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Dive into the research topics where Julia Maier is active.

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Featured researches published by Julia Maier.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2014

Recent progress in generating intracellular functional antibody fragments to target and trace cellular components in living cells.

Philipp D. Kaiser; Julia Maier; Bjoern Traenkle; Felix Emele; Ulrich Rothbauer

In biomedical research there is an ongoing demand for new technologies, which help to elucidate disease mechanisms and provide the basis to develop novel therapeutics. In this context a comprehensive understanding of cellular processes and their pathophysiology based on reliable information on abundance, localization, posttranslational modifications and dynamic interactions of cellular components is indispensable. Besides their significant impact as therapeutic molecules, antibodies are arguably the most powerful research tools to study endogenous proteins and other cellular components. However, for cellular diagnostics their use is restricted to endpoint assays using fixed and permeabilized cells. Alternatively, live cell imaging using fluorescent protein-tagged reporters is widely used to study protein localization and dynamics in living cells. However, only artificially introduced chimeric proteins are visualized, whereas the endogenous proteins, their posttranslational modifications as well as non-protein components of the cell remain invisible and cannot be analyzed. To overcome these limitations, traceable intracellular binding molecules provide new opportunities to perform cellular diagnostics in real time. In this review we summarize recent progress in the generation of intracellular and cell penetrating antibodies and their application to target and trace cellular components in living cells. We highlight recent advances in the structural formulation of recombinant antibody formats, reliable screening protocols and sophisticated cellular targeting technologies and propose that such intrabodies will become versatile research tools for real time cell-based diagnostics including target validation and live cell imaging. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Recent advances in molecular engineering of antibody.


Development | 2015

Live imaging of endogenous protein dynamics in zebrafish using chromobodies

Paolo Panza; Julia Maier; Christian Schmees; Ulrich Rothbauer; Christian Söllner

Chromobodies are intracellular nanoprobes that combine the specificity of antibodies with the convenience of live fluorescence imaging in a flexible, DNA-encoded reagent. Here, we present the first application of this technique to an intact living vertebrate organism. We generated zebrafish lines expressing chromobodies that trace the major cytoskeletal component actin and the cell cycle marker PCNA with spatial and temporal specificity. Using these chromobodies, we captured full localization dynamics of the endogenous antigens in different cell types and at different stages of development. For the first time, the chromobody technology enables live imaging of endogenous subcellular structures in an animal, with the remarkable advantage of avoiding target protein overexpression or tagging. In combination with improved chromobody selection systems, we anticipate a rapid adaptation of this technique to new intracellular antigens and model organisms, allowing the faithful description of cellular and molecular processes in their dynamic state. SUMMARY: Chromobodies - small, intracellular fluorescent antibodies - are used to trace endogenous antigens, without the need for direct protein tagging, in zebrafish embryos.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2015

Monitoring Interactions and Dynamics of Endogenous Beta-catenin With Intracellular Nanobodies in Living Cells

Bjoern Traenkle; Felix Emele; Roman Anton; Oliver Poetz; Ragna S. Haeussler; Julia Maier; Philipp D. Kaiser; Armin M. Scholz; Stefan Nueske; Andrea Buchfellner; Tina Romer; Ulrich Rothbauer

β-catenin is the key component of the canonical Wnt pathway and plays a crucial role in a multitude of developmental and homeostatic processes. The different tasks of β-catenin are orchestrated by its subcellular localization and participation in multiprotein complexes. To gain a better understanding of β-catenins role in living cells we have generated a new set of single domain antibodies, referred to as nanobodies, derived from heavy chain antibodies of camelids. We selected nanobodies recognizing the N-terminal, core or C-terminal domain of β-catenin and applied these new high-affinity binders as capture molecules in sandwich immunoassays and co-immunoprecipitations of endogenous β-catenin complexes. In addition, we engineered intracellularly functional anti-β-catenin chromobodies by combining the binding moieties of the nanobodies with fluorescent proteins. For the first time, we were able to visualize the subcellular localization and nuclear translocation of endogenous β-catenin in living cells using these chromobodies. Moreover, the chromobody signal allowed us to trace the accumulation of diffusible, hypo-phosphorylated β-catenin in response to compound treatment in real time using High Content Imaging. The anti-β-catenin nanobodies and chromobodies characterized in this study are versatile tools that enable a novel and unique approach to monitor the dynamics of subcellular β-catenin in biochemical and cell biological assays.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Real-time analysis of epithelial-mesenchymal transition using fluorescent single-domain antibodies.

Julia Maier; Bjoern Traenkle; Ulrich Rothbauer

Vimentin has become an important biomarker for epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), a highly dynamic cellular process involved in the initiation of metastasis and cancer progression. To date there is no approach available to study endogenous vimentin in a physiological context. Here, we describe the selection and targeted modification of novel single-domain antibodies, so-called nanobodies, to trace vimentin in various cellular assays. Most importantly, we generated vimentin chromobodies by combining the binding moieties of the nanobodies with fluorescent proteins. Following chromobody fluorescence in a cancer-relevant cellular model, we were able for the first time to monitor and quantify dynamic changes of endogenous vimentin upon siRNA-mediated knockdown, induction with TGF-β and modification with Withaferin A by high-content imaging. This versatile approach allows detailed studies of the spatiotemporal organization of vimentin in living cells. It enables the identification of vimentin-modulating compounds, thereby providing the basis to screen for novel therapeutics affecting EMT.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Tetra-substituted pyridinylimidazoles as dual inhibitors of p38α mitogen-activated protein kinase and c-Jun N-terminal kinase 3 for potential treatment of neurodegenerative diseases.

Felix Muth; Marcel Günther; Silke M. Bauer; Eva Döring; Sabine Fischer; Julia Maier; Peter Drückes; Jürgen Köppler; Jörg Trappe; Ulrich Rothbauer; Pierre Koch; Stefan Laufer

Tetra-substituted imidazoles were designed as dual inhibitors of c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) 3 and p38α mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase. A library of 45 derivatives was prepared and evaluated in a kinase activity assay for their ability to inhibit both kinases, JNK3 and p38α MAP kinase. Dual inhibitors with IC50 values down to the low double-digit nanomolar range at both enzymes were identified. The best balanced dual JNK3/p38α MAP kinase inhibitors are 6m (IC50: JNK3, 18 nM; p38α, 30 nM) and 14d (IC50: JNK3, 26 nM; p38α, 34 nM) featuring both excellent solubility and metabolic stability. They may serve as useful tool compounds for preclinical proof-of-principle studies in order to validate the synergistic role of both kinases in the progression of Huntingtons disease.


Proteomics | 2013

From spots to beads—PTM‐peptide bead arrays for the characterization of anti‐histone antibodies

Yvonne Heubach; Hannes Planatscher; Cornelia Sommersdorf; Daniel Maisch; Julia Maier; Thomas O. Joos; Markus F. Templin; Oliver Poetz

Antibodies that recognize PTMs of histones play a central role in epigenetic proteomic research. Modification‐specific antibodies are employed in chromatin immunoprecipitation, for Western blotting and during the immunoprecipitation steps for MS‐based global proteomic analyses. Knowledge about the antibodies’ off‐target binding is essential for the interpretation of experimental data. To address this challenge we developed a fast and cost efficient system for generating peptide bead arrays. We employed this method to establish a bead‐based peptide array containing 384 peptides displaying phosphorylated, acetylated, methylated, and citrullinated N‐terminal regions of histones H2A, H2B, H3 and H4 and controls. We profiled the binding of 40 PTM‐specific antibodies important for epigenetic proteomic research.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2016

A Multiplexed High-Content Screening Approach Using the Chromobody Technology to Identify Cell Cycle Modulators in Living Cells.

Kenji Schorpp; Ina Rothenaigner; Julia Maier; Bjoern Traenkle; Ulrich Rothbauer; Kamyar Hadian

Many screening hits show relatively poor quality regarding later efficacy and safety. Therefore, small-molecule screening efforts shift toward high-content analysis providing more detailed information. Here, we describe a novel screening approach to identify cell cycle modulators with low toxicity by combining the Cell Cycle Chromobody (CCC) technology with the CytoTox-Glo (CTG) cytotoxicity assay. The CCC technology employs intracellularly functional single-domain antibodies coupled to a fluorescent protein (chromobodies) to visualize the cell cycle–dependent redistribution of the proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) in living cells. This image-based cell cycle analysis was combined with determination of dead-cell protease activity in cell culture supernatants by the CTG assay. We adopted this multiplex approach to high-throughput format and screened 960 Food and Drug Administration (FDA)–approved drugs. By this, we identified nontoxic compounds, which modulate different cell cycle stages, and validated selected hits in diverse cell lines stably expressing CCC. Additionally, we independently validated these hits by flow cytometry as the current state-of-the-art format for cell cycle analysis. This study demonstrates that CCC imaging is a versatile high-content screening approach to identify cell cycle modulators, which can be multiplexed with cytotoxicity assays for early elimination of toxic compounds during screening.


Cancer Research | 2016

Visualizing Epithelial–Mesenchymal Transition Using the Chromobody Technology

Julia Maier; Bjoern Traenkle; Ulrich Rothbauer

The epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) is a complex cellular program involved in the progression of epithelial cancers to a metastatic stage. Along this process, epithelial traits are repressed in favor of a motile mesenchymal phenotype. A detailed characterization and monitoring of EMT-related processes is required for the design of screening strategies needed to develop novel antimetastatic therapies. Overexpression of the canonical EMT biomarker vimentin correlates with increased tumor growth and invasiveness, as well as with reduced patient survival across various epithelial cancers. Moreover, recent findings have demonstrated an active role of vimentin in regulating and reorganizing the cellular architecture toward a migratory and invasive phenotype. However, current studies suffer from a lack of appropriate methods to trace the induction and dynamics of vimentin in cell-based assays. Recently, we have reported a novel intrabody (chromobody)-based approach to study the spatiotemporal organization of endogenous vimentin upon induction of EMT by high-content imaging. In this review, we discuss the relevance of the chromobody technology with regard to the visualization of EMT-related processes in living systems. Cancer Res; 76(19); 5592-6. ©2016 AACR.


Nature Communications | 2018

A peptide tag-specific nanobody enables high-quality labeling for dSTORM imaging

David Virant; Bjoern Traenkle; Julia Maier; Philipp D. Kaiser; Mona Bodenhöfer; Christian Schmees; Ilijana Vojnovic; Borbála Pisak-Lukáts; Ulrike Endesfelder; Ulrich Rothbauer

Dense fluorophore labeling without compromising the biological target is crucial for genuine super-resolution microscopy. Here we introduce a broadly applicable labeling strategy for fixed and living cells utilizing a short peptide tag-specific nanobody (BC2-tag/bivBC2-Nb). BC2-tagging of ectopically introduced or endogenous proteins does not interfere with the examined structures and bivBC2-Nb staining results in a close-grained fluorophore labeling with minimal linkage errors. This allowed us to perform high-quality dSTORM imaging of various targets in mammalian and yeast cells. We expect that this versatile strategy will render many more demanding cellular targets amenable to dSTORM imaging.Nanobodies (Nbs) coupled to organic dyes are increasingly used for super-resolution cell imaging, but producing gene-specific Nbs is time-consuming. Here the authors present a peptide-tag/Nb combination for dSTORM imaging which can be easily adapted to different targets in fixed and live cells.


Biospektrum | 2018

Nano- und Chromobodies für high-content und super-resolution imaging

Bettina-Maria Keller; Julia Maier; Sören Segan; Björn Tränkle; Ulrich Rothbauer

AbstractNano- and chromobodies are recombinant binding molecules that have expanded the possibilities of advanced cellular imaging. Here we provide an overview how chromobodies can be implemented to visualize localization and dynamics of endogenous proteins in live-cell high-content imaging. Additionally, we highlight recent advances in the development of nanobodies to label cellular structures with high densities and minimal fluorophore displacement for super-resolution microscopy.

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Felix Emele

University of Tübingen

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Oliver Poetz

University of Tübingen

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Roman Anton

University of Tübingen

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