Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Ann-Sofie Cans is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Ann-Sofie Cans.


Nature | 2001

Molecular engineering: Networks of nanotubes and containers

Anders Karlsson; Roger Karlsson; Mattias Karlsson; Ann-Sofie Cans; Anette Strömberg; Frida Ryttsén; Owe Orwar

We have constructed complex two-dimensional microscopic networks of phospholipid bilayer nanotubes and containers in which we are able to control the connectivity, container size, nanotube length, and angle between the nanotube extensions. Containers within these networks can be chemically differentiated and materials successfully routed between two containers connected by a common nanotube. These networks will enable model systems to be devised for studying confined biochemical reactions, intracellular transport phenomena and chemical computations.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Artificial cells: unique insights into exocytosis using liposomes and lipid nanotubes.

Ann-Sofie Cans; Nathan J. Wittenberg; Roger Karlsson; Leslie A. Sombers; Mattias Karlsson; Owe Orwar; Andrew G. Ewing

Exocytosis is the fundamental process underlying neuronal communication. This process involves fusion of a small neurotransmitter-containing vesicle with the plasma membrane of a cell to release minute amounts of transmitter molecules. Exocytosis is thought to go through an intermediate step involving formation of a small lipid nanotube or fusion pore, followed by expansion of the pore to the final stage of exocytosis. The process of exocytosis has been studied by various methods; however, when living cells are used it is difficult to discriminate between the molecular effects of membrane proteins relative to the mechanics of lipid–membrane-driven processes and to manipulate system parameters (e.g., membrane composition, pH, ion concentration, temperature, etc.). We describe the use of liposome–lipid nanotube networks to create an artificial cell model that undergoes the later stages of exocytosis. This model shows that membrane mechanics, without protein intervention, can drive expansion of the fusion pore to the final stage of exocytosis and can affect the rate of transmitter release through the fusion pore.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

The Effects of Vesicular Volume on Secretion through the Fusion Pore in Exocytotic Release from PC12 Cells

Leslie A. Sombers; H.J. Hanchar; Thomas L. Colliver; Nathan J. Wittenberg; Ann-Sofie Cans; Stéphane Arbault; Christian Amatore; Andrew G. Ewing

Many spikes in amperometric records of exocytosis events initially exhibit a prespike feature, or foot, which represents a steady-state flux of neurotransmitter through a stable fusion pore spanning both the vesicle and plasma membranes and connecting the vesicle lumen to the extracellular fluid. Here, we present the first evidence indicating that vesicular volume before secretion is strongly correlated with the characteristics of amperometric foot events. l-3,4-Dihydroxyphenylalanine and reserpine have been used to increase and decrease, respectively, the volume of single pheochromocytoma cell vesicles. Amperometry and transmission electron microscopy have been used to determine that as vesicle size is decreased the frequency with which foot events are observed increases, the amount and duration of neurotransmitter released in the foot portion of the event decreases, and vesicles release a greater percentage of their total contents in the foot portion of the event. This previously unidentified correlation provides new insight into how vesicle volume can modulate the activity of the exocytotic fusion pore.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Formation of geometrically complex lipid nanotube-vesicle networks of higher-order topologies

Mattias Karlsson; Kristin Sott; Maximillian Davidson; Ann-Sofie Cans; Pontus Linderholm; Daniel Chiu; Owe Orwar

We present a microelectrofusion method for construction of fluid-state lipid bilayer networks of high geometrical complexity up to fully connected networks with genus = 3 topology. Within networks, self-organizing branching nanotube architectures could be produced where intersections spontaneously arrange themselves into three-way junctions with an angle of 120° between each nanotube. Formation of branching nanotube networks appears to follow a minimum-bending energy algorithm that solves for pathway minimization. It is also demonstrated that materials can be injected into specific containers within a network by nanotube-mediated transport of satellite vesicles having defined contents. Using a combination of microelectrofusion, spontaneous nanotube pattern formation, and satellite-vesicle injection, complex networks of containers and nanotubes can be produced for a range of applications in, for example, nanofluidics and artificial cell design. In addition, this electrofusion method allows integration of biological cells into lipid nanotube-vesicle networks.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Characterizing the catecholamine content of single mammalian vesicles by collision-adsorption events at an electrode.

Johan Dunevall; Hoda Mashadi Fathali; Neda Najafinobar; Jelena Lovric; Joakim Wigström; Ann-Sofie Cans; Andrew G. Ewing

We present the electrochemical response to single adrenal chromaffin vesicles filled with catecholamine hormones as they are adsorbed and rupture on a 33 μm diameter disk-shaped carbon electrode. The vesicles adsorb onto the electrode surface and sequentially spread out over the electrode surface, trapping their contents against the electrode. These contents are then oxidized, and a current (or amperometric) peak results from each vesicle that bursts. A large number of current transients associated with rupture of single vesicles (86%) are observed under the experimental conditions used, allowing us to quantify the vesicular catecholamine content.


Analytical Chemistry | 2012

Carbon-Ring Microelectrode Arrays for Electrochemical Imaging of Single Cell Exocytosis: Fabrication and Characterization

Yuqing Lin; Raphaël Trouillon; Maria I. Svensson; Jacqueline D. Keighron; Ann-Sofie Cans; Andrew G. Ewing

Fabrication of carbon microelectrode arrays, with up to 15 electrodes in total tips as small as 10-50 μm, is presented. The support structures of microelectrodes were obtained by pulling multiple quartz capillaries together to form hollow capillary arrays before carbon deposition. Carbon ring microelectrodes were deposited by pyrolysis of acetylene in the lumen of these quartz capillary arrays. Each carbon deposited array tip was filled with epoxy, followed by beveling of the tip of the array to form a deposited carbon-ring microelectrode array (CRMA). Both the number of the microelectrodes in the array and the tip size are independently tunable. These CRMAs have been characterized using scanning electron microscopy, energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, and electrogenerated chemiluminescence. Additionally, the electrochemical properties were investigated with steady-state voltammetry. In order to demonstrate the utility of these fabricated microelectrodes in neurochemistry, CRMAs containing eight microring electrodes were used for electrochemical monitoring of exocytotic events from single PC12 cells. Subcellular temporal heterogeneities in exocytosis (i.e. cold spots vs hot spots) were successfully detected with the CRMAs.


Scientific Reports | 2013

The real catecholamine content of secretory vesicles in the CNS revealed by electrochemical cytometry

Donna M. Omiatek; Amanda J. Bressler; Ann-Sofie Cans; Anne M. Andrews; Michael L. Heien; Andrew G. Ewing

Resolution of synaptic vesicle neurotransmitter content has mostly been limited to the study of stimulated release in cultured cell systems, and it has been controversial as to whether synaptic vesicle transmitter levels are saturated in vivo. We use electrochemical cytometry to count dopamine molecules in individual synaptic vesicles in populations directly sampled from brain tissue. Vesicles from the striatum yield an average of 33,000 dopamine molecules per vesicle, an amount considerably greater than typically measured during quantal release at cultured neurons. Vesicular content was markedly increased by L-DOPA or decreased by reserpine in a time-dependent manner in response to in vivo administration of drugs known to alter dopamine release. We investigated the effects of the psychostimulant amphetamine on vesicle content, finding that vesicular transmitter is rapidly depleted by 50% following in vivo administration, supporting the “weak base hypothesis” that amphetamine reduces synaptic vesicle transmitter and quantal size.


Analyst | 2012

Analytical tools to monitor exocytosis: a focus on new fluorescent probes and methods

Jacqueline D. Keighron; Andrew G. Ewing; Ann-Sofie Cans

A great deal of research has been focused on unraveling the processes governing the exocytotic pathway and the extent of release during the process. Arguments abound for and against both the occurrence and significance of full release during exocytosis and partial release including kiss-and-run events. Several optical methods to directly observe the exocytosis process have been developed and here we focus on fluorescence methods and probes for this work. Although fluorescence imaging has been used for cell experiments for decades, in the last two decades a plethora of new approaches have arrived on the scene. These include application of new microscopy techniques, like total internal reflectance and stimulated emission depletion that are offering new ways to circumvent the limits of far field microscopy with a diffraction limit of 200 nm, and allow tracking of single synaptic vesicles. For selective imaging of synaptic vesicles the introduction of methods to stain the vesicular compartment has involved developing probes of the vesicular membrane and intravesicular solution, nanoparticle quantum dots that can be observed during exocytosis but not via the fusion pore, and fluorescent false neurotransmitters.


ChemPhysChem | 2010

Electrochemical Probes for Detection and Analysis of Exocytosis and Vesicles

Lisa Mellander; Ann-Sofie Cans; Andrew G. Ewing

Unraveling the mechanistic details of neurotransmitter exocytosis is arguably among the most important molecular problems in neuroscience today. Investigations at single cells, particularly with electrochemical methods, have given unique chemical and biological insight into this process at the fundamental level. The rapid response time (submillisecond) of microelectrodes makes them well suited for monitoring the dynamic process of exocytosis. We review here recent developments in electrochemical techniques to spatially and simultaneously detect exocytosis across a single cell and to measure the transmitter content of single vesicles removed from cells. The former method is used to demonstrate dynamic heterogeneity in release across a cell, and in the latter work comparison is made between vesicle content and release to conclude that only a fraction of the transmitter is released during full exocytosis.


Quarterly Reviews of Biophysics | 2016

The evidence for open and closed exocytosis as the primary release mechanism

Lin Ren; Lisa Mellander; Jacqueline D. Keighron; Ann-Sofie Cans; Michael E. Kurczy; Irina Svir; Alexander Oleinick; Christian Amatore; Andrew G. Ewing

Exocytosis is the fundamental process by which cells communicate with each other. The events that lead up to the fusion of a vesicle loaded with chemical messenger with the cell membrane were the subject of a Nobel Prize in 2013. However, the processes occurring after the initial formation of a fusion pore are very much still in debate. The release of chemical messenger has traditionally been thought to occur through full distention of the vesicle membrane, hence assuming exocytosis to be all or none. In contrast to the all or none hypothesis, here we discuss the evidence that during exocytosis the vesicle-membrane pore opens to release only a portion of the transmitter content during exocytosis and then close again. This open and closed exocytosis is distinct from kiss-and-run exocytosis, in that it appears to be the main content released during regular exocytosis. The evidence for this partial release via open and closed exocytosis is presented considering primarily the quantitative evidence obtained with amperometry.

Collaboration


Dive into the Ann-Sofie Cans's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael E. Kurczy

Pennsylvania State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Johan Dunevall

Chalmers University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hoda Mashadi Fathali

Chalmers University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jacqueline D. Keighron

Chalmers University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Neda Najafinobar

Chalmers University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Owe Orwar

Chalmers University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Roger Karlsson

University of Gothenburg

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joakim Wigström

Chalmers University of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lisa Mellander

University of Gothenburg

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge