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Dive into the research topics where Ricardo Henriques is active.

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Featured researches published by Ricardo Henriques.


Nature Methods | 2010

QuickPALM: 3D real-time photoactivation nanoscopy image processing in ImageJ

Ricardo Henriques; Mickaël Lelek; Eugenio F. Fornasiero; Flavia Valtorta; Christophe Zimmer; Musa M. Mhlanga

To the Editor: Although conventional microscopes have a reso-lution limited by diffraction to about half the wavelength of light, several recent advances have led to microscopy methods that achieve roughly tenfold improvements in resolution. Among them, photoactivated light microscopy (PALM) and stochastic optical resolution microscopy (STORM) have become particularly popular, as they only require relatively simple and affordable modifications to a standard total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscope and have been extended to three-dimensional (3D) super-resolution and multicolor imaging.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2014

TNF and IL-1 exhibit distinct ubiquitin requirements for inducing NEMO–IKK supramolecular structures

Nadine Tarantino; Jean-Yves Tinevez; Elizabeth Faris Crowell; Bertrand Boisson; Ricardo Henriques; Musa M. Mhlanga; Fabrice Agou; Alain Israël; Emmanuel Laplantine

The mechanism of NEMO recruitment into supramolecular complexes and its dependence on ubiquitination differs in response to the proinflammatory cytokines TNF and IL-1.


Biopolymers | 2011

PALM and STORM: Unlocking live-cell super-resolution†

Ricardo Henriques; Caron Griffiths; E. Hesper Rego; Musa M. Mhlanga

Live‐cell fluorescence light microscopy has emerged as an important tool in the study of cellular biology. The development of fluorescent markers in parallel with super‐resolution imaging systems has pushed light microscopy into the realm of molecular visualization at the nanometer scale. Resolutions previously only attained with electron microscopes are now within the grasp of light microscopes. However, until recently, live‐cell imaging approaches have eluded super‐resolution microscopy, hampering it from reaching its full potential for revealing the dynamic interactions in biology occurring at the single molecule level. Here we examine recent advances in the super‐resolution imaging of living cells by reviewing recent breakthroughs in single molecule localization microscopy methods such as PALM and STORM to achieve this important goal.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Superresolution imaging of HIV in infected cells with FlAsH-PALM

Mickaël Lelek; Francesca Di Nunzio; Ricardo Henriques; Pierre Charneau; Nathalie Arhel; Christophe Zimmer

Imaging protein assemblies at molecular resolution without affecting biological function is a long-standing goal. The diffraction-limited resolution of conventional light microscopy (∼200–300 nm) has been overcome by recent superresolution (SR) methods including techniques based on accurate localization of molecules exhibiting stochastic fluorescence; however, SR methods still suffer important restrictions inherent to the protein labeling strategies. Antibody labels are encumbered by variable specificity, limited commercial availability and affinity, and are mostly restricted to fixed cells. Fluorescent protein fusions, though compatible with live cell imaging, substantially increase protein size and can interfere with their biological activity. We demonstrate SR imaging of proteins tagged with small tetracysteine motifs and the fluorescein arsenical helix binder (FlAsH-PALM). We applied FlAsH-PALM to image the integrase enzyme (IN) of HIV in fixed and living cells under experimental conditions that fully preserved HIV infectivity. The obtained resolution (∼30 nm) allowed us to characterize the distribution of IN within virions and intracellular complexes and to distinguish different HIV structural populations based on their morphology. We could thus discriminate ∼100 nm long mature conical cores from immature Gag shells and observe that in infected cells cytoplasmic (but not nuclear) IN complexes display a morphology similar to the conical capsid. Together with the presence of capsid proteins, our data suggest that cytoplasmic IN is largely present in intact capsids and that these can be found deep within the cytoplasm. FlAsH-PALM opens the door to in vivo SR studies of microbial complexes within host cells and may help achieve truly molecular resolution.


Nature Communications | 2016

Fast live-cell conventional fluorophore nanoscopy with ImageJ through super-resolution radial fluctuations

Nils Gustafsson; Siân Culley; George W. Ashdown; Dylan M. Owen; Pedro Matos Pereira; Ricardo Henriques

Despite significant progress, high-speed live-cell super-resolution studies remain limited to specialized optical setups, generally requiring intense phototoxic illumination. Here, we describe a new analytical approach, super-resolution radial fluctuations (SRRF), provided as a fast graphics processing unit-enabled ImageJ plugin. In the most challenging data sets for super-resolution, such as those obtained in low-illumination live-cell imaging with GFP, we show that SRRF is generally capable of achieving resolutions better than 150 nm. Meanwhile, for data sets similar to those obtained in PALM or STORM imaging, SRRF achieves resolutions approaching those of standard single-molecule localization analysis. The broad applicability of SRRF and its performance at low signal-to-noise ratios allows super-resolution using modern widefield, confocal or TIRF microscopes with illumination orders of magnitude lower than methods such as PALM, STORM or STED. We demonstrate this by super-resolution live-cell imaging over timescales ranging from minutes to hours.


Infection and Immunity | 2012

Hierarchies of Host Factor Dynamics at the Entry Site of Shigella flexneri during Host Cell Invasion

Soudeh Ehsani; José Carlos Santos; Cristina D. Rodrigues; Ricardo Henriques; Laurent Audry; Christophe Zimmer; Philippe J. Sansonetti; Guy Tran Van Nhieu; Jost Enninga

ABSTRACT Shigella flexneri, the causative agent of bacillary dysentery, induces massive cytoskeletal rearrangement, resulting in its entry into nonphagocytic epithelial cells. The bacterium-engulfing membrane ruffles are formed by polymerizing actin, a process activated through injected bacterial effectors that target host small GTPases and tyrosine kinases. Once inside the host cell, S. flexneri escapes from the endocytic vacuole within minutes to move intra- and intercellularly. We quantified the fluorescence signals from fluorescently tagged host factors that are recruited to the site of pathogen entry and vacuolar escape. Quantitative time lapse fluorescence imaging revealed simultaneous recruitment of polymerizing actin, small GTPases of the Rho family, and tyrosine kinases. In contrast, we found that actin surrounding the vacuole containing bacteria dispersed first from the disassembling membranes, whereas other host factors remained colocalized with the membrane remnants. Furthermore, we found that the disassembly of the membrane remnants took place rapidly, within minutes after bacterial release into the cytoplasm. Superresolution visualization of galectin 3 through photoactivated localization microscopy characterized these remnants as small, specular, patchy structures between 30 and 300 nm in diameter. Using our experimental setup to track the time course of infection, we identified the S. flexneri effector IpgB1 as an accelerator of the infection pace, specifically targeting the entry step, but not vacuolar progression or escape. Together, our studies show that bacterial entry into host cells follows precise kinetics and that this time course can be targeted by the pathogen.


EMBO Reports | 2016

Mitochondria mediate septin cage assembly to promote autophagy of Shigella

Andrea Sirianni; Sina Krokowski; Damián Lobato-Márquez; Stephen Buranyi; Julia Pfanzelter; Dieter Galea; Alexandra R. Willis; Siân Culley; Ricardo Henriques; Gérald Larrouy-Maumus; Michael Hollinshead; Vanessa Sancho-Shimizu; Michael Way; Serge Mostowy

Septins, cytoskeletal proteins with well‐characterised roles in cytokinesis, form cage‐like structures around cytosolic Shigella flexneri and promote their targeting to autophagosomes. However, the processes underlying septin cage assembly, and whether they influence S. flexneri proliferation, remain to be established. Using single‐cell analysis, we show that the septin cages inhibit S. flexneri proliferation. To study mechanisms of septin cage assembly, we used proteomics and found mitochondrial proteins associate with septins in S. flexneri‐infected cells. Strikingly, mitochondria associated with S. flexneri promote septin assembly into cages that entrap bacteria for autophagy. We demonstrate that the cytosolic GTPase dynamin‐related protein 1 (Drp1) interacts with septins to enhance mitochondrial fission. To avoid autophagy, actin‐polymerising Shigella fragment mitochondria to escape from septin caging. Our results demonstrate a role for mitochondria in anti‐Shigella autophagy and uncover a fundamental link between septin assembly and mitochondria.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Highly Dynamic Host Actin Reorganization around Developing Plasmodium Inside Hepatocytes

Carina S. S. Gomes-Santos; Maurice A. Itoe; Cristina Afonso; Ricardo Henriques; Rui Gardner; Nuno Sepúlveda; Pedro D. Simões; Helena Raquel; Antonio Almeida; Luis F. Moita; Friedrich Frischknecht; Maria M. Mota

Plasmodium sporozoites are transmitted by Anopheles mosquitoes and infect hepatocytes, where a single sporozoite replicates into thousands of merozoites inside a parasitophorous vacuole. The nature of the Plasmodium-host cell interface, as well as the interactions occurring between these two organisms, remains largely unknown. Here we show that highly dynamic hepatocyte actin reorganization events occur around developing Plasmodium berghei parasites inside human hepatoma cells. Actin reorganization is most prominent between 10 to 16 hours post infection and depends on the actin severing and capping protein, gelsolin. Live cell imaging studies also suggest that the hepatocyte cytoskeleton may contribute to parasite elimination during Plasmodium development in the liver.


Microscopy and Microanalysis | 2012

Single-Molecule Localization Super-Resolution Microscopy: Deeper and Faster

Sébastien Herbert; Helena Soares; Christophe Zimmer; Ricardo Henriques

For over a decade fluorescence microscopy has demonstrated the capacity to achieve single-molecule localization accuracies of a few nanometers, well below the ≈ 200 nm lateral and ≈ 500 nm axial resolution limit of conventional microscopy. Yet, only the recent development of new fluorescence labeling modalities, the increase in sensitivity of imaging hardware, and the creation of novel image analysis tools allow for the emergence of single-molecule-based super-resolution imaging techniques. Novel methods such as photoactivated localization microscopy and stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy can typically reach a tenfold increase in resolution compared to standard microscopy methods. Their implementation is relatively easy only requiring minimal changes to a conventional wide-field or total internal reflection fluorescence microscope. The recent translation of these two methods into commercial imaging systems has made them further accessible to researchers in biology. However, these methods are still evolving rapidly toward imaging live samples with high temporal resolution and depth. In this review, we recall the roots of single-molecule localization microscopy, summarize major recent developments, and offer perspective on potential applications.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2009

High-Throughput SNP Genotyping: Combining Tag SNPs and Molecular Beacons

Luis B. Barreiro; Ricardo Henriques; Musa M. Mhlanga

In the last decade, molecular beacons have emerged to become a widely used tool in the multiplex typing of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Improvements in detection technologies in instrumentation and chemistries to label these probes have made it possible to use up to six spectrally distinguishable probes per reaction well. With the remarkable advances made in the characterization of human genome diversity, it has been possible to describe empirical patterns of SNPs and haplotype variation in the genome of diverse human populations. These patterns have revealed that the human genome is structured in blocks of strong linkage disequilibrium (LD). Because SNPs tend to be in LD with each other, common haplotypes share common SNPs and thus the majority of the diversity in a region can be characterized by typing a very small number of SNPs; so-called tag SNPs. Herein lies the advantage of the multiplexing ability of molecular beacons, since it becomes possible to use as few as 30 probes to interrogate several haplotypes in a high-throughput approach. Thus, through the combined use of tag SNPs and molecular beacons it becomes possible to type individuals for clinically relevant haplotypes in a high-throughput manner at a cost that is orders of magnitude less than that for high throughput sequencing methods.

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Siân Culley

University College London

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Jason Mercer

University College London

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David Albrecht

University College London

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Pedro Almada

University College London

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Christophe Zimmer

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Musa M. Mhlanga

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Ann P. Wheeler

Queen Mary University of London

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