Romain Wyss
École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
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Publication
Featured researches published by Romain Wyss.
PLOS Biology | 2015
Felipe O. Bendezú; Vincent Vincenzetti; Dimitrios Vavylonis; Romain Wyss; Horst Vogel; Sophie G. Martin
The small Rho-family GTPase Cdc42 is critical for cell polarization and polarizes spontaneously in absence of upstream spatial cues. Spontaneous polarization is thought to require dynamic Cdc42 recycling through Guanine nucleotide Dissociation Inhibitor (GDI)-mediated membrane extraction and vesicle trafficking. Here, we describe a functional fluorescent Cdc42 allele in fission yeast, which demonstrates Cdc42 dynamics and polarization independent of these pathways. Furthermore, an engineered Cdc42 allele targeted to the membrane independently of these recycling pathways by an amphipathic helix is viable and polarizes spontaneously to multiple sites in fission and budding yeasts. We show that Cdc42 is highly mobile at the membrane and accumulates at sites of activity, where it displays slower mobility. By contrast, a near-immobile transmembrane domain-containing Cdc42 allele supports viability and polarized activity, but does not accumulate at sites of activity. We propose that Cdc42 activation, enhanced by positive feedback, leads to its local accumulation by capture of fast-diffusing inactive molecules.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2014
Debora Keller; Meritxell Orpinell; Nicolas Olivier; Malte Wachsmuth; Robert Mahen; Romain Wyss; Virginie Hachet; Jan Ellenberg; Suliana Manley; Pierre Gönczy
HsSAS-6 homodimers are present in the cytoplasm and assemble into ninefold symmetrical arrays at centrosomes, thus initiating procentriole formation.
Nano Letters | 2012
Tor Sandén; Romain Wyss; Christian Santschi; Ghérici Hassaïne; Cédric Deluz; Olivier J. F. Martin; Stefan Wennmalm; Horst Vogel
A central goal in bioanalytics is to determine the concentration of and interactions between biomolecules. Nanotechnology allows performing such analyses in a highly parallel, low-cost, and miniaturized fashion. Here we report on label-free volume, concentration, and mobility analysis of single protein molecules and nanoparticles during their diffusion through a subattoliter detection volume, confined by a 100 nm aperture in a thin gold film. A high concentration of small fluorescent molecules renders the aqueous solution in the aperture brightly fluorescent. Nonfluorescent analytes diffusing into the aperture displace the fluorescent molecules in the solution, leading to a decrease of the detected fluorescence signal, while analytes diffusing out of the aperture return the fluorescence level. The resulting fluorescence fluctuations provide direct information on the volume, concentration, and mobility of the nonfluorescent analytes through fluctuation analysis in both time and amplitude.
Analytical Chemistry | 2014
Romain Wyss; Luigino Grasso; Camille Wolf; Wolfgang Grosse; Davide Demurtas; Horst Vogel
Cells secrete extracellular vesicles (EVs) into their microenvironment that act as mediators of intercellular communication under physiological conditions and in this context also actively participate in spreading various diseases. Large efforts are currently made to produce reliable EV samples and to develop, improve, and standardize techniques allowing their biophysical characterization. Here, we used ultrafiltration and size-exclusion chromatography for the isolation and a model-free fluorescence fluctuation analysis for the investigation of the physical and biological properties of EVs secreted by mammalian cells. Our purification strategy produced enriched samples of morphologically intact EVs free of extravesicular proteins and allowed labeling of marker molecules on the vesicle surface for single-vesicle analysis with single-molecule sensitivity. This novel approach provides information on the distribution profile of both EV size and relative expression level of a specific exosomal marker, deciphering the overall heterogeneity of EV preparations.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Luigino Grasso; Romain Wyss; Joachim Piguet; Michael Werner; Ghérici Hassaïne; Ruud Hovius; Horst Vogel
Cellular signaling is classically investigated by measuring optical or electrical properties of single or populations of living cells. Here we show that ligand binding to cell surface receptors and subsequent activation of signaling cascades can be monitored in single, (sub-)micrometer sized native vesicles with single-molecule sensitivity. The vesicles are derived from live mammalian cells using chemicals or optical tweezers. They comprise parts of a cell’s plasma membrane and cytosol and represent the smallest autonomous containers performing cellular signaling reactions thus functioning like minimized cells. Using fluorescence microscopies, we measured in individual vesicles the different steps of G-protein-coupled receptor mediated signaling like ligand binding to receptors, subsequent G-protein activation and finally arrestin translocation indicating receptor deactivation. Observing cellular signaling reactions in individual vesicles opens the door for downscaling bioanalysis of cellular functions to the attoliter range, multiplexing single cell analysis, and investigating receptor mediated signaling in multiarray format.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Julia Gunzenhäuser; Romain Wyss; Suliana Manley
The assembly process of the human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) is driven by the viral polyprotein Gag. Fluorescence imaging of Gag protein fusions is widely performed and has revealed important information on viral assembly. Gag fusion proteins are commonly co-transfected with an unlabeled form of Gag to prevent labeling artifacts such as morphological defects and decreased infectivity. Although viral assembly is widely studied on individual cells, the efficiency of the co-transfection rescue has never been tested at the single cell level. Here, we first develop a methodology to quantify levels of unlabeled to labeled Gag in single cells using a fluorescent reporter protein for unlabeled Gag and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy. Using super-resolution imaging based on photoactivated localization microscopy (PALM) combined with molecular counting we then study the nanoscale morphology of Gag clusters as a function of unlabeled to labeled Gag ratios in single cells. We show that for a given co-transfection ratio, individual cells express a wide range of protein ratios, necessitating a quantitative read-out for the expression of unlabeled Gag. Further, we show that monomerically labeled Gag assembles into membrane-bound clusters that are morphologically indistinguishable from mixtures of unlabeled and labeled Gag.
Biophysical Journal | 2014
Ghérici Hassaïne; Cédric Deluz; Alexandra Graff; Christophe Moreau; Romain Wyss; Luigino Grasso; Aline Desmyter; Takashi Tomizaki; Xiao-Dan Li; Henning Stahlberg; Horst Vogel; Hugues Nury
Reference EPFL-CONF-201047View record in Web of Science Record created on 2014-08-29, modified on 2016-08-09
Membrane Protein Structure and Function Characterization | 2017
Ghérici Hassaïne; Cédric Deluz; Luigino Grasso; Romain Wyss; Ruud Hovius; Henning Stahlberg; Takashi Tomizaki; Aline Desmyter; Christophe Moreau; Lucie Peclinovska; Sonja Minniberger; Lamia Mebarki; Xiao-Dan Li; Horst Vogel; Hugues Nury
There is growing interest in the use of mammalian protein expression systems, and in the use of antibody-derived chaperones, for structural studies. Here, we describe protocols ranging from the production of recombinant membrane proteins in stable inducible cell lines to biophysical characterization of purified membrane proteins in complex with llama antibody domains. These protocols were used to solve the structure of the mouse 5-HT3 serotonin receptor but are of broad applicability for crystallization or cryo-electron microscopy projects.
Nature | 2014
Ghérici Hassaïne; Cédric Deluz; Luigino Grasso; Romain Wyss; Menno B. Tol; Ruud Hovius; Alexandra Graff; Henning Stahlberg; Takashi Tomizaki; Aline Desmyter; Christophe Moreau; Xiao-Dan Li; Frédéric Poitevin; Horst Vogel; Hugues Nury
Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2015
Luigino Grasso; Romain Wyss; Lorenz Weidenauer; Ashwin Thampi; Davide Demurtas; Michel Prudent; Niels Lion; Horst Vogel