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Dive into the research topics where Gerd Schneider is active.

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Featured researches published by Gerd Schneider.


Nature Methods | 2010

Three-dimensional cellular ultrastructure resolved by X-ray microscopy

Gerd Schneider; Peter Guttmann; Stefan Heim; Stefan Rehbein; Florian Mueller; Kunio Nagashima; J. Bernard Heymann; Waltraud G. Müller; James G. McNally

We developed an X-ray microscope using partially coherent object illumination instead of previously used quasi-incoherent illumination. The design permitted the incorporation of a cryogenic tilt stage, enabling tomography of frozen-hydrated, intact adherent cells. We obtained three-dimensional reconstructions of mouse adenocarcinoma cells at ∼36-nm (Rayleigh) and ∼70-nm (Fourier ring correlation) resolution, which allowed us to visualize the double nuclear membrane, nuclear pores, nuclear membrane channels, mitochondrial cristae and lysosomal inclusions.


Cell | 2015

Structural Basis of Vesicle Formation at the Inner Nuclear Membrane

Christoph Hagen; Kyle C. Dent; Tzviya Zeev-Ben-Mordehai; Michael Grange; Jens B. Bosse; Cathy Whittle; Barbara G. Klupp; C. Alistair Siebert; Daven Vasishtan; Felix J.B. Bäuerlein; Juliana Cheleski; Stephan Werner; Peter Guttmann; Stefan Rehbein; Katja Henzler; Justin Demmerle; Barbara Adler; Ulrich H. Koszinowski; Lothar Schermelleh; Gerd Schneider; Lynn W. Enquist; Jürgen M. Plitzko; Thomas C. Mettenleiter; Kay Grünewald

Summary Vesicular nucleo-cytoplasmic transport is becoming recognized as a general cellular mechanism for translocation of large cargoes across the nuclear envelope. Cargo is recruited, enveloped at the inner nuclear membrane (INM), and delivered by membrane fusion at the outer nuclear membrane. To understand the structural underpinning for this trafficking, we investigated nuclear egress of progeny herpesvirus capsids where capsid envelopment is mediated by two viral proteins, forming the nuclear egress complex (NEC). Using a multi-modal imaging approach, we visualized the NEC in situ forming coated vesicles of defined size. Cellular electron cryo-tomography revealed a protein layer showing two distinct hexagonal lattices at its membrane-proximal and membrane-distant faces, respectively. NEC coat architecture was determined by combining this information with integrative modeling using small-angle X-ray scattering data. The molecular arrangement of the NEC establishes the basic mechanism for budding and scission of tailored vesicles at the INM.


Ultramicroscopy | 2014

Imaging endosomes and autophagosomes in whole mammalian cells using correlative cryo-fluorescence and cryo-soft X-ray microscopy (cryo-CLXM).

Elizabeth Duke; Minoo Razi; Anne E. Weston; Peter Guttmann; Stephan Werner; Katja Henzler; Gerd Schneider; Sharon A. Tooze; Lucy M. Collinson

Cryo-soft X-ray tomography (cryo-SXT) is a powerful imaging technique that can extract ultrastructural information from whole, unstained mammalian cells as close to the living state as possible. Subcellular organelles including the nucleus, the Golgi apparatus and mitochondria have been identified by morphology alone, due to the similarity in contrast to transmission electron micrographs. In this study, we used cryo-SXT to image endosomes and autophagosomes, organelles that are particularly susceptible to chemical fixation artefacts during sample preparation for electron microscopy. We used two approaches to identify these compartments. For early and recycling endosomes, which are accessible to externally-loaded markers, we used an anti-transferrin receptor antibody conjugated to 10 nm gold particles. For autophagosomes, which are not accessible to externally-applied markers, we developed a correlative cryo-fluorescence and cryo-SXT workflow (cryo-CLXM) to localise GFP-LC3 and RFP-Atg9. We used a stand-alone cryo-fluorescence stage in the home laboratory to localise the cloned fluorophores, followed by cryo-soft X-ray tomography at the synchrotron to analyse cellular ultrastructure. We mapped the 3D ultrastructure of the endocytic and autophagic structures, and discovered clusters of omegasomes arising from ‘hotspots’ on the ER. Thus, immunogold markers and cryo-CLXM can be used to analyse cellular processes that are inaccessible using other imaging modalities.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2012

Correlative VIS-fluorescence and soft X-ray cryo-microscopy/tomography of adherent cells

Christoph Hagen; Peter Guttmann; Barbara G. Klupp; Stephan Werner; Stefan Rehbein; Thomas C. Mettenleiter; Gerd Schneider; Kay Grünewald

Soft X-ray cryo-microscopy/tomography of vitreous samples is becoming a valuable tool in structural cell biology. Within the ‘water-window’ wavelength region (2.34–4.37 nm), it provides absorption contrast images with high signal to noise ratio and resolution of a few tens of nanometer. Soft X-rays with wavelengths close to the K-absorption edge of oxygen penetrate biological samples with thicknesses in the micrometer range. Here, we report on the application of a recently established extension of the transmission soft X-ray cryo-microscope (HZB TXM) at the beamline U41-XM of the BESSY II electron storage ring by an in-column epi-fluorescence and reflected light cryo-microscope. We demonstrate the new capability for correlative fluorescence and soft X-ray cryo-microscopy/tomography of this instrument along a typical life science experimental approach – the correlation of a fluorophore-tagged protein (pUL34-GFP of pseudorabies virus, PrV, the nuclear membrane-anchored component of the nuclear egress complex of the Herpesviridae which interacts with viral pUL31) in PrV pUL34-GFP/pUL31 coexpressing mammalian cells, with virus-induced vesicular structures in the nucleus, expanding the nucleoplasmic reticulum. Taken together, our results demonstrate new possibilities to study the role of specific proteins in substructures of adherent cells, especially of the nucleus in toto, accessible to electron microscopy in thinned samples only.


Optics Express | 2012

Compact x-ray microscope for the water window based on a high brightness laser plasma source

Herbert Legall; G. Blobel; H. Stiel; W. Sandner; C. Seim; Per Takman; D. H. Martz; M. Selin; Ulrich Vogt; Hans M. Hertz; D. Esser; H. Sipma; J. Luttmann; M. Höfer; H. D. Hoffmann; S. Yulin; T. Feigl; Stefan Rehbein; Peter Guttmann; Gerd Schneider; U. Wiesemann; M. Wirtz; W. Diete

We present a laser plasma based x-ray microscope for the water window employing a high-average power laser system for plasma generation. At 90 W laser power a brightness of 7.4 x 10(11) photons/(s x sr x μm(2)) was measured for the nitrogen Lyα line emission at 2.478 nm. Using a multilayer condenser mirror with 0.3 % reflectivity 10(6) photons/(μm(2) x s) were obtained in the object plane. Microscopy performed at a laser power of 60 W resolves 40 nm lines with an exposure time of 60 s. The exposure time can be further reduced to 20 s by the use of new multilayer condenser optics and operating the laser at its full power of 130 W.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2009

Cryo-X-ray tomography of vaccinia virus membranes and inner compartments

José L. Carrascosa; Francisco Javier Chichón; Eva Pereiro; María Josefa Rodríguez; José Jesús Fernández; Mariano Esteban; Stefan Heim; Peter Guttmann; Gerd Schneider

Vitrified unstained purified vaccinia virus particles have been used as a test sample to evaluate the capabilities of cryo-X-ray tomography. Embedded in a thick layer of vitreous ice, the viral particles representing the mature form of the virus (MV) were visualized using full-field transmission X-ray tomography. The tomographic reconstructions reveal the viral brick-shaped characteristic structures with a size of 250x270x360nm(3). The X-ray tomograms show the presence of a clearly defined external envelope, together with an inner core surrounded by an internal envelope, including areas with clear differential density, which correlate well with those features previously described for these viral particles using electron microscopy analyses. A quantitative assessment of the resolution attained in X-ray and electron tomograms of the viral particles prepared under the same conditions yields values of 25.7 and 6.7nm half-pitch, respectively. Although the resolution of the X-ray microscope is well above the dimensions of the membranous compartments, the strong differential contrast exhibited makes it possible to precisely reveal them without any contrasting reagent within this small and complex biological sample.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2012

Cryo X-ray microscope with flat sample geometry for correlative fluorescence and nanoscale tomographic imaging

Gerd Schneider; Peter Guttmann; Stefan Rehbein; Stephan Werner; Rolf Follath

X-ray imaging offers a new 3-D view into cells. With its ability to penetrate whole hydrated cells it is ideally suited for pairing fluorescence light microscopy and nanoscale X-ray tomography. In this paper, we describe the X-ray optical set-up and the design of the cryo full-field transmission X-ray microscope (TXM) at the electron storage ring BESSY II. Compared to previous TXM set-ups with zone plate condenser monochromator, the new X-ray optical layout employs an undulator source, a spherical grating monochromator and an elliptically shaped glass capillary mirror as condenser. This set-up improves the spectral resolution by an order of magnitude. Furthermore, the partially coherent object illumination improves the contrast transfer of the microscope compared to incoherent conditions. With the new TXM, cells grown on flat support grids can be tilted perpendicular to the optical axis without any geometrical restrictions by the previously required pinhole for the zone plate monochromator close to the sample plane. We also developed an incorporated fluorescence light microscope which permits to record fluorescence, bright field and DIC images of cryogenic cells inside the TXM. For TXM tomography, imaging with multi-keV X-rays is a straightforward approach to increase the depth of focus. Under these conditions phase contrast imaging is necessary. For soft X-rays with shrinking depth of focus towards 10nm spatial resolution, thin optical sections through a thick specimen might be obtained by deconvolution X-ray microscopy. As alternative 3-D X-ray imaging techniques, the confocal cryo-STXM and the dual beam cryo-FIB/STXM with photoelectron detection are proposed.


Optics Express | 2012

Characterization of the resolving power and contrast transfer function of a transmission X-ray microscope with partially coherent illumination

Stefan Rehbein; Peter Guttmann; Stephan Werner; Gerd Schneider

The achievable spatial resolution and the contrast transfer function (CTF) are key parameters characterizing an X-ray microscope. We measured the spatial resolution and the contrast transfer function of the transmission X-ray microscope (TXM) at the electron storage ring BESSY II. The TXM uses the radiation of an undulator source and operates under partially coherent illumination conditions. For spatial resolutions down to 25 nm, our measurements of the CTFs are in good agreement with theoretical CTF data for partial coherence. With higher resolution zone plate objectives, we measured a spatial resolution (half-pitch) of 11 nm in 1st and 3rd order of diffraction. However, with these objectives the stray light level increases significantly.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2012

Towards an atlas of mammalian cell ultrastructure by cryo soft X-ray tomography

Waltraud G. Müller; J. Bernard Heymann; Kunio Nagashima; Peter Guttmann; Stephan Werner; Stefan Rehbein; Gerd Schneider; James G. McNally

We provide a catalog of 3D cryo soft X-ray tomography (cryo-SXT) images obtained from ∼6 to 12μm thick mouse adenocarcinoma cells. Included are multiple representative images of nuclei, nucleoli, nuclear membrane, nuclear membrane channels, mitochondria, lysosomes, endoplasmic reticulum, filaments and plasma membrane, plus three structures not previously described by cryo-SXT, namely Golgi, microvilli and nuclear-membrane blebs. Sections from the 3D cryo-SXT tomograms for all the preceding structures closely resemble those seen by thin-section transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Some structures such as nuclear-membrane channels and nuclear-membrane blebs are more easily detected by cryo-SXT than TEM most likely due to their better contrast and cellular preservation in cryo-SXT combined with the ability to rapidly locate these structures within a full 3D image. We identify and discuss two current limitations in cryo-SXT: variability in image quality and difficulties in detecting weaker contrast structures such as chromatin and various nuclear bodies. Progress on these points is likely to come from the solution of several technical problems in image acquisition, plus the implementation of advanced cryo soft X-ray microscopy approaches such as phase contrast or optical sectioning.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2012

Cryo X-ray nano-tomography of vaccinia virus infected cells

Francisco Javier Chichón; María Josefa Rodríguez; Eva Pereiro; Michele Chiappi; Beatriz Perdiguero; Peter Guttmann; Stephan Werner; Stefan Rehbein; Gerd Schneider; Mariano Esteban; José L. Carrascosa

n Abstractn n We have performed full-field cryo X-ray microscopy in the water window photon energy range on vaccinia virus (VACV) infected cells to produce tomographic reconstructions. PtK2 cells were infected with a GFP-expressing VACV strain and frozen by plunge fast freezing. The infected cells were selected by light fluorescence microscopy of the GFP marker and subsequently imaged in the X-ray microscope under cryogenic conditions. Tomographic tilt series of X-ray images were used to yield three-dimensional reconstructions showing different cell organelles (nuclei, mitochondria, filaments), together with other structures derived from the virus infection. Among them, it was possible to detect viral factories and two types of viral particles related to different maturation steps of VACV (immature and mature particles), which were compared to images obtained by standard electron microscopy of the same type of cells. In addition, the effect of radiation damage during X-ray tomographic acquisition was analyzed. Thin sections studied by electron microscopy revealed that the morphological features of the cells do not present noticeable changes after irradiation. Our findings show that cryo X-ray nano-tomography is a powerful tool for collecting three-dimensional structural information from frozen, unfixed, unstained whole cells with sufficient resolution to detect different virus particles exhibiting distinct maturation levels.n n

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Peter Guttmann

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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Stefan Rehbein

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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Stephan Werner

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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Stefan Heim

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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Katja Henzler

Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin

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Francisco Javier Chichón

Spanish National Research Council

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José L. Carrascosa

Spanish National Research Council

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Barbara G. Klupp

Friedrich Loeffler Institute

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Daniela Drescher

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Janina Kneipp

Humboldt University of Berlin

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