Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Andrea Picco is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Andrea Picco.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2011

Correlated fluorescence and 3D electron microscopy with high sensitivity and spatial precision

Wanda Kukulski; Martin Schorb; Sonja Welsch; Andrea Picco; Marko Kaksonen; John A. G. Briggs

New methodology improves the spatial resolution and sensitivity of correlative light and EM tomography, revealing new insights into dynamic cellular processes.


Methods in Cell Biology | 2012

Precise, correlated fluorescence microscopy and electron tomography of lowicryl sections using fluorescent fiducial markers.

Wanda Kukulski; Martin Schorb; Sonja Welsch; Andrea Picco; Marko Kaksonen; John A. G. Briggs

The application of fluorescence and electron microscopy to the same specimen allows the study of dynamic and rare cellular events at ultrastructural detail. Here, we present a correlative microscopy approach, which combines high accuracy of correlation, high sensitivity for detecting faint fluorescent signals, as well as robustness and reproducibility to permit large dataset collections. We provide a step-by-step protocol that allows direct mapping of fluorescent protein signals into electron tomograms. A localization precision of <100 nm is achieved by using fluorescent fiducial markers which are visible both in fluorescence images and in electron tomograms. We explain the critical details of the procedure, give background information on the individual steps, present results from test experiments carried out during establishment of the method, as well as information about possible modifications to the protocol, such as its application to 2D electron micrographs. This simple, robust, and flexible method can be applied to a large variety of cellular systems, such as yeast cell pellets and mammalian cell monolayers, to answer a broad spectrum of structure-function related questions.


eLife | 2015

Visualizing the functional architecture of the endocytic machinery

Andrea Picco; Markus Mund; Jonas Ries; François Nédélec; Marko Kaksonen

Clathrin-mediated endocytosis is an essential process that forms vesicles from the plasma membrane. Although most of the protein components of the endocytic protein machinery have been thoroughly characterized, their organization at the endocytic site is poorly understood. We developed a fluorescence microscopy method to track the average positions of yeast endocytic proteins in relation to each other with a time precision below 1 s and with a spatial precision of ∼10 nm. With these data, integrated with shapes of endocytic membrane intermediates and with superresolution imaging, we could visualize the dynamic architecture of the endocytic machinery. We showed how different coat proteins are distributed within the coat structure and how the assembly dynamics of N-BAR proteins relate to membrane shape changes. Moreover, we found that the region of actin polymerization is located at the base of the endocytic invagination, with the growing ends of filaments pointing toward the plasma membrane. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.04535.001


EMBO Reports | 2016

Higher-order assemblies of oligomeric cargo receptor complexes form the membrane scaffold of the Cvt vesicle

Chiara Bertipaglia; Sarah Schneider; Arjen J. Jakobi; Abul K. Tarafder; Yury S. Bykov; Andrea Picco; Wanda Kukulski; Jan Kosinski; Wim J. H. Hagen; Arvind C. Ravichandran; Matthias Wilmanns; Marko Kaksonen; John A. G. Briggs; Carsten Sachse

Selective autophagy is the mechanism by which large cargos are specifically sequestered for degradation. The structural details of cargo and receptor assembly giving rise to autophagic vesicles remain to be elucidated. We utilize the yeast cytoplasm‐to‐vacuole targeting (Cvt) pathway, a prototype of selective autophagy, together with a multi‐scale analysis approach to study the molecular structure of Cvt vesicles. We report the oligomeric nature of the major Cvt cargo Ape1 with a combined 2.8 Å X‐ray and negative stain EM structure, as well as the secondary cargo Ams1 with a 6.3 Å cryo‐EM structure. We show that the major dodecameric cargo prApe1 exhibits a tendency to form higher‐order chain structures that are broken upon interaction with the receptor Atg19 in vitro. The stoichiometry of these cargo–receptor complexes is key to maintaining the size of the Cvt aggregate in vivo. Using correlative light and electron microscopy, we further visualize key stages of Cvt vesicle biogenesis. Our findings suggest that Atg19 interaction limits Ape1 aggregate size while serving as a vehicle for vacuolar delivery of tetrameric Ams1.


eLife | 2016

Clathrin modulates vesicle scission, but not invagination shape, in yeast endocytosis

Wanda Kukulski; Andrea Picco; Tanja Specht; John A. G. Briggs; Marko Kaksonen

In a previous paper (Picco et al., 2015), the dynamic architecture of the protein machinery during clathrin-mediated endocytosis was visualized using a new live imaging and particle tracking method. Here, by combining this approach with correlative light and electron microscopy, we address the role of clathrin in this process. During endocytosis, clathrin forms a cage-like coat around the membrane and associated protein components. There is growing evidence that clathrin does not determine the membrane morphology of the invagination but rather modulates the progression of endocytosis. We investigate how the deletion of clathrin heavy chain impairs the dynamics and the morphology of the endocytic membrane in budding yeast. Our results show that clathrin is not required for elongating or shaping the endocytic membrane invagination. Instead, we find that clathrin contributes to the regularity of vesicle scission and thereby to controlling vesicle size. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.16036.001


bioRxiv | 2017

Systematic analysis of the molecular architecture of endocytosis reveals a nanoscale actin nucleation template that drives efficient vesicle formation

Markus Mund; Johannes Albertus van der Beek; Joran Deschamps; Serge Dmitrieff; Jooske Louise Monster; Andrea Picco; François Nédélec; Marko Kaksonen; Jonas Ries

Clathrin-mediated endocytosis is an essential cellular function in all eukaryotes that is driven by a self-assembled macromolecular machine of over 50 different proteins in tens to hundreds of copies. How these proteins are organized to produce endocytic vesicles with high precision and efficiency is not understood. Here, we developed high-throughput superresolution microscopy to reconstruct the nanoscale structural organization of 23 endocytic proteins from over 100,000 endocytic sites in yeast. We found that proteins assemble by radially-ordered recruitment according to function. WASP family proteins form a circular nano-scale template on the membrane to spatially control actin nucleation during vesicle formation. Mathematical modeling of actin polymerization showed that this WASP nano-template creates sufficient force for membrane invagination and substantially increases the efficiency of endocytosis. Such nanoscale pre-patterning of actin nucleation may represent a general design principle for directional force generation in membrane remodeling processes such as during cell migration and division.


Methods in Cell Biology | 2017

Precise tracking of the dynamics of multiple proteins in endocytic events

Andrea Picco; Marko Kaksonen

Endocytosis is a complex and dynamic process that involves dozens of different proteins to define the site of endocytosis, form a membrane invagination, and pinch off a membrane vesicle into the cytoplasm. Fluorescent light microscopy is a powerful tool to visualize the dynamic behaviors of the proteins taking part in the endocytic process. The resolution of light microscopy is, however, a serious limitation. Here, we detail a fluorescence microscope method that we have developed to visualize the dynamics of the clathrin-mediated endocytic protein machinery in yeast cells. This method is based on subpixel centroid tracking of endocytic proteins. For each endocytic protein, the centroid trajectories obtained from multiple endocytic events are used to compute an average trajectory that describes, at nanometer scale, the assembly and movement of the protein during endocytosis. The average trajectories of the different endocytic proteins are then aligned together in space and time to reconstruct how the different proteins behave relative to each other during the endocytic process.


Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 2018

Quantitative imaging of clathrin-mediated endocytosis

Andrea Picco; Marko Kaksonen

Clathrin-mediated endocytosis is a process by which eukaryotic cells bend a small region of their plasma membrane to form a transport vesicle that carries specific cargo molecules into the cell. Endocytosis controls the composition of the plasma membrane, imports nutrients and regulates many signalling pathways. The roles of most of the proteins involved in endocytosis have been thoroughly characterised. However, how these proteins cooperate in the cell to drive the endocytic process is not well understood. Microscopy methods have been instrumental in describing the dynamics and the molecular mechanism of endocytosis. Here, we will review the challenges and the recent advances in visualising the endocytic machinery and we will reflect on how the integration of current imaging technologies can lead us toward a quantitative understanding of the molecular mechanisms of endocytosis.


Cell | 2018

Systematic Nanoscale Analysis of Endocytosis Links Efficient Vesicle Formation to Patterned Actin Nucleation

Markus Mund; Johannes Albertus van der Beek; Joran Deschamps; Serge Dmitrieff; Philipp Hoess; Jooske Louise Monster; Andrea Picco; François Nédélec; Marko Kaksonen; Jonas Ries

Summary Clathrin-mediated endocytosis is an essential cellular function in all eukaryotes that is driven by a self-assembled macromolecular machine of over 50 different proteins in tens to hundreds of copies. How these proteins are organized to produce endocytic vesicles with high precision and efficiency is not understood. Here, we developed high-throughput superresolution microscopy to reconstruct the nanoscale structural organization of 23 endocytic proteins from over 100,000 endocytic sites in yeast. We found that proteins assemble by radially ordered recruitment according to function. WASP family proteins form a circular nanoscale template on the membrane to spatially control actin nucleation during vesicle formation. Mathematical modeling of actin polymerization showed that this WASP nano-template optimizes force generation for membrane invagination and substantially increases the efficiency of endocytosis. Such nanoscale pre-patterning of actin nucleation may represent a general design principle for directional force generation in membrane remodeling processes such as during cell migration and division.


Cell | 2017

The In Vivo Architecture of the Exocyst Provides Structural Basis for Exocytosis.

Andrea Picco; Ibai Irastorza-Azcarate; Tanja Specht; Dominik Böke; Irene Pazos; Anne-Sophie Rivier-Cordey; Damien P. Devos; Marko Kaksonen; Oriol Gallego

Collaboration


Dive into the Andrea Picco's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Marko Kaksonen

European Bioinformatics Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John A. G. Briggs

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wanda Kukulski

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

François Nédélec

European Bioinformatics Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jonas Ries

European Bioinformatics Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Markus Mund

European Bioinformatics Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tanja Specht

European Bioinformatics Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jooske Louise Monster

European Bioinformatics Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joran Deschamps

European Bioinformatics Institute

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge