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Dive into the research topics where Anne Osterrieder is active.

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Featured researches published by Anne Osterrieder.


The Plant Cell | 2010

Five Arabidopsis Reticulon Isoforms Share Endoplasmic Reticulum Location, Topology, and Membrane-Shaping Properties

Imogen Sparkes; Nicholas Tolley; Isabel Aller; Julia Svozil; Anne Osterrieder; Stanley W. Botchway; Christopher Mueller; Lorenzo Frigerio; Chris Hawes

This article describes the localization and organization of several members of a family of proteins known as the reticulons that reside in the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), which is responsible for synthesizing proteins for export out of the cell. The reticulons reside in the ER membrane, interact with each other, and induce curvature to make these ER compartments tubular in structure. The cortical endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) epidermal cells is a network of tubules and cisternae undergoing dramatic rearrangements. Reticulons are integral membrane proteins involved in shaping ER tubules. Here, we characterized the localization, topology, effect, and interactions of five Arabidopsis thaliana reticulons (RTNs), isoforms 1-4 and 13, in the cortical ER. Our results indicate that RTNLB13 and RTNLB1-4 colocate to and constrict the tubular ER membrane. All five RTNs preferentially accumulate on ER tubules and are excluded from ER cisternae. All isoforms share the same transmembrane topology, with N and C termini facing the cytosol and four transmembrane domains. We show by Förster resonance energy transfer and fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy that several RTNs have the capacity to interact with themselves and each other, and we suggest that oligomerization is responsible for their residence in the ER membrane. We also show that a complete reticulon homology domain is required for both RTN residence in high-curvature ER membranes and ER tubule constriction, yet it is not necessary for homotypic interactions.


Plant Physiology | 2008

Elucidation of the Final Reactions of DIMBOA-Glucoside Biosynthesis in Maize: Characterization of Bx6 and Bx7

Rafal Jonczyk; Holger Schmidt; Anne Osterrieder; Andreas Fiesselmann; Katrin Schullehner; Martin Haslbeck; Dieter Sicker; Diana Hofmann; Nasser Yalpani; Carl R. Simmons; Monika Frey; Alfons Gierl

Benzoxazinoids were identified in the early 1960s as secondary metabolites of the grasses that function as natural pesticides and exhibit allelopathic properties. Benzoxazinoids are synthesized in seedlings and stored as glucosides (glcs); the main aglucone moieties are 2,4-dihydroxy-2H-1,4-benzoxazin-3(4H)-one (DIBOA) and 2,4-dihydroxy-7-methoxy-2H-1,4-benzoxazin-3(4H)-one (DIMBOA). The genes of DIBOA-glc biosynthesis have previously been isolated and the enzymatic functions characterized. Here, the enzymes for conversion of DIBOA-glc to DIMBOA-glc are identified. DIBOA-glc is the substrate of the dioxygenase BENZOXAZINLESS6 (BX6) and the produced 2,4,7-trihydroxy-2H-1,4-benzoxazin-3-(4H)-one-glc is metabolized by the methyltransferase BX7 to yield DIMBOA-glc. Both enzymes exhibit moderate Km values (below 0.4 mm) and kcat values of 2.10 s−1 and 0.25 s−1, respectively. Although BX6 uses a glucosylated substrate, our localization studies indicate a cytoplasmic localization of the dioxygenase. Bx6 and Bx7 are highest expressed in seedling tissue, a feature shared with the other Bx genes. At present, Bx6 and Bx7 have no close relatives among the members of their respective gene families. Bx6 and Bx7 map to the cluster of Bx genes on the short arm of chromosome 4.


Traffic | 2008

The plant ER-Golgi interface.

Chris Hawes; Anne Osterrieder; Eric Hummel; Imogen Sparkes

The interface between the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and the Golgi apparatus is a critical junction in the secretory pathway mediating the transport of both soluble and membrane cargo between the two organelles. Such transport can be bidirectional and is mediated by coated membranes. In this review, we consider the organization and dynamics of this interface in plant cells, the putative structure of which has caused some controversy in the literature, and we speculate on the stages of Golgi biogenesis from the ER and the role of the Golgi and ER on each other’s motility.


Traffic | 2009

Fluorescence lifetime imaging of interactions between Golgi tethering factors and small GTPases in plants.

Anne Osterrieder; Claudine M. Carvalho; Maita Latijnhouwers; Jorunn Nergaard Johansen; Christopher D. Stubbs; Stanley W. Botchway; Chris Hawes

Peripheral tethering factors bind to small GTPases in order to obtain their correct location within the Golgi apparatus. Using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) and fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) we visualized interactions between Arabidopsis homologues of tethering factors and small GTPases at the Golgi stacks in planta. Co‐expression of the coiled‐coil proteins AtGRIP and golgin candidate 5 (GC5) [TATA element modulatory factor (TMF)] and the putative post‐Golgi tethering factor AtVPS52 fused to green fluorescent protein (GFP) with mRFP (monomeric red fluorescent protein) fusions to the small GTPases AtRab‐H1b, AtRab‐H1c and AtARL1 resulted in reduced GFP lifetimes compared to the control proteins. Interestingly, we observed differences in GFP quenching between the different protein combinations as well as selective quenching of GFP‐AtVPS52‐labelled structures. The data presented here indicate that the FRET‐FLIM technique should prove invaluable in assessing protein interactions in living plant cells at the organelle level.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2011

Bleach it, switch it, bounce it, pull it: using lasers to reveal plant cell dynamics

Imogen Sparkes; Katja Graumann; A. Martinière; Jennifer Schoberer; Pengwei Wang; Anne Osterrieder

Since the production of Robert Hooke’s intricate diagrams of the microcomos in the mid-seventeenth century (Hooke, 1665), the use of the light microscope has undergone a technological revolution. Techniques and optics have greatly advanced, allowing us not only to describe the morphology of a specimen but also to probe the movement and dynamics of proteins and organelles within the cell. One of the most significant molecular and genetic advancements has been the isolation, engineering, and use of green fluorescent protein (GFP) to allow the visualization of protein fusions. In 2008, the impact GFP has had on cell biology was recognized by awarding the Nobel prize in Chemistry to the scientists involved in the pioneering initial discovery and development of its use as a fluorescent molecular tag. GFP was isolated from the jellyfish Aequorea victoria and has been expressed in a wide range of organisms including several species of plant. Subsequent engineering of GFP has resulted in multiple fluorophores with differing excitation/emission spectra allowing the visualization of two protein fusions (dual imaging) in the same cell (Shaner et al., 2007). There are numerous fluorescent protein fusions readily available to light up any organelle (Nelson et al., 2007; Geldner et al., 2009), and the generation of fusions can easily be produced using the available binary vectors (Karimi et al., 2007). This commentary briefly summarizes laser-based microscopy techniques which have expanded beyond the pure analysis of protein localization and steady-state levels, gene expression or organelle movement to allow the quantitative studies of protein and organelle dynamics. Bleach it, switch it: photobleaching, photoactivation, and photoconvertible proteins


Traffic | 2010

Sequential Depletion and Acquisition of Proteins during Golgi Stack Disassembly and Reformation

Jennifer Schoberer; John Runions; Herta Steinkellner; Richard Strasser; Chris Hawes; Anne Osterrieder

Herein, we report the stepwise transport of multiple plant Golgi membrane markers during disassembly of the Golgi apparatus in tobacco leaf epidermal cells in response to the induced expression of the GTP‐locked Sar1p or Brefeldin A (BFA), and reassembly on BFA washout. The distribution of fluorescent Golgi‐resident N‐glycan processing enzymes and matrix proteins (golgins) with specific cis–trans‐Golgi sub‐locations was followed by confocal microscopy during disassembly and reassembly. The first event during Golgi disassembly was the loss of trans‐Golgi enzymes and golgins from Golgi membranes, followed by a sequential redistribution of medial and cis‐Golgi enzymes into the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), whilst golgins were relocated to the ER or cytoplasm. This event was confirmed by fractionation and immuno‐blotting. The sequential redistribution of Golgi components in a trans–cis sequence may highlight a novel retrograde trafficking pathway between the trans‐Golgi and the ER in plants. Release of Golgi markers from the ER upon BFA washout occurred in the opposite sequence, with cis‐matrix proteins labelling Golgi‐like structures before cis/medial enzymes. Trans‐enzyme location was preceded by trans‐matrix proteins being recruited back to Golgi membranes. Our results show that Golgi disassembly and reassembly occur in a highly ordered fashion in plants.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2010

Golgi membrane dynamics after induction of a dominant-negative mutant Sar1 GTPase in tobacco

Anne Osterrieder; Eric Hummel; Claudine M. Carvalho; Chris Hawes

An inducible system has been established in Nicotiana tabacum plants allowing controlled expression of Sar1-GTP and thus the investigation of protein dynamics after inhibition of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to Golgi transport. Complete Golgi disassembly and redistribution of Golgi markers into the ER was observed within 18-24h after induction. At the ultrastructural level Sar1-GTP expression led to a decrease in Golgi stack size followed by Golgi fragmentation and accumulation of vesicle remnants. Induction of Sar1-GTP resulted in redistribution of the green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged Arabidopsis golgins AtCASP and GC1 (golgin candidate 1, an Arabidopsis golgin 84 isoform) into the ER or cytoplasm, respectively. Additionally, both fusion proteins were observed in punctate structures, which co-located with a yellow fluorescent protein (YFP)-tagged version of Sar1-GTP. The Sar1-GTP-inducible system is compared with constitutive Sar1-GTP expression and brefeldin A treatment, and its potential for the study of the composition of ER exit sites and early cis-Golgi structures is discussed.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2010

Inhibition of Golgi function causes plastid starch accumulation

Eric Hummel; Anne Osterrieder; David G. Robinson; Chris Hawes

Little is known about possible interactions between chloroplasts and the Golgi apparatus, although there is increasing evidence for a direct Golgi to chloroplast transport pathway targeting proteins to their destinations within the membranes and stroma of plastids. Here data are presented showing that a blockage of secretion results in a significant increase of starch within plastids. Golgi disassembly promoted either by the secretory inhibitor brefeldin A or through an inducible Sar1-GTP system leads to dramatic starch accumulation in plastids, thus providing evidence for a direct interaction between plastids and Golgi activity. The possibility that starch accumulation is due either to elevated levels of cytosolic sugars because of loss of secretory Golgi activity or even to a blockage of amylase transport from the Golgi to the chloroplast is discussed.


Current Opinion in Plant Biology | 2010

Optical tweezers for the micromanipulation of plant cytoplasm and organelles

Chris Hawes; Anne Osterrieder; Imogen Sparkes; Tijs Ketelaar

Laser trapping of micron-sized particles can be achieved utilizing the radiation pressure generated by a focused infrared laser beam. Thus, it is theoretically possible to trap and manipulate organelles within the cytoplasm and remodel the architecture of the cytoplasm and membrane systems. Here we describe recent progress, using this under utilized technology, in the manipulation of cytoplasmic strands and organelles in plant cells.


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2010

Biogenesis of the plant Golgi apparatus.

Chris Hawes; Jennifer Schoberer; Eric Hummel; Anne Osterrieder

It has long been assumed that the individual cisternal stacks that comprise the plant Golgi apparatus multiply by some kind of fission process. However, more recently, it has been demonstrated that the Golgi apparatus can be experimentally disassembled and the reformation process from the ER (endoplasmic reticulum) monitored sequentially using confocal fluorescence and electron microscopy. Some other evidence suggests that Golgi stacks may arise de novo in cells. In the present paper, we review some of the more recent findings on plant Golgi stack biogenesis and propose a new model for their growth de novo from ER exit sites.

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Chris Hawes

Oxford Brookes University

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Eric Hummel

Oxford Brookes University

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Stanley W. Botchway

Rutherford Appleton Laboratory

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Tijs Ketelaar

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Claudine M. Carvalho

Universidade Federal de Viçosa

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A. Martinière

Oxford Brookes University

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