Frank Schmidt

Frank Schmidt
Weill Cornell Medicine in Qatar | WCM-Q · Research

Prof. Dr., Dipl.-Ing.

About

165
Publications
19,950
Reads
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3,292
Citations
Introduction
Proteomics, Immunoproteomics, Bioinformatics, Infection Disease, Sepsis, Diabetes, Proteasome
Research Experience
January 2019 - present
Weill Cornell Medicine in Qatar
Position
  • Professor of Biochemistry
Description
  • Director Proteomics Core
January 2007 - December 2007
Helmholtz-Zentrum für Umweltforschung
Position
  • Group Leader
January 2007 - October 2018
University Medicine Greifswald
Position
  • Group Leader

Publications

Publications (165)
SIRT1-depletion suppressed the expression of key adipokines and...
Quantitative proteomics identified altered expression levels of key...
Identification of significantly-altered molecular pathways in...
SIRT1 promoted mitochondrial biogenesis and respiration in 3T3-L1...
Identification of significantly-affected transcription factors and...
Article
Full-text available
The NAD+-dependent deacetylase SIRT1 controls key metabolic functions by deacetylating target proteins and strategies that promote SIRT1 function such as SIRT1 overexpression or NAD+ boosters alleviate metabolic complications. We previously reported that SIRT1-depletion in 3T3-L1 preadipocytes led to C-Myc activation, adipocyte hyperplasia, and dys...
FIGURE 1 | Serum IgG titers against S. aureus are highly variable with...
FIGURE 3 | Volcano-like plots displaying the association of response...
FIGURE 4 | Serum IgA titers against S. aureus are highly variable with...
FIGURE 5 | Ranking of antigens for IgG and IgA. Antigens used in...
FIGURE 6 | Antigen-wise comparison of IgG and IgA results. Comparison...
Article
Full-text available
Our goal was to provide a comprehensive overview of the antibody response to Staphylococcus aureus antigens in the general population as a basis for defining disease-specific profiles and diagnostic signatures. We tested the specific IgG and IgA responses to 79 staphylococcal antigens in 996 individuals from the population-based Study of Health in...
Article
Mechanically ventilated patients are at risk of contracting pneumonia. Therefore, these patients often receive prophylactic systemic antimicrobial therapy. Intriguingly however, a previous study showed that antimicrobial activity in bronchoalveolar aspirates (here referred to as “sputa”) from ventilated patients was only partially explained by anti...
Left panel: schematic of the hypothesised reaction on circular β2GPI,...
(A) SDS-PAGE and Western blot analyses (full-length gels and blots with...
AFM imaging of β2GPI. Untreated (A) and reduced (B) β2GPI with examples...
Principal Component Analysis were generated with an in-house code and...
Assessment of antigenicity of reduced β2GPI. Antibodies to DI of β2GPI...
Article
Full-text available
Beta-2-glycoprotein I (β2GPI) is a blood protein and the major antigen in the autoimmune disorder antiphospholipid syndrome (APS). β2GPI exists mainly in closed or open conformations and comprises of 11 disulfides distributed across five domains. The terminal Cys288/Cys326 disulfide bond at domain V has been associated with different cysteine redox...
Figure 2. Transition metal levels impact growth kinetics and proteomic...
Figure 3. Antigen selection strategy based on comparative proteome...
Figure 4. OMVs displaying pneumococcal antigens are highly immunogenic...
Figure 5. Mucosal protection and antibody levels induced by OMVs...
Figure 6. Mice immunized with OMVs displaying AliA show improved...
Article
Full-text available
Nasopharyngeal colonization by Streptococcus pneumoniae is a prerequisite for pneumococcal transmission and disease. Current vaccines protect only against disease and colonization caused by a limited number of serotypes, consequently allowing serotype replacement and transmission. Therefore, the development of a broadly protective vaccine against c...
Article
Adipocyte differentiation is a general physiological process that is also critical for metabolic syndrome. In spite of extensive study in the past two decades, adipogenesis is a still complex cellular process that is accompanied by complicated molecular mechanisms. Here, we performed SILAC-based quantitative global proteomic profiling of 3T3-L1 adi...
Figure 5A. Heatmap showing significance of associations for all...
Discovery and replication subject subset characteristics and winsorized...
Regression results for protein changes versus BMI change and gastric...
Association of changes in proteins with change in BMI in the gastric...
Preprint
Full-text available
Gastric bypass surgery results in long-term weight loss due to re-routing of the gastro-intestinal anatomy and dietary intake alterations. Studies have examined protein change during rapid weight loss (up to 1 year post-surgery), but whether protein changes are maintained long-term after weight stabilization is unknown. To identify proteins and pat...
Article
Mass spectrometry has become an important analytical tool for protein research studies to identify, characterise and quantify proteins with unmatched sensitivity in a highly parallel manner. When transferred into clinical routine, the cumbersome and error-prone sample preparation workflows present a major bottleneck. In this work, we demonstrate tr...
Article
Full-text available
Background Although autophagy plays a dual role in suppressing or promoting certain cancers, the nature of its involvement in breast cancers remains unclear. Here, we investigated the function of STXBP6, a protein regulating the autophagy‐associated SNARE complex, in triple negative breast cancer (TNBC). Results We report that STXBP6 is profoundly...
Fig. 1. The main features for the constructed SimCell characterized in...
Fig. 3. I-CeuI+ cultures were treated with the drug D-cycloserine to...
CFU/mL of I-CeuI+ versus I-CeuI-cultures
Article
Full-text available
A type of chromosome-free cell called SimCells (simple cells) has been generated from Escherichia coli , Pseudomonas putida , and Ralstonia eutropha. The removal of the native chromosomes of these bacteria was achieved by double-stranded breaks made by heterologous I-CeuI endonuclease and the degradation activity of endogenous nucleases. We have sh...
FIG 2 (A) Identification of serum proteins from both patient and...
FIG 3 (A) Bar plot of inertia gains of agglomerative hierarchical...
FIG 4 Serum proteins and related functional pathways significantly...
FIG 5 (A) Box plot of 143 S. aureus-specific IgG signals (mean...
Article
Full-text available
Systemic and quantitative investigations of human plasma proteins (proteomics) and Staphylococcus aureus -specific antibodies (immunoproteomics) provide complementary information and hold promise for the discovery of biomarkers in Staphylococcus aureus bloodstream infection (SABSI). Usually, data-dependent acquisition (DDA) is used for proteome ana...
Article
Here, we demonstrate a high-dynamic-range quantification of antibody binding to single antigens in a multiplexed suspension bead array format. Using a dilution-based approach and the newly developed data analysis tool the quantitative dynamic range is increased by three orders of magnitude in the selected samples. The strong increase in dynamic ran...
Article
B. pertussis is the etiological agent of whooping cough, a highly contagious respiratory disease which remains uncontrolled worldwide. Understanding how this pathogen responds to the environmental changes and adapts to different niches found inside the host might contribute to gain insight into bacterial pathogenesis. Comparative analyses of previo...
Genes Associated with the Proteins That Experienced the Highest Fold...
Bacterial Strains and Plasmids Used in This Study
Primers Used in This Study
Article
Full-text available
It has been widely debated whether transposable elements have a positive or a negative effect on their host cells. This study demonstrated that transposable elements, specifically insertion sequences (ISs), can adopt a defensive role in Escherichia coli. IS1 and IS10 in three different E. coli strains (S17, DH5a and Nissle 1917) rapidly disrupted t...
Fig 1. Workflow applied for the identification of pneumococcal-specific...
Fig 2. Identification of ComDE and AliB in S. pneumoniae D39 from in...
Fig 3. Lack of ComDE and/or AliB results in an attenuated inflammatory...
Fig 4. Loss of function of ComDE and/or AliB is protective in murine...
Fig 6. Comparison of proteins with differential abundance between S....
Article
Full-text available
Streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococci) is a leading cause of severe bacterial meningitis in many countries worldwide. To characterize the repertoire of fitness and virulence factors predominantly expressed during meningitis we performed niche-specific analysis of the in vivo proteome in a mouse meningitis model, in which bacteria are directly inocu...
Article
Full-text available
The intracellular pathogen Salmonella enterica has evolved an array of traits for propagation and invasion of the intestinal layers. It remains largely elusive how Salmonella adjusts its metabolic states to survive inside immune host cells. In this study, single-cell Raman biotechnology combined with Deuterium Isotope Probing (Raman-DIP) have been...
Figure 1. Flow chart illustrating the experimental strategy used for...
Figure 2. Level of initiation factors and ribosomal proteins associated...
Figure 3. Deletion of the entire NTD of IF2 confers a cold-sensitive...
Figure 4. Inactivation of the GTPase activity of IF2 confers a...
Figure 5. Temperature-dependent effect of IF2 mutations on ribosomal...
Article
Full-text available
Cold-stress in Escherichia coli induces de novo synthesis of translation initiation factors IF1, IF2 and IF3 while ribosome synthesis and assembly slow down. Consequently, the IFs/ribosome stoichiomet-ric ratio increases about 3-fold during the first hours of cold adaptation. The IF1 and IF3 increase plays a role in translation regulation at low te...
Fig. 1. Presence of proteins in the different fractions after OptiPrep...
Fig. 2. Volcano plot used to visualize the differentially secreted...
Fig. 3. Volcano plot used to visualize the differentially secreted...
Article
Full-text available
Bacterial membrane vesicles (MVs) mediate bacterial virulence by enabling secretion and long distance delivery of bacterial effector molecules. Staphylococcus haemolyticus has now been demonstrated to produce membrane vesicles (MVs). The protein content of S. haemolyticus MVs was identified by Mass spectrometry and compared to proteins identified i...
Article
Full-text available
Staphylococcus haemolyticus is a skin commensal emerging as an opportunistic pathogen. Nosocomial isolates of S. haemolyticus are the most antibiotic resistant members of the coagulase negative staphylococci (CoNS), but information about other S. haemolyticus virulence factors is scarce. Bacterial membrane vesicles (MVs) are one mediator of virulen...
FIGURE 1 | Pneumococcal lipoproteins heterologously expressed in E....
TABLE 1 | Strain and plasmid list.
FIGURE 2 | Pneumococcal lipoproteins are highly abundant on the...
FIGURE 4 | Intranasal vaccinations with the lipoproteins MetQ, DacB or...
FIGURE 5 | Intranasal immunisation with lipoproteins induces lower...
Article
Full-text available
Streptococcus pneumoniae is endowed with a variety of surface-exposed proteins representing putative vaccine candidates. Lipoproteins are covalently anchored to the cell membrane and highly conserved among pneumococcal serotypes. Here, we evaluated these lipoproteins for their immunogenicity and protective potential against pneumococcal colonisatio...
Chapter
Quantitative proteome profiling of microorganisms by isotopic labeling of amino acids is still a challenge, because only microorganisms with auxotrophic character are able to embed amino acids into their biomass in a quantitatively correct manner. Here, we describe an isotopic labeling technique (sulfur stable isotope labeling of amino acids for qu...
Chapter
Proteome profiling of bacteria internalized by host cells is still a challenging task, due to low amounts of bacterial proteins in host–pathogen settings and the high amounts of contaminating host proteins. Here, we describe a workflow for the enrichment of intracellular bacteria by fluorescence activated cell sorting which in combination with high...
Article
Staphylococcus aureus, an opportunistic pathogen is able to invade into and persist inside non-professional phagocytic cells. To do so, this bacterium possesses a wide range of secreted virulence factors which enable attachment to the host as well as intracellular survival. Hence, a monitoring of virulence factors specifically produced upon interna...
Article
Staphylococcus aureus can cause bloodstream infections associated with infective endocarditis (IE) and disseminated intravascular coagulopathy (DIC). Both complications involve platelets. In view of an increasing number of antibiotic-resistant strains, new approaches to control systemicS. aureusinfection are gaining importance. Using a repertoire o...
Article
Staphylococcus aureus is a frequent colonizer of the upper airways in chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps, but also resides intramucosally; it has been shown that secreted staphylococcal proteins such as enterotoxins and serine proteases induce the release of cytokines such as IL-5. We have analyzed nasal polyp tissue freshly obtained during r...
Poster
Background To maintain fitness pathogenic bacteria such as Streptococcus pneumoniae have to adapt their physiology and virulence potential to changing host niche conditions during invasive infections. The virulence factor repertoire of pneumococci has already been deciphered (analysed in detail), but information on the proteome adaptation during in...
Figure 4. Live-cell imaging of S. aureus infecting S9 human bronchial...
Figure 5. Global sample characterization and comparison of regulated...
Characterization of the generated S. aureus ion library.
Number of...
Determination of contaminating ion interference.
The scheme depicts the...
Comparison of peptide detection accuracy between DDA and...
Article
Full-text available
Data-independent acquisition mass spectrometry promises higher performance in terms of quantification and reproducibility compared to data-dependent acquisition mass spectrometry methods. To enable high-accuracy quantification of Staphylococcus aureus proteins, we have developed a global ion library for data-independent acquisition approaches emplo...
Poster
To decrease attrition rates is one of the major challenges of drug discovery. One strategy is the development of more predictive pre-clinical in vitro models. Human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived (hiPSC) neuronal cultures promise higher physiological relevance and thus, better translation to the in vivo situation. In this context genetic cel...
FIGURE 1 | S. aureus is efficiently transmitted from murine parents to...
FIGURE 2 | CC88 is common among murine but not human S. aureus strains....
FIGURE 3 | Murine CC88 isolates coagulate murine plasma faster than...
Article
Full-text available
Whether mice are an appropriate model for S. aureus infection and vaccination studies is a matter of debate, because they are not considered as natural hosts of S. aureus. We previously identified a mouse-adapted S. aureus strain, which caused infections in laboratory mice. This raised the question whether laboratory mice are commonly colonized wit...
Preprint
Full-text available
Background Whether mice are an appropriate model for S . aureus infection and vaccination studies is a matter of debate, because they are not considered as natural hosts of S. aureus. Sparked by an outbreak of S. aureus infections in laboratory mice, we investigated whether laboratory mice are commonly colonized with S. aureus and whether this migh...
Article
Significance: In this study, we used high resolution mass spectrometry to identify S. aureus proteins directly in infected nasal polyp tissue. We discovered bacterial proteins involved in invasion of tissue, virulence, bacterial signal transduction or acquisition of nutrients. Some of the detected superantigens and Spls are known to provoke secret...
Figure 2. sos2 and acp1 knockdowns result in defective kidney...
Article
Full-text available
Genome-wide association studies have identified >50 common variants associated with kidney function, but these variants do not fully explain the variation in eGFR. We performed a two-stage meta-analysis of associations between genotypes from the Illumina exome array and eGFR on the basis of serum creatinine (eGFRcrea) among participants of European...
Article
Staphylococcus aureus is a Gram-positive opportunistic pathogen that is able to cause a broad range of infectious diseases in humans. Furthermore, S. aureus is able to survive inside nonprofessional phagocytic host cell which serve as a niche for the pathogen to hide from the immune system and antibiotics therapies. Modern OMICs technologies provid...
Article
Objectives: Host cell invasion is a major feature of Staphylococcus aureus and contributes to infection development. The intracellular metabolically active bacteria can induce host cell activation and death but they can also persist for long time periods. In this study we performed a comparative analysis of different well-characterized S. aureus s...
Figure 2. Low serum IgG binding to recombinant bacterial lipoproteins....
Figure 3. A moderate proliferative response in human PBMCs....
Figure 4. Th1/Th17 cytokine secretion. Cytokine profiling was conducted...
Article
Full-text available
Staphylococcus aureus is a frequent commensal but also a dangerous pathogen, causing many forms of infection ranging from mild to life-threatening conditions. Among its virulence factors are lipoproteins, which are anchored in the bacterial cell membrane. Lipoproteins perform various functions in colonization, immune evasion, and immunomodulation....
Article
Red blood cell (RBC) traits are important heritable clinical biomarkers and modifiers of disease severity. To identify coding genetic variants associated with these traits, we conducted meta-analyses of seven RBC phenotypes in 130,273 multi-ethnic individuals from studies genotyped on an exome array. After conditional analyses and replication in 27...
Article
Full-text available
Background: A substantial subgroup of asthmatic patients have "nonallergic" or idiopathic asthma, which often takes a severe course and is difficult to treat. The cause might be allergic reactions to the gram-positive pathogen Staphylococcus aureus, a frequent colonizer of the upper airways. However, the driving allergens of S aureus have remained...
Table 1.  Summary of the new transcription segments.
Fig 1.  Transcriptional landscape reconstruction leads to a new...
Fig 2.  The diversity of S. aureus HG001 wild-type expression profiles...
Table 2.  Characteristics of regions up-regulated in the Δrho mutant...
Fig 3.  Promoter tree, sigma-factor and TFBS predictions.
From top to...
Article
Full-text available
Staphylococcus aureus is a major pathogen that colonizes about 20% of the human population. Intriguingly, this Gram-positive bacterium can survive and thrive under a wide range of different conditions, both inside and outside the human body. Here, we investigated the transcriptional adaptation of S. aureus HG001, a derivative of strain NCTC 8325, a...
Data
Least and most expressed genes in all conditions. (XLSX)
Data
List of high confidence down-shifts and effects of rho deletion at termination sites. (XLSX)
Data
Transcription factor regulons including previously known and newly identified potential target genes. (XLSX)
Data
Differential expression analysis of infection-mimicking and antibiotic conditions. (XLSX)
Data
This file contains Supplementary Methods and Results (Text A—J); Supplementary Figures A—N; and Supplementary Tables A—E. (PDF)
Data
Barplots of expression profiles of 47 virulence-associated genes and selected reference genes for limitations in amino acids, iron or oxygen. Gene expression levels (normalized log2 intensities) are displayed for the following conditions: exponential growth and stationary phase in different cultivation media and human plasma (blue bars); growth in...
Data
Correlation coefficients and loadings associated with PCA axes 1–15. (XLSX)
Data
List of promoter up-shifts with cluster information and TU definition. (XLSX)
Data
Expression levels for all annotated genes and new RNA features in the 156 RNA samples. (XLSX)
Data
Information summary for each annotated gene and new RNA feature. (XLSX)
Data
List of promoter up-shifts with transcription factor binding site information. (XLSX)
Data
List of up-regulated regions in the Δrho mutant. (XLSX)
Data
List of genes showing differential expression in the Δrho mutant compared to the wild-type. (XLSX)
Figure 2. Combined approaches to successful S. aureus vaccine...
Figure 2. Combined approaches to successful S. aureus vaccine...
Article
Full-text available
Staphylococcus aureus is a dangerous pathogen both in hospitals and in the community. Due to the crisis of antibiotic resistance, there is an urgent need for new strategies to combat S. aureus infections, such as vaccination. Increasing our knowledge about the mechanisms of protection will be key for the successful prevention or treatment of S. aur...
Workflow for proteome data collection of internalized S. aureus HG001...
Article
Full-text available
To simultaneously obtain proteome data of host and pathogen from an internalization experiment, human alveolar epithelial A549 cells were infected with Staphylococcus aureus HG001 which carried a plasmid (pMV158GFP) encoding a continuously expressed green fluorescent protein (GFP). Samples were taken hourly between 1.5h and 6.5h post infection. By...
Article
Unlabelled: Previous studies have shown that B. pertussis survives inside human macrophages in non-acidic compartments with characteristics of early endosomes. In order to gain new insight into the biology of B. pertussis survival in host cells, we have analyzed the adaptation of the bacterial proteome during intracellular infection. The proteome...
Article
Most shotgun proteomics data analysis workflows are based on the assumption that each fragment ion spectrum is explained by a single species of peptide ion isolated by the mass spectrometer; however, in reality mass spectrometers often isolate more than one peptide ion within the window of isolation that contribute to additional peptide fragment pe...
Figure 2: Multiple signals at HELB and relationship to DNA helicase B...
table 2 results of the exome chip meta-analyses
Article
Full-text available
Menopause timing has a substantial impact on infertility and risk of disease, including breast cancer, but the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. We report a dual strategy in ∼70,000 women to identify common and low-frequency protein-coding variation associated with age at natural menopause (ANM). We identified 44 regions with common vari...
Article
Menopause timing has a substantial impact on infertility and risk of disease, including breast cancer, but the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. We report a dual strategy in ~70,000 women to identify common and low-frequency protein-coding variation associated with age at natural menopause (ANM). We identified 44 regions with common vari...
Article
Infectious diseases caused by pathogens such as Staphylococcus aureus are still a major threat for human health. Proteome analyses allow detailed monitoring of the molecular interplay between pathogen and host upon internalization. However, the investigation of the responses of both partners is complicated by the large excess of host cell proteins...
Article
Staphylococcus aureus is an opportunistic human pathogen, which can cause life-threatening disease. Proteome analyses of the bacterium can provide new insights into its pathophysiology and important facets of metabolic adaptation and, thus, aid the recognition of targets for intervention. However, the value of such proteome studies increases with t...
Table 1 : Comparison of the characteristics of immune-competent,...
Article
Full-text available
Significance: S. aureus is a dangerous pathogen of ever increasing importance both in hospitals and in the community. Due to the crisis of antibiotic resistance, an urgent need exists for new strategies to combat S. aureus infections, such as vaccination. To date, however, all vaccine trials have failed in clinical studies. It is therefore unclear...
Fig 1.  Isolation of C. trachomatis inclusions from HeLa cells at 24 h...
Fig 2.  Quantitative proteomics of isolated C. trachomatis...
Fig 3.  Global analysis of the host cell derived inclusion proteome.
A)...
Fig 4.  C. trachomatis infection shows SNX recruitment to the inclusion...
Fig 5.  Silencing of SNX5 promotes C. trachomatis infectious progeny...
Article
Full-text available
Chlamydia trachomatis is an important human pathogen that replicates inside the infected host cell in a unique vacuole, the inclusion. The formation of this intracellular bacterial niche is essential for productive Chlamydia infections. Despite its importance for Chlamydia biology, a holistic view on the protein composition of the inclusion, includ...
Article
One of the mechanisms involved in host immunity is the limitation of iron accessibility to pathogens, which in turn provokes the corresponding physiological adaptation of pathogens. This study reports a gel-free nanoLC-MS/MS-based comparative proteome analysis of Bordetella pertussis grown under iron-excess and iron-depleted conditions. Of the 926...
Internalization of S. aureus HG001 by human cell lines. (A)...
Proteomics identification and quantitation workflow. Bacteria were...
Principal component analysis of S. aureus proteins. Samples were...
Voronoi treemap analysis of S. aureus proteins. Ratios from intensity...
Protein groups displaying reduced levels after internalization by all...
Article
Full-text available
Staphylococcus aureus is a human pathogen that can cause a wide range of diseases. Although formerly regarded as extracellular pathogen, it has been shown that S. aureus can also be internalized by host cells and persist within these cells. In the present study, we comparatively analyzed survival and physiological adaptation of S. aureus HG001 afte...
Article
Staphylococcus aureus is one of the major causative agents of severe infections, and is responsible for a high burden of morbidity and mortality. Strains of increased virulence have emerged (e.g., USA300) that can infect healthy individuals in the community and are difficult to treat. To add to the knowledge about the pathophysiology of S. aureus,...
Figure 2: Rare and low-frequency missense variants in CXCR2 are...
Figure 3: Functional characterization of the CXCR2fs mutant receptor....
Article
Full-text available
Hematological traits are important clinical parameters. To test the effects of rare and low-frequency coding variants on hematological traits, we analyzed hemoglobin concentration, hematocrit levels, white blood cell (WBC) counts and platelet counts in 31,340 individuals genotyped on an exome array. We identified several missense variants in CXCR2...
Article
Unlabelled: Macrophages are essential components of the innate immune system and crucial for pathogen elimination in early stages of infection. We previously observed that bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMMs) from C57BL/6 mice exhibited increased killing activity against Burkholderia pseudomallei compared to BMMs from BALB/c mice. This effect wa...
Article
Quantitative proteomics has become an indispensable analytical tool for microbial research. Modern microbial proteomics covers a wide range of topics in basic and applied research from in vitro characterization of single organisms to unravel the physiological implications of stress/ starvation to description of the proteome content of a cell at a g...
Article
Throughout the world, infections caused by bacteria such as Staphylococcus aureus are a major cause of morbidity and mortality. In order to gain some understanding of the complicated physiological link between host and pathogen, modern techniques such as confocal microscopy and sophisticated OMICs technologies are suitable. However, labeling of pat...
Figure 1. MALDI-TOF profile mass spectra of Lactobacillus rhamnosus DSM...
Figure 2. Agarose gels of the amplification products specific for...
Figure 3. Concordantly identified species of 87 isolates of...
Figure 4. Occurrence of Lactobacillus species in soft (S1) and hard (S2...
Article
Full-text available
The aim of the present study was to compare MALDI-TOF results for the identification of 87 lactobacilli, isolated from soft or hard carious dentin from 70 first molars of 7- to 8-year-old children with those obtained by species-specific PCR. The 87 isolates were analyzed by MALDI-TOF MS (Microflex LT, MALDI Biotyper 3.0, Bruker Daltonik, Bremen, Ge...
Article
From raw data to gene expression profiles, from single cultures to complex microbial communities, environmental proteomics works with data of different complexity levels that need to be interpreted in detail or in its entirety. Although data visualization is closely connected with data analysis approaches; this work will scope solely on data visual...
Article
Full-text available
The recent development of metaproteomics has enabled the direct identification and quantification of expressed proteins from microbial communities in situ, without the need for microbial enrichment. This became possible by (1) significant increases in quality and quantity of metagenome data and by improvements of (2) accuracy and (3) sensitivity of...
Article
The development of a mass spectrometric workflow for the sensitive identification and quantitation of the kinetics of changes in metaproteomes, or in particular bacterial pathogens after internalization by host cells, is described. This procedure employs three essential stages: (i) SILAC pulse-chase labeling and infection assay; (ii) isolation of b...

Questions

Questions (2)
Question
Dear all,
I like to couple two nLCs to one ESI instrument to reduce the analysis time. I like to install a T- stick or similar and like to measure only the analysis runs, but I'm not sure how I can trigger the LCs. Does anyone have an idea?
Thanks,
Frank
Question
I would like to use the TPP for spectra identificationbut it faild to transform the raw files.

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Projects (4)
Project
The HID‐BD‐HPP initiative was established last year at the HUPO‐2014 in Madrid. The main goal of this initiative is to organize a community of scientists working in infectious disease proteomics or immunoproteomics. Infectious diseases are caused by pathogenic microorganisms, such as bacteria, viruses, parasites or fungi. These infectious are a leading cause of illness and death throughout the world, in particular in low income countries. Lower respiratory or blood infections, HIV/AIDS and diarrheal diseases are ranked in the top ten causes of death globally, whereas malaria and tuberculosis are two of the major ten causes of death in low income countries. In developed countries infectious diseases are also important in immunosuppressed patients and transplant recipients. New diagnostic tests, therapeutic agents and vaccines are required to control these infectious diseases. International collaboration of scientists working in infectious diseases and proteomics or immunoproteomics is essential to promote these researches. Therefore we kindly like to invite related scientists but also clinician to share this project.
Archived project
Project
Profiling food, microbiome, and biomarkers of nutritional status from a proteomics point of view will potentially lead to a new pillar of personalized medicine. This includes a special focus on food safety, security and quality issues, providing new insights and technologies to grant safety, from microbiome and consortia, detection of animal species in the food, identification of food allergens to food authenticity.