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Featured researches published by Stefan Klippel.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Development of an antibody-based, modular biosensor for 129Xe NMR molecular imaging of cells at nanomolar concentrations

Honor M. Rose; Christopher Witte; Federica Rossella; Stefan Klippel; Christian Freund; Leif Schröder

Significance The field of xenon magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is moving closer to the development of targeted xenon biosensors for in vivo applications. It is motivated by a ca. 108-fold improved sensitivity compared with conventional proton MRI. This has been enabled by significant improvements to hardware (xenon polarizer design) and sensitivity (through the hyperpolarized 129Xe chemical exchange saturation transfer technique). In this paper, we capitalize on these improvements by demonstrating targeted xenon imaging on cells using a modular xenon biosensor. With this method, we can detect target cells with as little as 20 nM of our xenon contrast agent. Imaging of such low levels of cell-specific xenon hosts is unprecedented and reinforces the potential of xenon–cryptophane biosensors for molecular imaging applications. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is seriously limited when aiming for visualization of targeted contrast agents. Images are reconstructed from the weak diamagnetic properties of the sample and require an abundant molecule like water as the reporter. Micromolar to millimolar concentrations of conventional contrast agents are needed to generate image contrast, thus excluding many molecular markers as potential targets. To address this limitation, we developed and characterized a functional xenon NMR biosensor that can identify a specific cell surface marker by targeted 129Xe MRI. Cells expressing the cell surface protein CD14 can be spatially distinguished from control cells with incorporation of as little as 20 nM of the xenon MRI readout unit, cryptophane-A. Cryptophane-A serves as a chemical host for hyperpolarized nuclei and facilitates the sensitivity enhancement achieved by xenon MRI. Although this paper describes the application of a CD14-specific biosensor, the construct has been designed in a versatile, modular fashion. This allows for quick and easy adaptation of the biosensor to any cell surface target for which there is a specific antibody. In addition, the modular design facilitates the creation of a multifunctional probe that incorporates readout modules for different detection methods, such as fluorescence, to complement the primary MRI readout. This modular antibody-based approach not only offers a practical technique with which to screen targets, but one which can be readily applied as the xenon MRI field moves closer to molecular imaging applications in vivo.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Cell Tracking with Caged Xenon: Using Cryptophanes as MRI Reporters upon Cellular Internalization

Stefan Klippel; Jörg Döpfert; Jabadurai Jayapaul; Martin Kunth; Federica Rossella; Matthias Schnurr; Christopher Witte; Christian Freund; Leif Schröder

Caged xenon has great potential in overcoming sensitivity limitations for solution-state NMR detection of dilute molecules. However, no application of such a system as a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) contrast agent has yet been performed with live cells. We demonstrate MRI localization of cells labeled with caged xenon in a packed-bed bioreactor working under perfusion with hyperpolarized-xenon-saturated medium. Xenon hosts enable NMR/MRI experiments with switchable contrast and selectivity for cell-associated versus unbound cages. We present MR images with 10(3) -fold sensitivity enhancement for cell-internalized, dual-mode (fluorescence/MRI) xenon hosts at low micromolar concentrations. Our results illustrate the capability of functionalized xenon to act as a highly sensitive cell tracer for MRI detection even without signal averaging. The method will bridge the challenging gap for translation to in vivo studies for the optimization of targeted biosensors and their multiplexing applications.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Live-cell MRI with Xenon Hyper-CEST Biosensors Targeted to Metabolically Labeled Cell-Surface Glycans†

Christopher Witte; Vera Martos; Honor May Rose; Stefan Reinke; Stefan Klippel; Leif Schröder; Christian P. R. Hackenberger

The targeting of metabolically labeled glycans with conventional MRI contrast agents has proved elusive. In this work, which further expands the utility of xenon Hyper-CEST biosensors in cell experiments, we present the first successful molecular imaging of such glycans using MRI. Xenon Hyper-CEST biosensors are a novel class of MRI contrast agents with very high sensitivity. We designed a multimodal biosensor for both fluorescent and xenon MRI detection that is targeted to metabolically labeled sialic acid through bioorthogonal chemistry. Through the use of a state of the art live-cell bioreactor, it was demonstrated that xenon MRI biosensors can be used to image cell-surface glycans at nanomolar concentrations.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Multivalent Binding of Formin-binding Protein 21 (FBP21)-Tandem-WW Domains Fosters Protein Recognition in the Pre-spliceosome

Stefan Klippel; Marek Wieczorek; Michael Schumann; Eberhard Krause; Berenice Marg; Thorsten Seidel; Tim Meyer; Ernst-Walter Knapp; Christian Freund

Background: The role of long proline-rich segments, as they are abundantly present in the spliceosome, is elusive. Results: Cell biological and biophysical data show the significance of multiple motifs for tandem-WW domain recognition. Conclusion: The dynamic assembly of the pre-spliceosome is enabled by transient multivalent interactions. Significance: Our results have general implications for the recognition of proline-rich sequence hubs in modular protein assemblies. The high abundance of repetitive but nonidentical proline-rich sequences in spliceosomal proteins raises the question of how these known interaction motifs recruit their interacting protein domains. Whereas complex formation of these adaptors with individual motifs has been studied in great detail, little is known about the binding mode of domains arranged in tandem repeats and long proline-rich sequences including multiple motifs. Here we studied the interaction of the two adjacent WW domains of spliceosomal protein FBP21 with several ligands of different lengths and composition to elucidate the hallmarks of multivalent binding for this class of recognition domains. First, we show that many of the proteins that define the cellular proteome interacting with FBP21-WW1-WW2 contain multiple proline-rich motifs. Among these is the newly identified binding partner SF3B4. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) analysis reveals the tandem-WW domains of FBP21 to interact with splicing factor 3B4 (SF3B4) in nuclear speckles where splicing takes place. Isothermal titration calorimetry and NMR shows that the tandem arrangement of WW domains and the multivalency of the proline-rich ligands both contribute to affinity enhancement. However, ligand exchange remains fast compared with the NMR time scale. Surprisingly, a N-terminal spin label attached to a bivalent ligand induces NMR line broadening of signals corresponding to both WW domains of the FBP21-WW1-WW2 protein. This suggests that distinct orientations of the ligand contribute to a delocalized and semispecific binding mode that should facilitate search processes within the spliceosome.


Nano Letters | 2014

Multichannel MRI labeling of mammalian cells by switchable nanocarriers for hyperpolarized xenon.

Stefan Klippel; Christian Freund; Leif Schröder


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Xenon‐MRT an lebenden Zellen mit Hyper‐CEST‐Biosensoren für metabolisch markierte Glykane an der Zelloberfläche

Christopher Witte; Vera Martos; Honor May Rose; Stefan Reinke; Stefan Klippel; Leif Schröder; Christian P. R. Hackenberger


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Innenrücktitelbild: Xenon-MRT an lebenden Zellen mit Hyper-CEST-Biosensoren für metabolisch markierte Glykane an der Zelloberfläche (Angew. Chem. 9/2015)

Christopher Witte; Vera Martos; Honor May Rose; Stefan Reinke; Stefan Klippel; Leif Schröder; Christian P. R. Hackenberger


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Inside Back Cover: Live-cell MRI with Xenon Hyper-CEST Biosensors Targeted to Metabolically Labeled Cell-Surface Glycans (Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 9/2015)

Christopher Witte; Vera Martos; Honor May Rose; Stefan Reinke; Stefan Klippel; Leif Schröder; Christian P. R. Hackenberger


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Back Cover: Cell Tracking with Caged Xenon: Using Cryptophanes as MRI Reporters upon Cellular Internalization (Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2/2014)

Stefan Klippel; Jörg Döpfert; Jabadurai Jayapaul; Martin Kunth; Federica Rossella; Matthias Schnurr; Christopher Witte; Christian Freund; Leif Schröder


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Rücktitelbild: Cell Tracking with Caged Xenon: Using Cryptophanes as MRI Reporters upon Cellular Internalization (Angew. Chem. 2/2014)

Stefan Klippel; Jörg Döpfert; Jabadurai Jayapaul; Martin Kunth; Federica Rossella; Matthias Schnurr; Christopher Witte; Christian Freund; Leif Schröder

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Leif Schröder

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Martin Kunth

California Institute of Technology

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Marek Wieczorek

Free University of Berlin

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