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Dive into the research topics where Johanna Bückers is active.

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Featured researches published by Johanna Bückers.


Optics Express | 2011

Simultaneous multi-lifetime multi-color STED imaging for colocalization analyses.

Johanna Bückers; Dominik Wildanger; Giuseppe Vicidomini; Lars Kastrup; Stefan W. Hell

We describe a STED microscope optimized for colocalization experiments with up to three colors. Two fluorescence labels are separated by their fluorescence lifetime whereas a third channel is discriminated by the wavelength of fluorescence emission. Since it does not require a second STED beam, separating by lifetime is insensitive to drift and thus optimally suited for colocalization analyses. Furthermore, we propose a setup having a second STED beam for long duration multicolor recording.


Science | 2011

RIM-binding protein, a central part of the active zone, is essential for neurotransmitter release

Karen S. Y. Liu; Matthias Siebert; Sara Mertel; Elena Knoche; Stephanie Wegener; Carolin Wichmann; Tanja Matkovic; Karzan Muhammad; Harald Depner; Christoph Mettke; Johanna Bückers; Stefan W. Hell; Martin R. Müller; Graeme W. Davis; Dietmar Schmitz; Stephan J. Sigrist

Transmitter release at the fly neuromuscular junction is abolished in the absence of a scaffold protein. The molecular machinery mediating the fusion of synaptic vesicles (SVs) at presynaptic active zone (AZ) membranes has been studied in detail, and several essential components have been identified. AZ-associated protein scaffolds are viewed as only modulatory for transmission. We discovered that Drosophila Rab3-interacting molecule (RIM)–binding protein (DRBP) is essential not only for the integrity of the AZ scaffold but also for exocytotic neurotransmitter release. Two-color stimulated emission depletion microscopy showed that DRBP surrounds the central Ca2+ channel field. In drbp mutants, Ca2+ channel clustering and Ca2+ influx were impaired, and synaptic release probability was drastically reduced. Our data identify RBP family proteins as prime effectors of the AZ scaffold that are essential for the coupling of SVs, Ca2+ channels, and the SV fusion machinery.


Nature Communications | 2013

Choroid plexus transcytosis and exosome shuttling deliver folate into brain parenchyma

Marcel Grapp; Arne Wrede; Michaela Schweizer; Sabine Hüwel; Hans-Joachim Galla; Nicolas Snaidero; Mikael Simons; Johanna Bückers; Philip S. Low; Henning Urlaub; Jutta Gärtner; Robert Steinfeld

Loss of folate receptor-α function is associated with cerebral folate transport deficiency and childhood-onset neurodegeneration. To clarify the mechanism of cerebral folate transport at the blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier, we investigate the transport of 5-methyltetrahydrofolate in polarized cells. Here we identify folate receptor-α-positive intralumenal vesicles within multivesicular bodies and demonstrate the directional cotransport of human folate receptor-α, and labelled folate from the basolateral to the apical membrane in rat choroid plexus cells. Both the apical medium of folate receptor-α-transfected rat choroid plexus cells and human cerebrospinal fluid contain folate receptor-α-positive exosomes. Loss of folate receptor-α-expressing cerebrospinal fluid exosomes correlates with severely reduced 5-methyltetrahydrofolate concentration, corroborating the importance of the folate receptor-α-mediated folate transport in the cerebrospinal fluid. Intraventricular injections of folate receptor-α-positive and -negative exosomes into mouse brains demonstrate folate receptor-α-dependent delivery of exosomes into the brain parenchyma. Our results unravel a new pathway of folate receptor-α-dependent exosome-mediated folate delivery into the brain parenchyma and opens new avenues for cerebral drug targeting.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Endosomal sorting of readily releasable synaptic vesicles

Peer Hoopmann; Annedore Punge; Sina V. Barysch; Volker Westphal; Johanna Bückers; Felipe Opazo; Ioanna Bethani; Marcel A. Lauterbach; Stefan W. Hell; Silvio O. Rizzoli

Neurotransmitter release is achieved through the fusion of synaptic vesicles with the neuronal plasma membrane (exocytosis). Vesicles are then retrieved from the plasma membrane (endocytosis). It was hypothesized more than 3 decades ago that endosomes participate in vesicle recycling, constituting a slow endocytosis pathway required especially after prolonged stimulation. This recycling model predicts that newly endocytosed vesicles fuse with an endosome, which sorts (organizes) the molecules and buds exocytosis-competent vesicles. We analyzed here the endosome function using hippocampal neurons, isolated nerve terminals (synaptosomes), and PC12 cells by stimulated emission depletion microscopy, photooxidation EM, and several conventional microscopy assays. Surprisingly, we found that endosomal sorting is a rapid pathway, which appeared to be involved in the recycling of the initial vesicles to be released on stimulation, the readily releasable pool. In agreement with the endosomal model, the vesicle composition changed after endocytosis, with the newly formed vesicles being enriched in plasma membrane proteins. Vesicle proteins were organized in clusters both in the plasma membrane (on exocytosis) and in the endosome. In the latter compartment, they segregated from plasma membrane components in a process that is likely important for sorting/budding of newly developed vesicles from the endosome.


Traffic | 2010

Limited intermixing of synaptic vesicle components upon vesicle recycling.

Felipe Opazo; Annedore Punge; Johanna Bückers; Peer Hoopmann; Lars Kastrup; Stefan W. Hell; Silvio Rizzoli

Synaptic vesicles recycle repeatedly in order to maintain synaptic transmission. We have previously proposed that upon exocytosis the vesicle components persist as clusters, which would be endocytosed as whole units. It has also been proposed that the vesicle components diffuse into the plasma membrane and are then randomly gathered into new vesicles. We found here that while strong stimulation (releasing the entire recycling pool) causes the diffusion of the vesicle marker synaptotagmin out of synaptic boutons, moderate stimulation (releasing ∼19% of all vesicles) is followed by no measurable diffusion. In agreement with this observation, synaptotagmin molecules labeled with different fluorescently tagged antibodies did not appear to mix upon vesicle recycling, when investigated by subdiffraction resolution stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy. Finally, as protein diffusion from vesicles has been mainly observed using molecules tagged with pH‐sensitive green fluorescent protein (pHluorin), we have also investigated the membrane patterning of several native and pHluorin‐tagged proteins. While the native proteins had a clustered distribution, the GFP‐tagged ones were diffused in the plasma membrane. We conclude that synaptic vesicle components intermix little, at least under moderate stimulation, possibly because of the formation of clusters in the plasma membrane. We suggest that several pHluorin‐tagged vesicle proteins are less well integrated in clusters.


Pmc Biophysics | 2010

Two-color STED microscopy reveals different degrees of colocalization between hexokinase-I and the three human VDAC isoforms

Daniel Neumann; Johanna Bückers; Lars Kastrup; Stefan W. Hell; Stefan Jakobs

The voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC, also known as mitochondrial porin) is the major transport channel mediating the transport of metabolites, including ATP, across the mitochondrial outer membrane. Biochemical data demonstrate the binding of the cytosolic protein hexokinase-I to VDAC, facilitating the direct access of hexokinase-I to the transported ATP. In human cells, three hVDAC isoforms have been identified. However, little is known on the distribution of these isoforms within the outer membrane of mitochondria and to what extent they colocalize with hexokinase-I. In this study we show that whereas hVDAC1 and hVDAC2 are localized predominantly within the same distinct domains in the outer membrane, hVDAC3 is mostly uniformly distributed over the surface of the mitochondrion. We used two-color stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy enabling a lateral resolution of ~40 nm to determine the detailed sub-mitochondrial distribution of the three hVDAC isoforms and hexokinase-I. Individual hVDAC and hexokinase-I clusters could thus be resolved which were concealed in the confocal images. Quantitative colocalization analysis of two-color STED images demonstrates that within the attained resolution, hexokinase-I and hVDAC3 exhibit a higher degree of colocalization than hexokinase-I with either hVDAC1 or hVDAC2. Furthermore, a substantial fraction of the mitochondria-bound hexokinase-I pool does not colocalize with any of the three hVDAC isoforms, suggesting a more complex interplay of these proteins than previously anticipated. This study demonstrates that two-color STED microscopy in conjunction with quantitative colocalization analysis is a powerful tool to study the complex distribution of membrane proteins in organelles such as mitochondria. PACS: 87.16.Tb, 87.85.Rs


Journal of Cell Biology | 2010

Formation of a Bazooka-Stardust complex is essential for plasma membrane polarity in epithelia.

Michael P. Krahn; Johanna Bückers; Lars Kastrup; Andreas Wodarz

Recruitment of the Crumbs–Stardust polarity complex depends on interactions between Bazooka and the Stardust PDZ domain and is regulated by aPKC-mediated phosphorylation.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Spectroscopic Rationale for Efficient Stimulated-Emission Depletion Microscopy Fluorophores

Jun-ichi Hotta; Eduard Fron; Peter Dedecker; Kris P. F. Janssen; Chen Li; Klaus Müllen; Benjamin Harke; Johanna Bückers; Stefan W. Hell; Johan Hofkens

We report a rationale for identifying superior dyes for stimulated-emission depletion (STED) microscopy. We compared the dyes pPDI and pTDI, which displayed excellent photostability in single-molecule spectroscopy. Surprisingly, their photostability and performance in STED microscopy differed significantly. While single pTDI molecules could be visualized with excellent resolution (35 nm), pPDI molecules bleached rapidly under similar conditions. Femtosecond transient absorption measurements proved that the overlap between the stimulated-emission band and the excited-state absorption band is the main reason for the observed difference. Thus, assessment of the excited-state absorption band provides a rational means of dye selection and determination of the optimal wavelength for STED.


Optics Express | 2009

A STED microscope aligned by design

Dominik Wildanger; Johanna Bückers; Volker Westphal; Stefan W. Hell; Lars Kastrup

STED microscopes are commonly built using separate optical paths for the excitation and the STED beam. As a result, the beams must be co-aligned and can be subject to mechanical drift. Here, we present a single-path STED microscope whose beams are aligned by design and hence is insensitive to mechanical drift. The design of a phase plate is described which selectively modulates the STED beam but leaves the excitation beam unaffected. The performance of the single-beam setup is on par with previous dual-beam designs.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

Probing the functional equivalence of otoferlin and synaptotagmin 1 in exocytosis

Ellen Reisinger; Chris Bresee; Jakob Neef; Ramya Nair; Kirsten Reuter; Anna V. Bulankina; Régis Nouvian; Manuel Koch; Johanna Bückers; Lars Kastrup; Isabelle Roux; Christine Petit; Stefan W. Hell; Nils Brose; Jeong-Seop Rhee; Sebastian Kügler; John V. Brigande; Tobias Moser

Cochlear inner hair cells (IHCs) use Ca2+-dependent exocytosis of glutamate to signal sound information. Otoferlin (Otof), a C2 domain protein essential for IHC exocytosis and hearing, may serve as a Ca2+ sensor in vesicle fusion in IHCs that seem to lack the classical neuronal Ca2+ sensors synaptotagmin 1 (Syt1) and Syt2. Support for the Ca2+ sensor of fusion hypothesis for otoferlin function comes from biochemical experiments, but additional roles in late exocytosis upstream of fusion have been indicated by physiological studies. Here, we tested the functional equivalence of otoferlin and Syt1 in three neurosecretory model systems: auditory IHCs, adrenal chromaffin cells, and hippocampal neurons. Long-term and short-term ectopic expression of Syt1 in IHCs of Otof −/− mice by viral gene transfer in the embryonic inner ear and organotypic culture failed to rescue their Ca2+ influx-triggered exocytosis. Conversely, virally mediated overexpression of otoferlin did not restore phasic exocytosis in Syt1-deficient chromaffin cells or neurons but enhanced asynchronous release in the latter. We further tested exocytosis in Otof −/− hippocampal neurons and in Syt1−/− IHCs but found no deficits in vesicle fusion. Expression analysis of different synaptotagmin isoforms indicated that Syt1 and Syt2 are absent from mature IHCs. Our data argue against a simple functional equivalence of the two C2 domain proteins in exocytosis of IHC ribbon synapses, chromaffin cells, and hippocampal synapses.

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Felipe Opazo

University of Göttingen

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Harald Depner

Free University of Berlin

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Karen S. Y. Liu

Free University of Berlin

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