Publications by authors named "Manuel Eisentraut"

Antibody-opsonized bacteria interact with Fc receptors in macrophages and trigger signaling cascades, which induce phagocytosis. The signaling pathways ultimately lead to actin polymerization that induces the protrusion of the membrane around the bacterium until it is completely engulfed. Although many proteins involved in the phagocytic cup formation have already been identified, it is still unclear how far the initial stimulus created by the bacterium-cell contact propagates in the cell.

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Phagocytosis is an important part of innate immunity and describes the engulfment of bacteria and other extracellular objects on the micrometer scale. The protrusion of the cell membrane around the bacteria during this process is driven by a reorganization of the actin cortex. The process has been studied on the molecular level to great extent during the past decades.

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Lipid membranes, the barrier defining living cells and many of their subcompartments, bind to a wide variety of nano- and micrometer sized objects. In the presence of strong adhesive forces, membranes can strongly deform and wrap the particles, an essential step in crossing the membrane for a variety of healthy and disease-related processes. A large body of theoretical and numerical work has focused on identifying the physical properties that underly wrapping.

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