Klaus Fiedler - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Papers by Klaus Fiedler
Cerebral Cortex, 2012
The burst of laughter that is evoked by tickling is a primitive form of vocalization. It evolves ... more The burst of laughter that is evoked by tickling is a primitive form of vocalization. It evolves during an early phase of postnatal life and appears to be independent of higher cortical circuits. Clinicopathological observations have led to suspicions that the hypothalamus is directly involved in the production of laughter. In this functional magnetic resonance imaging investigation, healthy participants were 1) tickled on the sole of the right foot with permission to laugh, 2) tickled but asked to stifle laughter, and 3) requested to laugh voluntarily. Tickling that was accompanied by involuntary laughter activated regions in the lateral hypothalamus, parietal operculum, amygdala, and right cerebellum to a consistently greater degree than did the 2 other conditions. Activation of the periaqueductal gray matter was observed during voluntary and involuntary laughter but not when laughter was inhibited. The present findings indicate that hypothalamic activity plays a crucial role in evoking ticklish laughter in healthy individuals. The hypothalamus promotes innate behavioral reactions to stimuli and sends projections to the periaqueductal gray matter, which is itself an important integrative center for the control of vocalization. A comparison of our findings with published data relating to humorous laughter revealed the involvement of a common set of subcortical centers.
The Sec14-like protein (280-385 GOLD-domain) in this study scores highly with the carbohydrate bi... more The Sec14-like protein (280-385 GOLD-domain) in this study scores highly with the carbohydrate binding module (CBM) of the RetS domain from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The thereupon modeled Cricetulus griseus p24-GOLD domain of p24, a member of intra-Golgi cargo receptors, is shown to interact with Wnt8 (wingless 8) of Xenopus laevis with a ΔG=-18.3 kcal/mol. Lower ranked models listed a smaller ΔG (PDBePISA) and energy of DelPhi interaction. Complex/hybrid N-glycans provide increasing energy of binding up to -7.1 kcal/mol to simulated p24-GOLD-ligand interaction. It is likely, that Wnt proteins and p24 cargo-receptors interact analogously to Wnt-Frizzled and that Wnt transport may involve early lectin binding. The possibly promiscuous interaction of p24-GOLD with ligands, including collagen, may shed light on cargo-receptor mediated traffic.
Alpha 1-6 fucosyltransferase (Fut8) is known for its properties as an enhancer of nonsmall cell l... more Alpha 1-6 fucosyltransferase (Fut8) is known for its properties as an enhancer of nonsmall cell lung cancer metastasis and as a suppressor in hepatocellular carcinoma cells (Hep3B). Promising candidates of affected molecules include E-cadherin. In its absence, during epithelial-mesenchymal transition,the pathway triggers signaling to the nucleus via β-catenin-TCF/LEF. Contrarily, in less metastatic tumors, Fut8 stimulates cell-cell adhesion. Regulated classes of molecules could also include the sorting machinery of polarized epithelial cells, sorted ligands or both, that may be altered in cellular transformation. I have analyzed here the cargo receptor VIP36 (Vesicular-integral membrane protein of 36 kD) for carbohydrate interaction. It has been described as a lectin in the ERGIC (endoplasmic reticulum-Golgi intermediate compartment), Golgi apparatus and plasma membrane. The docking reveals top-interacting carbohydrates of the N-glycan and O-glycan class that encompass N-linked glyc...
... who greatly contributed to make efficient bench work possible. I am indebted to all the prese... more ... who greatly contributed to make efficient bench work possible. I am indebted to all the present and former members of the lab: Anna, Carlos, Elina, Frank, Johan, Liane, Lukas, Masayuki, ... life, and my father. Finally, and most importantly, I thank Gabriela for her tolerance and ...
Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology, 1992
Journal of Neuroscience, 2009
Olfactory dysfunction is a frequent nonmotor symptom in idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD) and m... more Olfactory dysfunction is a frequent nonmotor symptom in idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD) and may be considered as an early clinical feature of the disease preceding motor symptoms by years. According to recent neuropathological staging concepts, impaired olfaction is assumed to indicate an early pathological process and might be associated with structural changes in the brain. A morphometric analysis of magnetic resonance images [voxel-based morphometry (VBM)] was used to investigate gray matter atrophy related to psychophysically measured scores of olfactory function in early PD patients (n ϭ 15, median Hoehn and Yahr stage 1.5), moderately advanced PD patients (n ϭ 12, median Hoehn and Yahr stage 2.5), and age-matched healthy controls (n ϭ 17). In PD patients, but not in controls, cortical atrophy in olfactory-related brain regions correlated specifically with olfactory dysfunction. Positive correlations between olfactory performance and gray matter volume were observed in the right piriform cortex in early PD patients and in the right amygdala in moderately advanced patients. The results provided first evidence that olfactory dysfunction in PD is related to atrophy in olfactory-eloquent regions of the limbic and paralimbic cortex. In addition, olfactory-correlated atrophy in these brain regions is consistent with the assumption that olfactory impairment as an early symptom of PD is likely to be associated with extranigral pathology.
Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1997
Members of the p24 family of putative cargo receptors are proposed to contain retrograde and ante... more Members of the p24 family of putative cargo receptors are proposed to contain retrograde and anterograde trafficking signals in their cytoplasmic domain to facilitate coat protein binding and cycling in the secretory pathway. We have analyzed the role of the transmembrane domain (TMD) of a p24 protein isolated from COPI-coated intra-Golgi transport vesicles. CD8-p24 chimeras were transiently expressed in COS7 cells and analyzed by immunofluorescence and pulse-chase experiments. The localization and transit of the wild-type chimera from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) through the Golgi complex involved a glutamic acid residue and a conserved glutamine in the TMD. The TMD glutamic acid mediated the localization of the chimeras to the ER in the absence of the conserved glutamine. Efficient ER exit required the TMD glutamine and was further facilitated by a pair of phenylalanine residues in the cytoplasmic tail. TMD residues of p24 proteins may mediate the interaction with integral membrane proteins of the vesicle budding machinery to ensure p24 packaging into transport vesicles.
The Sec14-like protein (280-385 GOLD-domain) in this study scores highly with the carbohydrate
Electrophoresis, 1997
TGN-derived carrier vesicles from MDCK cells
Alpha 1-6 fucosyltransferase (Fut8) is known for its properties as an enhancer of nonsmall cell l... more Alpha 1-6 fucosyltransferase (Fut8) is known for its properties as an enhancer of nonsmall cell lung cancer metastasis and as a suppressor in hepatocellular carcinoma cells (Hep3B). Promising candidates of affected molecules include E-cadherin. In its absence, during epithelial-mesenchymal transition, the pathway triggers signaling to the nucleus via beta-catenin-TCF/LEF. Contrarily, in less metastatic tumors, Fut8 stimulates cell-cell adhesion. Regulated classes of molecules could also include the sorting machinery of polarized epithelial cells, sorted ligands or both, that may be altered in cellular transformation. I have analyzed here the cargo receptor VIP36 (Vesicular-integral membrane protein of 36 kD) for carbohydrate interaction. It has been described as a lectin in the ERGIC (endoplasmic reticulum-Golgi intermediate compartment), Golgi apparatus and plasma membrane. The docking reveals top-interacting carbohydrates of the N-glycan and O-glycan class that encompass N-linked
glycans of high mannose and equally complex type which likely function as sorted ligands in epithelial cells. O-glycans score lower and include core 2 residue binding. I show that fucose core modifications by Fut8 stimulate binding of N-linked glycans to VIP36, which is known to be different from binding of galectins 3 and 9. This suggests that Fut8-upregulation may directly alter the affinity of sorted cargo and may enhance the sorting to the apical pathway as exemplified in hepatocytes and traffic to bile. High affinity binding of the ganglioside GM1 carbohydrate headgroup to VIP36 suggests a linkage with protein and glycosphingolipid apical transfer in epithelial cells. Thus, this fundamental approach with large scale docking of 165 carbohydrates including 19 N-glycan high mannose, 17 N-glycan hybrid, 9 N-glycan complex, 17 O-glycan core, 27 Sialoside, 25 Fucoside and 51 other glycan residues suggests, that linked cargo-receptor apical transport may provide a path to epithelial polarization that may be modulated by core fucosylation.
Research, 2015
see manuscript / corrections on page 13 were added in version 2
The Journal of comparative neurology, Jan 19, 2015
The insular cortex is fundamentally involved in the processing of interoceptive information. It h... more The insular cortex is fundamentally involved in the processing of interoceptive information. It has been postulated that the integrative monitoring of the bodily responses to environmental stimuli is crucial for the recognition and experience of emotions. Because emotional arousal is known to be closely coupled to functions of the anterior insula, we suspected laughter to be associated primarily with neuronal activity in this region. An anatomically constrained re-analysis of our imaging data pertaining to ticklish laughter, to inhibited ticklish laughter, and to voluntary laughter revealed regional differences in the levels of neuronal activity in the posterior and mid-/anterior portions of the insula. Ticklish laughter was associated specifically with right ventral anterior insular activity, which was not detected under the other two conditions. Hence, apparently, only laughter that is evoked as an emotional response bears the signature of autonomic arousal in the insular cortex. ...
The Journal of Cell Biology, 1995
The sorting of apical and basolateral proteins into vesicular carriers takes place in the trans-G... more The sorting of apical and basolateral proteins into vesicular carriers takes place in the trans-Golgi network (TGN) in MDCK cells. We have previously analyzed the protein composition of immunoisolated apical and basolateral transport vesicles and have now identified a component that is highly enriched in apical vesicles. Isolation of the encoding cDNA revealed that this protein, annexin XIIIb, is a new isoform of the epithelial specific annexin XIII sub-family which includes the previously described intestinespecific annexin (annexin XIILa; Wice, B. M., and J. I. Gordon. 1992. J. Cell Biol. 116:405-422). Annexin XlIlb differs from annexin XIIIa in that it contains a unique insert of 41 amino acids in the NH2 terminus and is exclusively expressed in dog intestine and kidney. Immunofluorescence microscopy demonstrated
The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology, 2004
Endothelial cell (EC) cultures of different, selected vascular beds and/or organs were screened f... more Endothelial cell (EC) cultures of different, selected vascular beds and/or organs were screened for receptor-mediated transport of proteins with a semipermeable filter assay. In SVEC4-10 cells, a mouse lymphoid endothelial cell line, orosomucoid, albumin, insulin and LDL were transcytosed from the apical (luminal) to basal (abluminal) side by a receptor-mediated pathway. Specific LDL transcytosis involved transport of intact LDL. A pathway of degradation of LDL and basal release involved vesicles in transport to lysosomes and amino acid merocrine secretion. This newly described transcellular passage of LDL via lysosomes, as well as the standard pathway, were reduced to 70% by PEG(50)-cholesterol (PEG-Chol). Combined results of temperature-dependence analysis and PEG(50)-cholesterol sensitivity show that two pathways contribute to general LDL transcellular passage. We suggest a mechanism of domain hopping by protein membrane diffusion of receptors as the pathway for intact LDL delivery. Based on theoretical considerations we propose that active transport by protein membrane diffusion can be facilitated by an organizational structure of lipid microdomains and polar cellular organization.
Molecular Biology Reports, 2004
Part of these results were presented as an abstract to the ASCB Meeting, San Francisco, 2002: Fie... more Part of these results were presented as an abstract to the ASCB Meeting, San Francisco, 2002: Fiedler, K. (2002 Caveolae in mechanotransduction. Mol. Biol. Cell Suppl., 232a. 2
Journal of Neuroscience Research, 1995
The remarkable quantities of myelin membrane produced by oligodendrocytes has led us to examine t... more The remarkable quantities of myelin membrane produced by oligodendrocytes has led us to examine the mechanisms involved in the sorting and transport of proteins and lipids during myelinogenesis. Noting that it has been proposed that proteins destined for the apical surface of polarized epithelial cells co-cluster with glycolipid-rich microdomains during sorting and transport from the trans-Golgi network (Simons and van Meer: Biochemistry 27:6197-6202, 1988; Simons and Wandinger-Ness: Cell 62:207-210, 1990), we hypothesized that the glycolipid-rich oligodendrocytes may adopt this mechanism for myelinogenesis. Protein-lipid complexes from oligodendrocytes and myelin were isolated utilizing detergent insolubility and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. A developmentally regulated protein, MVP17 (myelin vesicular protein of 17 kDa), was identified. Microsequencing of the N-terminal peptide revealed a high homology to human T-cell MAL protein (Alonso and Weissman: Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 84:1997-2001, 1987). The corresponding MVP17 cDNA was isolated from an oligodendrocyte cDNA library. The predicted protein sequence showed 88.9% identity with MAL, and the hydrophobicity profile suggested four transmembrane domains. In vitro translation demonstrated a signal at the deduced Mr of approximately 17 kDa. Northern analyses indicated that MVP17 mRNA expression is restricted to brain and kidney and that this expression is up-regulated in oligodendrocytes and brain during the period of active myelination. These data suggest that MVP17 is involved in myelin biogenesis and/or myelin function.
FEBS Letters, 1995
VIP17 is a proteolipid enriched in the CHAPS-insoluble complexes from MDCK cells, and a candidate... more VIP17 is a proteolipid enriched in the CHAPS-insoluble complexes from MDCK cells, and a candidate component of the molecular machinery responsible for the sorting and targeting of proteins to the apical surface. Cloning and sequencing of the cDNA encoding the protein revealed that it is the canine homolog of the human and rat MAL proteins. Analysis by immunofluorescence microscopy of epitope-tagged VIP17/MAL expressed transiently in BHK cells and stably in MDCK cells revealed a perinuclear, vesicular, and plasmalemmal staining. In MDCK cells the distribution was mainly in vesicular structures in the apical cytoplasm. These and other results suggest that VIP17/MAL is an important component in vesicular trafficking cycling between the Golgi complex and the apical plasma membrane.
Cerebral Cortex, 2012
The burst of laughter that is evoked by tickling is a primitive form of vocalization. It evolves ... more The burst of laughter that is evoked by tickling is a primitive form of vocalization. It evolves during an early phase of postnatal life and appears to be independent of higher cortical circuits. Clinicopathological observations have led to suspicions that the hypothalamus is directly involved in the production of laughter. In this functional magnetic resonance imaging investigation, healthy participants were 1) tickled on the sole of the right foot with permission to laugh, 2) tickled but asked to stifle laughter, and 3) requested to laugh voluntarily. Tickling that was accompanied by involuntary laughter activated regions in the lateral hypothalamus, parietal operculum, amygdala, and right cerebellum to a consistently greater degree than did the 2 other conditions. Activation of the periaqueductal gray matter was observed during voluntary and involuntary laughter but not when laughter was inhibited. The present findings indicate that hypothalamic activity plays a crucial role in evoking ticklish laughter in healthy individuals. The hypothalamus promotes innate behavioral reactions to stimuli and sends projections to the periaqueductal gray matter, which is itself an important integrative center for the control of vocalization. A comparison of our findings with published data relating to humorous laughter revealed the involvement of a common set of subcortical centers.
The Sec14-like protein (280-385 GOLD-domain) in this study scores highly with the carbohydrate bi... more The Sec14-like protein (280-385 GOLD-domain) in this study scores highly with the carbohydrate binding module (CBM) of the RetS domain from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The thereupon modeled Cricetulus griseus p24-GOLD domain of p24, a member of intra-Golgi cargo receptors, is shown to interact with Wnt8 (wingless 8) of Xenopus laevis with a ΔG=-18.3 kcal/mol. Lower ranked models listed a smaller ΔG (PDBePISA) and energy of DelPhi interaction. Complex/hybrid N-glycans provide increasing energy of binding up to -7.1 kcal/mol to simulated p24-GOLD-ligand interaction. It is likely, that Wnt proteins and p24 cargo-receptors interact analogously to Wnt-Frizzled and that Wnt transport may involve early lectin binding. The possibly promiscuous interaction of p24-GOLD with ligands, including collagen, may shed light on cargo-receptor mediated traffic.
Alpha 1-6 fucosyltransferase (Fut8) is known for its properties as an enhancer of nonsmall cell l... more Alpha 1-6 fucosyltransferase (Fut8) is known for its properties as an enhancer of nonsmall cell lung cancer metastasis and as a suppressor in hepatocellular carcinoma cells (Hep3B). Promising candidates of affected molecules include E-cadherin. In its absence, during epithelial-mesenchymal transition,the pathway triggers signaling to the nucleus via β-catenin-TCF/LEF. Contrarily, in less metastatic tumors, Fut8 stimulates cell-cell adhesion. Regulated classes of molecules could also include the sorting machinery of polarized epithelial cells, sorted ligands or both, that may be altered in cellular transformation. I have analyzed here the cargo receptor VIP36 (Vesicular-integral membrane protein of 36 kD) for carbohydrate interaction. It has been described as a lectin in the ERGIC (endoplasmic reticulum-Golgi intermediate compartment), Golgi apparatus and plasma membrane. The docking reveals top-interacting carbohydrates of the N-glycan and O-glycan class that encompass N-linked glyc...
... who greatly contributed to make efficient bench work possible. I am indebted to all the prese... more ... who greatly contributed to make efficient bench work possible. I am indebted to all the present and former members of the lab: Anna, Carlos, Elina, Frank, Johan, Liane, Lukas, Masayuki, ... life, and my father. Finally, and most importantly, I thank Gabriela for her tolerance and ...
Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology, 1992
Journal of Neuroscience, 2009
Olfactory dysfunction is a frequent nonmotor symptom in idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD) and m... more Olfactory dysfunction is a frequent nonmotor symptom in idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD) and may be considered as an early clinical feature of the disease preceding motor symptoms by years. According to recent neuropathological staging concepts, impaired olfaction is assumed to indicate an early pathological process and might be associated with structural changes in the brain. A morphometric analysis of magnetic resonance images [voxel-based morphometry (VBM)] was used to investigate gray matter atrophy related to psychophysically measured scores of olfactory function in early PD patients (n ϭ 15, median Hoehn and Yahr stage 1.5), moderately advanced PD patients (n ϭ 12, median Hoehn and Yahr stage 2.5), and age-matched healthy controls (n ϭ 17). In PD patients, but not in controls, cortical atrophy in olfactory-related brain regions correlated specifically with olfactory dysfunction. Positive correlations between olfactory performance and gray matter volume were observed in the right piriform cortex in early PD patients and in the right amygdala in moderately advanced patients. The results provided first evidence that olfactory dysfunction in PD is related to atrophy in olfactory-eloquent regions of the limbic and paralimbic cortex. In addition, olfactory-correlated atrophy in these brain regions is consistent with the assumption that olfactory impairment as an early symptom of PD is likely to be associated with extranigral pathology.
Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1997
Members of the p24 family of putative cargo receptors are proposed to contain retrograde and ante... more Members of the p24 family of putative cargo receptors are proposed to contain retrograde and anterograde trafficking signals in their cytoplasmic domain to facilitate coat protein binding and cycling in the secretory pathway. We have analyzed the role of the transmembrane domain (TMD) of a p24 protein isolated from COPI-coated intra-Golgi transport vesicles. CD8-p24 chimeras were transiently expressed in COS7 cells and analyzed by immunofluorescence and pulse-chase experiments. The localization and transit of the wild-type chimera from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) through the Golgi complex involved a glutamic acid residue and a conserved glutamine in the TMD. The TMD glutamic acid mediated the localization of the chimeras to the ER in the absence of the conserved glutamine. Efficient ER exit required the TMD glutamine and was further facilitated by a pair of phenylalanine residues in the cytoplasmic tail. TMD residues of p24 proteins may mediate the interaction with integral membrane proteins of the vesicle budding machinery to ensure p24 packaging into transport vesicles.
The Sec14-like protein (280-385 GOLD-domain) in this study scores highly with the carbohydrate
Electrophoresis, 1997
TGN-derived carrier vesicles from MDCK cells
Alpha 1-6 fucosyltransferase (Fut8) is known for its properties as an enhancer of nonsmall cell l... more Alpha 1-6 fucosyltransferase (Fut8) is known for its properties as an enhancer of nonsmall cell lung cancer metastasis and as a suppressor in hepatocellular carcinoma cells (Hep3B). Promising candidates of affected molecules include E-cadherin. In its absence, during epithelial-mesenchymal transition, the pathway triggers signaling to the nucleus via beta-catenin-TCF/LEF. Contrarily, in less metastatic tumors, Fut8 stimulates cell-cell adhesion. Regulated classes of molecules could also include the sorting machinery of polarized epithelial cells, sorted ligands or both, that may be altered in cellular transformation. I have analyzed here the cargo receptor VIP36 (Vesicular-integral membrane protein of 36 kD) for carbohydrate interaction. It has been described as a lectin in the ERGIC (endoplasmic reticulum-Golgi intermediate compartment), Golgi apparatus and plasma membrane. The docking reveals top-interacting carbohydrates of the N-glycan and O-glycan class that encompass N-linked
glycans of high mannose and equally complex type which likely function as sorted ligands in epithelial cells. O-glycans score lower and include core 2 residue binding. I show that fucose core modifications by Fut8 stimulate binding of N-linked glycans to VIP36, which is known to be different from binding of galectins 3 and 9. This suggests that Fut8-upregulation may directly alter the affinity of sorted cargo and may enhance the sorting to the apical pathway as exemplified in hepatocytes and traffic to bile. High affinity binding of the ganglioside GM1 carbohydrate headgroup to VIP36 suggests a linkage with protein and glycosphingolipid apical transfer in epithelial cells. Thus, this fundamental approach with large scale docking of 165 carbohydrates including 19 N-glycan high mannose, 17 N-glycan hybrid, 9 N-glycan complex, 17 O-glycan core, 27 Sialoside, 25 Fucoside and 51 other glycan residues suggests, that linked cargo-receptor apical transport may provide a path to epithelial polarization that may be modulated by core fucosylation.
Research, 2015
see manuscript / corrections on page 13 were added in version 2
The Journal of comparative neurology, Jan 19, 2015
The insular cortex is fundamentally involved in the processing of interoceptive information. It h... more The insular cortex is fundamentally involved in the processing of interoceptive information. It has been postulated that the integrative monitoring of the bodily responses to environmental stimuli is crucial for the recognition and experience of emotions. Because emotional arousal is known to be closely coupled to functions of the anterior insula, we suspected laughter to be associated primarily with neuronal activity in this region. An anatomically constrained re-analysis of our imaging data pertaining to ticklish laughter, to inhibited ticklish laughter, and to voluntary laughter revealed regional differences in the levels of neuronal activity in the posterior and mid-/anterior portions of the insula. Ticklish laughter was associated specifically with right ventral anterior insular activity, which was not detected under the other two conditions. Hence, apparently, only laughter that is evoked as an emotional response bears the signature of autonomic arousal in the insular cortex. ...
The Journal of Cell Biology, 1995
The sorting of apical and basolateral proteins into vesicular carriers takes place in the trans-G... more The sorting of apical and basolateral proteins into vesicular carriers takes place in the trans-Golgi network (TGN) in MDCK cells. We have previously analyzed the protein composition of immunoisolated apical and basolateral transport vesicles and have now identified a component that is highly enriched in apical vesicles. Isolation of the encoding cDNA revealed that this protein, annexin XIIIb, is a new isoform of the epithelial specific annexin XIII sub-family which includes the previously described intestinespecific annexin (annexin XIILa; Wice, B. M., and J. I. Gordon. 1992. J. Cell Biol. 116:405-422). Annexin XlIlb differs from annexin XIIIa in that it contains a unique insert of 41 amino acids in the NH2 terminus and is exclusively expressed in dog intestine and kidney. Immunofluorescence microscopy demonstrated
The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology, 2004
Endothelial cell (EC) cultures of different, selected vascular beds and/or organs were screened f... more Endothelial cell (EC) cultures of different, selected vascular beds and/or organs were screened for receptor-mediated transport of proteins with a semipermeable filter assay. In SVEC4-10 cells, a mouse lymphoid endothelial cell line, orosomucoid, albumin, insulin and LDL were transcytosed from the apical (luminal) to basal (abluminal) side by a receptor-mediated pathway. Specific LDL transcytosis involved transport of intact LDL. A pathway of degradation of LDL and basal release involved vesicles in transport to lysosomes and amino acid merocrine secretion. This newly described transcellular passage of LDL via lysosomes, as well as the standard pathway, were reduced to 70% by PEG(50)-cholesterol (PEG-Chol). Combined results of temperature-dependence analysis and PEG(50)-cholesterol sensitivity show that two pathways contribute to general LDL transcellular passage. We suggest a mechanism of domain hopping by protein membrane diffusion of receptors as the pathway for intact LDL delivery. Based on theoretical considerations we propose that active transport by protein membrane diffusion can be facilitated by an organizational structure of lipid microdomains and polar cellular organization.
Molecular Biology Reports, 2004
Part of these results were presented as an abstract to the ASCB Meeting, San Francisco, 2002: Fie... more Part of these results were presented as an abstract to the ASCB Meeting, San Francisco, 2002: Fiedler, K. (2002 Caveolae in mechanotransduction. Mol. Biol. Cell Suppl., 232a. 2
Journal of Neuroscience Research, 1995
The remarkable quantities of myelin membrane produced by oligodendrocytes has led us to examine t... more The remarkable quantities of myelin membrane produced by oligodendrocytes has led us to examine the mechanisms involved in the sorting and transport of proteins and lipids during myelinogenesis. Noting that it has been proposed that proteins destined for the apical surface of polarized epithelial cells co-cluster with glycolipid-rich microdomains during sorting and transport from the trans-Golgi network (Simons and van Meer: Biochemistry 27:6197-6202, 1988; Simons and Wandinger-Ness: Cell 62:207-210, 1990), we hypothesized that the glycolipid-rich oligodendrocytes may adopt this mechanism for myelinogenesis. Protein-lipid complexes from oligodendrocytes and myelin were isolated utilizing detergent insolubility and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. A developmentally regulated protein, MVP17 (myelin vesicular protein of 17 kDa), was identified. Microsequencing of the N-terminal peptide revealed a high homology to human T-cell MAL protein (Alonso and Weissman: Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 84:1997-2001, 1987). The corresponding MVP17 cDNA was isolated from an oligodendrocyte cDNA library. The predicted protein sequence showed 88.9% identity with MAL, and the hydrophobicity profile suggested four transmembrane domains. In vitro translation demonstrated a signal at the deduced Mr of approximately 17 kDa. Northern analyses indicated that MVP17 mRNA expression is restricted to brain and kidney and that this expression is up-regulated in oligodendrocytes and brain during the period of active myelination. These data suggest that MVP17 is involved in myelin biogenesis and/or myelin function.
FEBS Letters, 1995
VIP17 is a proteolipid enriched in the CHAPS-insoluble complexes from MDCK cells, and a candidate... more VIP17 is a proteolipid enriched in the CHAPS-insoluble complexes from MDCK cells, and a candidate component of the molecular machinery responsible for the sorting and targeting of proteins to the apical surface. Cloning and sequencing of the cDNA encoding the protein revealed that it is the canine homolog of the human and rat MAL proteins. Analysis by immunofluorescence microscopy of epitope-tagged VIP17/MAL expressed transiently in BHK cells and stably in MDCK cells revealed a perinuclear, vesicular, and plasmalemmal staining. In MDCK cells the distribution was mainly in vesicular structures in the apical cytoplasm. These and other results suggest that VIP17/MAL is an important component in vesicular trafficking cycling between the Golgi complex and the apical plasma membrane.