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Dive into the research topics where Eva Brundell is active.

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Featured researches published by Eva Brundell.


Molecular Cell | 2000

The Murine SCP3 Gene Is Required for Synaptonemal Complex Assembly, Chromosome Synapsis, and Male Fertility

Li Yuan; Jian-Guo Liu; Jian Zhao; Eva Brundell; Bertil Daneholt; Christer Höög

During meiosis, the homologous chromosomes pair and recombine. An evolutionarily conserved protein structure, the synaptonemal complex (SC), is located along the paired meiotic chromosomes. We have studied the function of a structural component in the axial/lateral element of the SC, the synaptonemal complex protein 3 (SCP3). A null mutation in the SCP3 gene was generated, and we noted that homozygous mutant males were sterile due to massive apoptotic cell death during meiotic prophase. The SCP3-deficient male mice failed to form axial/lateral elements and SCs, and the chromosomes in the mutant spermatocytes did not synapse. While the absence of SCP3 affected the nuclear distribution of DNA repair and recombination proteins (Rad51 and RPA), as well as synaptonemal complex protein 1 (SCP1), a residual chromatin organization remained in the mutant meiotic cells.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2001

A Meiotic Chromosomal Core Consisting of Cohesin Complex Proteins Recruits DNA Recombination Proteins and Promotes Synapsis in the Absence of an Axial Element in Mammalian Meiotic Cells

Jeanette Pelttari; Mary-Rose Hoja; Li Yuan; Jian-Guo Liu; Eva Brundell; Peter B. Moens; Sabine Santucci-Darmanin; Rolf Jessberger; Jose Luis Barbero; Christa Heyting; Christer Höög

ABSTRACT The behavior of meiotic chromosomes differs in several respects from that of their mitotic counterparts, resulting in the generation of genetically distinct haploid cells. This has been attributed in part to a meiosis-specific chromatin-associated protein structure, the synaptonemal complex. This complex consist of two parallel axial elements, each one associated with a pair of sister chromatids, and a transverse filament located between the synapsed homologous chromosomes. Recently, a different protein structure, the cohesin complex, was shown to be associated with meiotic chromosomes and to be required for chromosome segregation. To explore the functions of the two different protein structures, the synaptonemal complex and the cohesin complex, in mammalian male meiotic cells, we have analyzed how absence of the axial element affects early meiotic chromosome behavior. We find that the synaptonemal complex protein 3 (SCP3) is a main determinant of axial-element assembly and is required for attachment of this structure to meiotic chromosomes, whereas SCP2 helps shape the in vivo structure of the axial element. We also show that formation of a cohesin-containing chromosomal core in meiotic nuclei does not require SCP3 or SCP2. Our results also suggest that the cohesin core recruits recombination proteins and promotes synapsis between homologous chromosomes in the absence of an axial element. A model for early meiotic chromosome pairing and synapsis is proposed.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2003

Affinity Proteomics for Systematic Protein Profiling of Chromosome 21 Gene Products in Human Tissues

Charlotta Agaton; Joakim Galli; Ingmarie Höidén Guthenberg; Lars Janzon; Marianne Hansson; Anna Asplund; Eva Brundell; Susanne Lindberg; Irene Ruthberg; Kenneth Wester; Dorothee Wurtz; Christer Höög; Joakim Lundeberg; Stefan Ståhl; Fredrik Pontén; Mathias Uhlén

Here we show that an affinity proteomics strategy using affinity-purified antibodies raised against recombinant human protein fragments can be used for chromosome-wide protein profiling. The approach is based on affinity reagents raised toward bioinformatics-designed protein epitope signature tags corresponding to unique regions of individual gene loci. The genes of human chromosome 21 identified by the genome efforts were investigated, and the success rates for de novo cloning, protein production, and antibody generation were 85, 76, and 56%, respectively. Using human tissue arrays, a systematic profiling of protein expression and subcellular localization was undertaken for the putative gene products. The results suggest that this affinity proteomics strategy can be used to produce a proteome atlas, describing distribution and expression of proteins in normal tissues as well as in common cancers and other forms of diseased tissues.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1998

A Subunit of the Anaphase-Promoting Complex Is a Centromere-Associated Protein in Mammalian Cells

Pia-Marie Jörgensen; Eva Brundell; Maria Starborg; Christer Höög

ABSTRACT Sister chromatids in early mitotic cells are held together mainly by interactions between centromeres. The separation of sister chromatids at the transition between the metaphase and the anaphase stages of mitosis depends on the anaphase-promoting complex (APC), a 20S ubiquitin-ligase complex that targets proteins for destruction. A subunit of the APC, called APC-α in Xenopus (and whose homologs are APC-1, Cut4, BIME, and Tsg24), has recently been identified and shown to be required for entry into anaphase. We now show that the mammalian APC-α homolog, Tsg24, is a centromere-associated protein. While this protein is detected only during the prophase to the anaphase stages of mitosis in Chinese hamster cells, it is constitutively associated with the centromeres in murine cells. We show that there are two forms of this protein in mammalian cells, a soluble form associated with other components of the APC and a centromere-bound form. We also show that both the Tsg24 protein and the Cdc27 protein, another APC component, are bound to isolated mitotic chromosomes. These results therefore support a model in which the APC by ubiquitination of a centromere protein regulates the sister chromatid separation process.


European Journal of Cell Biology | 2000

The spatial and temporal expression of Tekt1, a mouse tektin C homologue, during spermatogenesis suggest that it is involved in the development of the sperm tail basal body and axoneme

Magnus Larsson; Jan M. Norrander; Susanne Gräslund; Eva Brundell; Richard W. Linck; Stefan Ståhl; Christer Höög

Tektins comprise a family of filament-forming proteins that are known to be coassembled with tubulins to form ciliary and flagellar microtubules. Recently we described the sequence of the first mammalian tektin protein, Tekt1 (from mouse testis), which is most homologous with sea urchin tektin C. We have now investigated the temporal and spatial expression of Tekt1 during mouse male germ cell development. By in situ hybridization analysis TEKT1 RNA expression is detected in spermatocytes and in round spermatids in the mouse testis. Immunofluorescence microscopy analysis with anti-Tekt1 antibodies showed no distinct labeling of any subcellular structure in spermatocytes, whereas in round spermatids anti-Tekt1 antibodies co-localize with anti-ANA antibodies to the centrosome. At a later stage, elongating spermatids display a larger area of anti-Tektl staining at their caudal ends; as spermiogenesis proceeds, the anti-Tekt1 staining disappears. Together with other evidence, these results provide the first intraspecies evidence that Tekt1 is transiently associated with the centrosome, and indicates that Tekt1 is one of several tektins to participate in the nucleation of the flagellar axoneme of mature spermatozoa, perhaps being required to assemble the basal body.


Biotechnology and Applied Biochemistry | 2002

A high-stringency proteomics concept aimed for generation of antibodies specific for cDNA-encoded proteins

Susanne Gräslund; Ronny Falk; Eva Brundell; Christer Höög; Stefan Ståhl

A novel dual bacterial expression system, designed for high‐throughput generation of antibodies specific for cDNA‐encoded proteins, is presented. The concept involves parallel expression of cDNA‐encoded proteins, in two vector systems, as fusions with two different tags, both enabling single‐step affinity purification under denaturing conditions. One of the fusion tags includes a portion with documented immunopotentiating effect to stimulate antibody production, and the generated fusion proteins are used to elicit antibodies. The second fusion protein is used in an immobilized form as an affinity ligand to enrich, from the generated antisera, antibodies with selective reactivity to the cDNA‐encoded part. To evaluate the system, five cDNA clones from a mouse testis cDNA library were expressed, and antibodies to these cDNA‐encoded proteins were generated, enriched and used in blotting procedures to determine expression patterns for the native proteins corresponding to the cDNAs. The five antibody preparations showed specific reactivity to the corresponding recombinant cDNA‐encoded proteins, and three of the five antibodies gave specific staining in Western‐blot screening of various cell types and tissue homogenates. When the same five cDNAs were processed and analysed using a single‐vector method, antibodies with a more non‐specific staining were generated. We thus conclude that the presented dual‐vector method offers a highly stringent strategy for generation of monospecific polyclonal antibodies.


European Journal of Cell Biology | 1999

Characterization of a novel nucleolar protein that transiently associates with the condensed chromosomes in mitotic cells

Magnus Larsson; Eva Brundell; Pia-Marie Jörgensen; Stefan Ståhl; Christer Höög

We report the isolation and characterization of a murine gene encoding a conserved mammalian nucleolar protein. The protein, called Tsg118, has a predicted molecular mass of 59.4 kDa and a high content of basic amino acids. A homologous human gene was localized to chromosome 16p12.3. The Tsg118 protein is predominantly expressed in proliferating somatic cells and in male germ cells. Indirect immunofluorescence microscopy analysis using an affinity-purified anti-Tsg118 serum shows colocalization of Tsg118 and a known nucleolar protein, fibrillarin, to the dense fibrillar component of the nucleolus. The nucleolar localization of the Tsg118 protein appears to be temporally restricted to the interphase stages of the somatic cell cycle and to the meiotic phase of spermatogenesis. We find that the Tsg118 protein localizes to the nucleolus in both proliferating and serum-starved cells. Interestingly, as the nucleolar signal disappears in mitotic cells, the Tsg118 protein instead becomes associated with the surface of the condensed chromosomes.


Journal of Cell Science | 1996

The murine Ki-67 cell proliferation antigen accumulates in the nucleolar and heterochromatic regions of interphase cells and at the periphery of the mitotic chromosomes in a process essential for cell cycle progression

Maria Starborg; Katarina Gell; Eva Brundell; Christer Höög


Journal of Biotechnology | 2000

High-throughput protein expression of cDNA products as a tool in functional genomics

Magnus Larsson; Susanne Gräslund; Li Yuan; Eva Brundell; Mathias Uhlén; Christer Höög; Stefan Ståhl


Experimental Cell Research | 1996

Localization of the N-terminus of SCP1 to the central element of the synaptonemal complex and evidence for direct interactions between the N-termini of SCP1 molecules organized head-to-head.

Jian-Guo Liu; Li Yuan; Eva Brundell; Birgitta Björkroth; Bertil Daneholt; Christer Höög

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Li Yuan

Karolinska Institutet

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Stefan Ståhl

Royal Institute of Technology

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Magnus Larsson

Royal Institute of Technology

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Mathias Uhlén

Royal Institute of Technology

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Susanne Gräslund

Royal Institute of Technology

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