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Dive into the research topics where Corella S. Casas-Delucchi is active.

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Featured researches published by Corella S. Casas-Delucchi.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2010

Modulation of protein properties in living cells using nanobodies

Axel Kirchhofer; Jonas Helma; Katrin Schmidthals; Carina Frauer; Sheng Cui; Annette Karcher; Mireille Pellis; Serge Muyldermans; Corella S. Casas-Delucchi; M. Cristina Cardoso; Heinrich Leonhardt; Karl-Peter Hopfner; Ulrich Rothbauer

Protein conformation is critically linked to function and often controlled by interactions with regulatory factors. Here we report the selection of camelid-derived single-domain antibodies (nanobodies) that modulate the conformation and spectral properties of the green fluorescent protein (GFP). One nanobody could reversibly reduce GFP fluorescence by a factor of 5, whereas its displacement by a second nanobody caused an increase by a factor of 10. Structural analysis of GFP–nanobody complexes revealed that the two nanobodies induce subtle opposing changes in the chromophore environment, leading to altered absorption properties. Unlike conventional antibodies, the small, stable nanobodies are functional in living cells. Nanobody-induced changes were detected by ratio imaging and used to monitor protein expression and subcellular localization as well as translocation events such as the tamoxifen-induced nuclear localization of estrogen receptor. This work demonstrates that protein conformations can be manipulated and studied with nanobodies in living cells.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

Histone hypoacetylation is required to maintain late replication timing of constitutive heterochromatin

Corella S. Casas-Delucchi; Joke G. van Bemmel; Sebastian Haase; Henry D. Herce; Danny Nowak; Daniela Meilinger; Jeffrey H. Stear; Heinrich Leonhardt; M. Cristina Cardoso

The replication of the genome is a spatio-temporally highly organized process. Yet, its flexibility throughout development suggests that this process is not genetically regulated. However, the mechanisms and chromatin modifications controlling replication timing are still unclear. We made use of the prominent structure and defined heterochromatic landscape of pericentric regions as an example of late replicating constitutive heterochromatin. We manipulated the major chromatin markers of these regions, namely histone acetylation, DNA and histone methylation, as well as chromatin condensation and determined the effects of these altered chromatin states on replication timing. Here, we show that manipulation of DNA and histone methylation as well as acetylation levels caused large-scale heterochromatin decondensation. Histone demethylation and the concomitant decondensation, however, did not affect replication timing. In contrast, immuno-FISH and time-lapse analyses showed that lowering DNA methylation, as well as increasing histone acetylation, advanced the onset of heterochromatin replication. While dnmt1−/− cells showed increased histone acetylation at chromocenters, histone hyperacetylation did not induce DNA demethylation. Hence, we propose that histone hypoacetylation is required to maintain normal heterochromatin duplication dynamics. We speculate that a high histone acetylation level might increase the firing efficiency of origins and, concomitantly, advances the replication timing of distinct genomic regions.


Nucleus | 2011

A top-down analysis of Xa- and Xi-territories reveals differences of higher order structure at ≥ 20 Mb genomic length scales.

Kathrin Teller; Doris Illner; Stefanie Thamm; Corella S. Casas-Delucchi; Rogier Versteeg; Mireille H. G. Indemans; Thomas Cremer; Marion Cremer

The active and inactive X (Xa;Xi) territory with its seemingly highly compacted Barr body in nuclei of female mammalian cells provide a key example for studies of structure/function relationships in homologous chromosomes with different functional properties. Here we used about 300 human X-specific large insert clones to generate probe sets, which target physically or functionally defined sub-chromosomal segments. We combined 3D multicolor FISH with quantitative 3D image analysis in order to compare the higher order organization in Xi-and Xa-territories in human diploid fibroblasts (HDFs) at various length scales ranging from about 50 Mb down to 1 Mb. Xi-territories were characterized by a rounder shape as compared to the flatter and more extended shape of Xa-territories. The overall compaction of the entire Xi-territory, including the Barr body, was only 1.2-fold higher than the Xa-territory. Significant differences, however, were noted between distinct subchromosomal segments: At 20 Mb length scales higher compaction in Xi-territories was restricted to specific segments, but higher compaction in these segments was not correlated with gene density, transcriptional activity, LINE content or histone markers locally enriched in Xi-territories. Notably, higher compaction in Xi-territories observed for 20 Mb segments was not reflected accordingly by inclosed segments of 1-4 Mb. We conclude that compaction differences result mainly from a regrouping of ~1 Mb chromatin domains rather than from an increased condensation of individual domains. In contrast to a previous report, genes subject to inactivation as well as escaping from inactivation were not excluded from the interior of the Barr body.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

The histone variant H2A.Bbd is enriched at sites of DNA synthesis

Viola Sansoni; Corella S. Casas-Delucchi; Malini Rajan; Andreas Schmidt; Clemens Bönisch; Andreas W. Thomae; Martin S. Staege; Sandra B. Hake; M. Cristina Cardoso; Axel Imhof

Histone variants play an important role in shaping the mammalian epigenome and their aberrant expression is frequently observed in several types of cancer. However, the mechanisms that mediate their function and the composition of the variant-containing chromatin are still largely unknown. A proteomic interrogation of chromatin containing the different H2A variants macroH2A.1.2, H2A.Bbd and H2A revealed a strikingly different protein composition. Gene ontology analysis reveals a strong enrichment of splicing factors as well as components of the mammalian replisome in H2A.Bbd-containing chromatin. We find H2A.Bbd localizing transiently to sites of DNA synthesis during S-phase and during DNA repair. Cells that express H2A.Bbd have a shortened S-phase and are more susceptible to DNA damage, two phenotypes that are also observed in human Hodgkins lymphoma cells that aberrantly express this variant. Based on our experiments we conclude that H2A.Bbd is targeted to newly synthesized DNA during replication and DNA repair. The transient incorporation of H2A.Bbd may be due to the intrinsic instability of nucleosomes carrying this variant or a faster chromatin loading. This potentially leads to a disturbance of the existing chromatin structure, which may have effects on cell cycle regulation and DNA damage sensitivity.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

Targeted manipulation of heterochromatin rescues MeCP2 Rett mutants and re-establishes higher order chromatin organization

Corella S. Casas-Delucchi; Annette Becker; Janine J. Bolius; M. Cristina Cardoso

Heterochromatic regions represent a significant portion of the mammalian genome and have been implied in several important cellular processes, including cell division and genomic stability. However, its composition and dynamics remain largely unknown. To better understand how heterochromatin functions and how it is organized within the context of the cell nucleus, we have developed molecular tools allowing the targeting of virtually any nuclear factor specifically to heterochromatic regions and, thereby, the manipulation, also in a temporally controlled manner, of its composition. To validate our approach, we have ectopically targeted MeCP2 chromatin binding deficient Rett mutants to constitutive heterochromatic regions and analyze its functional consequences. We could show that, once bound to their endogenous target regions, their ability to re-organize higher order chromatin structure is restored. Furthermore, a temporally controlled targeting strategy allowed us to monitor MeCP2-mediated chromatin rearrangements in vivo and to visualize large-scale chromatin movements over several micrometers, as well as heterochromatic foci fusion events. This novel strategy enables specific tethering of any protein to heterochromatin and lays the ground for controlled manipulation of its composition and organization.


Nucleus | 2011

Epigenetic control of DNA replication dynamics in mammals

Corella S. Casas-Delucchi; M. Cristina Cardoso

Every time a cell divides it must ensure that its genetic information is accurately duplicated and dis-tributed equally to the two daughter cells. This fundamental biological process is conserved through-out all kingdoms of life and relies on the correct and complete duplication of the DNA before a cell can divide and give rise to other cells or to multicellular organisms. Any mistakes in this process can result in genetic mutations or karyotype aberrations, which may lead to disease or even death. Whereas in prokaryotes the entire genome is replicated from a single origin, the increased genome size and complexity in mammals requires the spatio-temporal coordination of thousands of replica-tion origins. Furthermore, this spatio-temporal order of genome replication changes throughout de-velopment and cellular differentiation. Here we present and discuss current knowledge on the con-trol of DNA replication dynamics in mammals and the role of chromatin modifications in this basic biological process.


indian conference on computer vision, graphics and image processing | 2010

Classification of cell cycle phases in 3D confocal microscopy using PCNA and chromocenter features

Stefan Jaeger; Kannappan Palaniappan; Corella S. Casas-Delucchi; M. Cristina Cardoso

Cell cycle progression studies using subcellular markers offer important insight into cellular mechanisms of disease and therapeutic drug development. Due to the large volumes of microscopy data involved in such studies, a manual approach to extracting quantitative information is not only prohibitive but error prone. We present an automatic cell cycle phase identification algorithm applied to 3D spinning disk confocal microscopy imagery of mouse embryonic fibroblast cells. In our training dataset, each 3D image stack depicts a single cell in a manually identified cell phase, and is recorded via two channels showing the fluorescently marked protein PCNA and the chromocenters, respectively. We use a 3D k-means approach to segment each volume and extract a set of shape and curvature features to characterize the subcellular foci patterns associated with cell cycle phases for each channel. Radial features are used to describe the spatial distribution of PCNA over the course of the cell cycle. A support vector machine (SVM) classifier using 234 features was trained and achieved a recognition rate of 83% for the chromocenter and 86% for the PCNA channels separately on the testing data. A combined SVM classifier using both channels and 468 features further improved the accuracy to nearly 92% for five phases (G1, SE, SM, SL, G2) and shows promising scalability.


PLOS ONE | 2013

A role for MeCP2 in switching gene activity via chromatin unfolding and HP1γ displacement.

Maartje C. Brink; Diewertje G. E. Piebes; Marloes L. de Groote; Martijn S. Luijsterburg; Corella S. Casas-Delucchi; Roel van Driel; Marianne G. Rots; M. Cristina Cardoso; Pernette J. Verschure

Methyl-CpG-binding protein 2 (MeCP2) is generally considered to act as a transcriptional repressor, whereas recent studies suggest that MeCP2 is also involved in transcription activation. To gain insight into this dual function of MeCP2, we assessed the impact of MeCP2 on higher-order chromatin structure in living cells using mammalian cell systems harbouring a lactose operator and reporter gene-containing chromosomal domain to assess the effect of lactose repressor-tagged MeCP2 (and separate MeCP2 domains) binding in living cells. Our data reveal that targeted binding of MeCP2 elicits extensive chromatin unfolding. MeCP2-induced chromatin unfolding is triggered independently of the methyl-cytosine-binding domain. Interestingly, MeCP2 binding triggers the loss of HP1γ at the chromosomal domain and an increased HP1γ mobility, which is not observed for HP1α and HP1β. Surprisingly, MeCP2-induced chromatin unfolding is not associated with transcriptional activation. Our study suggests a novel role for MeCP2 in reorganizing chromatin to facilitate a switch in gene activity.


international conference on pattern recognition | 2010

Dual Channel Colocalization for Cell Cycle Analysis Using 3D Confocal Microscopy

Stefan Jaeger; Kannappan Palaniappan; Corella S. Casas-Delucchi; M. Cristina Cardoso

We present a cell cycle analysis that aims towards improving our previous work by adding another channel and using one more dimension. The data we use is a set of 3D images of mouse cells captured with a spinning disk confocal microscope. All images are available in two channels showing the chromocenters and the fluorescently marked protein PCNA, respectively. In the present paper, we will describe our recent colocalization study in which we use Hessian-based blob detectors in combination with radial features to measure the degree of overlap between both channels. We show that colocalization performed in such a way provides additional discriminative power and allows us to distinguish between phases that we were not able to distinguish with a single 2D channel.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2013

Spatiotemporal Visualization of DNA Replication Dynamics

Marius Reinhart; Corella S. Casas-Delucchi; M. Cristina Cardoso

The ability of cells to copy their DNA allows them to transmit their genetic information to their progeny. In such, this central biological process preserves the instructions that direct the entire development of a cell. Earlier biochemical analysis in vitro and genetic analysis in yeast laid the basis of our understanding of the highly conserved mechanism of DNA replication. Recent advances on labeling and live-cell microscopy permit now the dissection of this fundamental process in vivo within the context of intact cells. In this chapter, we describe in detail how to perform multiple DNA replication labeling and detection allowing high spatial resolution imaging, as well as how to follow DNA replication in living cells allowing high temporal resolution imaging.

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Dive into the Corella S. Casas-Delucchi's collaboration.

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M. Cristina Cardoso

Technische Universität Darmstadt

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Stefan Jaeger

National Institutes of Health

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Alexander Rapp

Technische Universität Darmstadt

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Annette Becker

Technische Universität Darmstadt

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Carina Frauer

Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich

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Clemens Bönisch

Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich

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Daniela Meilinger

Center for Integrated Protein Science Munich

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Danny Nowak

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Henry D. Herce

Technische Universität Darmstadt

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