Niko Dalheimer
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niko-dalheimer.bsky.social
Niko Dalheimer
@niko-dalheimer.bsky.social
PhD student in F.U.Hartl group - MPI of Biochemistry | Molecular cell biology | Single particle tracking | Proteostasis | Chaperone mediated protein folding
Pinned
I’m excited to share my first-author paper, with co-first author @rongqinxiaoxiao.bsky.social, now out in @nature.com. We developed a live-cell single-particle tracking platform to see how TRiC & prefoldin engage proteins during co- and post-translational folding. 1/9 www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Single-molecule dynamics of the TRiC chaperonin system in vivo - Nature
Single-particle tracking experiments in intact cells reveal dynamic co- and post-translational interactions of the TRiC–PFD chaperonin complex with client proteins during in vivo protein folding.
www.nature.com
Reposted by Niko Dalheimer
Nature research paper: Single-molecule dynamics of the TRiC chaperonin system in vivo

go.nature.com/4qZM3Cn
Single-molecule dynamics of the TRiC chaperonin system in vivo - Nature
Single-particle tracking experiments in intact cells reveal dynamic co- and post-translational interactions of the TRiC–PFD chaperonin complex with client proteins during in vivo protein folding.
go.nature.com
February 9, 2026 at 8:55 AM
Reposted by Niko Dalheimer
All lights on protein folding 💡

Out @nature.com , @niko-dalheimer.bsky.social & @rongqinxiaoxiao.bsky.social from the Hartl lab at @maxplanck.de Institute of Biochemistry developed single-particle tracking in living cells to study the dynamics of co-translational protein folding

#sciart #scicomm
February 7, 2026 at 3:16 PM
Reposted by Niko Dalheimer
"Single-molecule dynamics of the #TRiC #chaperonin system in vivo" is out @nature.com.

❕Publication: www.nature.com/articles/s41...
❕Press Release: www.biochem.mpg.de/live-broadca...

Authors: @rongqinxiaoxiao.bsky.social, @niko-dalheimer.bsky.social, @mamueller.bsky.social, F.-Ulrich Hartl
February 5, 2026 at 4:12 PM
I’m excited to share my first-author paper, with co-first author @rongqinxiaoxiao.bsky.social, now out in @nature.com. We developed a live-cell single-particle tracking platform to see how TRiC & prefoldin engage proteins during co- and post-translational folding. 1/9 www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Single-molecule dynamics of the TRiC chaperonin system in vivo - Nature
Single-particle tracking experiments in intact cells reveal dynamic co- and post-translational interactions of the TRiC–PFD chaperonin complex with client proteins during in vivo protein folding.
www.nature.com
February 5, 2026 at 5:17 PM
Reposted by Niko Dalheimer
Now out in Nature! We visualize infection of the RNA virus RSV in real-time with single-vRNP resolution to understand how RSV establishes viral factories, biomolecular condensates that act as sites of viral replication. A huge collaborative effort led by Dhanushika Ratnayake!

rdcu.be/e1bBW
Pre-assembly of biomolecular condensate seeds drives RSV replication
Nature - Viral ribonucleoprotein–viral protein networks form pre-replication centres that nucleate viral factories and drive respiratory syncytial virus replication.
rdcu.be
January 28, 2026 at 8:38 PM
Reposted by Niko Dalheimer
New lab paper!! We develop a technology for real-time, single-molecule visualization of proteasomal substrate degradation in cells. We find that the site of substrate engagement by the proteasome determines decay kinetics, efficiency and co-factor requirement.

www.biorxiv.org/content/10.6...
In vivo kinetics of protein degradation by individual proteasomes
Protein degradation by the proteasome is central to cellular homeostasis and has been studied extensively using biochemical and structural studies. Despite an in-depth understanding of core proteolytic activity, it has remained largely unresolved how individual proteasomes process substrates inside living cells where many substrate types and co-factors exist. Here, we establish a live-cell single-molecule imaging approach that enables direct visualization and quantification of protein degradation by individual proteasomes. Using this approach, we find that substrate identity, folding and protein-protein interaction have a surprisingly modest impact on processing efficiency, whereas the mode of substrate engagement greatly impacts substrate processing; degradation initiated from protein termini typically proceeds rapidly and with high processivity, whereas internal engagement constitutes a distinct processing mode that exhibits poor processivity and a specific requirement for the AAA+ family ATPase p97/VCP. Furthermore, degradation initiated from opposite termini proceeds with asymmetric rates in a sequence-dependent manner, demonstrating that directionality is an important feature of proteasomal processing in vivo. Notably, poly-glutamine substrates associated with neurodegenerative disease are efficiently degraded from one terminus but resist degradation when engaged from the opposite terminus, highlighting the importance of substrate engagement mode. Together, our results show that different modes of substrate engagement lead to different proteasomal processing outcomes in vivo and revise the prevailing view of the proteasome as a uniform degradation machine. ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.
www.biorxiv.org
January 20, 2026 at 8:32 AM
Reposted by Niko Dalheimer
Our latest cotranslational folding story is now published @cp-molcell.bsky.social. Really cool (I think) new ideas about how exactly the ribosome directs folding and assembly to make sure complicated proteins mature efficiently in cells.
www.cell.com/molecular-ce...
The ribosome synchronizes folding and assembly to promote oligomeric protein biogenesis
Large oligomeric proteins constitute a major fraction of proteomes, but are difficult to refold in vitro, raising the question of how cells direct their biogenesis. Roeselová and Shivakumaraswamy et a...
www.cell.com
January 19, 2026 at 5:14 PM