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Featured researches published by Aidos Baumuratov.


MicrobiologyOpen | 2015

The extracellular RNA complement of Escherichia coli

Anubrata Ghosal; Bimal Babu Upadhyaya; Joëlle V. Fritz; Anna Heintz-Buschart; Mahesh S. Desai; Dilmurat Yusuf; David Huang; Aidos Baumuratov; Kai Wang; David J. Galas; Paul Wilmes

The secretion of biomolecules into the extracellular milieu is a common and well‐conserved phenomenon in biology. In bacteria, secreted biomolecules are not only involved in intra‐species communication but they also play roles in inter‐kingdom exchanges and pathogenicity. To date, released products, such as small molecules, DNA, peptides, and proteins, have been well studied in bacteria. However, the bacterial extracellular RNA complement has so far not been comprehensively characterized. Here, we have analyzed, using a combination of physical characterization and high‐throughput sequencing, the extracellular RNA complement of both outer membrane vesicle (OMV)‐associated and OMV‐free RNA of the enteric Gram‐negative model bacterium Escherichia coli K‐12 substrain MG1655 and have compared it to its intracellular RNA complement. Our results demonstrate that a large part of the extracellular RNA complement is in the size range between 15 and 40 nucleotides and is derived from specific intracellular RNAs. Furthermore, RNA is associated with OMVs and the relative abundances of RNA biotypes in the intracellular, OMV and OMV‐free fractions are distinct. Apart from rRNA fragments, a significant portion of the extracellular RNA complement is composed of specific cleavage products of functionally important structural noncoding RNAs, including tRNAs, 4.5S RNA, 6S RNA, and tmRNA. In addition, the extracellular RNA pool includes RNA biotypes from cryptic prophages, intergenic, and coding regions, of which some are so far uncharacterised, for example, transcripts mapping to the fimA‐fimL and ves‐spy intergenic regions. Our study provides the first detailed characterization of the extracellular RNA complement of the enteric model bacterium E. coli. Analogous to findings in eukaryotes, our results suggest the selective export of specific RNA biotypes by E. coli, which in turn indicates a potential role for extracellular bacterial RNAs in intercellular communication.


Stem cell reports | 2014

Induced Neural Stem Cells Achieve Long-Term Survival and Functional Integration in the Adult Mouse Brain

Kathrin Hemmer; Mingyue Zhang; Thea van Wüllen; Marna Sakalem; Natalia Tapia; Aidos Baumuratov; Christian Kaltschmidt; Barbara Kaltschmidt; Hans R. Schöler; Weiqi Zhang; Jens Christian Schwamborn

Summary Differentiated cells can be converted directly into multipotent neural stem cells (i.e., induced neural stem cells [iNSCs]). iNSCs offer an attractive alternative to induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) technology with regard to regenerative therapies. Here, we show an in vivo long-term analysis of transplanted iNSCs in the adult mouse brain. iNSCs showed sound in vivo long-term survival rates without graft overgrowths. The cells displayed a neural multilineage potential with a clear bias toward astrocytes and a permanent downregulation of progenitor and cell-cycle markers, indicating that iNSCs are not predisposed to tumor formation. Furthermore, the formation of synaptic connections as well as neuronal and glial electrophysiological properties demonstrated that differentiated iNSCs migrated, functionally integrated, and interacted with the existing neuronal circuitry. We conclude that iNSC long-term transplantation is a safe procedure; moreover, it might represent an interesting tool for future personalized regenerative applications.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2016

Characterization of Differentiated SH-SY5Y as Neuronal Screening Model Reveals Increased Oxidative Vulnerability

Julia Ilona Forster; Sandra Köglsberger; Christophe Trefois; Olga Boyd; Aidos Baumuratov; L. Buck; Rudi Balling; Paul Antony

The immortalized and proliferative cell line SH-SY5Y is one of the most commonly used cell lines in neuroscience and neuroblastoma research. However, undifferentiated SH-SY5Y cells share few properties with mature neurons. In this study, we present an optimized neuronal differentiation protocol for SH-SY5Y that requires only two work steps and 6 days. After differentiation, the cells present increased levels of ATP and plasma membrane activity but reduced expression of energetic stress response genes. Differentiation results in reduced mitochondrial membrane potential and decreased robustness toward perturbations with 6-hydroxydopamine. We are convinced that the presented differentiation method will leverage genetic and chemical high-throughput screening projects targeting pathways that are involved in the selective vulnerability of neurons with high energetic stress levels.


Cell Communication and Signaling | 2013

Light microscopy applications in systems biology: opportunities and challenges

Paul Paul Michel Aloyse Antony; Christophe Trefois; Aleksandar Stojanovic; Aidos Baumuratov; Karol Kozak

Biological systems present multiple scales of complexity, ranging from molecules to entire populations. Light microscopy is one of the least invasive techniques used to access information from various biological scales in living cells. The combination of molecular biology and imaging provides a bottom-up tool for direct insight into how molecular processes work on a cellular scale. However, imaging can also be used as a top-down approach to study the behavior of a system without detailed prior knowledge about its underlying molecular mechanisms. In this review, we highlight the recent developments on microscopy-based systems analyses and discuss the complementary opportunities and different challenges with high-content screening and high-throughput imaging. Furthermore, we provide a comprehensive overview of the available platforms that can be used for image analysis, which enable community-driven efforts in the development of image-based systems biology.


Annals of clinical and translational neurology | 2015

Platelet mitochondrial membrane potential in Parkinson's disease

Paul Antony; Olga Boyd; Christophe Trefois; Wim Ammerlaan; Marek Ostaszewski; Aidos Baumuratov; Laura Longhino; Laurent Antunes; Werner J.H. Koopman; Rudi Balling; Nico J. Diederich

Mitochondrial dysfunction is a hallmark of idiopathic Parkinsons disease (IPD), which has been reported not to be restricted to striatal neurons. However, studies that analyzed mitochondrial function at the level of selected enzymatic activities in peripheral tissues have produced conflicting data. We considered the electron transport chain as a complex system with mitochondrial membrane potential as an integrative indicator for mitochondrial fitness.


Lab on a Chip | 2015

Differentiation of neuroepithelial stem cells into functional dopaminergic neurons in 3D microfluidic cell culture

Edinson Lucumi Moreno; Siham Hachi; Kathrin Hemmer; Sebastian Trietsch; Aidos Baumuratov; Thomas Hankemeier; Paul Vulto; Jens Christian Schwamborn; Ronan M. T. Fleming


Archive | 2015

Staining for unphosphorylated alpha-synuclein in the colon mucosa. No difference between patients with Parkinson's disease and healthy controls

Paul Antony; Laurent Antunes; Sonia Frasquilho; Marek Ostaszewski; Jos Weber; Laura Longhino; Aidos Baumuratov; P Derkinderen; Rudi Balling; Nico J. Diederich


Journal of World Mitochondria Society | 2015

ENTERIC NERVOUS SYSTEM IN PARKINSON’S DISEASE: INCREASED MITOCHONDRIAL DENSITY BUT REDUCED GANGLIA VOLUME

Aidos Baumuratov; Paul Antony; Marek Ostaszewski; Feng He; Laurent Antunes; Jos Weber; Laura Longhino; Pascal Derkinderen; Rudi Balling; Nico J. Diederich


Journal of World Mitochondria Society | 2015

ANALYSIS OF MITOCHONDRIAL MEMBRANE POTENTIAL IN THROMBOCYTES FROM PARKINSON’S DISEASE PATIENTS

Paul Antony; Olga Boyd; Christophe Trefois; Wim Ammerlaan; Marek Ostaszewski; Aidos Baumuratov; Laura Longhino; Laurent Antunes; Werner J.H. Koopman; Rudi Balling; Nico J. Diederich


Archive | 2014

Analysis of mitochondrial membrane potential in idiopathic Parkinson's disease: A case-control study

Paul Antony; Olga Boyd; Christophe Trefois; Marek Ostaszewski; Aidos Baumuratov; Rudi Balling; Nico J. Diederich

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Paul Antony

University of Luxembourg

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Rudi Balling

University of Luxembourg

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Olga Boyd

University of Luxembourg

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Nico J. Diederich

Centre Hospitalier de Luxembourg

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Laura Longhino

Centre Hospitalier de Luxembourg

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Jos Weber

Centre Hospitalier de Luxembourg

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