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Featured researches published by Saveez Saffarian.


PLOS Pathogens | 2009

Vesicular Stomatitis Virus Enters Cells through Vesicles Incompletely Coated with Clathrin That Depend upon Actin for Internalization

David K. Cureton; Ramiro Massol; Saveez Saffarian; Tomas Kirchhausen; Sean P. J. Whelan

Many viruses that enter cells by clathrin-dependent endocytosis are significantly larger than the dimensions of a typical clathrin-coated vesicle. The mechanisms by which viruses co-opt the clathrin machinery for efficient internalization remain uncertain. Here we examined how clathrin-coated vesicles accommodate vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) during its entry into cells. Using high-resolution imaging of the internalization of single viral particles into cells expressing fluorescent clathrin and adaptor molecules, we show that VSV enters cells through partially clathrin-coated vesicles. We found that on average, virus-containing vesicles contain more clathrin and clathrin adaptor molecules than conventional vesicles, but this increase is insufficient to permit full coating of the vesicle. We further show that virus-containing vesicles depend upon the actin machinery for their internalization. Specifically, we found that components of the actin machinery are recruited to virus-containing vesicles, and chemical inhibition of actin polymerization trapped viral particles in vesicles at the plasma membrane. By analysis of multiple independent virus internalization events, we show that VSV induces the nucleation of clathrin for its uptake, rather than depending upon random capture by formation of a clathrin-coated pit. This work provides new mechanistic insights into the process of virus internalization as well as uptake of unconventional cargo by the clathrin-dependent endocytic machinery.


PLOS Biology | 2009

Distinct Dynamics Of Endocytic Clathrin Coated Pits And Coated Plaques

Saveez Saffarian; Emanuele Cocucci; Tomas Kirchhausen

Here we classify endocytic structures at the adherent (bottom) surface of many cells in culture into shorter-lived coated pits and longer-lived coated plaques which internalize by different mechanisms.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Concentration fluctuations in a mesoscopic oscillating chemical reaction system.

Hong Qian; Saveez Saffarian; Elliot L. Elson

Under sustained pumping, kinetics of macroscopic nonlinear biochemical reaction systems far from equilibrium either can be in a stationary steady state or can execute sustained oscillations about a fixed mean. For a system of two dynamic species X and Y, the concentrations nx and ny will be constant or will repetitively trace a closed loop in the (nx, ny) phase plane, respectively. We study a mesoscopic system with nx and ny very small; hence the occurrence of random fluctuations modifies the deterministic behavior and the law of mass action is replaced by a stochastic model. We show that nx and ny execute cyclic random walks in the (nx, ny) plane whether or not the deterministic kinetics for the corresponding macroscopic system represents a steady or an oscillating state. Probability distributions and correlation functions for nx(t) and ny(t) show quantitative but not qualitative differences between states that would appear as either oscillating or steady in the corresponding macroscopic systems. A diffusion-like equation for probability P(nx, ny, t) is obtained for the two-dimensional Brownian motion in the (nx, ny) phase plane. In the limit of large nx, ny, the deterministic nonlinear kinetics derived from mass action is recovered. The nature of large fluctuations in an oscillating nonequilibrium system and the conceptual difference between “thermal stochasticity” and “temporal complexity” are clarified by this analysis. This result is relevant to fluorescence correlation spectroscopy and metabolic reaction networks.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Measurement of microsecond dynamic motion in the intestinal fatty acid binding protein by using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy

Krishnananda Chattopadhyay; Saveez Saffarian; Elliot L. Elson; Carl Frieden

Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) measurements have been carried out on the intestinal fatty acid binding protein (IFABP) to study microsecond dynamics of the protein in its native state as well as in pH-induced intermediates. IFABP is a small (15 kDa) protein that consists mostly of antiparallel β-strands enclosing a large central cavity into which the ligand binds. Because this protein does not contain cysteine, two cysteine mutants (Val60Cys and Phe62Cys) have been prepared and covalently modified with fluorescein. Based on fluorescence measurements, one of the mutants (Val60Flu) has the fluorescein moiety inside the cavity of the protein, whereas the fluorescein is exposed to solvent in the other (Phe62Flu). The protein modified at position 60 demonstrates the presence of a conformational event on the order of 35 μsec, which is not seen in the other mutant (Phe62Flu). The amplitude of this fast conformational event decreases sharply at low pH as the protein unfolds. Experiments measuring the diffusion as a function of pH indicate the formation of a compact state distinct from the native state at about pH 3.5. Steady state fluorescence and far-UV CD indicates that unfolding occurs at pH values below pH 3.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Roles of AP-2 in Clathrin-Mediated Endocytosis

Emmanuel Boucrot; Saveez Saffarian; Rongying Zhang; Tomas Kirchhausen

Background The notion that AP-2 clathrin adaptor is an essential component of an endocytic clathrin coat appears to conflict with recent observations that substantial AP-2 depletion, using RNA interference with synthesis of AP-2 subunits, fails to block uptake of certain ligands known to internalize through a clathrin-based pathway. Methodology/Principal Findings We report here the use of in vivo imaging data obtained by spinning-disk confocal microscopy to study the formation of clathrin-coated structures at the plasma membranes of BSC1 and HeLa cells depleted by RNAi of the clathrin adaptor, AP-2. Very few clathrin coats continue to assemble after AP-2 knockdown. Moreover, there is a total absence of clathrin-containing structures completely lacking AP-2 while all the remaining coats still contain a small amount of AP-2. These observations suggest that AP-2 is essential for endocytic coated-pit and coated-vesicle formation. We also find that AP-2 knockdown strongly inhibits light-density lipoprotein (LDL) receptor-mediated endocytosis, as long as cells are maintained in complete serum and at 37°C. If cells are first incubated with LDL at 4°C, followed by warming, there is little or no decrease in LDL uptake with respect to control cells. LDL uptake at 37°C is also not affected in AP-2 depleted cells first deprived of LDL by incubation with either serum-starved or LDL-starved cells for 24 hr. The LDL-deprived cells display a significant increase in endocytic structures enriched on deeply invaginated tubes that contain LDL and we suggest that under this condition of stress, LDL might enter through this alternative pathway. Conclusions/Significance These results suggest that AP-2 is essential for endocytic clathrin coated-pit and coated-vesicle formation. They also indicate that under normal conditions, functional endocytic clathrin coated pits are required for LDL internalization. We also show that under certain conditions of stress, cells can upregulate alternative endocytic structures with the potential to provide compensatory trafficking pathways.


Biophysical Journal | 2001

Substrate recognition by gelatinase A: the C-terminal domain facilitates surface diffusion.

Ivan E. Collier; Saveez Saffarian; Barry L. Marmer; Elliot L. Elson; Greg Goldberg

An investigation of gelatinase A binding to gelatin produced results that are inconsistent with a traditional bimolecular Michaelis-Menten formalism but are effectively accounted for by a power law characteristic of fractal kinetics. The main reason for this inconsistency is that the bulk of the gelatinase A binding depends on its ability to diffuse laterally on the gelatin surface. Most interestingly, we show that the anomalous lateral diffusion and, consequently, the binding to gelatin is greatly facilitated by the C-terminal hemopexin-like domain of the enzyme whereas the specificity of binding resides with the fibronectin-like gelatin-binding domain.


Biophysical Journal | 2007

Oligomerization of the EGF Receptor Investigated by Live Cell Fluorescence Intensity Distribution Analysis

Saveez Saffarian; Yu Li; Elliot L. Elson; Linda J. Pike


Science | 2004

Interstitial Collagenase Is a Brownian Ratchet Driven by Proteolysis of Collagen

Saveez Saffarian; Ivan E. Collier; Barry L. Marmer; Elliot L. Elson; Gregory I. Goldberg


Experimental Cell Research | 2006

Role of lipids and actin in the formation of clathrin-coated pits.

Emmanuel Boucrot; Saveez Saffarian; Ramiro Massol; Tomas Kirchhausen; Marcelo Ehrlich


Biophysical Journal | 2003

Statistical Analysis of Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy: The Standard Deviation and Bias

Saveez Saffarian; Elliot L. Elson

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Elliot L. Elson

Washington University in St. Louis

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Tomas Kirchhausen

Boston Children's Hospital

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Ivan E. Collier

Washington University in St. Louis

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Barry L. Marmer

Washington University in St. Louis

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Gregory I. Goldberg

Washington University in St. Louis

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Carl Frieden

Washington University in St. Louis

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Hong Qian

University of Washington

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Krishnananda Chattopadhyay

Indian Institute of Chemical Biology

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