro}, isbn = {978-1-4244-4127-3}, issn = {1945-8452}, keywords = {image segmentation, biomedical imaging, three dimensional displays, neurons, retina, observers, image color analysis}, location = {Chicago, Illinois, USA}, publisher = {Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers}, title = {{Ilastik: Interactive learning and segmentation toolkit}}, doi = {10.1109/isbi.2011.5872394}, year = {2011}, } @article{4157, abstract = {Integrin- and cadherin-mediated adhesion is central for cell and tissue morphogenesis, allowing cells and tissues to change shape without loosing integrity. Studies predominantly in cell culture showed that mechanosensation through adhesion structures is achieved by force-mediated modulation of their molecular composition. The specific molecular composition of adhesion sites in turn determines their signalling activity and dynamic reorganization. Here, we will review how adhesion sites respond to mecanical stimuli, and how spatially and temporally regulated signalling from different adhesion sites controls cell migration and tissue morphogenesis.}, author = {Papusheva, Ekaterina and Heisenberg, Carl-Philipp J}, journal = {EMBO Journal}, number = {16}, pages = {2753 -- 2768}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, title = {{Spatial organization of adhesion: force-dependent regulation and function in tissue morphogenesis}}, doi = {10.1038/emboj.2010.182}, volume = {29}, year = {2010}, }