Skip to ContentSkip to Navigation
Over ons Praktische zaken Waar vindt u ons prof. dr. L.M. (Liesbeth) Veenhoff

Research interests

Liesbeth Marian Veenhoff

Born 23-11-1972, NL

Partner of Jan Jacob Schuringa, mother of two born 2003 and 2005

Address: European Research Inst. for the Biology of Ageing, University Medical Center Groningen; Antonius Deusinglaan 1; room 205, 9713 AV Groningen; The Netherlands

email: l.m.veenhoff@rug.nl

 

Training

Master: University of Groningen; August 1996; Biology (Biochemistry/Molecular Biology)

PhD: University of Groningen; 7 September 2001, supervisor Prof. Dr. Poolman; Cum Laude

 

Work experience since completing PhD

2002-2003           post doctoral HFSP fellow, Rockefeller University (New York, USA), 1fte

2004-2010           post doctoral veni & vidi fellow, University of Groningen (NL), 0.8fte

2010-2012           Assistant Prof, University Medical Center Groningen (NL), 1fte  

2012-present       Group leader European Research Institute for the Biology of Ageing (ERIBA), University Medical Center Groningen (NL)

(UHD/Associate Prof since 2015, ius promovendi since 2018),

 

Brief summary of research over the last five years

My group has made important contributions in the nuclear transport field studying the mechanism of transport of membrane proteins. Specifically, we discovered that, while the majority of membrane proteins simply reach the inner membrane by diffusion, a selective and energy-dependent transport mechanism exists for two yeast proteins, and likely for a third human protein. Intriguingly, these three proteins all act in nuclear pore complex (NPC) assembly and quality control, which led me to question whether this special transport mechanism may be important for NPC quality control.

In collaboration with others, my team developed new methods and generated a first system-wide inventory of the molecular changes in mitotic ageing yeast. We found that a major signature of ageing cells is an altered stoichiometry in protein complexes, which was particularly strong for the NPC.

To then answer the many unresolved questions with regard to the function of the NPCs in ageing cells, we follow nuclear transport in ageing yeast cells. Using microfluidic devices, we monitor cells over their entire life span under perfectly controlled environmental conditions. My team found that NPC quality control is compromised in ageing cells, and associated with reduced transport across the nuclear envelope.

Altogether, my research lines—related to the function of the NPC, on the one hand, and to understanding what cellular ageing is on a molecular level, on the other—have now converged and jointly point to the importance of NPC quality control.

 

Grants, scholarships and prizes

PI   

2020 'Quality control of nuclear pores', NWO-Vici Science Domain

2020 'Guardians of protein disorder', NWO-XL Science Domain (previously ENW-GROOT) consortium grant, I act as project leader. 

2017 'Unravelling the molecular mechanism of impaired nuclear transport in ALS' Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (BBoL-NWO)

2016 Aspasia, Netherlands Organization for Scientific Reserach (NWO)   

2015 'A mother’s sacrifice: asymmetric inheritance of ageing factors' Netherlands Organization for Scientific Reserach (NWO-ALW) 

2013 ‘Aging of the Nuclear Pore Complex: relating structure and function’ Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (ECHO-NWO).               

2008 ‘Composition, function, and dynamics of the yeast nuclear envelope’ financed by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (Vidi-NWO)        

2004 Veni-NWO 

2002 Human Frontiers Fellowship long term fellowship           

2001 My thesis 'Mechanistic aspects and structural organization of a secondary sugar transporter' was awarded with the honour 'Cum laude' representing the top 5 % of PhD theses.          

1996 The Unilever Research Award 1996 for the best master student research project ‘Purification and reconstitution of transport proteins’.             

Co-PI     

2010 Co-author on the proposal for the Systems Biology Centre for Energy Metabolism and Ageing. Funding for 1 PhD student, project leader. (NWO)    

2008 Co-author on collaborative project “transport through a polymer network”. Funding for 1 PhD student. (Zernike institute for Advanced Material)           

2008 The Netherlands Proteomics Centre funds proteome research on the yeast nucleus. Funding for 1 PhD student.

Lees meer

Publicaties

Protein biogenesis machinery is a driver of replicative aging in yeast

Conservation of inner nuclear membrane targeting sequences in mammalian Pom121 and yeast Heh2 membrane proteins

Long Unfolded Linkers Facilitate Membrane Protein Import Through the Nuclear Pore Complex

The molecular architecture of the nuclear pore complex

Longevity biotechnology: bridging AI, biomarkers, geroscience and clinical applications for healthy longevity

Nucleoporin Nsp1 surveils the phase state of FG-Nups

PunctaFinder: An algorithm for automated spot detection in fluorescence microscopy images

A physicochemical perspective on cellular ageing

A survey of the specificity and mechanism of 1,6 hexanediol-induced disruption of nuclear transport

Changing the guard—nuclear pore complex quality control

Lees meer

Pers/media

e rol van het kernporiecomplex in veroudering

hoe onderzoek je de relatie tussen cellulair transport en veroudering?

Vici-beurs voor UMCG-onderzoek

Onderzoek naar eiwitstructuren

Nieuwe sluiproute door het kernporiecomplex ontdekt

Lees meer