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Claus W Heizmann

Claus W Heizmann

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468
Publications
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Introduction
Study of Chemisty, University of Basel, Switzerland PhD University of Konstanz, Germany Postdoc University of Washington, Seattle, USA; ETH Zürich Prof. em. Clinical Biochemistry, University of Zürich Visiting Prof. Mie University, Tsu, Japan Past General Secretary of the Swiss Society for Clinical Chemistry and Specialist for Laboratory Medicine (FAMH) Past President and Honorary Member of the European Calcium Society (ECS)
Additional affiliations
January 1988 - July 2007
University of Zurich
January 1974 - January 1978
ETH Zurich

Publications

Publications (468)
Chapter
A multitude of Ca²⁺-sensor proteins containing the specific Ca²⁺-binding motif (helix-loop-helix, called EF-hand) are of major clinical relevance in a many human diseases. Measurements of troponin, the first intracellular Ca-sensor protein to be discovered, is nowadays the “gold standard” in the diagnosis of patients with acute coronary syndrome (A...
Book
This detailed volume explores protocols for studying the many facets of Ca²⁺-imaging, Ca²⁺-signaling, and Ca²⁺-binding along with background information on the principles and application of these techniques. The content of the book delves into 48 chapters including subjects such as data analysis and modern technologies to study calcium-binding and...
Article
S100 proteins are members of the superfamily of Ca²⁺-binding proteins characterized by the specific Ca²⁺-binding motif, the EF-hand. Proteins of this superfamily are of clinical use as important diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers in adult and pediatric Laboratory Medicine. For example, measurements of troponin are nowadays the ‘gold standard’ in...
Article
We identified S100A4, as a marker of rhomboid (R) smooth muscle cells (SMCs) in vitro (the synthetic phenotype, typical of intimal SMCs) in the porcine coronary artery and of intimal SMCs in vivo both in pig and human. S100A4 is an intracellular Ca(2+) signalling protein and can be secreted; it has extracellular functions via the receptor for advan...
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Background: It has been proposed that smooth muscle cells (SMCs) from the arterial wall are heterogeneous and that only a subset of medial SMCs are prone to accumulate into the intima leading to atheromatous plaque formation. We isolated 2 distinct SMC phenotypes from porcine coronary artery: spindle-shaped (S) and rhomboid (R). Biological features...
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Survival of colorectal cancer patients is strongly dependent on development of distant metastases. S100A4 is a prognostic biomarker and inducer for colorectal cancer metastasis. Besides exerting intracellular functions, S100A4 is secreted extracellularly. The receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) is one of its interaction partners. Th...
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Survival of colorectal cancer patients is strongly dependent on development of distant metastases. S100A4 is a prognostic biomarker and inducer for colorectal cancer metastasis. Besides exerting intracellular functions, S100A4 is secreted extracellularly. The receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) is one of its interaction partners. Th...
Chapter
Deimination is a relatively new post-translational modification of proteins, whose recognition is ever-increasing. First linked to the pathology of rheumatoid arthritis (RA), deimination is a process by which selected positively charged arginine amino acids are converted to neutral citrulline amino acids by the peptidyl arginine deiminase (PAD) fam...
Article
The S100A3 homotetramer assembles upon citrullination of a specific symmetric Arg51 pair on its homodimer interface in human hair cuticular cells. Each S100A3 subunit contains two EF-hand-type Ca2 +-binding motifs and one (Cys)3His-type Zn2 +-binding site in the C-terminus. The C-terminal coiled domain is cross-linked to the presumed docking surfac...
Book
Authorative and practical,Calcium-Binding Proteins and RAGE: from Structural Basics to Clinical Applications underlines the diagnostic and clinical importance of the EF-hand proteins in human diseases and as drug targets
Article
High quantity and quality of recombinant Ca(2+)-binding proteins are required to study their molecular interactions, self-assembly, posttranslational modifications, and biological activities to elucidate Ca(2+)-dependent cellular signaling pathways. S100A3 is a unique member of the S100 protein family with the highest cysteine content (10%). This p...
Book
A major direction in medical research leading to clinical applications targets the regulation of intracellular calcium and the various human diseases associated with an altered homeostasis of this global second messenger. These diseases include, for example: cardiomyopathy, inflammation, brain disorders, diabetes and cancer. In Calcium Binding Prot...
Article
The Receptor for Advanced Glycation Endproducts (RAGE) is a multiligand receptor involved in a large number of human disorders. Identified first as the receptor for the Advanced Glycation Endproducts (AGEs), RAGE has emerged in recent years as a major receptor for many members of the S100 calcium and zinc binding protein family. The interaction wit...
Article
Epithelial Ca(2+)-regulation, which governs cornified envelope formation in the skin epidermis and hair follicles, closely coincides with the expression of S100A3, filaggrin and trichohyalin, and the post-translational modification of these proteins by Ca(2+)-dependent peptidylarginine deiminases. This review summarizes the current nomenclature and...
Article
Mitochondrial Ca(2+) signals have been proposed to accelerate oxidative metabolism and ATP production to match Ca(2+)-activated energy-consuming processes. Efforts to understand the signaling role of mitochondrial Ca(2+) have been hampered by the inability to manipulate matrix Ca(2+) without directly altering cytosolic Ca(2+). We were able to selec...
Article
S100A3, a member of the EF-hand-type Ca(2+)-binding S100 protein family, is unique in its exceptionally high cysteine content and Zn(2+) affinity. We produced human S100A3 protein and its mutants in insect cells using a baculovirus expression system. The purified wild-type S100A3 and the pseudo-citrullinated form (R51A) were crystallized with ammon...
Article
Advanced glycation endproducts (AGEs) are suspected to stimulate inflammatory signaling pathways in target tissues via activation of the receptor for AGEs. Endotoxins are generally recognized as potential contamination of AGE preparations and stimulate biological actions that are very similar as or identical to those induced by AGEs. In our study,...
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Saliva is a body fluid of a unique composition devoted to protect the mouth cavity and the digestive tract. Our high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC)-electrospray ionization-MS analysis of the acidic soluble fraction of saliva from preterm human newborn surprisingly revealed more than 40 protein masses often undetected in adult saliva. We w...
Article
S100B is a homodimeric zinc-, copper-, and calcium-binding protein of the family of EF-hand S100 proteins. Zn(2+) binding to S100B increases its affinity towards Ca(2+) as well as towards target peptides and proteins. Cu(2+) and Zn(2+) bind presumably to the same site in S100B. We determined the structures of human Zn(2+)- and Ca(2+)-loaded S100B a...
Article
S100A1 is a Ca2+-binding protein expressed at high levels in the myocardium. It is thought to modulate the Ca2+ sensitivity of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ release channels (ryanodine receptors or RyRs) and its expression has been shown to be down regulated in various heart diseases. In this study we used S100A1 knock-out (KO) mice to inves...
Article
The Receptor for Advanced Glycation Endproducts (RAGE) is a multi-ligand receptor of the immunoglobulin family. RAGE interacts with structurally different ligands probably through the oligomerization of the receptor on the cell surface. However, the exact mechanism is unknown. Among RAGE ligands are members of the S100 protein family. S100 proteins...
Article
S100A1 and S100B, members of the EF‐hand family of Ca ²⁺ ‐binding proteins, exist in cells as homo‐ or hetero‐dimers. Our studies on mouse embryos showed that these two proteins shared some common expression sites including skeletal tissues, dorsal root ganglia, trigeminal ganglia and the hindbrain. However, neither S100A1 nor S100B knockout mice e...
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In primary squamous cell carcinoma of the larynx (LSCC), Ca(2+) binding S100A2 protein underexpression was already found to be associated with poor tumour differentiation and shorter overall survival. In the present work, the role of S100A2 protein expression in the prediction of regional metastasis-free survival (MFS) was investigated to guide nec...
Chapter
The EF-hand containing calcium-binding proteins (CaBP) form a large family of proteins that is continuously growing, adding more complexity to calcium-dependent cellular processes. In this review, we give an overview of the different classes of EF-hand containing CaBP that play important roles in the CNS. We have indicated the cellular function, wh...
Article
Hallmarks of Alzheimer's disease (AD) include the accumulation of amyloid beta peptide (Abeta), hyperphosphorylation of tau protein, and increased inflammatory activity in the hippocampus and cerebral cortex. The receptor for advanced glycation endproducts (RAGE) has been shown to interact with Abeta and to modulate Abeta transport across the blood...
Article
Ca2+ regulates many vital physiological functions and metabolic processes. This Ca2+-signal within cells is transmitted by the EF-hand Ca2+ binding proteins, including the S100 protein family. S100 proteins are implicated in pleiotropic Ca2+-dependent events, with specific functions for each of the family members demonstrated in a number of genetic...
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The Receptor for Advanced Glycation Endproducts (RAGE) has been suggested to play an important role in melanoma. Animal studies with anti-RAGE antibodies have shown that RAGE blockade leads to reduced melanoma tumor growth and metastasis formation. RAGE is a multiligand receptor and among its ligands are the Ca-binding S100 proteins. Certain S100 p...
Article
Full-text available
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by brain accumulation of the amyloid-beta peptide (Abeta) that triggers a cascade of biochemical and cellular alterations resulting in the clinical phenotype of the disease. While numerous experiments addressed Abeta toxicity, the mechanisms are still not fully understood. The receptor for advanced glycatio...
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Pterin-4a-carbinolamine dehydratase/dimerization cofactor for hepatocyte nuclear factor-1α is a protein with two different functions. We have overexpressed and purified the human wild-type protein, and its Cys81Ser and Cys81Arg mutants. The Cys81Arg mutant has been proposed to be causative in a hyperphenylalaninaemic patient [Citron, B. A., Kaufman...
Article
S100A1 is a Ca(2+)-binding protein and predominantly expressed in the heart. We have generated a mouse line of S100A1 deficiency by gene trap mutagenesis to investigate the impact of S100A1 ablation on heart function. Electrocardiogram recordings revealed that after beta-adrenergic stimulation S100A1-deficient mice had prolonged QT, QTc and ST inte...
Article
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In the genesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD), converging lines of evidence suggest that amyloid-beta peptide (Abeta) triggers a pathogenic cascade leading to neuronal loss. It was long assumed that Abeta had to be assembled into extracellular amyloid fibrils or aggregates to exert its cytotoxic effects. Over the past decade, characterization of solub...
Article
The receptor for advanced glycation endproducts (RAGE) interacts with several ligands and is involved in various human diseases. RAGE_v1 or sRAGE, a RAGE splice variant, is secreted and contributes to the removal of RAGE ligands. Because RAGE blockade by specific antibodies directed against RAGE extracellular domains and the use of sRAGE have been...
Article
Ca(2+) acts as global second messenger involved in the regulation of all aspects of cell function. A multitude of Ca(2+)-sensor proteins containing the specific Ca(2+) binding motif (helix-loop-helix, called EF-hand) developed early in evolution. Calmodulin (CAM) as the prototypical Ca(2+)-sensor with four EF-hands and its family members troponin-C...
Article
S100A1 protein is an EF‐hand type calcium‐binding protein with unique functions in adult tissues. However, its role in the embryonic development is largely unknown. To better understand its developmental role, we sought to determine the spatio‐temporal expression of S100A1 with reverse transcription‐PCR and specific immunohistochemical localization...
Article
Advanced glycation endproducts (AGEs) containing carboxymethyllysine (CML) modifications are generally thought to be ligands of the receptor for AGEs, RAGEs. It has been argued that this results in the activation of pro-inflammatory pathways and diseases. However, it has not been shown conclusively that a CML-modified protein can interact directly...
Article
Full-text available
S100A3 is a unique member of the Ca2+-binding S100 protein family with the highest cysteine content and affinity for Zn2+. This protein is highly expressed in the differentiating cuticular cells within the hair follicle and organized into mature hair cuticles. Previous studies suggest a close association of S100A3 with epithelial differentiation, l...
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More than 900 hemoglobin (Hb) variants are currently known. Common techniques used in Hb analysis are electrophoretic and chromatographic assays. In our laboratory, we routinely apply chromatographic methods. To ascertain whether Hb variants are missed with our procedures, we additionally analyzed all samples with mass spectrometry (MS). Database e...
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S100 proteins are EF-hand calcium-binding proteins with various intracellular functions including cell proliferation, differentiation, migration, and apoptosis. Some S100 proteins are also secreted and exert extracellular paracrine and autocrine functions. Experimental results suggest that the receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) pla...
Article
We are interested in the regulation of intracellular calcium and the various diseases associated with an altered regulation of this second messenger. More recently, we also became interested in pathologies involving the Ca2+‐binding S100 proteins and AGEs and their association with the multifunctional Receptor for Advanced Glycation Endproducts (RA...
Article
Nervous system development and plasticity require regulation of cell proliferation, survival, neurite outgrowth and synapse formation by specific extracellular factors. The EF-hand protein S100B is highly expressed in human brain. In the extracellular space, it promotes neurite extension and neuron survival via the receptor RAGE (receptor for advan...
Article
Calcium is of pivotal importance for many biological processes. It may have a rather static, structure-stabilizing role, or it may participate as one of the second messengers of the cell in signal transduction pathways, fulfilling a more dynamic function. This is made possible by some specific properties of the Ca2+ ion (e.g. high dehydration rate,...
Article
Immunocytochemical localization studies of S100A1 in muscle cells have so far yielded variable and conflicting results mainly due to different sample preparation techniques for immunoelectron microscopy. To minimize denaturation by fixation and embedding, cryofixation and cryosectioning followed by immunolabelling were used in the present study. Ra...
Article
The receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) is an important cell surface receptor being pursued as a therapeutic target because it has been implicated in complications arising from diabetes and chronic inflammatory conditions. RAGE is a single membrane spanning receptor containing a very small approximately 40 residue cytosolic domain a...
Article
Human S100A2 is an EF-hand calcium-binding S100 protein that is localized mainly in the nucleus and functions as tumor suppressor. In addition to Ca2+ S100A2 binds Zn2+ with a high affinity. Studies have been carried out to investigate whether Zn2+ acts as a regulatory ion for S100A2, as in the case of Ca2+. Using the method of competition with the...
Article
The S100 proteins are exclusively expressed in vertebrates and are the largest subgroup within the superfamily of EF-hand Ca 2+ -binding proteins Generally, S100 proteins are organized as tight homodimers (some as heterodimers). Each subunit is composed of a C-terminal, ‘canonical’ EF-hand, common to all EF-hand proteins, and a N-terminal, ‘pseudo’...
Article
Single proteins, when analyzed with 2-D-PAGE, often show multiple spots due to PTMs. In gels of human body fluids, the spot patterns facilitate the assignment and identification of the proteins. We analyzed serums from patients with congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) in which glycoproteins are strongly impacted and exhibit highly distingui...
Article
Full-text available
S100A16 protein is a new and unique member of the EF-hand Ca(2+)-binding proteins. S100 proteins are cell- and tissue-specific and are involved in many intra- and extracellular processes through interacting with specific target proteins. In the central nervous system S100 proteins are implicated in cell proliferation, differentiation, migration, an...
Article
Activation of the Wnt/beta-catenin pathway is frequently observed in colorectal cancers. Our aim was to elucidate the impact of gain-of-function beta-catenin on the metastasis-associated gene S100A4 in human colon cancer cell lines and tumors. We analyzed cell lines heterozygous for gain-of-function and wild-type beta-catenin, and variants homozygo...
Article
S100 proteins comprise a family of Ca(2+) binding proteins of at least 21 members. They are distinctly expressed in a variety of cell types and tissues and are thought to play unique roles, although they share a high degree of sequence homology and expression overlap. S100A1 is prominently expressed in the heart, where it takes part in Ca(2+)-cycli...
Article
The plethora of names given to S100 proteins resulted in considerable confusion. Here we present the official and updated nomenclature of this protein family, approved by the HGNC (HUGO gene nomenclature committee) and ECS (European Calcium Society).
Article
3-Nitrotyrosine (3-NT) is considered as a marker of oxidative stress, which occurs during inflammation. Since 3-NT levels in exhaled breath condensate (EBC) are very low, we applied a specific and sensitive gas chromatography-negative ion chemical ionization-mass spectrometry (GC-NICI-MS) method and high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) wit...
Article
RAGE is a multi-ligand receptor involved in various human diseases including diabetes, cancer or Alzheimer's disease. Engagement of RAGE by its ligands triggers activation of key cellular signalling pathways such as the MAP kinase and NF-kappaB pathways. Whereas the main isoform of RAGE is a transmembrane receptor with both extra- and intracellular...
Article
A single-stranded DNA-binding protein of Mr 35,000 (35K protein) was isolated from calf cerebral cortex by affinity chromatography on immobilized double-stranded and single-stranded DNA. Its localization in the nuclear compartment was demonstrated by im-munohistochemistry. Previous studies had uncovered a homologous nonhistone chromosomal protein i...
Chapter
Full-text available
S100 proteins are involved in many cellular processes such as cell growth and motility, cell cycle regulation, transcription, and differentiation. Twenty members have been discovered so far, and altogether, S100 proteins represent the largest subgroup within the EF-hand Ca²⁺-protein family. In resting cells, S100 proteins are localized in specific...
Article
Previous studies suggest that some S100 proteins are involved in the progression of certain types of cancer. However, no comprehensive data is currently available on the expression of S100 family genes in lung adenocarcinomas. Oligonucleotide array, quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction and western blot analyses of lung adeno...
Article
S100A4 has multiple functions in cell cycle progression and cell motility, and has been implicated in cancer invasion. In this study, we examined the expression of S100A4, E-cadherin and its related proteins in oral squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) cell lines with different invasive phenotypes, grade 4C and 4D. Furthermore, grade 4C OSC-19 cells expre...
Article
The cellular events leading to cerebral vasospasm after subarachnoid haemorrhages (SAH) involve a number of members of the protein kinase C (PKC) family. However, whereas calcium is thought to play a number of major roles in the pathophysiology of SAH, a number of PKCs function independently of calcium. We recently emphasized the potential role of...
Article
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While most osteosarcoma patients have metastatic or micrometastatic lesions, less than 15% of them have clinically detectable metastatic diseases at presentation. To identify potential markers that may predict osteosarcoma metastasis, we analyzed the expression of S100A6 in 50 osteosarcoma cases and found that 84% of the analyzed specimens stained...
Article
Hair treatment chemicals induce sudden and severe hair damage. In this study, we examined cuticles from untreated, permed, and bleached hair that were mechanically discriminated by shaking in water. Both perming and bleaching treatments are prone to easily delaminate cuticles. Confocal microscopy revealed that the cuticles of permed hair were delam...
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Full-text available
Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma express high levels of the EF-hand calcium-binding protein S100A2 in contrast to other tumorigenic tissues and cell lines where the expression of this protein is reduced. Subtractive hybridization of tumorigenic versus normal tumor-derived mammary epithelial cells has previously identified the S100A2 protein as...
Article
Full-text available
S100B, a Ca2+-binding protein, acts intracellularly as a Ca2+-signalling protein but is also secreted to the extracellular space, acting in a cytokine-like manner through its receptor RAGE. Recombinant human S100B has been purified and crystallized in the Ca2+-bound state. Size-exclusion chromatography indicates that S100B can exist as a dimer and...
Article
Hemoglobin (Hb) heterogeneity arises mainly from posttranslational modifications of the globin chains, and cation-exchange chromatography reveals falsely increased concentrations of some minor Hbs in the presence of abnormal Hbs. Here we describe a method for identification of the globin chains and their posttranslational modifications contained in...
Article
Full-text available
The reduction of flavins by BH4− is slow, but strongly catalyzed by light. The main product of the reaction is 1,5-dihydroflavin, i. e. normal leucoflavin, which is rapidly reoxidized upon admission of air. Under continuous aeration, however, a second reaction, irreversible by oxygen in the dark, becomes dominant yielding a tetrahydroflavin which,...
Article
Ten puppy dogs (82, 131 or 148 days-old) from a Pointer cross-colony, exhibiting a juvenile severe hearing loss transmitted as an autosomal recessive trait, were used for histopathological characterization of the inner ear lesion. Immunostaining with calbindin, Na,K-ATPase, cytokeratins, S100, S100A1 and S100A6 antisera were helpful in identifying...
Article
Astrocytes recruitment and activation are a hallmark of many neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer's disease (AD). We have previously observed an overexpression for S100A6 protein, a Ca(2+)/Zn(2+) binding protein presenting more affinity for zinc than for calcium, in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Here we demonstrated in AD patients...
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Full-text available
The biological factors responsible for the increased aggressiveness in atypical meningiomas are not well known. The aim of this study is to evaluate the discriminatory value of a number of biological markers (S100 proteins and galectin-3 and its ligand profile) with respect to benign and atypical meningiomas. Using 63 meningiomas (39 benign and 24...
Article
Time-lapse studies indicate that ventricular zone (VZ)-derived cells show two migratory modes in the cerebral cortex at different stages of mammalian embryogenesis: somal translocation and locomotion. We carried out a systematic analysis to examine whether the migratory behavior of cortical neurons derived from the cortical VZ is stage-dependent. W...
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The stria vascularis in the cochlea and the dark-cell areas in the vestibular endorgans are structures involved in the production of endolymphatic fluid. This study investigated the dark-cell areas in the vestibular endorgans of the dog by classical staining and by immunohistochemistry (anti-Na,K-ATPase beta2 isoform, anti-cytokeratins (against cyt...
Article
The S100 protein family is the largest subgroup within the superfamily of proteins carrying the Ca2+-binding EF-hand motif. Despite their small molecular size and their conserved functional domain of two distinct EF-hands, S100 proteins developed a plethora of tissue-specific intra- and extracellular functions. Accordingly, various diseases such as...
Article
S100A4 is known to be involved in cancer cell motility by virtue of its ability to activate non-muscle myosin. In the current study, we investigated the interrelationship of clinico-pathological findings and S100A4 expression in oral squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). The expression of S100A4 was examined immunohistochemically in 41 clinical specimens...
Article
Full-text available
Metastasis-promoting Mts1(S100A4) protein belongs to the S100 family of Ca(2+)-binding proteins. A mouse strain with a germ-line inactivation of the S100A4 gene was generated. The mice were viable and did not display developmental abnormalities in the postnatal period. However, an abnormal sex ratio was observed in the litters with the S100A4-/- ge...
Article
Some WHO grade I intracranial meningiomas resected from the same sites and with the same quality of resection (Simpson's grading scale) recur, while others do not. The reasons for this variability in occurrence of recurrence have not yet been determined. We therefore investigated the prognostic recurrence value of seven biological markers on a seri...
Article
The extracellular functions of S100 proteins have attracted more attention in recent years. S100 proteins are a group of calcium-binding proteins which exhibit cell- and tissue-specific expression, and different expression levels of members from this family have been observed in various pathological conditions. The reported extracellular functions...
Article
Electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry is a widely applied method for the analysis of acylcarnitines in blood samples spotted on filter paper cards (Guthrie cards). When the filter paper cards are contaminated by EMLA cream, highly intense signals at m/z 221 and 235 are detected under ESI-MS/MS conditions, monitoring for precursors of m/z...

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