Stefanie Redemann
Dresden University of Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Stefanie Redemann.
Nature Methods | 2011
Stefanie Redemann; Siegfried Schloissnig; Susanne Ernst; Andrey Pozniakowsky; Swathi Ayloo; Antony A Hyman; Henrik Bringmann
We present a method to control protein levels under native genetic regulation in Caenorhabditis elegans by using synthetic genes with adapted codons. We found that the force acting on the spindle in C. elegans embryos was related to the amount of the G-protein regulator GPR-1/2. Codon-adapted versions of any C. elegans gene can be designed using our web tool, C. elegans codon adapter.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Stefanie Redemann; Jacques Pecreaux; Nathan W. Goehring; Khaled Khairy; Ernst H. K. Stelzer; Anthony A. Hyman; Jonathon Howard
Asymmetric positioning of the mitotic spindle in C. elegans embryos is mediated by force-generating complexes that are anchored at the plasma membrane and that pull on microtubules growing out from the spindle poles. Although asymmetric distribution of the force generators is thought to underlie asymmetric positioning of the spindle, the number and location of the force generators has not been well defined. In particular, it has not been possible to visualize individual force generating events at the cortex. We discovered that perturbation of the acto-myosin cortex leads to the formation of long membrane invaginations that are pulled from the plasma membrane toward the spindle poles. Several lines of evidence show that the invaginations, which also occur in unperturbed embryos though at lower frequency, are pulled by the same force generators responsible for spindle positioning. Thus, the invaginations serve as a tool to localize the sites of force generation at the cortex and allow us to estimate a lower limit on the number of cortical force generators within the cell.
Nature Communications | 2017
Stefanie Redemann; Johannes Baumgart; Norbert Lindow; Michael Shelley; Ehssan Nazockdast; Andrea Kratz; Steffen Prohaska; Jan Brugués; Sebastian Fürthauer; Thomas Müller-Reichert
The mitotic spindle ensures the faithful segregation of chromosomes. Here we combine the first large-scale serial electron tomography of whole mitotic spindles in early C. elegans embryos with live-cell imaging to reconstruct all microtubules in 3D and identify their plus- and minus-ends. We classify them as kinetochore (KMTs), spindle (SMTs) or astral microtubules (AMTs) according to their positions, and quantify distinct properties of each class. While our light microscopy and mutant studies show that microtubules are nucleated from the centrosomes, we find only a few KMTs directly connected to the centrosomes. Indeed, by quantitatively analysing several models of microtubule growth, we conclude that minus-ends of KMTs have selectively detached and depolymerized from the centrosome. In toto, our results show that the connection between centrosomes and chromosomes is mediated by an anchoring into the entire spindle network and that any direct connections through KMTs are few and likely very transient.
Journal of Microscopy | 2013
Stefanie Redemann; Thomas Müller-Reichert
Correlative light and electron microscopy (CLEM) has recently gained increasing attention, because it enables the acquisition of dynamic as well as ultrastructural information about subcellular processes. It is the power of combining the two imaging modalities that gives additional information as compared to using the imaging techniques separately. Here, we briefly summarize two CLEM approaches for the analysis of cells in mitosis and cytokinesis.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2014
Stefanie Redemann; Britta Weber; Marit Möller; Jean-Marc Verbavatz; Anthony A. Hyman; Daniel Baum; Steffen Prohaska; Thomas Müller-Reichert
The development of automatic tools for the three-dimensional reconstruction of the microtubule cytoskeleton is crucial for large-scale analysis of mitotic spindles. Recently, we have published a method for the semiautomatic tracing of microtubules based on 3D template matching (Weber et al., J Struct Biol 178:129-138, 2012). Here, we give step-by-step instructions for the automatic tracing of microtubules emanating from centrosomes in the early mitotic Caenorhabditis elegans embryo. This approach, integrated in the visualization and data analysis software Amira, is applicable to tomographic data sets from other model systems.
Biophysical Journal | 2016
Jacques Pecreaux; Stefanie Redemann; Zahraa Alayan; Benjamin Mercat; Sylvain Pastezeur; Carlos Garzon-Coral; Anthony A. Hyman; Jonathon Howard
Precise positioning of the mitotic spindle is important for specifying the plane of cell division, which in turn determines how the cytoplasmic contents of the mother cell are partitioned into the daughter cells, and how the daughters are positioned within the tissue. During metaphase in the early Caenorhabditis elegans embryo, the spindle is aligned and centered on the anterior-posterior axis by a microtubule-dependent machinery that exerts restoring forces when the spindle is displaced from the center. To investigate the accuracy and stability of centering, we tracked the position and orientation of the mitotic spindle during the first cell division with high temporal and spatial resolution. We found that the precision is remarkably high: the cell-to-cell variation in the transverse position of the center of the spindle during metaphase, as measured by the standard deviation, was only 1.5% of the length of the short axis of the cell. Spindle position is also very stable: the standard deviation of the fluctuations in transverse spindle position during metaphase was only 0.5% of the short axis of the cell. Assuming that stability is limited by fluctuations in the number of independent motor elements such as microtubules or dyneins underlying the centering machinery, we infer that the number is ∼1000, consistent with the several thousand of astral microtubules in these cells. Astral microtubules grow out from the two spindle poles, make contact with the cell cortex, and then shrink back shortly thereafter. The high stability of centering can be accounted for quantitatively if, while making contact with the cortex, the astral microtubules buckle as they exert compressive, pushing forces. We thus propose that the large number of microtubules in the asters provides a highly precise mechanism for positioning the spindle during metaphase while assembly is completed before the onset of anaphase.
Journal of Cell Science | 2018
Thomas Müller-Reichert; Robert Kiewisz; Stefanie Redemann
ABSTRACT The mitotic spindle is a complex three-dimensional (3D) apparatus that functions to ensure the faithful segregation of chromosomes during cell division. Our current understanding of spindle architecture is mainly based on a plethora of information derived from light microscopy with rather few insights about spindle ultrastructure obtained from electron microscopy. In this Review, we will provide insights into the history of imaging of mitotic spindles and highlight recent technological advances in electron tomography and data processing, which have delivered detailed 3D reconstructions of mitotic spindles in the early embryo of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. Tomographic reconstructions provide novel views on spindles and will enable us to revisit and address long-standing questions in the field of mitosis. Summary: A discussion of recent tomographic reconstructions that provide novel views on spindles and will enable us to revisit and address long-standing questions in the field of mitosis.
bioRxiv | 2016
Stefanie Redemann; Johannes Baumgart; Norbert Lindow; Sebastian Fuerthauer; Ehssan Nazockdast; Andrea Kratz; Steffen Prohaska; Jan Brugués; Michael Shelley; Thomas Mueller-Reichert
The mitotic spindle is a dynamic microtubule-based apparatus that ensures the faithful segregation of chromosomes by connecting chromosomes to spindle poles. How this pivotal connection is established and maintained during mitosis is currently debated. Here we combined large-scale serial electron tomography with live-cell imaging to uncover the spatial and dynamic organization of microtubules in the mitotic spindles in C. elegans. With this we quantified the position of microtubule minus and plus-ends as well as distinguished the different classes of microtubules, such as kinetochore, astral and spindle microtubules with their distinct properties. Although microtubules are nucleated from the centrosomes, we find only a few, if any, kinetochore microtubules directly connected to the spindle poles, suggesting an indirect pole to chromosome connection. We propose a model of kinetochore microtubule assembly and disassembly, in which microtubules undergo minus-end depolymerisation, resulting in a detachment from the centrosome. Our reconstructions and analyses of complete spindles expand our understanding of spindle architecture beyond the light microscopic limit.The mitotic spindle ensures the faithful segregation of chromosomes. To discover the nature of the crucial centrosome-to-chromosome connection during mitosis, we combined the first large-scale serial electron tomography of whole mitotic spindles in early C. elegans embryos with live-cell imaging. Using tomography, we reconstructed the positions of all microtubules in 3D, and identified their plus- and minus-ends. We classified them as kinetochore (KMTs), spindle (SMTs), or astral microtubules (AMTs) according to their positions, and quantified distinct properties of each class. While our light microscopy and mutant studies show that microtubules are nucleated from the centrosomes, we find only a few KMTs are directly connected to the centrosomes. Indeed, by quantitatively analysing several models of microtubule growth, we conclude that minus-ends of KMTs have selectively detached and depolymerized from the centrosome. In toto, our results show that the connection between centrosomes and chromosomes is mediated by an anchoring into the entire spindle network and that any direct connections through KMTs are few and likely very transient.
Archive | 2018
Norbert Lindow; Stefanie Redemann; Florian Brünig; Gunar Fabig; Thomas Müller-Reichert; Steffen Prohaska
Mitotic and meiotic spindles are microtubule-based structures to faithfully segregate chromosomes. Electron tomography is currently the method of choice to analyze the three-dimensional (3D) architecture of both types of spindles. Over the years, we have developed methods and software for automatic segmentation and stitching of microtubules in serial sections for large-scale reconstructions. 3D reconstruction of microtubules, however, is only the first step toward biological insight. The second step is the analysis of the structural data to derive measurable spindle properties. Here, we present a comprehensive set of techniques to quantify spindle parameters. These techniques provide quantitative analyses of specific microtubule classes and are applicable to a variety of tomographic reconstructions of spindles from different organisms.
European Journal of Cell Biology | 2005
Manuel Mendoza; Stefanie Redemann; Damian Brunner