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Featured researches published by Julia Mahamid.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Amorphous calcium phosphate is a major component of the forming fin bones of zebrafish: Indications for an amorphous precursor phase

Julia Mahamid; Amnon Sharir; Lia Addadi; Steve Weiner

A fundamental question in biomineralization is the nature of the first-formed mineral phase. In vertebrate bone formation, this issue has been the subject of a long-standing controversy. We address this key issue using the continuously growing fin bony rays of the Tuebingen long-fin zebrafish as a model for bone mineralization. Employing high-resolution scanning and transmission electron microscopy imaging, electron diffraction, and elemental analysis, we demonstrate the presence of an abundant amorphous calcium phosphate phase in the newly formed fin bones. The extracted amorphous mineral particles crystallize with time, and mineral crystallinity increases during bone maturation. Based on these findings, we propose that this amorphous calcium phosphate phase may be a precursor phase that later transforms into the mature crystalline mineral.


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

Mapping amorphous calcium phosphate transformation into crystalline mineral from the cell to the bone in zebrafish fin rays

Julia Mahamid; Barbara Aichmayer; Eyal Shimoni; Roy Ziblat; Chenghao Li; Stefan Siegel; Oskar Paris; Peter Fratzl; Steve Weiner; Lia Addadi

The continuously forming fin bony rays of zebrafish represent a simple bone model system in which mineralization is temporally and spatially resolved. The mineralized collagen fibrils of the fin bones are identical in structure to those found in all known bone materials. We study the continuous mineralization process within the tissue by using synchrotron microbeam x-ray diffraction and small-angle scattering, combined with cryo-scanning electron microscopy. The former provides information on the mineral phase and the mineral particles size and shape, whereas the latter allows high-resolution imaging of native hydrated tissues. The integration of the two techniques demonstrates that new mineral is delivered and deposited as packages of amorphous calcium phosphate nanospheres, which transform into platelets of crystalline apatite within the collagen matrix.


Science | 2016

Visualizing the molecular sociology at the HeLa cell nuclear periphery

Julia Mahamid; Stefan Pfeffer; Miroslava Schaffer; Elizabeth Villa; Radostin Danev; Luis Kuhn Cuellar; Friedrich Förster; Anthony A. Hyman; Jürgen M. Plitzko; Wolfgang Baumeister

Close-up view of the nuclear periphery Cell biologists would like to be able to visualize complexes inside cells at molecular resolution. Several limitations, however, have prevented the field from realizing this goal. The thickness of most cells precludes cryo-electron tomography, a technique which itself does not provide sufficient contrast. Mahamid et al. successfully combined recent advances on both fronts to analyze structures in situ at the periphery of the nucleus. Their images reveal features that inform our understanding of the native organization of nuclear pores and of the nuclear lamina. Science, this issue p. 969 Cryo–electron tomography reveals the molecular organization of the cell nucleus periphery in situ. The molecular organization of eukaryotic nuclear volumes remains largely unexplored. Here we combined recent developments in cryo–electron tomography (cryo-ET) to produce three-dimensional snapshots of the HeLa cell nuclear periphery. Subtomogram averaging and classification of ribosomes revealed the native structure and organization of the cytoplasmic translation machinery. Analysis of a large dynamic structure—the nuclear pore complex—revealed variations detectable at the level of individual complexes. Cryo-ET was used to visualize previously elusive structures, such as nucleosome chains and the filaments of the nuclear lamina, in situ. Elucidation of the lamina structure provides insight into its contribution to metazoan nuclear stiffness.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2011

Bone mineralization proceeds through intracellular calcium phosphate loaded vesicles: A cryo-electron microscopy study

Julia Mahamid; Amnon Sharir; Dvir Gur; Elazar Zelzer; Lia Addadi; Steve Weiner

Bone is the most widespread mineralized tissue in vertebrates and its formation is orchestrated by specialized cells - the osteoblasts. Crystalline carbonated hydroxyapatite, an inorganic calcium phosphate mineral, constitutes a substantial fraction of mature bone tissue. Yet key aspects of the mineral formation mechanism, transport pathways and deposition in the extracellular matrix remain unidentified. Using cryo-electron microscopy on native frozen-hydrated tissues we show that during mineralization of developing mouse calvaria and long bones, bone-lining cells concentrate membrane-bound mineral granules within intracellular vesicles. Elemental analysis and electron diffraction show that the intracellular mineral granules consist of disordered calcium phosphate, a highly metastable phase and a potential precursor of carbonated hydroxyapatite. The intracellular mineral contains considerably less calcium than expected for synthetic amorphous calcium phosphate, suggesting the presence of a cellular mechanism by which phosphate entities are first formed and thereafter gradually sequester calcium within the vesicles. We thus demonstrate that in vivo osteoblasts actively produce disordered mineral packets within intracellular vesicles for mineralization of the extracellular developing bone tissue. The use of a highly disordered precursor mineral phase that later crystallizes within an extracellular matrix is a strategy employed in the formation of fish fin bones and by various invertebrate phyla. This therefore appears to be a widespread strategy used by many animal phyla, including vertebrates.


CrystEngComm | 2007

Asprich mollusk shell protein: in vitro experiments aimed at elucidating function in CaCO3 crystallization

Yael Politi; Julia Mahamid; Harvey A. Goldberg; Steve Weiner; Lia Addadi

Acidic proteins are key components of the organic matrix of many biologically formed minerals and are therefore thought to play an important role in their formation. Here we study the effect of one unusually acidic protein of the Asprich family, associated with mollusk shell prismatic layer, on the precipitation of CaCO3in vitro. We show that Asprich induces and transiently stabilizes the deposition of amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC). Asprich also induces the formation of ACC when adsorbed onto chitin, a major component of the intracrystalline organic matrix of the prismatic layer. Based on this evidence, combined with previous studies on the forming prisms in the shell layer, we suggest that the in vivo function of Asprich is inducing and stabilizing ACC particles and inhibiting their uncontrolled crystallization until they undergo secondary nucleation on the growing prisms.


Science | 2015

Regulated assembly of a supramolecular centrosome scaffold in vitro

Jeffrey B. Woodruff; Oliver Wueseke; Valeria Viscardi; Julia Mahamid; Stacy D. Ochoa; Jakob Bunkenborg; Per O. Widlund; Andrei Pozniakovsky; Esther Zanin; Shirin Bahmanyar; Andrea Zinke; Sun Hae Hong; Marcus Decker; Wolfgang Baumeister; Jens S. Andersen; Karen Oegema; Anthony A. Hyman

A little bit of this and a little bit of that Centrosomes are the major microtubule-organizing centers in animal cells. Key to this function is the somewhat mysterious pericentriolar material (PCM). Woodruff et al. describe the in vitro reconstitution of PCM assembly. In cells, PCM is recruited by centrioles to form centrosomes that nucleate and anchor microtubules. SPD-5, the main component of the PCM matrix in Caenorhabiditis elegans, polymerized in vitro to form micrometer-sized porous networks. SPD-5 polymerization was directly controlled by the polo family kinase Plk1 and Cep192/SPD-2, two conserved regulators that control PCM assembly across metazoans. Science, this issue p. 808 Centrosome assembly in Caenorhabditis elegans involves self-assembly of an interconnected, micrometer-scale network of proteins. The centrosome organizes microtubule arrays within animal cells and comprises two centrioles surrounded by an amorphous protein mass called the pericentriolar material (PCM). Despite the importance of centrosomes as microtubule-organizing centers, the mechanism and regulation of PCM assembly are not well understood. In Caenorhabditis elegans, PCM assembly requires the coiled-coil protein SPD-5. We found that recombinant SPD-5 could polymerize to form micrometer-sized porous networks in vitro. Network assembly was accelerated by two conserved regulators that control PCM assembly in vivo, Polo-like kinase-1 and SPD-2/Cep192. Only the assembled SPD-5 networks, and not unassembled SPD-5 protein, functioned as a scaffold for other PCM proteins. Thus, PCM size and binding capacity emerge from the regulated polymerization of one coiled-coil protein to form a porous network.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2017

Optimized cryo-focused ion beam sample preparation aimed at in situ structural studies of membrane proteins

Miroslava Schaffer; Julia Mahamid; Benjamin D. Engel; Tim Laugks; Wolfgang Baumeister; Jürgen M. Plitzko

While cryo-electron tomography (cryo-ET) can reveal biological structures in their native state within the cellular environment, it requires the production of high-quality frozen-hydrated sections that are thinner than 300nm. Sample requirements are even more stringent for the visualization of membrane-bound protein complexes within dense cellular regions. Focused ion beam (FIB) sample preparation for transmission electron microscopy (TEM) is a well-established technique in material science, but there are only few examples of biological samples exhibiting sufficient quality for high-resolution in situ investigation by cryo-ET. In this work, we present a comprehensive description of a cryo-sample preparation workflow incorporating additional conductive-coating procedures. These coating steps eliminate the adverse effects of sample charging on imaging with the Volta phase plate, allowing data acquisition with improved contrast. We discuss optimized FIB milling strategies adapted from material science and each critical step required to produce homogeneously thin, non-charging FIB lamellas that make large areas of unperturbed HeLa and Chlamydomonas cells accessible for cryo-ET at molecular resolution.


Cells Tissues Organs | 2011

Crystallization Pathways in Bone

Julia Mahamid; Lia Addadi; Steve Weiner

Many biomineralization processes involve the sequestering of ions by cells and their translocation through the cells to the final deposition site. In many invertebrate crystallization pathways the cells deposit an initial highly disordered mineral phase with intracellular vesicles, and this mineral is subsequently transported into the final deposition site outside the cell. As this initial mineral phase is metastable, it can easily dissolve or crystallize during sample preparation and examination. A cryogenic electron microscopy study of the forming fin bone of a zebra fish strain with continuously growing fins shows that the cells responsible for bone tissue formation do have mineral-bearing intracellular vesicles and that the mineral phase is a highly disordered calcium phosphate. We also show that globules of disordered calcium phosphate are present in the extracellular collageneous matrix and that they are not membrane bound. Close to the mineralization front these globules appear to penetrate into the collagen fibrils where they crystallize to form mature bone. This crystallization pathway is similar to pathways observed in invertebrates, and it differs from the matrix vesicle pathway documented for a variety of vertebrate mineralizing tissues as the extracellular mineral globules are not membrane bound.


Science | 2018

Phase separation of a yeast prion protein promotes cellular fitness

Titus M. Franzmann; Marcus Jahnel; Andrei Pozniakovsky; Julia Mahamid; Alex S. Holehouse; Elisabeth Nüske; Doris Richter; Wolfgang Baumeister; Stephan W. Grill; Rohit V. Pappu; Anthony A. Hyman; Simon Alberti

Biophysical responses of proteins to stress Much recent work has focused on liquid-liquid phase separation as a cellular response to changing physicochemical conditions. Because phase separation responds critically to small changes in conditions such as pH, temperature, or salt, it is in principle an ideal way for a cell to measure and respond to changes in the environment. Small pH changes could, for instance, induce phase separation of compartments that store, protect, or inactivate proteins. Franzmann et al. used the yeast translation termination factor Sup35 as a model for a phase separation–induced stress response. Lowering the pH induced liquid-liquid phase separation of Sup35. The resulting liquid compartments subsequently hardened into gels, which sequestered the termination factor. Raising the pH triggered dissolution of the gels, concomitant with translation restart. Protecting Sup35 in gels could provide a fitness advantage to recovering yeast cells that must restart the translation machinery after stress. Science, this issue p. eaao5654 The prion domain of Sup35 is a pH sensor that promotes stress survival by phase separation. INTRODUCTION The formation of dynamic, membraneless compartments using intracellular phase transitions such as phase separation and gelation provides an efficient way for cells to respond to environmental changes. Recent work has identified a special class of intrinsically disordered domains enriched for polar amino acids such as glycine, glutamine, serine, or tyrosine as potential drivers of phase separation in cells. However, more traditional work has highlighted the ability of these domains to drive the formation of fibrillar aggregates. Such domains are also known as prion domains. They have first been identified in budding yeast proteins that form amyloid-like aggregates. Because these aggregates are heritable and change the activity of the prion-domain–containing protein, they are thought to be a common mechanism for phenotypic inheritance in fungi and other organisms. However, the aggregation of prion domains has also been associated with neurodegenerative diseases in mammals. Therefore, the relationship between the role of these domains as drivers of phase separation and their ability to form prion-like aggregates is unknown. RATIONALE The budding yeast translation termination factor Sup35 is an archetypal prion-domain–containing protein. Sup35 forms irreversible heritable aggregates, and these aggregates have been proposed to be either a disease or an adaptation that generates heritable phenotypic variation in populations of budding yeast. Despite having been described almost 25 years ago, the physiological functions of the Sup35 prion domain and other prion-like domains remain unclear. Uncovering these functions is a prerequisite for understanding the evolutionary pressures shaping prion-like sequences and how their physiological and pathological transitions affect cellular fitness. RESULTS Here, we show that the prion domain of Sup35 drives the reversible phase separation of the translation termination factor into biomolecular condensates. These condensates are distinct and different from fibrillar amyloid-like prion particles. Combining genetic analysis in cells with in vitro reconstitution protein biochemistry and quantitative biophysical methods, we demonstrate that Sup35 condensates form by pH-induced liquid-like phase separation as a response to sudden stress. The condensates are liquid-like initially but subsequently solidify to form protective protein gels. Cryo–electron tomography demonstrates that these gel-like condensates consist of cross-linked Sup35 molecules forming a porous meshwork. A cluster of negatively charged amino acids functions as a pH sensor and regulates condensate formation. The ability to form biomolecular condensates is shared among distantly related budding yeast and fission yeast. This suggests that condensate formation is a conserved and ancestral function of the prion domain of Sup35. In agreement with an important physiological function of the prion domain, the catalytic guanosine triphosphatase (GTPase) domain of the translation termination factor Sup35 readily forms irreversible aggregates in the absence of the prion domain. Consequently, cells lacking the prion domain exhibit impaired translational activity and a growth defect when recovering from stress. These data demonstrate that the prion domain rescues the essential GTPase domain of Sup35 from irreversible aggregation, thus ensuring that the translation termination factor remains functional during harsh environmental conditions. CONCLUSION The prion domain of Sup35 is a highly regulated molecular device that has the ability to sense and respond to physiochemical changes within cells. The N-terminal prion domain provides the interactions that drive liquid phase separation. Phase separation is regulated by the adjacent stress sensor. The synergy of these two modules enables the essential translation termination factor to rapidly form protective condensates during stress. This suggests that prion domains are protein-specific stress sensors and modifiers of protein phase transitions that allow cells to respond to specific environmental conditions. The Sup35 prion domain regulates phase separation of the translation termination factor Sup35 during cellular stress. The translation termination factor Sup35 (depicted in the magnifying glass) consists of a disordered prion domain (cyan) a disordered stress sensor domain (red) and a folded catalytic domain (blue). During growth, Sup35 catalyzes translation termination. During cell stress, the prion domain and the sensor domain act together to promote phase separation into protective and reversible biomolecular condensates. Despite the important role of prion domains in neurodegenerative disease, their physiological function has remained enigmatic. Previous work with yeast prions has defined prion domains as sequences that form self-propagating aggregates. Here, we uncovered an unexpected function of the canonical yeast prion protein Sup35. In stressed conditions, Sup35 formed protective gels via pH-regulated liquid-like phase separation followed by gelation. Phase separation was mediated by the N-terminal prion domain and regulated by the adjacent pH sensor domain. Phase separation promoted yeast cell survival by rescuing the essential Sup35 translation factor from stress-induced damage. Thus, prion-like domains represent conserved environmental stress sensors that facilitate rapid adaptation in unstable environments by modifying protein phase behavior.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2015

A focused ion beam milling and lift-out approach for site-specific preparation of frozen-hydrated lamellas from multicellular organisms.

Julia Mahamid; Ruud Schampers; Hans Persoon; Anthony A. Hyman; Wolfgang Baumeister; Jürgen M. Plitzko

Cryo-electron tomography provides 3D views of cellular architecture with molecular resolution. A principal limitation of cryo-transmission electron microscopy performed on cells or tissues is the accessible specimen thickness. Recently it has been shown that cryo-focused ion beam milling of plunge-frozen eukaryotic cells can produce homogeneously thin, distortion free lamellas for cryo-electron tomography. Multicellular organisms and tissue cannot be properly vitrified and thinned using this technique because they are considerably thicker. High pressure freezing is therefore necessary to provide optimal preservation. Here, we describe a workflow for preparing lamellas from Caenorhabditis elegans worms using cryo-FIB applied to high pressure frozen samples. We employ cryo-planing followed by correlative cryo-fluorescence microscopy to navigate this large multicellular volume and to localize specific targets within. To produce vitreous lamellas amenable to cryo-TEM observations at these targeted locations, we have developed a dedicated lift-out procedure at cryogenic temperature.

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Lia Addadi

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Steve Weiner

Weizmann Institute of Science

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Yael Politi

Weizmann Institute of Science

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