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Featured researches published by Dirk Kamin.


Science | 2008

Video-Rate Far-Field Optical Nanoscopy Dissects Synaptic Vesicle Movement

Volker Westphal; Silvio O. Rizzoli; Marcel A. Lauterbach; Dirk Kamin; Reinhard Jahn; Stefan W. Hell

We present video-rate (28 frames per second) far-field optical imaging with a focal spot size of 62 nanometers in living cells. Fluorescently labeled synaptic vesicles inside the axons of cultured neurons were recorded with stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy in a 2.5-micrometer by 1.8-micrometer field of view. By reducing the cross-sectional area of the focal spot by about a factor of 18 below the diffraction limit (260 nanometers), STED allowed us to map and describe the vesicle mobility within the highly confined space of synaptic boutons. Although restricted within boutons, the vesicle movement was substantially faster in nonbouton areas, consistent with the observation that a sizable vesicle pool continuously transits through the axons. Our study demonstrates the emerging ability of optical microscopy to investigate intracellular physiological processes on the nanoscale in real time.


PLOS Pathogens | 2013

An Overexpression Screen of Toxoplasma gondii Rab-GTPases Reveals Distinct Transport Routes to the Micronemes

Katrin Kremer; Dirk Kamin; Eva Rittweger; Jonathan M. Wilkes; Halley P. Flammer; Sabine Mahler; Joanne Heng; Christopher J. Tonkin; Gordon Langsley; Stefan W. Hell; Vernon B. Carruthers; David J. P. Ferguson; Markus Meissner

The basic organisation of the endomembrane system is conserved in all eukaryotes and comparative genome analyses provides compelling evidence that the endomembrane system of the last common eukaryotic ancestor (LCEA) is complex with many genes required for regulated traffic being present. Although apicomplexan parasites, causative agents of severe human and animal diseases, appear to have only a basic set of trafficking factors such as Rab-GTPases, they evolved unique secretory organelles (micronemes, rhoptries and dense granules) that are sequentially secreted during invasion of the host cell. In order to define the secretory pathway of apicomplexans, we performed an overexpression screen of Rabs in Toxoplasma gondii and identified Rab5A and Rab5C as important regulators of traffic to micronemes and rhoptries. Intriguingly, we found that not all microneme proteins traffic depends on functional Rab5A and Rab5C, indicating the existence of redundant microneme targeting pathways. Using two-colour super-resolution stimulated emission depletion (STED) we verified distinct localisations of independent microneme proteins and demonstrate that micronemal organelles are organised in distinct subsets or subcompartments. Our results suggest that apicomplexan parasites modify classical regulators of the endocytic system to carryout essential parasite-specific roles in the biogenesis of their unique secretory organelles.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2013

The bruchpilot cytomatrix determines the size of the readily releasable pool of synaptic vesicles

Tanja Matkovic; Matthias Siebert; Elena Knoche; Harald Depner; Sara Mertel; David Owald; Manuela Schmidt; Ulrich Thomas; Albert Sickmann; Dirk Kamin; Stefan W. Hell; Jörg Bürger; Christina Hollmann; Thorsten Mielke; Carolin Wichmann; Stephan J. Sigrist

Two Bruchpilot isoforms create a stereotypic arrangement of the cytomatrix that defines the size of the readily releasable pool of synaptic vesicles.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Fluorescent Rhodamines and Fluorogenic Carbopyronines for Super-Resolution STED Microscopy in Living Cells.

Alexey N. Butkevich; Gyuzel Yu. Mitronova; Sven C. Sidenstein; Jessica L. Klocke; Dirk Kamin; Dirk N. H. Meineke; Elisa D'Este; Philip Tobias Kraemer; Johann G. Danzl; Vladimir N. Belov; Stefan W. Hell

Abstract A range of bright and photostable rhodamines and carbopyronines with absorption maxima in the range of λ=500–630 nm were prepared, and enabled the specific labeling of cytoskeletal filaments using HaloTag technology followed by staining with 1 μm solutions of the dye–ligand conjugates. The synthesis, photophysical parameters, fluorogenic behavior, and structure–property relationships of the new dyes are discussed. Light microscopy with stimulated emission depletion (STED) provided one‐ and two‐color images of living cells with an optical resolution of 40–60 nm.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2014

A new probe for super-resolution imaging of membranes elucidates trafficking pathways.

Natalia H. Revelo; Dirk Kamin; Sven Truckenbrodt; Aaron B. Wong; Kirsten Reuter-Jessen; Ellen Reisinger; Tobias Moser; Silvio O. Rizzoli

mCLING is a novel membrane probe for the study of membrane trafficking with demonstrated value in both live and fixed cells across a wide range of biological systems.


Biophysical Journal | 2010

High- and Low-Mobility Stages in the Synaptic Vesicle Cycle

Dirk Kamin; Marcel A. Lauterbach; Volker Westphal; Jan Keller; Andreas Schönle; Stefan W. Hell; Silvio O. Rizzoli

Synaptic vesicles need to be mobile to reach their release sites during synaptic activity. We investigated vesicle mobility throughout the synaptic vesicle cycle using both conventional and subdiffraction-resolution stimulated emission depletion fluorescence microscopy. Vesicle tracking revealed that recently endocytosed synaptic vesicles are highly mobile for a substantial time period after endocytosis. They later undergo a maturation process and integrate into vesicle clusters where they exhibit little mobility. Despite the differences in mobility, both recently endocytosed and mature vesicles are exchanged between synapses. Electrical stimulation does not seem to affect the mobility of the two types of vesicles. After exocytosis, the vesicle material is mobile in the plasma membrane, although the movement appears to be somewhat limited. Increasing the proportion of fused vesicles (by stimulating exocytosis while simultaneously blocking endocytosis) leads to substantially higher mobility. We conclude that both high- and low-mobility states are characteristic of synaptic vesicle movement.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Subcortical cytoskeleton periodicity throughout the nervous system

Elisa D'Este; Dirk Kamin; Caroline Velte; Fabian Göttfert; Mikael Simons; Stefan W. Hell

Superresolution fluorescence microscopy recently revealed a ~190 nm periodic cytoskeleton lattice consisting of actin, spectrin, and other proteins underneath the membrane of cultured hippocampal neurons. Whether the periodic cytoskeleton lattice is a structural feature of all neurons and how it is modified when axons are ensheathed by myelin forming glial cells is not known. Here, STED nanoscopy is used to demonstrate that this structure is a commonplace of virtually all neuron types in vitro. To check how the subcortical meshwork is modified during myelination, we studied sciatic nerve fibers from adult mice. Periodicity of both actin and spectrin was uncovered at the internodes, indicating no substantial differences between unmyelinated and myelinated axons. Remarkably, the actin/spectrin pattern was also detected in glial cells such as cultured oligodendrocyte precursor cells. Altogether our work shows that the periodic subcortical cytoskeletal meshwork is a fundamental characteristic of cells in the nervous system and is not a distinctive feature of neurons, as previously thought.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2012

Distinct Subsets of Syt-IV/BDNF Vesicles Are Sorted to Axons versus Dendrites and Recruited to Synapses by Activity

Camin Dean; Huisheng Liu; Thorsten Staudt; Markus A. Stahlberg; Siv Vingill; Johanna Bückers; Dirk Kamin; Johann Engelhardt; Meyer B. Jackson; Stefan W. Hell; Edwin R. Chapman

BDNF plays a critical role in the regulation of synaptic strength and is essential for long-term potentiation, a phenomenon that underlies learning and memory. However, whether BDNF acts in a diffuse manner or is targeted to specific neuronal subcompartments or synaptic sites to affect circuit function remains unknown. Here, using photoactivation of BDNF or syt-IV (a regulator of exocytosis present on BDNF-containing vesicles) in transfected rat hippocampal neurons, we discovered that distinct subsets of BDNF vesicles are targeted to axons versus dendrites and are not shared between these compartments. Moreover, syt-IV- and BDNF-harboring vesicles are recruited to both presynaptic and postsynaptic sites in response to increased neuronal activity. Finally, using syt-IV knockout mouse neurons, we found that syt-IV is necessary for both presynaptic and postsynaptic scaling of synaptic strength in response to changes in network activity. These findings demonstrate that BDNF-containing vesicles can be targeted to specific sites in neurons and suggest that syt-IV-regulated BDNF secretion is subject to spatial control to regulate synaptic function in a site-specific manner.


Journal of Biophotonics | 2010

Comparing video-rate STED nanoscopy and confocal microscopy of living neurons.

Marcel A. Lauterbach; Jan Keller; Andreas Schönle; Dirk Kamin; Volker Westphal; Silvio O. Rizzoli; Stefan W. Hell

We compare the performance of video-rate Stimulated Emission Depletion (STED) and confocal microscopy in imaging the interior of living neurons. A lateral resolution of 65 nm is observed in STED movies of 28 frames per second, which is 4-fold higher in spatial resolution than in their confocal counterparts. STED microscopy, but not confocal microscopy, allows discrimination of single features at high spatial densities. Specific patterns of movement within the confined space of the axon are revealed in STED microscopy, while confocal imaging is limited to reporting gross motion. Further progress is to be expected, as we demonstrate that the use of continuous wave (CW) beams for excitation and STED is viable for video-rate STED recording of living neurons. Tentatively providing a larger photon flux, CW beams should facilitate extending fast STED imaging towards imaging fainter living samples.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Ultrastructural anatomy of nodes of Ranvier in the peripheral nervous system as revealed by STED microscopy

Elisa D’Este; Dirk Kamin; Francisco Balzarotti; Stefan W. Hell

Significance In vertebrates, the action potential travels along myelin-coated electrically isolated axons and is regenerated at the nodes of Ranvier, which lack myelination and are characterized by a tight interaction between the axon and glial cells. Specific sets of proteins are enriched in each region of the nodes. Thanks to its subdiffraction resolution, stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy here uncovers the organization of 12 of these proteins at the nanoscale. The superresolved imaging reveals an extremely fine interplay and alignment of the axonal and glial cytoskeleton, with a defined ∼190-nm periodicity. Furthermore, the results point to the importance of the lateral organization of proteins at nodal gaps, an aspect that is yet unexplored. We used stimulated emission depletion (STED) superresolution microscopy to analyze the nanoscale organization of 12 glial and axonal proteins at the nodes of Ranvier of teased sciatic nerve fibers. Cytoskeletal proteins of the axon (betaIV spectrin, ankyrin G) exhibit a high degree of one-dimensional longitudinal order at nodal gaps. In contrast, axonal and glial nodal adhesion molecules [neurofascin-186, neuron glial-related cell adhesion molecule (NrCAM)] can arrange in a more complex, 2D hexagonal-like lattice but still feature a ∼190-nm periodicity. Such a lattice-like organization is also found for glial actin. Sodium and potassium channels exhibit a one-dimensional periodicity, with the Nav channels appearing to have a lower degree of organization. At paranodes, both axonal proteins (betaII spectrin, Caspr) and glial proteins (neurofascin-155, ankyrin B) form periodic quasi–one-dimensional arrangements, with a high degree of interdependence between the position of the axonal and the glial proteins. The results indicate the presence of mechanisms that finely align the cytoskeleton of the axon with the one of the Schwann cells, both at paranodal junctions (with myelin loops) and at nodal gaps (with microvilli). Taken together, our observations reveal the importance of the lateral organization of proteins at the nodes of Ranvier and pave the way for deeper investigations of the molecular ultrastructural mechanisms involved in action potential propagation, the formation of the nodes, axon–glia interactions, and demyelination diseases.

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