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Dive into the research topics where Berend Snijder is active.

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Featured researches published by Berend Snijder.


Nature | 2009

Population context determines cell-to-cell variability in endocytosis and virus infection

Berend Snijder; Raphael Sacher; Pauli Rämö; Eva-Maria Damm; Prisca Liberali; Lucas Pelkmans

Single-cell heterogeneity in cell populations arises from a combination of intrinsic and extrinsic factors. This heterogeneity has been measured for gene transcription, phosphorylation, cell morphology and drug perturbations, and used to explain various aspects of cellular physiology. In all cases, however, the causes of heterogeneity were not studied. Here we analyse, for the first time, the heterogeneous patterns of related cellular activities, namely virus infection, endocytosis and membrane lipid composition in adherent human cells. We reveal correlations with specific cellular states that are defined by the population context of a cell, and we derive probabilistic models that can explain and predict most cellular heterogeneity of these activities, solely on the basis of each cell’s population context. We find that accounting for population-determined heterogeneity is essential for interpreting differences between the activity levels of cell populations. Finally, we reveal that synergy between two molecular components, focal adhesion kinase and the sphingolipid GM1, enhances the population-determined pattern of simian virus 40 (SV40) infection. Our findings provide an explanation for the origin of heterogeneity patterns of cellular activities in adherent cell populations.


Nature | 2015

SLC38A9 is a component of the lysosomal amino acid sensing machinery that controls mTORC1

Manuele Rebsamen; Lorena Pochini; Taras Stasyk; Mariana E. G. de Araujo; Michele Galluccio; Richard K. Kandasamy; Berend Snijder; Astrid Fauster; Elena L. Rudashevskaya; Manuela Bruckner; Stefania Scorzoni; Przemyslaw A. Filipek; Kilian Huber; Johannes W. Bigenzahn; Leonhard X. Heinz; Claudine Kraft; Keiryn L. Bennett; Cesare Indiveri; Lukas A. Huber; Giulio Superti-Furga

Cell growth and proliferation are tightly linked to nutrient availability. The mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) integrates the presence of growth factors, energy levels, glucose and amino acids to modulate metabolic status and cellular responses. mTORC1 is activated at the surface of lysosomes by the RAG GTPases and the Ragulator complex through a not fully understood mechanism monitoring amino acid availability in the lysosomal lumen and involving the vacuolar H+-ATPase. Here we describe the uncharacterized human member 9 of the solute carrier family 38 (SLC38A9) as a lysosomal membrane-resident protein competent in amino acid transport. Extensive functional proteomic analysis established SLC38A9 as an integral part of the Ragulator–RAG GTPases machinery. Gain of SLC38A9 function rendered cells resistant to amino acid withdrawal, whereas loss of SLC38A9 expression impaired amino-acid-induced mTORC1 activation. Thus SLC38A9 is a physical and functional component of the amino acid sensing machinery that controls the activation of mTOR.


Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology | 2011

Origins of regulated cell-to-cell variability.

Berend Snijder; Lucas Pelkmans

Single-cell measurements and lineage-tracing experiments are revealing that phenotypic cell-to-cell variability is often the result of deterministic processes, despite the existence of intrinsic noise in molecular networks. In most cases, this determinism represents largely uncharacterized molecular regulatory mechanisms, which places the study of cell-to-cell variability in the realm of molecular cell biology. Further research in the field will be important to advance quantitative cell biology because it will provide new insights into the mechanisms by which cells coordinate their intracellular activities in the spatiotemporal context of the multicellular environment.


Cell | 2015

A Call for Systematic Research on Solute Carriers

Adrián César-Razquin; Berend Snijder; Tristan Frappier-Brinton; Ruth Isserlin; Gergely Gyimesi; Xiaoyun Bai; Reinhart A. F. Reithmeier; David Hepworth; Matthias A. Hediger; A. Edwards; Giulio Superti-Furga

Solute carrier (SLC) membrane transport proteins control essential physiological functions, including nutrient uptake, ion transport, and waste removal. SLCs interact with several important drugs, and a quarter of the more than 400 SLC genes are associated with human diseases. Yet, compared to other gene families of similar stature, SLCs are relatively understudied. The time is right for a systematic attack on SLC structure, specificity, and function, taking into account kinship and expression, as well as the dependencies that arise from the common metabolic space.


Molecular Systems Biology | 2012

Single-cell analysis of population context advances RNAi screening at multiple levels

Berend Snijder; Raphael Sacher; Pauli Rämö; Prisca Liberali; Karin Mench; Nina Wolfrum; Laura Burleigh; Cameron C. Scott; Monique H. Verheije; Jason Mercer; Stefan Moese; Thomas Heger; Kristina Theusner; Andreas Jurgeit; David Lamparter; Giuseppe Balistreri; Mario Schelhaas; Cornelis A. M. de Haan; Varpu Marjomäki; Timo Hyypiä; Peter J. M. Rottier; Beate Sodeik; Mark Marsh; Jean Gruenberg; Ali Amara; Urs F. Greber; Ari Helenius; Lucas Pelkmans

Isogenic cells in culture show strong variability, which arises from dynamic adaptations to the microenvironment of individual cells. Here we study the influence of the cell population context, which determines a single cells microenvironment, in image‐based RNAi screens. We developed a comprehensive computational approach that employs Bayesian and multivariate methods at the single‐cell level. We applied these methods to 45 RNA interference screens of various sizes, including 7 druggable genome and 2 genome‐wide screens, analysing 17 different mammalian virus infections and four related cell physiological processes. Analysing cell‐based screens at this depth reveals widespread RNAi‐induced changes in the population context of individual cells leading to indirect RNAi effects, as well as perturbations of cell‐to‐cell variability regulators. We find that accounting for indirect effects improves the consistency between siRNAs targeted against the same gene, and between replicate RNAi screens performed in different cell lines, in different labs, and with different siRNA libraries. In an era where large‐scale RNAi screens are increasingly performed to reach a systems‐level understanding of cellular processes, we show that this is often improved by analyses that account for and incorporate the single‐cell microenvironment.


Planta | 2005

The Arabidopsis LHP1 protein is a component of euchromatin

Marc Libault; Federico Tessadori; Sophie Germann; Berend Snijder; Paul F. Fransz; Valérie Gaudin

The HP1 family proteins are involved in several aspects of chromatin function and regulation in Drosophila, mammals and the fission yeast. Here we investigate the localization of LHP1, the unique Arabidopsis thaliana HP1 homolog known at present time, to approach its function. A functional LHP1–GFP fusion protein, able to restore the wild-type phenotype in the lhp1 mutant, was used to analyze the subnuclear distribution of LHP1 in both A. thaliana and Nicotiana tabacum. In A. thaliana interphase nuclei, LHP1 was predominantly located outside the heterochromatic chromocenters. No major aberrations were observed in heterochromatin content or chromocenter organization in lhp1 plants. These data indicate that LHP1 is mainly involved in euchromatin organization in A. thaliana. In tobacco BY-2 cells, the LHP1 distribution, although in foci, slightly differed suggesting that LHP1 localization is determined by the underlying genome organization of plant species. Truncated LHP1 proteins expressed in vivo allowed us to determine the function of the different segments in the localization. The in foci distribution is dependent on the presence of the two chromo domains, whereas the hinge region has some nucleolus-targeting properties. Furthermore, like the animal HP1β and HP1γ subtypes, LHP1 dissociates from chromosomes during mitosis. In transgenic plants expressing the LHP1–GFP fusion protein, two major localization patterns were observed according to cell types suggesting that localization evolves with age or differentiation states. Our results show conversed characteristics of the A. thaliana HP1 homolog with the mammal HP1γ isoform, besides specific plant properties.


PLOS Pathogens | 2014

Large Scale RNAi Reveals the Requirement of Nuclear Envelope Breakdown for Nuclear Import of Human Papillomaviruses

Inci Aydin; Susanne Weber; Berend Snijder; Pilar Samperio Ventayol; Andreas Kühbacher; Miriam Becker; Patricia M. Day; John T. Schiller; Michael Kann; Lucas Pelkmans; Ari Helenius; Mario Schelhaas

A two-step, high-throughput RNAi silencing screen was used to identify host cell factors required during human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV16) infection. Analysis of validated hits implicated a cluster of mitotic genes and revealed a previously undetermined mechanism for import of the viral DNA (vDNA) into the nucleus. In interphase cells, viruses were endocytosed, routed to the perinuclear area, and uncoated, but the vDNA failed to be imported into the nucleus. Upon nuclear envelope perforation in interphase cells HPV16 infection occured. During mitosis, the vDNA and L2 associated with host cell chromatin on the metaphase plate. Hence, we propose that HPV16 requires nuclear envelope breakdown during mitosis for access of the vDNA to the nucleoplasm. The results accentuate the value of genes found by RNAi screens for investigation of viral infections. The list of cell functions required during HPV16 infection will, moreover, provide a resource for future virus-host cell interaction studies.


Cell | 2015

A Conserved Circular Network of Coregulated Lipids Modulates Innate Immune Responses

Marielle S. Köberlin; Berend Snijder; Leonhard X. Heinz; Christoph Baumann; Astrid Fauster; Gregory I. Vladimer; Anne-Claude Gavin; Giulio Superti-Furga

Summary Lipid composition affects the biophysical properties of membranes that provide a platform for receptor-mediated cellular signaling. To study the regulatory role of membrane lipid composition, we combined genetic perturbations of sphingolipid metabolism with the quantification of diverse steps in Toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling and mass spectrometry-based lipidomics. Membrane lipid composition was broadly affected by these perturbations, revealing a circular network of coregulated sphingolipids and glycerophospholipids. This evolutionarily conserved network architecture simultaneously reflected membrane lipid metabolism, subcellular localization, and adaptation mechanisms. Integration of the diverse TLR-induced inflammatory phenotypes with changes in lipid abundance assigned distinct functional roles to individual lipid species organized across the network. This functional annotation accurately predicted the inflammatory response of cells derived from patients suffering from lipid storage disorders, based solely on their altered membrane lipid composition. The analytical strategy described here empowers the understanding of higher-level organization of membrane lipid function in diverse biological systems.


Molecular Systems Biology | 2014

RNAi screen of Salmonella invasion shows role of COPI in membrane targeting of cholesterol and Cdc42

Benjamin Misselwitz; Sabrina Dilling; Pascale Vonaesch; Raphael Sacher; Berend Snijder; Markus C. Schlumberger; Samuel Rout; Manuel Stark; Christian von Mering; Lucas Pelkmans; Wolf-Dietrich Hardt

The pathogen Salmonella Typhimurium is a common cause of diarrhea and invades the gut tissue by injecting a cocktail of virulence factors into epithelial cells, triggering actin rearrangements, membrane ruffling and pathogen entry. One of these factors is SopE, a G‐nucleotide exchange factor for the host cellular Rho GTPases Rac1 and Cdc42. How SopE mediates cellular invasion is incompletely understood. Using genome‐scale RNAi screening we identified 72 known and novel host cell proteins affecting SopE‐mediated entry. Follow‐up assays assigned these ‘hits’ to particular steps of the invasion process; i.e., binding, effector injection, membrane ruffling, membrane closure and maturation of the Salmonella‐containing vacuole. Depletion of the COPI complex revealed a unique effect on virulence factor injection and membrane ruffling. Both effects are attributable to mislocalization of cholesterol, sphingolipids, Rac1 and Cdc42 away from the plasma membrane into a large intracellular compartment. Equivalent results were obtained with the vesicular stomatitis virus. Therefore, COPI‐facilitated maintenance of lipids may represent a novel, unifying mechanism essential for a wide range of pathogens, offering opportunities for designing new drugs.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2015

Human Haploid Cell Genetics Reveals Roles for Lipid Metabolism Genes in Nonapoptotic Cell Death

Scott J. Dixon; Georg E. Winter; Leila S. Musavi; Eric D. Lee; Berend Snijder; Manuele Rebsamen; Giulio Superti-Furga; Brent R. Stockwell

Little is known about the regulation of nonapoptotic cell death. Using massive insertional mutagenesis of haploid KBM7 cells we identified nine genes involved in small-molecule-induced nonapoptotic cell death, including mediators of fatty acid metabolism (ACSL4) and lipid remodeling (LPCAT3) in ferroptosis. One novel compound, CIL56, triggered cell death dependent upon the rate-limiting de novo lipid synthetic enzyme ACC1. These results provide insight into the genetic regulation of cell death and highlight the central role of lipid metabolism in nonapoptotic cell death.

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Giulio Superti-Furga

Medical University of Vienna

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Gregory I. Vladimer

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Manuele Rebsamen

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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Richard K. Kandasamy

Austrian Academy of Sciences

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