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Dive into the research topics where Elisabeth M. Schraner is active.

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Featured researches published by Elisabeth M. Schraner.


Veterinary Microbiology | 1990

Adhesive fimbriae produced in vivo by Escherichia coli O139:K12(B):H1 associated with enterotoxaemia in pigs

H.U. Bertschinger; M. Bachmann; C. Mettler; Andreas Pospischil; Elisabeth M. Schraner; M. Stamm; T. Sydler; Peter Wild

Two strains of E. coli O139:K12 (B):H1 were compared in vitro and in the intestinal environment. Both strains colonized the small intestines of experimentally inoculated pigs and exhibited in vivo a similar relationship to the microvillus border as enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC). Strain 107/86 grown on blood agar expressed numerous long flexible non-haemagglutinating fimbriae which were antigenically distinct from the known fimbriae of porcine ETEC. It adhered in vitro to porcine enterocyte brush border fragments. Strain 124/76 grown on blood agar was devoid of fimbriae and did not adhere to brush border fragments. However, fimbriae morphologically and antigenically indistinguishable from those of strain 107/86 were detected in the intestinal environment by direct immunofluorescence and by immuno electron microscopy.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Herpes Simplex Virus 1 Envelopment Follows Two Diverse Pathways

Helene Leuzinger; Urs Ziegler; Elisabeth M. Schraner; Cornel Fraefel; Daniel L. Glauser; Irma Heid; Mathias Ackermann; Martin Mueller; Peter Wild

ABSTRACT Herpesvirus envelopment is assumed to follow an uneconomical pathway including primary envelopment at the inner nuclear membrane, de-envelopment at the outer nuclear membrane, and reenvelopment at the trans-Golgi network. In contrast to the hypothesis of de-envelopment by fusion of the primary envelope with the outer nuclear membrane, virions were demonstrated to be transported from the perinuclear space to rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) cisternae. Here we show by high-resolution microscopy that herpes simplex virus 1 envelopment follows two diverse pathways. First, nuclear envelopment includes budding of capsids at the inner nuclear membrane into the perinuclear space whereby tegument and a thick electron dense envelope are acquired. The substance responsible for the dense envelope is speculated to enable intraluminal transportation of virions via RER into Golgi cisternae. Within Golgi cisternae, virions are packaged into transport vacuoles containing one or several virions. Second, for cytoplasmic envelopment, capsids gain direct access from the nucleus to the cytoplasm via impaired nuclear pores. Cytoplasmic capsids could bud at the outer nuclear membrane, at membranes of RER, Golgi cisternae, and large vacuoles, and at banana-shaped membranous entities that were found to continue into Golgi membranes. Envelopes originating by budding at the outer nuclear membrane and RER membrane also acquire a dense substance. Budding at Golgi stacks, designated wrapping, results in single virions within small vacuoles that contain electron-dense substances between envelope and vacuolar membranes.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Impairment of Nuclear Pores in Bovine Herpesvirus 1-Infected MDBK Cells

Peter Wild; Monika Engels; Claudia Senn; Kurt Tobler; Urs Ziegler; Elisabeth M. Schraner; Eva Loepfe; Mathias Ackermann; Martin Mueller; Paul Walther

ABSTRACT Herpesvirus capsids originating in the nucleus overcome the nucleocytoplasmic barrier by budding at the inner nuclear membrane. The fate of the resulting virions is still under debate. The fact that capsids approach Golgi membranes from the cytoplasmic side led to the theory of fusion between the viral envelope and the outer nuclear membrane, resulting in the release of capsids into the cytoplasm. We recently discovered a continuum from the perinuclear space to the Golgi complex implying (i) intracisternal viral transportation from the perinuclear space directly into Golgi cisternae and (ii) the existence of an alternative pathway of capsids from the nucleus to the cytoplasm. Here, we analyzed the nuclear surface by high-resolution microscopy. Confocal microscopy of MDBK cells infected with recombinant bovine herpesvirus 1 expressing green fluorescent protein fused to VP26 (a minor capsid protein) revealed distortions of the nuclear surface in the course of viral multiplication. High-resolution scanning and transmission electron microscopy proved the distortions to be related to enlargement of nuclear pores through which nuclear content including capsids protrudes into the cytoplasm, suggesting that capsids use impaired nuclear pores as gateways to gain access to the cytoplasmic matrix. Close examination of Golgi membranes, rough endoplasmic reticulum, and outer nuclear membrane yielded capsid-membrane interaction of high identity to the budding process at the inner nuclear membrane. These observations signify the ability of capsids to induce budding at any cell membrane, provided the fusion machinery is present and/or budding is not suppressed by viral proteins.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2002

Quantification of Feline Herpesvirus 1 DNA in Ocular Fluid Samples of Clinically Diseased Cats by Real-Time TaqMan PCR

Andrea Vögtlin; Cornel Fraefel; S. Albini; Christian M. Leutenegger; Elisabeth M. Schraner; B. Spiess; Hans Lutz; Mathias Ackermann

ABSTRACT A fluorogenic PCR was established for the quantification of feline herpesvirus 1 (FeHV-1) DNA in ocular fluid samples of clinically diseased cats. The new assay was specific for FeHV-1 and sensitive. The 100% detection rate ranged from 0.6 to 6 50% tissue culture infective doses per sample. When spiked samples with known quantities of virus were used, infectious virus titers and quantification of viral DNA by PCR correlated to each other in a linear fashion (R2 = 0.9858) over a range of 4 orders of magnitude. Within this range, it was possible to calculate the FeHV-1 DNA content from a given infectious dose, and vice versa. The new diagnostic procedure was applied to ocular fluid samples from cats experimentally infected with FeHV-1 and specific FeHV-1-free cats. A good correlation between virus titer and quantitative PCR was observed, although only early in infection. In a second stage, the titer of infectious virus collapsed, while the PCR signal remained high. A constantly decreasing PCR signal accompanied by negative virus isolation was characteristic for a final stage of the infection. Finally, clinical samples from 20 cats that were suspected to suffer from FeHV-1 infection were analyzed. By comparing virus titers and quantitative PCR signals, it was possible to determine the current stage of the ongoing infection. Based on these findings, comparison of the results of consecutive samples allows the tracking of the course of the infection. Therefore, the new method combines the advantages of the two previously established conventional methods, qualitative PCR and virus isolation and titration.


Microbiological Research | 2000

Effect of lysozyme or modified lysozyme fragments on DNA and RNA synthesis and membrane permeability of Escherichia coli.

Antonio Pellegrini; Ursula Thomas; Peter Wild; Elisabeth M. Schraner; Roland von Fellenberg

Previously we have shown that chicken egg white lysozyme, an efficient bactericidal agent, affects both gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria independently of its muramidase activity. More recently we reported that the digestion of lysozyme by clostripain yielded a pentadecapeptide, IVSDGNGMNAWVAWR (amino acid 98-112 of chicken egg white lysozyme), with moderate bactericidal activity but without muramidase activity. On the basis of this amino acid sequence three polypeptides, in which asparagine 106 was replaced by arginine (IVSDGNGMRAWVAWR, RAWVAWR, RWVAWR), were synthesized which showed to be strongly bactericidal. To elucidate the mechanisms of action of lysozyme and of the modified antimicrobial polypeptides Escherichia coli strain ML-35p was used. It is an ideal organism to study the outer and the inner membrane permeabilization since it is cryptic for periplasmic beta-lactamase and cytoplasmic beta-galactosidase unless the outer or inner membrane becomes damaged. For the first time we present evidence that lysozyme inhibits DNA and RNA synthesis and in contrast to the present view is able to damage the outer membrane of Escherichia coli. Blockage of macromolecular synthesis, outer membrane damage and inner membrane permeabilization bring about bacterial death. Ultrastructural studies indicate that lysozyme does not affect bacterial morphology but impairs stability of the organism. The bactericidal polypeptides derived from lysozyme block at first the synthesis of DNA and RNA which is followed by an increase of the outer membrane permeabilization causing the bacterial death. Inner membrane permeabilization, caused by RAWVAWR and RWVAWR, follows after the blockage of macromolecular synthesis and outer membrane damage, indicating that inner membrane permeabilization is not the deadly event. Escherichia coli bacteria killed by the substituted bactericidal polypeptides appeared, by electron microscopy, with a condensed cytoplasm and undulated bacterial membrane. So the action of lysozyme and its derived peptides is not identical.


Neuroreport | 1997

Green fluorescent protein as a reporter for retrovirus and helper virus-free HSV-1 amplicon vector-mediated gene transfer into neural cells in culture and in vivo

Aboody-Guterman Ks; Peter A. Pechan; Nikolai G. Rainov; Miguel Sena-Esteves; Andreas Jacobs; Evan Y. Snyder; Peter Wild; Elisabeth M. Schraner; Kurt Tobler; Xandra O. Breakefield; Cornel Fraefel

GREEN fluorescent protein (GFP) is an effective marker for retrovirus and herpes virus vector-mediated gene transfer into various central nervous system-derived cells, both proliferative and non-proliferative, in culture and in vivo. Retrovirus vectors were used to stably transduce several rat and human glioma lines, and a multi-potent mouse neural progenitor line in culture. Implantation of selected pools of transduced glioma cells into rodent brain allowed clear visualization of the tumor and the invading tumor edge. Helper virus-free HSV-1 amplicon vectors successfully transferred gfp into non-dividing primary neural cells in culture and in the rat brain. This study describes the versatility of GFP for: (i) labelling of glioma cells in experimental brain tumor models and neural progenitor cells by retrovirus vectors, and (ii) efficient, non-toxic delivery of genes to post mitotic cells of the nervous system using helper-virus free HSV-1 amplicon vectors.


Traffic | 2008

The single dynamin family protein in the primitive protozoan Giardia lamblia is essential for stage conversion and endocytic transport.

Verena Gaechter; Elisabeth M. Schraner; Peter Wild; Adrian B. Hehl

Dynamins are universally conserved large guanosine triphosphatases, which function as mechanoenzymes in membrane scission. The primitive protozoan Giardia lamblia has a single dynamin‐related protein (GlDRP) with an unusual domain structure. Giardia lacks a Golgi apparatus but generates transient Golgi‐like delay compartments dubbed encystation‐specific vesicles (ESVs), which serve to accumulate and mature cyst wall proteins during differentiation to infectious cyst forms. Here, we analyze the function of GlDRP during growth and encystation and demonstrate that it relocalizes from peripheral endosomal–lysosomal compartments to nascent ESVs. We show that GlDRP is necessary for secretion of the cyst wall material and ESV homeostasis. Expression of a dominant‐negative GlDRP variant does not interfere with ESV formation but blocks cyst formation completely prior to regulated exocytosis. GlDRP colocalizes with clathrin at the cell periphery and is necessary for endocytosis of surface proteins to endosomal–lysosomal organelles in trophozoites. Electron microscopy and live cell imaging reveal gross morphological changes as well as functional impairment of the endocytic system in cells expressing the dominant‐negative GlDRP. Thus, giardial DRP plays a key role in two distinct trafficking pathways and in organelle homeostasis, both essential functions for the proliferation of the parasite in the gut and its transmission to a new host.


Journal of Virology | 2008

Live Visualization of Herpes Simplex Virus Type 1 Compartment Dynamics

Anna Paula de Oliveira; Daniel L. Glauser; Andrea S. Laimbacher; Regina Strasser; Elisabeth M. Schraner; Peter Wild; Urs Ziegler; Xandra O. Breakefield; Mathias Ackermann; Cornel Fraefel

ABSTRACT We have constructed a recombinant herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) that simultaneously encodes selected structural proteins from all three virion compartments—capsid, tegument, and envelope—fused with autofluorescent proteins. This triple-fluorescent recombinant, rHSV-RYC, was replication competent, albeit with delayed kinetics, incorporated the fusion proteins into all three virion compartments, and was comparable to wild-type HSV-1 at the ultrastructural level. The VP26 capsid fusion protein (monomeric red fluorescent protein [mRFP]-VP26) was first observed throughout the nucleus and later accumulated in viral replication compartments. In the course of infection, mRFP-VP26 formed small foci in the periphery of the replication compartments that expanded and coalesced over time into much larger foci. The envelope glycoprotein H (gH) fusion protein (enhanced yellow fluorescent protein [EYFP]-gH) was first observed accumulating in a vesicular pattern in the cytoplasm and was then incorporated primarily into the nuclear membrane. The VP16 tegument fusion protein (VP16-enhanced cyan fluorescent protein [ECFP]) was first observed in a diffuse nuclear pattern and then accumulated in viral replication compartments. In addition, it also formed small foci in the periphery of the replication compartments which, however, did not colocalize with the small mRFP-VP26 foci. Later, VP16-ECFP was redistributed out of the nucleus into the cytoplasm, where it accumulated in vesicular foci and in perinuclear clusters reminiscent of the Golgi apparatus. Late in infection, mRFP-VP26, EYFP-gH, and VP16-ECFP were found colocalizing in dots at the plasma membrane, possibly representing mature progeny virus. In summary, this study provides new insights into the dynamics of compartmentalization and interaction among capsid, tegument, and envelope proteins. Similar strategies can also be applied to assess other dynamic events in the virus life cycle, such as entry and trafficking.


Histochemistry and Cell Biology | 1989

Potency of microwave irradiation during fixation for electron microscopy.

Peter Wild; M. Krähenbühl; Elisabeth M. Schraner

SummaryLiver, skeletal muscle, peripheral nerves, pancreas, thyroid and adrenal cortex were prepared for electron microscopy employing microwave energy either during prefixation with glutaraldehyde or instead of prefixation. Microwave irradiation in the presence of glutaraldehyde in Na/K-phosphate or Na-cacodylate containing CaCl2 and MgCl2 led to distinct appearance of membranes, mainly plasma membrane, and membranes of SER, Golgi complex and mitochondria in liver, pancreas and muscle. The area of high quality fixation, however, was limited to the periphery of samples. On the other hand, SER was dilated in cells of the adrenal cortex, and RER markedly vacuolated in thyroid follicular cells.Microwave irradiation in the presence of Na/K-phosphate and subsequent osmication resulted in preservation of the ultrastructure in similar quality as was obtained by osmication without previous immersion in glutaraldehyde. However, the preservation of SER and Golgi complex in liver and pancreas, and of mitochondria in muscle was greatly improved. Small myelin sheaths remained intact whereas large ones showed focal disintegration.We consider that enhancement of fixation by microwave energy may greatly improve preservation of membranes in some tissues. Successful fixation depends on the use of glutaraldehyde during microwave irradiation, the type of buffer, the addition of ions to increase stabilization, the exposure time to heat, and on postosmication.


Journal of Virology | 2009

Exploring the Nuclear Envelope of Herpes Simplex Virus 1-Infected Cells by High-Resolution Microscopy

Peter Wild; Claudia Senn; Céline L. Manera; Esther Sutter; Elisabeth M. Schraner; Kurt Tobler; Mathias Ackermann; Urs Ziegler; Miriam S. Lucas; Andres Kaech

ABSTRACT Herpesviruses are composed of capsid, tegument, and envelope. Capsids assemble in the nucleus and exit the nucleus by budding at the inner nuclear membrane, acquiring tegument and the envelope. This study focuses on the changes of the nuclear envelope during herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) infection in HeLa and Vero cells by employing preparation techniques at ambient and low temperatures for high-resolution scanning and transmission electron microscopy and confocal laser scanning microscopy. Cryo-field emission scanning electron microscopy of freeze-fractured cells showed for the first time budding of capsids at the nuclear envelope at the third dimension with high activity at 10 h and low activity at 15 h of incubation. The mean number of pores was significantly lower, and the mean interpore distance and the mean interpore area were significantly larger than those for mock-infected cells 15 h after inoculation. Forty-five percent of nuclear pores in HSV-1-infected cells were dilated to more than 140 nm. Nuclear material containing capsids protrude through them into the cytoplasm. Examination of in situ preparations after dry fracturing revealed significant enlargements of the nuclear pore diameter and of the nuclear pore central channel in HSV-1-infected cells compared to mock-infected cells. The demonstration of nucleoporins by confocal microscopy also revealed fewer pores but focal enhancement of fluorescence signals in HSV-1-infected cells, whereas Western blots showed no loss of nucleoporins from cells. The data suggest that infection with HSV-1 alters the number, size, and architecture of nuclear pores without a loss of nucleoporins from altered nuclear pore complexes.

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