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Dive into the research topics where Eugenia Butkevich is active.

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Featured researches published by Eugenia Butkevich.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Synaptic scaffolding protein SYD-2 clusters and activates kinesin-3 UNC-104 in C. elegans

Oliver Wagner; Alessandro Esposito; Barbara Köhler; Chih-Wei Chen; Che-Piao Shen; Gong-Her Wu; Eugenia Butkevich; Sailaja Mandalapu; Dirk Wenzel; Fred S. Wouters; Dieter R. Klopfenstein

Kinesin-3 motor UNC-104/KIF1A is essential for transporting synaptic precursors to synapses. Although the mechanism of cargo binding is well understood, little is known how motor activity is regulated. We mapped functional interaction domains between SYD-2 and UNC-104 by using yeast 2-hybrid and pull-down assays and by using FRET/fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy to image the binding of SYD-2 to UNC-104 in living Caenorhabditis elegans. We found that UNC-104 forms SYD-2-dependent axonal clusters (appearing during the transition from L2 to L3 larval stages), which behave in FRAP experiments as dynamic aggregates. High-resolution microscopy reveals that these clusters contain UNC-104 and synaptic precursors (synaptobrevin-1). Analysis of motor motility indicates bi-directional movement of UNC-104, whereas in syd-2 mutants, loss of SYD-2 binding reduces net anterograde movement and velocity (similar after deleting UNC-104s liprin-binding domain), switching to retrograde transport characteristics when no role of SYD-2 on dynein and conventional kinesin UNC-116 motility was found. These data present a kinesin scaffolding protein that controls both motor clustering along axons and motor motility, resulting in reduced cargo transport efficiency upon loss of interaction.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Phosphorylation-regulated axonal dependent transport of syntaxin 1 is mediated by a Kinesin-1 adapter

John Jia En Chua; Eugenia Butkevich; Josephine M. Worseck; Maike Kittelmann; Mads Grønborg; Elmar Behrmann; Ulrich Stelzl; Nathan J. Pavlos; Maciej Lalowski; Stefan Eimer; Erich E. Wanker; Dieter R. Klopfenstein; Reinhard Jahn

Presynaptic nerve terminals are formed from preassembled vesicles that are delivered to the prospective synapse by kinesin-mediated axonal transport. However, precisely how the various cargoes are linked to the motor proteins remains unclear. Here, we report a transport complex linking syntaxin 1a (Stx) and Munc18, two proteins functioning in synaptic vesicle exocytosis at the presynaptic plasma membrane, to the motor protein Kinesin-1 via the kinesin adaptor FEZ1. Mutation of the FEZ1 ortholog UNC-76 in Caenorhabditis elegans causes defects in the axonal transport of Stx. We also show that binding of FEZ1 to Kinesin-1 and Munc18 is regulated by phosphorylation, with a conserved site (serine 58) being essential for binding. When expressed in C. elegans, wild-type but not phosphorylation-deficient FEZ1 (S58A) restored axonal transport of Stx. We conclude that FEZ1 operates as a kinesin adaptor for the transport of Stx, with cargo loading and unloading being regulated by protein kinases.


Histochemistry and Cell Biology | 2009

Limiting transport steps and novel interactions of Connexin-43 along the secretory pathway

Irina V. Majoul; Daria Onichtchouk; Eugenia Butkevich; Dirk Wenzel; L. M. Chailakhyan; Rainer Duden

Connexins are four-transmembrane-domain proteins expressed in all vertebrates which form permeable gap junction channels that connect cells. Here, we analysed Connexin-43 (Cx43) transport to the plasma membrane and studied the effects of small GTPases acting along the secretory pathway. We show that both GTP- and GDP-restricted Sar1 prevents exit of Cx43 from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), but only GTP-restricted Sar1 arrests Cx43 in COP II-coated ER exit sites and accumulates 14-3-3 proteins in the ER fraction. FRET-FLIM data confirm that already in ER exit sites Cx43 exists in oligomeric form, suggesting an in vivo role for 14-3-3 in Cx43 oligomerization. Exit of Cx43 from the ER can be blocked by other factors—such as expression of the β subunit of the COP I coat or p50/dynamitin that acts on the microtubule-based dynein motor complex. GTP-restricted Arf1 blocks Cx43 in the Golgi. Lastly, we show that GTP-restricted Arf6 removes Cx43 gap junction plaques from the cell–cell interface and targets them to degradation. These data provide a molecular explanation of how small GTPases act to regulate Cx43 transport through the secretory pathway, facilitating or abolishing cell–cell communication through gap junctions.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Fast structural responses of gap junction membrane domains to AB5 toxins

Irina V. Majoul; Liang Gao; Eric Betzig; Daria Onichtchouk; Eugenia Butkevich; Yuri Kozlov; Feliksas F. Bukauskas; Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz; Rainer Duden

Significance We used 3D Bessel beam plane illumination and spinning disk microscopy to reveal fast structural changes in the architecture of gap junctions (GJs). Previously, GJ plaques were considered relatively stable structures. We demonstrate extremely rapid remodeling of proteins and lipids within GJ plaques in response to bacterial toxin exposure. Connexin channels within GJ plaques undergo dramatic rearrangements that lead to increased connexin packing and lipid reorganization. These changes likely reflect lipid-phase separation events in the biological membrane. Toxin-induced connexin reorganization depends on lipids and is little modified by membrane–cytoskeletal interactions. We suggest that fast GJ changes upon toxin exposure reveal an early-response system of cells and that GJ plaques are much more dynamic structures than previously recognized. Gap junctions (GJs) represent connexin-rich membrane domains that connect interiors of adjoining cells in mammalian tissues. How fast GJs can respond to bacterial pathogens has not been known previously. Using Bessel beam plane illumination and confocal spinning disk microscopy, we found fast (∼500 ms) formation of connexin-depleted regions (CDRs) inside GJ plaques between cells exposed to AB5 toxins. CDR formation appears as a fast redistribution of connexin channels within GJ plaques with minor changes in outline or geometry. CDR formation does not depend on membrane trafficking or submembrane cytoskeleton and has no effect on GJ conductance. However, CDR responses depend on membrane lipids, can be modified by cholesterol-clustering agents and extracellular K+ ion concentration, and influence cAMP signaling. The CDR response of GJ plaques to bacterial toxins is a phenomenon observed for all tested connexin isoforms. Through signaling, the CDR response may enable cells to sense exposure to AB5 toxins. CDR formation may reflect lipid-phase separation events in the biological membrane of the GJ plaque, leading to increased connexin packing and lipid reorganization. Our data demonstrate very fast dynamics (in the millisecond-to-second range) within GJ plaques, which previously were considered to be relatively stable, long-lived structures.


Nature Communications | 2015

Drebrin-like protein DBN-1 is a sarcomere component that stabilizes actin filaments during muscle contraction

Eugenia Butkevich; Kai Bodensiek; Nikta Fakhri; Kerstin von Roden; Iwan A. T. Schaap; Irina V. Majoul; Christoph F. Schmidt; Dieter R. Klopfenstein

Actin filament organization and stability in the sarcomeres of muscle cells are critical for force generation. Here we identify and functionally characterize a Caenorhabditis elegans drebrin-like protein DBN-1 as a novel constituent of the muscle contraction machinery. In vitro, DBN-1 exhibits actin filament binding and bundling activity. In vivo, DBN-1 is expressed in body wall muscles of C. elegans. During the muscle contraction cycle, DBN-1 alternates location between myosin- and actin-rich regions of the sarcomere. In contracted muscle, DBN-1 is accumulated at I-bands where it likely regulates proper spacing of α-actinin and tropomyosin and protects actin filaments from the interaction with ADF/cofilin. DBN-1 loss of function results in the partial depolymerization of F-actin during muscle contraction. Taken together, our data show that DBN-1 organizes the muscle contractile apparatus maintaining the spatial relationship between actin-binding proteins such as α-actinin, tropomyosin and ADF/cofilin and possibly strengthening actin filaments by bundling.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Phosphorylation of FEZ1 by Microtubule Affinity Regulating Kinases regulates its function in presynaptic protein trafficking.

Eugenia Butkevich; Wolfgang Härtig; Miroslav Nikolov; Christian Erck; Jens Grosche; Henning Urlaub; Christoph F. Schmidt; Dieter R. Klopfenstein; John Jia En Chua

Adapters bind motor proteins to cargoes and therefore play essential roles in Kinesin-1 mediated intracellular transport. The regulatory mechanisms governing adapter functions and the spectrum of cargoes recognized by individual adapters remain poorly defined. Here, we show that cargoes transported by the Kinesin-1 adapter FEZ1 are enriched for presynaptic components and identify that specific phosphorylation of FEZ1 at its serine 58 regulatory site is mediated by microtubule affinity-regulating kinases (MARK/PAR-1). Loss of MARK/PAR-1 impairs axonal transport, with adapter and cargo abnormally co-aggregating in neuronal cell bodies and axons. Presynaptic specializations are markedly reduced and distorted in FEZ1 and MARK/PAR-1 mutants. Strikingly, abnormal co-aggregates of unphosphorylated FEZ1, Kinesin-1 and its putative cargoes are present in brains of transgenic mice modelling aspects of Alzheimer’s disease, a neurodegenerative disorder exhibiting impaired axonal transport and altered MARK activity. Our findings suggest that perturbed FEZ1-mediated synaptic delivery of proteins arising from abnormal signalling potentially contributes to the process of neurodegeneration.


Worm | 2016

Game of Zones: how actin-binding proteins organize muscle contraction

Eugenia Butkevich; Dieter R. Klopfenstein; Christoph F. Schmidt

ABSTRACT Locomotion of C. elegans requires coordinated, efficient transmission of forces generated on the molecular scale by myosin and actin filaments in myocytes to dense bodies and the hypodermis and cuticle enveloping body wall muscles. The complex organization of the acto-myosin scaffold with its accessory proteins provides a fine-tuned machinery regulated by effectors that guarantees that sarcomere units undergo controlled, reversible cycles of contraction and relaxation. Actin filaments in sarcomeres dynamically undergo polymerization and depolymerization. In a recent study, the actin-binding protein DBN-1, the C. elegans ortholog of human drebrin and drebrin-like proteins, was discovered to stabilize actin in muscle cells. DBN-1 reversibly changes location between actin filaments and myosin-rich regions during muscle contraction. Mutations in DBN-1 result in mislocalization of other actin-binding proteins. Here we discuss implications of this finding for the regulation of sarcomere actin stability and the organization of other actin-binding proteins.


Biomedical optics | 2003

Live-cell analyses of transport complex formation with FRET

Irina Majoul; Alexander Goroshkov; Eugenia Butkevich; Sophie Verrier; Rainer Duden

No abstract available.


Current Biology | 2004

Drebrin Is a Novel Connexin-43 Binding Partner that Links Gap Junctions to the Submembrane Cytoskeleton

Eugenia Butkevich; Swen Hülsmann; Dirk Wenzel; Tomoaki Shirao; Rainer Duden; Irina Majoul


Archive | 2017

Drebrins and Connexins: A Biomedical Perspective

Irina V. Majoul; Justus S. Ernesti; Eugenia Butkevich; Rainer Duden

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Christian Erck

University of Göttingen

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