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Dive into the research topics where Marija Vrljic is active.

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Featured researches published by Marija Vrljic.


Biophysical Journal | 2002

Translational diffusion of individual class II MHC membrane proteins in cells.

Marija Vrljic; Stefanie Y. Nishimura; Sophie Brasselet; W. E. Moerner; Harden M. McConnell

Single-molecule epifluorescence microscopy was used to observe the translational motion of GPI-linked and native I-E(k) class II MHC membrane proteins in the plasma membrane of CHO cells. The purpose of the study was to look for deviations from Brownian diffusion that might arise from barriers to this motion. Detergent extraction had suggested that these proteins may be confined to lipid microdomains in the plasma membrane. The individual I-E(k) proteins were visualized with a Cy5-labeled peptide that binds to a specific extracytoplasmic site common to both proteins. Single-molecule trajectories were used to compute a radial distribution of displacements, yielding average diffusion coefficients equal to 0.22 (GPI-linked I-E(k)) and 0.18 microm(2)/s (native I-E(k)). The relative diffusion of pairs of proteins was also studied for intermolecular separations in the range 0.3-1.0 microm, to distinguish between free diffusion of a protein molecule and diffusion of proteins restricted to a rapidly diffusing small domain. Both analyses show that motion is predominantly Brownian. This study finds no strong evidence for significant confinement of either GPI-linked or native I-E(k) in the plasma membrane of CHO cells.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2010

Single-molecule FRET–derived model of the synaptotagmin 1–SNARE fusion complex

Ucheor B. Choi; Pavel Strop; Marija Vrljic; Steven Chu; Axel T. Brunger; Keith Weninger

Synchronous neurotransmission is triggered when Ca2+ binds to synaptotagmin 1 (Syt1), a synaptic-vesicle protein that interacts with SNAREs and membranes. We used single-molecule fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between synaptotagmins two C2 domains to determine that their conformation consists of multiple states with occasional transitions, consistent with domains in random relative motion. SNARE binding results in narrower intrasynaptotagmin FRET distributions and less frequent transitions between states. We obtained an experimentally determined model of the elusive Syt1–SNARE complex using a multibody docking approach with 34 FRET-derived distances as restraints. The Ca2+-binding loops point away from the SNARE complex, so they may interact with the same membrane. The loop arrangement is similar to that of the crystal structure of SNARE-induced Ca2+-bound Syt3, suggesting a common mechanism by which the interaction between synaptotagmins and SNAREs aids in Ca2+-triggered fusion.


Immunity | 1998

Formation of a Highly Peptide-Receptive State of Class II MHC

Joshua D. Rabinowitz; Marija Vrljic; Peter M. Kasson; Michael N. Liang; Robert Busch; J. Jay Boniface; Mark M. Davis; Harden M. McConnell

Peptide binding to class II MHC proteins occurs in acidic endosomal compartments following dissociation of class II-associated invariant chain peptide (CLIP). Based on peptide binding both to empty class II MHC and to molecules preloaded with peptides including CLIP, we find evidence for two isomeric forms of empty MHC. One (inactive) does not bind peptide. The other (active) binds peptide rapidly, with k(on) 1000-fold faster than previous estimates. The active isomer can be formed either by slow isomerization of the inactive molecule or by dissociation of a preformed peptide/MHC complex. In the absence of peptide, the active isomer is unstable, rapidly converting to the inactive isomer. These results demonstrate that fast peptide binding is an inherent property of one isomer of empty class II MHC. Dissociation of peptides such as CLIP yields this transient, peptide-receptive isomer.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

In vitro system capable of differentiating fast Ca2+-triggered content mixing from lipid exchange for mechanistic studies of neurotransmitter release

Minjoung Kyoung; Ankita Srivastava; Yunxiang Zhang; Jiajie Diao; Marija Vrljic; Patricia Grob; Eva Nogales; Steven Chu; Axel T. Brunger

Understanding the molecular principles of synaptic vesicle fusion is a long-sought goal. It requires the development of a synthetic system that allows manipulations and observations not possible in vivo. Here, we report an in vitro system with reconstituted synaptic proteins that meets the long-sought goal to produce fast content release in the millisecond time regime upon Ca2+ triggering. Our system simultaneously monitors both content and lipid exchange, and it starts from stable interacting pairs of donor and acceptor vesicles, mimicking the readily releasable pool of synaptic vesicles prior to an action potential. It differentiates between single-vesicle interaction, hemifusion, and complete fusion, the latter mimicking quantized neurotransmitter release upon exocytosis of synaptic vesicles. Prior to Ca2+ injection, the system is in a state in which spontaneous fusion events between donor and acceptor vesicles are rare. Upon Ca2+ injection, a rapid burst of complete fusion events emerges, followed by a biphasic decay. The present study focuses on neuronal SNAREs, the Ca2+ sensor synaptotagmin 1, and the modulator complexin. However, other synaptic proteins could be added and their function examined. Ca2+ triggering is cooperative, requiring the presence of synaptotagmin, whereas SNAREs alone do not produce a fast fusion burst. Manipulations of the system mimic effects observed in vivo. These results also show that neuronal SNAREs alone do not efficiently produce complete fusion, that the combination of SNAREs with synaptotagmin lowers the activation barriers to full fusion, and that complexin enhances this kinetic control.


eLife | 2012

Synaptic proteins promote calcium-triggered fast transition from point contact to full fusion.

Jiajie Diao; Patricia Grob; Daniel J. Cipriano; Minjoung Kyoung; Yunxiang Zhang; Sachi Shah; Amie Nguyen; Mark S. Padolina; Ankita Srivastava; Marija Vrljic; Ankita Shah; Eva Nogales; Steven Chu; Axel T. Brunger

The molecular underpinnings of synaptic vesicle fusion for fast neurotransmitter release are still unclear. Here, we used a single vesicle–vesicle system with reconstituted SNARE and synaptotagmin-1 proteoliposomes to decipher the temporal sequence of membrane states upon Ca2+-injection at 250–500 μM on a 100-ms timescale. Furthermore, detailed membrane morphologies were imaged with cryo-electron microscopy before and after Ca2+-injection. We discovered a heterogeneous network of immediate and delayed fusion pathways. Remarkably, all instances of Ca2+-triggered immediate fusion started from a membrane–membrane point-contact and proceeded to complete fusion without discernible hemifusion intermediates. In contrast, pathways that involved a stable hemifusion diaphragm only resulted in fusion after many seconds, if at all. When complexin was included, the Ca2+-triggered fusion network shifted towards the immediate pathway, effectively synchronizing fusion, especially at lower Ca2+-concentration. Synaptic proteins may have evolved to select this immediate pathway out of a heterogeneous network of possible membrane fusion pathways. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.00109.001


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Ensemble molecular dynamics yields submillisecond kinetics and intermediates of membrane fusion

Peter M. Kasson; Nicholas W. Kelley; Nina Singhal; Marija Vrljic; Axel T. Brunger; Vijay S. Pande

Lipid membrane fusion is critical to cellular transport and signaling processes such as constitutive secretion, neurotransmitter release, and infection by enveloped viruses. Here, we introduce a powerful computational methodology for simulating membrane fusion from a starting configuration designed to approximate activated prefusion assemblies from neuronal and viral fusion, producing results on a time scale and degree of mechanistic detail not previously possible to our knowledge. We use an approach to the long time scale simulation of fusion by constructing a Markovian state model with large-scale distributed computing, yielding an understanding of fusion mechanisms on time scales previously impossible to simulate to our knowledge. Our simulation data suggest a branched pathway for fusion, in which a common stalk-like intermediate can either rapidly form a fusion pore or remain in a metastable hemifused state that slowly forms fully fused vesicles. This branched reaction pathway provides a mechanistic explanation both for the biphasic fusion kinetics and the stable hemifused intermediates previously observed experimentally. Our distributed computing and Markovian state model approaches provide sufficient sampling to detect rare transitions, a systematic process for analyzing reaction pathways, and the ability to develop quantitative approximations of reaction kinetics for fusion.


Biophysical Journal | 2008

Both MHC Class II and its GPI-Anchored Form Undergo Hop Diffusion as Observed by Single-Molecule Tracking

Yasuhiro Umemura; Marija Vrljic; Stefanie Y. Nishimura; Takahiro K. Fujiwara; Kenichi Suzuki; Akihiro Kusumi

Previously, investigations using single-fluorescent-molecule tracking at frame rates of up to 65 Hz, showed that the transmembrane MHC class II protein and its GPI-anchored modified form expressed in CHO cells undergo simple Brownian diffusion, without any influence of actin depolymerization with cytochalasin D. These results are at apparent variance with the view that GPI-anchored proteins stay with cholesterol-enriched raft domains, as well as with the observation that both lipids and transmembrane proteins undergo short-term confined diffusion within a compartment and long-term hop diffusion between compartments. Here, this apparent discrepancy has been resolved by reexamining the same paradigm, by using both high-speed single-particle tracking (50 kHz) and single fluorescent-molecule tracking (30 Hz). Both molecules exhibited rapid hop diffusion between 40-nm compartments, with an average dwell time of 1-3 ms in each compartment. Cytochalasin D hardly affected the hop diffusion, consistent with previous observations, whereas latrunculin A increased the compartment sizes with concomitant decreases of the hop rates, which led to an approximately 50% increase in the median macroscopic diffusion coefficient. These results indicate that the actin-based membrane skeleton influences the diffusion of both transmembrane and GPI-anchored proteins.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2010

Molecular mechanism of the synaptotagmin–SNARE interaction in Ca2+-triggered vesicle fusion

Marija Vrljic; Pavel Strop; James A. Ernst; Sutton Rb; Steven Chu; Axel T. Brunger

In neurons, SNAREs, synaptotagmin and other factors catalyze Ca2+-triggered fusion of vesicles with the plasma membrane. The molecular mechanism of this process, especially the interaction between synaptotagmin and SNAREs, remains an enigma. Here we characterized this interaction by single-molecule fluorescence microscopy and crystallography. The two rigid Ca2+-binding domains of synaptotagmin 3 (Syt3) undergo large relative motions in solution. Interaction with SNARE complex amplifies a particular state of the two domains that is further enhanced by Ca2+. This state is represented by the first SNARE-induced Ca2+-bound crystal structure of a synaptotagmin fragment containing both domains. The arrangement of the Ca2+-binding loops of this structure of Syt3 matches that of SNARE-bound Syt1, suggesting a conserved feature of synaptotagmins. The loops resemble the membrane-interacting loops of certain viral fusion proteins in the postfusion state, suggesting unexpected similarities between both fusion systems.


Journal of Structural Biology | 2011

Three-dimensional molecular modeling with single molecule FRET.

Axel T. Brunger; Pavel Strop; Marija Vrljic; Steven Chu; Keith Weninger

Single molecule fluorescence energy transfer experiments enable investigations of macromolecular conformation and folding by the introduction of fluorescent dyes at specific sites in the macromolecule. Multiple such experiments can be performed with different labeling site combinations in order to map complex conformational changes or interactions between multiple molecules. Distances that are derived from such experiments can be used for determination of the fluorophore positions by triangulation. When combined with a known structure of the macromolecule(s) to which the fluorophores are attached, a three-dimensional model of the system can be determined. However, care has to be taken to properly derive distance from fluorescence energy transfer efficiency and to recognize the systematic or random errors for this relationship. Here we review the experimental and computational methods used for three-dimensional modeling based on single molecule fluorescence resonance transfer, and describe recent progress in pushing the limits of this approach to macromolecular complexes.


Lab on a Chip | 2010

Single-Molecule Imaging of NGF Axonal Transport in Microfluidic Devices

Kai Zhang; Yasuko Osakada; Marija Vrljic; Liang Chen; Harsha V. Mudrakola; Bianxiao Cui

Nerve growth factor (NGF) signaling begins at the nerve terminal, where it binds and activates membrane receptors and subsequently carries the cell-survival signal to the cell body through the axon. A recent study revealed that the majority of endosomes contain a single NGF molecule, which makes single-molecule imaging an essential tool for NGF studies. Despite being an increasingly popular technique, single-molecule imaging in live cells is often limited by background fluorescence. Here, we employed a microfluidic culture platform to achieve background reduction for single-molecule imaging in live neurons. Microfluidic devices guide the growth of neurons and allow separately controlled microenvironment for cell bodies or axon termini. Designs of microfluidic devices were optimized and a three-compartment device successfully achieved direct observation of axonal transport of single NGF when quantum dot labeled NGF (Qdot-NGF) was applied only to the distal-axon compartment while imaging was carried out exclusively in the cell-body compartment. Qdot-NGF was shown to move exclusively toward the cell body with a characteristic stop-and-go pattern of movements. Measurements at various temperatures show that the rate of NGF retrograde transport decreased exponentially over the range of 36-14 degrees C. A 10 degrees C decrease in temperature resulted in a threefold decrease in the rate of NGF retrograde transport. Our successful measurements of NGF transport suggest that the microfluidic device can serve as a unique platform for single-molecule imaging of molecular processes in neurons.

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Pavel Strop

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Eva Nogales

University of California

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Patricia Grob

University of California

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Ankita Srivastava

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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