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Dive into the research topics where Andre C. Stiel is active.

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Featured researches published by Andre C. Stiel.


Biophysical Journal | 2007

Fluorescence nanoscopy in whole cells by asynchronous localization of photoswitching emitters

Alexander Egner; Claudia Geisler; Claas von Middendorff; Hannes Bock; Dirk Wenzel; Rebecca Medda; Martin Andresen; Andre C. Stiel; Stefan Jakobs; Christian Eggeling; Andreas Schönle; Stefan W. Hell

We demonstrate nanoscale resolution in far-field fluorescence microscopy using reversible photoswitching and localization of individual fluorophores at comparatively fast recording speeds and from the interior of intact cells. These advancements have become possible by asynchronously recording the photon bursts of individual molecular switching cycles. We present images from the microtubular network of an intact mammalian cell with a resolution of 40 nm.


Nature Biotechnology | 2008

Photoswitchable fluorescent proteins enable monochromatic multilabel imaging and dual color fluorescence nanoscopy

Martin Andresen; Andre C. Stiel; Jonas Fölling; Dirk Wenzel; Andreas Schönle; Alexander Egner; Christian Eggeling; Stefan W. Hell; Stefan Jakobs

Fluorescent proteins that can be reversibly photoswitched between a fluorescent and a nonfluorescent state are important for innovative microscopy schemes, such as protein tracking, fluorescence resonance energy transfer imaging, sub-diffraction resolution microscopy and others. However, all available monomeric reversibly switchable fluorescent proteins (RSFPs) have similar properties and switching characteristics, thereby limiting their use. Here, we introduce two bright green fluorescent RSFPs, bsDronpa and Padron, generated by extensive mutagenesis of the RSFP Dronpa, with unique absorption and switching characteristics. Whereas bsDronpa features a broad absorption spectrum extending into the UV, Padron displays a switching behavior that is reversed to that of all green fluorescent RSFPs known to date. These two RSFPs enable live-cell fluorescence microscopy with multiple labels using a single detection color, because they can be distinguished by photoswitching. Furthermore, we demonstrate dual-color fluorescence microscopy with sub-diffraction resolution using bsDronpa and Dronpa whose emission maxima are separated by <20 nm.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Structural basis for reversible photoswitching in Dronpa

Martin Andresen; Andre C. Stiel; Simon Trowitzsch; Gert Weber; Christian Eggeling; Markus C. Wahl; Stefan W. Hell; Stefan Jakobs

Dronpa is a novel GFP-like fluorescent protein with exceptional light-controlled switching properties. It may be reversibly switched between a fluorescent on-state and a nonfluorescent off-state by irradiation with light. To elucidate the molecular basis of the switching mechanism, we generated reversibly switchable Dronpa protein crystals. Using these crystals we determined the elusive dark-state structure of Dronpa at 1.95-Å resolution. We found that the photoswitching results in a cis–trans isomerization of the chromophore accompanied by complex structural rearrangements of four nearby amino acid residues. Because of this cascade of intramolecular events, the chromophore is exposed to distinct electrostatic surface potentials, which are likely to influence the protonation equilibria at the chromophore. We suggest a comprehensive model for the light-induced switching mechanism, connecting a cascade of structural rearrangements with different protonation states of the chromophore.


Biochemical Journal | 2007

1.8 Å bright-state structure of the reversibly switchable fluorescent protein Dronpa guides the generation of fast switching variants

Andre C. Stiel; Simon Trowitzsch; Gert Weber; Martin Andresen; Christian Eggeling; Stefan W. Hell; Stefan Jakobs; Markus C. Wahl

RSFPs (reversibly switchable fluorescent proteins) may be repeatedly converted between a fluorescent and a non-fluorescent state by irradiation and have attracted widespread interest for many new applications. The RSFP Dronpa may be switched with blue light from a fluorescent state into a non-fluorescent state, and back again with UV light. To obtain insight into the underlying molecular mechanism of this switching, we have determined the crystal structure of the fluorescent equilibrium state of Dronpa. Its bicyclic chromophore is formed spontaneously from the Cys62-Tyr63-Gly64 tripeptide. In the fluorescent state, it adopts a slightly non-coplanar cis conformation within the interior of a typical GFP (green fluorescent protein) b-can fold. Dronpa shares some structural features with asFP595, another RSFP whose chromophore has previously been demonstrated to undergo a cis-trans isomerization upon photoswitching. Based on the structural comparison with asFP595, we have generated new Dronpa variants with an up to more than 1000-fold accelerated switching behaviour. The mutations which were introduced at position Val157 or Met159 apparently reduce the steric hindrance for a cis-trans isomerization of the chromophore, thus lowering the energy barrier for the blue light-driven on-to-off transition. The findings reported in the present study support the view that a cis-trans isomerization is one of the key events common to the switching mechanism in RSFPs.


Nature Biotechnology | 2011

A reversibly photoswitchable GFP-like protein with fluorescence excitation decoupled from switching.

Tanja Brakemann; Andre C. Stiel; Gert Weber; Martin Andresen; Ilaria Testa; Tim Grotjohann; Marcel Leutenegger; Uwe Plessmann; Henning Urlaub; Christian Eggeling; Markus C. Wahl; Stefan W. Hell; Stefan Jakobs

Photoswitchable fluorescent proteins have enabled new approaches for imaging cells, but their utility has been limited either because they cannot be switched repeatedly or because the wavelengths for switching and fluorescence imaging are strictly coupled. We report a bright, monomeric, reversibly photoswitchable variant of GFP, Dreiklang, whose fluorescence excitation spectrum is decoupled from that for optical switching. Reversible on-and-off switching in living cells is accomplished at illumination wavelengths of ∼365 nm and ∼405 nm, respectively, whereas fluorescence is elicited at ∼515 nm. Mass spectrometry and high-resolution crystallographic analysis of the same protein crystal in the photoswitched on- and off-states demonstrate that switching is based on a reversible hydration/dehydration reaction that modifies the chromophore. The switching properties of Dreiklang enable far-field fluorescence nanoscopy in living mammalian cells using both a coordinate-targeted and a stochastic single molecule switching approach.


Biophysical Journal | 2008

Generation of Monomeric Reversibly Switchable Red Fluorescent Proteins for Far-Field Fluorescence Nanoscopy

Andre C. Stiel; Martin Andresen; Hannes Bock; Michael Hilbert; Jessica Schilde; Andreas Schönle; Christian Eggeling; Alexander Egner; Stefan W. Hell; Stefan Jakobs

Reversibly switchable fluorescent proteins (RSFPs) are GFP-like proteins that may be repeatedly switched by irradiation with light from a fluorescent to a nonfluorescent state, and vice versa. They can be utilized as genetically encodable probes and bear large potential for a wide array of applications, in particular for new protein tracking schemes and subdiffraction resolution microscopy. However, the currently described monomeric RSFPs emit only blue-green or green fluorescence; the spectral window for their use is thus rather limited. Using a semirational engineering approach based on the crystal structure of the monomeric nonswitchable red fluorescent protein mCherry, we generated rsCherry and rsCherryRev. These two novel red fluorescent RSFPs exhibit fluorescence emission maxima at approximately 610 nm. They display antagonistic switching modes, i.e., in rsCherry irradiation with yellow light induces the off-to-on transition and blue light the on-to-off transition, whereas in rsCherryRev the effects of the switching wavelengths are reversed. We demonstrate time-lapse live-cell subdiffraction microscopy by imaging rsCherryRev targeted to the endoplasmic reticulum utilizing the switching and localization of single molecules.


Nano Letters | 2011

Dual-label STED nanoscopy of living cells using photochromism

Katrin I. Willig; Andre C. Stiel; Tanja Brakemann; Stefan Jakobs; Stefan W. Hell

We demonstrate live-cell STED microscopy of two protein species using photochromic green fluorescent proteins as markers. The reversible photoswitching of two markers is implemented so that they can be discerned with a single excitation and STED wavelength and a single detection channel. Dual-label STED microscopy is shown in living mammalian cells.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Molecular basis of the light-driven switching of the photochromic fluorescent protein Padron.

Tanja Brakemann; Gert Weber; Martin Andresen; Gerrit Groenhof; Andre C. Stiel; Simon Trowitzsch; Christian Eggeling; Helmut Grubmüller; Stefan W. Hell; Markus C. Wahl; Stefan Jakobs

Reversibly switchable fluorescent proteins can be repeatedly photoswitched between a fluorescent and a nonfluorescent state by irradiation with the light of two different wavelengths. The molecular basis of the switching process remains a controversial topic. Padron0.9 is a reversibly switchable fluorescent protein with “positive” switching characteristics, exhibiting excellent spectroscopic properties. Its chromophore is formed by the amino acids Cys-Tyr-Gly. We obtained high resolution x-ray structures of Padron0.9 in both the fluorescent and the nonfluorescent states and used the structural information for molecular dynamics simulations. We found that in Padron0.9 the chromophore undergoes a cis-trans isomerization upon photoswitching. The molecular dynamics simulations clarified the protonation states of the amino acid residues within the chromophore pocket that influence the protonation state of the chromophore. We conclude that a light driven cis-trans isomerization of the chromophore appears to be the fundamental switching mechanism in all photochromic fluorescent proteins known to date. Distinct absorption cross-sections for the switching wavelengths in the fluorescent and the nonfluorescent state are not essential for efficient photochromism in fluorescent proteins, although they may facilitate the switching process.


Optics Express | 2008

Nanoscale separation of molecular species based on their rotational mobility

Ilaria Testa; Andreas Schönle; Claas von Middendorff; Claudia Geisler; Rebecca Medda; Christian A. Wurm; Andre C. Stiel; Stefan Jakobs; Mariano L. Bossi; Christian Eggeling; Stefan W. Hell; Alexander Egner

We combine far-field fluorescence nanoscopy through serialized recording of switchable emitters with polarization-sensitive fluorescence detection. In addition to imaging with nanoscale spatial resolution, this technique allows determination of the fluorescence anisotropy of each detected dipole emitter and thus an estimate of its rotational mobility. Sub-populations of fluorescent markers can thus be separated based on their interaction with the sample. We applied this new functional nanoscopy to imaging of living mammalian cells.


Optics Letters | 2015

Light fluence normalization in turbid tissues via temporally unmixed multispectral optoacoustic tomography

X. Luís Deán-Ben; Andre C. Stiel; Y Jiang; Vasilis Ntziachristos; Gil G. Westmeyer; Daniel Razansky

Discerning the accurate distribution of chromophores and biomarkers by means of optoacoustic imaging is commonly challenged by the highly heterogeneous excitation light patterns resulting from strong spatial variations of tissue scattering and absorption. Here we used the light-fluence dependent switching kinetics of reversibly switchable fluorescent proteins (RSFPs), in combination with real-time acquisition of volumetric multi-spectral optoacoustic data to correct for the light fluence distribution deep in scattering media. The new approach allows for dynamic fluence correction in time-resolved imaging, e.g., of moving organs, and can be extended to work with a large palette of available synthetic and genetically encoded photochromic substances for multiplexed wavelength-specific fluence normalization.

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Gert Weber

Free University of Berlin

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Markus C. Wahl

Free University of Berlin

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