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Université de Fribourg

Seipin accumulates and traps diacylglycerols and triglycerides in its ring-like structure

Zoni, Valeria ; Khaddaj, Rasha ; Lukmantara, Ivan ; Shinoda, Wataru ; Hongyuan, Yang ; Schneiter, Roger ; Vanni, Stefano

In: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2021, vol. 118, no. 10, p. e2017205118

Lipid droplets (LDs) are intracellular organelles responsible for lipid storage, and they emerge from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) upon the accumulation of neutral lipids, mostly triglycerides (TG), between the two leaflets of the ER membrane. LD biogenesis takes place at ER sites that are marked by the protein seipin, which subsequently recruits additional proteins to catalyze LD formation....

Université de Fribourg

Lipid signalling in disease

Wymann, Matthias P. ; Schneiter, Roger

In: Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2008, vol. 9, p. 162-176

Université de Fribourg

A novel sit4 phosphatase complex is involved in the response to ceramide stress in yeast

Woodacre, Alexandra ; Lone, Museer A. ; Jablonowski, Daniel ; Schneiter, Roger ; Giorgini, Flaviano ; Schaffrath, Raffael

In: Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity, 2013, p. -

Ceramide is a building block for complex sphingolipids in the plasma membrane, but it also plays a significant role in secondary signalling pathways regulating cell proliferation and apoptosis in response to stress. Ceramide activated protein phosphatase activity has been previously observed in association with the Sit4 protein phosphatase. Here we find that sit4Δ mutants have decreased ceramide...

Université de Fribourg

Secreted venom allergen-like proteins of helminths: Conserved modulators of host responses in animals and plants

Wilbers, Ruud H. P. ; Schneiter, Roger ; Holterman, Martijn H. M. ; Drurey, Claire ; Smant, Geert ; Asojo, Oluwatoyin A. ; Maizels, Rick M. ; Lozano-Torres, Jose L.

In: PLOS Pathogens, 2018, vol. 14, no. 10, p. e1007300

Despite causing considerable damage to host tissue at the onset of parasitism, invasive helminths establish remarkably persistent infections in both animals and plants. Secretions released by these obligate parasites during host invasion are thought to be crucial for their persistence in infection. Helminth secretions are complex mixtures of molecules, most of which have unknown molecular...

Université de Fribourg

Chemogenetic E-MAP in Saccharomyces cerevisiae for identification of membrane transporters operating lipid flip flop

Vazquez, Hector M. ; Vionnet, Christine ; Roubaty, Carole ; Mallela, Shamroop k. ; Schneiter, Roger ; Conzelmann, Andreas

In: PLOS Genet, 2016, vol. 12, no. 7, p. e1006160

While most yeast enzymes for the biosynthesis of glycerophospholipids, sphingolipids and ergosterol are known, genes for several postulated transporters allowing the flopping of biosynthetic intermediates and newly made lipids from the cytosolic to the lumenal side of the membrane are still not identified. An E-MAP measuring the growth of 142'108 double mutants generated by systematically...

Université de Fribourg

Lipid-dependent surface transport of the proton pumping ATPase: A model to study plasma membrane biogenesis in yeast

Toulmay, Alexandre ; Schneiter, Roger

In: Biochimie, 2007, vol. 89, no. 2, p. 249-254

The proton pumping H+-ATPase, Pma1, is one of the most abundant integral membrane proteins of the yeast plasma membrane. Pma1 activity controls the intracellular pH and maintains the electrochemical gradient across the plasma membrane, two essential cellular functions. The maintenance of the proton gradient, on the other hand, also requires a specialized lipid composition of this membrane. The...

Université de Fribourg

A two-step method for the introduction of single or multiple defined point mutations into the genome of Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Toulmay, Alexandre ; Schneiter, Roger

In: Yeast, 2006, vol. 23, no. 11, p. 825-831

The introduction of defined mutations into open reading frames (ORF) or non-translated regions of the genome is important to study of the structure-function relationship of amino acid residues in proteins or that of sequence motifs at the genome level. We describe a simple two-step method for the introduction of defined single or multiple point mutations into the genome of Saccharomyces...

Université de Fribourg

An acetylation/deacetylation cycle controls the export of sterols and steroids from S. cerevisiae

Tiwari, Rashi ; Köffel, René ; Schneiter, Roger

In: The EMBO Journal, 2007, vol. 26, no. 24, p. 5109–5119

Sterol homeostasis in eukaryotic cells relies on the reciprocal interconversion of free sterols and steryl esters. Here we report the identification of a novel reversible sterol modification in yeast, the sterol acetylation/deacetylation cycle. Sterol acetylation requires the acetyltransferase ATF2, whereas deacetylation requires SAY1, a membrane-anchored deacetylase with a putative active site...

Université de Fribourg

Integrating complex functions: coordination of nuclear pore complex assembly and membrane expansion of the nuclear envelope requires a family of integral membrane proteins

Schneiter, Roger ; Cole, Charles N.

In: Nucleus, 2010, vol. 1, no. 5, p. 387-392

The nuclear envelope harbors numerous large proteinaceous channels, the nuclear pore complexes (NPCs), through which macromolecular exchange between the cytosol and the nucleoplasm occurs. This double-membrane nuclear envelope is continuous with the endoplasmic reticulum and thus functionally connected to such diverse processes as vesicular transport, protein maturation and lipid synthesis....

Université de Fribourg

Intracellular sterol transport in eukaryotes, a connection to mitochondrial function ?

Schneiter, Roger

In: Biochimie, 2007, vol. 89, no. 2, p. 255-259

Eukaryotic cells synthesize sterols in the endoplasmatic reticulum (ER) from where it needs to be efficiently transported to the plasma membrane, which harbors not, vert, similar90% of the free sterol pool of the cell. Sterols that are being taken up from the environment, on the other hand, are transported back from the plasma membrane to the ER, where the free sterols are esterified to steryl...