Michal A. Surma
Max Planck Society
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Publication
Featured researches published by Michal A. Surma.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2009
Robin W. Klemm; Christer S. Ejsing; Michal A. Surma; Hermann-Josef Kaiser; Mathias J. Gerl; Julio L. Sampaio; Quentin de Robillard; Charles Ferguson; Tomasz J. Proszynski; Andrej Shevchenko; Kai Simons
The trans-Golgi network (TGN) is the major sorting station in the secretory pathway of all eukaryotic cells. How the TGN sorts proteins and lipids to generate the enrichment of sphingolipids and sterols at the plasma membrane is poorly understood. To address this fundamental question in membrane trafficking, we devised an immunoisolation procedure for specific recovery of post-Golgi secretory vesicles transporting a transmembrane raft protein from the TGN to the cell surface in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Using a novel quantitative shotgun lipidomics approach, we could demonstrate that TGN sorting selectively enriched ergosterol and sphingolipid species in the immunoisolated secretory vesicles. This finding, for the first time, indicates that the TGN exhibits the capacity to sort membrane lipids. Furthermore, the observation that the immunoisolated vesicles exhibited a higher membrane order than the late Golgi membrane, as measured by C-Laurdan spectrophotometry, strongly suggests that lipid rafts play a role in the TGN-sorting machinery.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Christian Klose; Michal A. Surma; Mathias J. Gerl; Felix Meyenhofer; Andrej Shevchenko; Kai Simons
Mass spectrometry-based shotgun lipidomics has enabled the quantitative and comprehensive assessment of cellular lipid compositions. The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae has proven to be a particularly valuable experimental system for studying lipid-related cellular processes. Here, by applying our shotgun lipidomics platform, we investigated the influence of a variety of commonly used growth conditions on the yeast lipidome, including glycerophospholipids, triglycerides, ergosterol as well as complex sphingolipids. This extensive dataset allowed for a quantitative description of the intrinsic flexibility of a eukaryotic lipidome, thereby providing new insights into the adjustments of lipid biosynthetic pathways. In addition, we established a baseline for future lipidomic experiments in yeast. Finally, flexibility of lipidomic features is proposed as a new parameter for the description of the physiological state of an organism.
Nature Biotechnology | 2013
Janusz Dutkowski; Michael Kramer; Michal A. Surma; Rama Balakrishnan; J. Michael Cherry; Nevan J. Krogan; Trey Ideker
Ontologies have proven very useful for capturing knowledge as a hierarchy of terms and their interrelationships. In biology a major challenge has been to construct ontologies of gene function given incomplete biological knowledge and inconsistencies in how this knowledge is manually curated. Here we show that large networks of gene and protein interactions in Saccharomyces cerevisiae can be used to infer an ontology whose coverage and power are equivalent to those of the manually curated Gene Ontology (GO). The network-extracted ontology (NeXO) contains 4,123 biological terms and 5,766 term-term relations, capturing 58% of known cellular components. We also explore robust NeXO terms and term relations that were initially not cataloged in GO, a number of which have now been added based on our analysis. Using quantitative genetic interaction profiling and chemogenomics, we find further support for many of the uncharacterized terms identified by NeXO, including multisubunit structures related to protein trafficking or mitochondrial function. This work enables a shift from using ontologies to evaluate data to using data to construct and evaluate ontologies.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2012
Michal A. Surma; Christian Klose; Kai Simons
In eukaryotic cells, the trans-Golgi network serves as a sorting station for post-Golgi traffic. In addition to coat- and adaptor-mediated mechanisms, studies in mammalian epithelial cells and yeast have provided evidence for lipid-dependent protein sorting as a major delivery mechanism for cargo sorting to the cell surface. The mechanism for lipid-mediated sorting is the generation of raft platforms of sphingolipids, sterols and specific sets of cargo proteins by phase segregation in the TGN. Here, we review the evidence for such lipid-raft-based sorting at the TGN, as well as their involvement in the formation of TGN-to-PM transport carriers. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Lipids and Vesicular Transport.
Cell Research | 2012
Xinwang Cao; Michal A. Surma; Kai Simons
The polarized distribution of proteins and lipids at the surface membrane of epithelial cells results in the formation of an apical and a basolateral domain, which are separated by tight junctions. The generation and maintenance of epithelial polarity require elaborate mechanisms that guarantee correct sorting and vectorial delivery of cargo molecules. This dynamic process involves the interaction of sorting signals with sorting machineries and the formation of transport carriers. Here we review the recent advances in the field of polarized sorting in epithelial cells. We especially highlight the role of lipid rafts in apical sorting.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Christian Klose; Christer S. Ejsing; Ana J. García-Sáez; Hermann Josef Kaiser; Julio L. Sampaio; Michal A. Surma; Andrej Shevchenko; Petra Schwille; Kai Simons
The lipid raft concept proposes that biological membranes have the potential to form functional domains based on a selective interaction between sphingolipids and sterols. These domains seem to be involved in signal transduction and vesicular sorting of proteins and lipids. Although there is biochemical evidence for lipid raft-dependent protein and lipid sorting in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, direct evidence for an interaction between yeast sphingolipids and the yeast sterol ergosterol, resulting in membrane domain formation, is lacking. Here we show that model membranes formed from yeast total lipid extracts possess an inherent self-organization potential resulting in liquid-disordered-liquid-ordered phase coexistence at physiologically relevant temperature. Analyses of lipid extracts from mutants defective in sphingolipid metabolism as well as reconstitution of purified yeast lipids in model membranes of defined composition suggest that membrane domain formation depends on specific interactions between yeast sphingolipids and ergosterol. Taken together, these results provide a mechanistic explanation for lipid raft-dependent lipid and protein sorting in yeast.
Molecular Cell | 2013
Michal A. Surma; Christian Klose; Debby Peng; Michael Shales; Caroline Mrejen; Adam Stefanko; Hannes Braberg; David E. Gordon; Daniela Vorkel; Christer S. Ejsing; Robert V. Farese; Kai Simons; Nevan J. Krogan; Robert Ernst
Biological membranes are complex, and the mechanisms underlying their homeostasis are incompletely understood. Here, we present a quantitative genetic interaction map (E-MAP) focused on various aspects of lipid biology, including lipid metabolism, sorting, and trafficking. This E-MAP contains ∼250,000 negative and positive genetic interaction scores and identifies a molecular crosstalk of protein quality control pathways with lipid bilayer homeostasis. Ubx2p, a component of the endoplasmic-reticulum-associated degradation pathway, surfaces as a key upstream regulator of the essential fatty acid (FA) desaturase Ole1p. Loss of Ubx2p affects the transcriptional control of OLE1, resulting in impaired FA desaturation and a severe shift toward more saturated membrane lipids. Both the induction of the unfolded protein response and aberrant nuclear membrane morphologies observed in cells lacking UBX2 are suppressed by the supplementation of unsaturated FAs. Our results point toward the existence of dedicated bilayer stress responses for membrane homeostasis.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2011
Lena Karotki; Juha T. Huiskonen; Christopher J. Stefan; Natasza E. Ziółkowska; Robyn Roth; Michal A. Surma; Nevan J. Krogan; Scott D. Emr; John E. Heuser; Kay Grünewald; Tobias C. Walther
Membrane organization by eisosomes is mediated by self-assembly of its main components into a membrane-bound protein scaffold with lipid-binding specificity.
Nature Cell Biology | 2016
Yasunori Saheki; Xin Bian; Curtis M. Schauder; Yujin Sawaki; Michal A. Surma; Christian Klose; Frédéric Pincet; Karin M. Reinisch; Pietro De Camilli
Acute metabolic changes in plasma membrane (PM) lipids, such as those mediating signalling reactions, are rapidly compensated by homeostatic responses whose molecular basis is poorly understood. Here we show that the extended synaptotagmins (E-Syts), endoplasmic reticulum (ER) proteins that function as PtdIns(4,5)P2- and Ca2+-regulated tethers to the PM, participate in these responses. E-Syts transfer glycerolipids between bilayers in vitro, and this transfer requires Ca2+ and their lipid-harbouring SMP domain. Genome-edited cells lacking E-Syts do not exhibit abnormalities in the major glycerolipids at rest, but exhibit enhanced and sustained accumulation of PM diacylglycerol following PtdIns(4,5)P2 hydrolysis by PLC activation, which can be rescued by expression of E-Syt1, but not by mutant E-Syt1 lacking the SMP domain. The formation of E-Syt-dependent ER–PM tethers in response to stimuli that cleave PtdIns(4,5)P2 and elevate Ca2+ may help reverse accumulation of diacylglycerol in the PM by transferring it to the ER for metabolic recycling.
Current Opinion in Cell Biology | 2013
Christian Klose; Michal A. Surma; Kai Simons
The basic structural units of eukaryotic cells are membrane-bound organelles and many essential cellular processes take place in and on membranes. It is becoming increasingly clear that these processes are influenced by the biophysical properties of the organelle membranes, which in turn are affected by their lipid composition. Even subtle changes in lipid composition can have a tremendous impact on membrane properties and the processes occurring within them. Therefore, in order to understand the contribution of membrane lipid composition to the functionality of membrane-bound cellular processes, comprehensive structural and quantitative information on the organellar lipidome is essential. Here we argue that only mass spectrometry-based organellar lipidomics can provide this information today.