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Browsing by Author "Scheiderer, Lukas"

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    Accelerated MINFLUX Nanoscopy, through Spontaneously Fast‐Blinking Fluorophores
    (2023)
    Remmel, Michael
    ;
    Scheiderer, Lukas
    ;
    Butkevich, Alexey N.  
    ;
    Bossi, Mariano L.  
    ;
    Hell, Stefan W.  
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    Hot on the Trail of Kinesin-1 with MINFLUX
    (2023)
    Matthias, Jessica
    ;
    Wolff, Jan O
    ;
    Scheiderer, Lukas
    ;
    Engelhardt, Tobias
    ;
    Engelhardt, Johann
    ;
    Hell, Stefan W
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    MINFLUX dissects the unimpeded walking of kinesin-1
    (2023)
    Wolff, Jan O.
    ;
    Scheiderer, Lukas
    ;
    Engelhardt, Tobias
    ;
    Engelhardt, Johann
    ;
    Matthias, Jessica
    ;
    Hell, Stefan W.
    We introduce an interferometric MINFLUX microscope that records protein movements with up to 1.7 nanometer per millisecond spatiotemporal precision. Such precision has previously required attaching disproportionately large beads to the protein, but MINFLUX requires the detection of only about 20 photons from an approximately 1-nanometer-sized fluorophore. Therefore, we were able to study the stepping of the motor protein kinesin-1 on microtubules at up to physiological adenosine-5′-triphosphate (ATP) concentrations. We uncovered rotations of the stalk and the heads of load-free kinesin during stepping and showed that ATP is taken up with a single head bound to the microtubule and that ATP hydrolysis occurs when both heads are bound. Our results show that MINFLUX quantifies (sub)millisecond conformational changes of proteins with minimal disturbance.
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    MINSTED tracking of single biomolecules
    (2024)
    Scheiderer, Lukas
    ;
    von der Emde, Henrik
    ;
    Hesselink, Mira
    ;
    Weber, Michael
    ;
    Hell, Stefan W.
    Abstract Here we show that MINSTED localization, a method whereby the position of a fluorophore is identified with precisely controlled beams of a STED microscope, tracks fluorophores and hence labeled biomolecules with nanometer/millisecond spatiotemporal precision. By updating the position for each detected photon, MINSTED recognizes fluorophore steps of 16 nm within <250 μs using about 13 photons. The power of MINSTED tracking is demonstrated by resolving the stepping of the motor protein kinesin-1 walking on microtubules and switching protofilaments.
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    Uncovering kinesin dynamics in neurites with MINFLUX
    (2024)
    Wirth, Jan Otto
    ;
    Schentarra, Eva-Maria
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    Scheiderer, Lukas
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    Macarrón-Palacios, Victor
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    Tarnawski, Miroslaw
    ;
    Hell, Stefan W.
    Abstract Neurons grow neurites of several tens of micrometers in length, necessitating active transport from the cell body by motor proteins. By tracking fluorophores as minimally invasive labels, MINFLUX is able to quantify the motion of those proteins with nanometer/millisecond resolution. Here we study the substeps of a truncated kinesin-1 mutant in primary rat hippocampal neurons, which have so far been mainly observed on polymerized microtubules deposited onto glass coverslips. A gentle fixation protocol largely maintains the structure and surface modifications of the microtubules in the cell. By analyzing the time between the substeps, we identify the ATP-binding state of kinesin-1 and observe the associated rotation of the kinesin-1 head in neurites. We also observed kinesin-1 switching microtubules mid-walk, highlighting the potential of MINFLUX to study the details of active cellular transport.

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