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Dive into the research topics where Barry Schweitzer is active.

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Featured researches published by Barry Schweitzer.


Nature | 2005

Global analysis of protein phosphorylation in yeast

Jason Ptacek; Geeta Devgan; Gregory A. Michaud; Heng Zhu; Xiaowei Zhu; Joseph Fasolo; Hong Guo; Ghil Jona; Ashton Breitkreutz; Richelle Sopko; Rhonda R. McCartney; Martin C. Schmidt; Najma Rachidi; Soo Jung Lee; Angie S. Mah; Lihao Meng; Michael J. R. Stark; David F. Stern; Claudio De Virgilio; Mike Tyers; Brenda Andrews; Mark Gerstein; Barry Schweitzer; Paul F. Predki; Michael Snyder

Protein phosphorylation is estimated to affect 30% of the proteome and is a major regulatory mechanism that controls many basic cellular processes. Until recently, our biochemical understanding of protein phosphorylation on a global scale has been extremely limited; only one half of the yeast kinases have known in vivo substrates and the phosphorylating kinase is known for less than 160 phosphoproteins. Here we describe, with the use of proteome chip technology, the in vitro substrates recognized by most yeast protein kinases: we identified over 4,000 phosphorylation events involving 1,325 different proteins. These substrates represent a broad spectrum of different biochemical functions and cellular roles. Distinct sets of substrates were recognized by each protein kinase, including closely related kinases of the protein kinase A family and four cyclin-dependent kinases that vary only in their cyclin subunits. Although many substrates reside in the same cellular compartment or belong to the same functional category as their phosphorylating kinase, many others do not, indicating possible new roles for several kinases. Furthermore, integration of the phosphorylation results with protein–protein interaction and transcription factor binding data revealed novel regulatory modules. Our phosphorylation results have been assembled into a first-generation phosphorylation map for yeast. Because many yeast proteins and pathways are conserved, these results will provide insights into the mechanisms and roles of protein phosphorylation in many eukaryotes.


Nature Biotechnology | 2002

Multiplexed protein profiling on microarrays by rolling-circle amplification

Barry Schweitzer; Scott Roberts; Brian Grimwade; Weiping Shao; Minjuan Wang; Qin Fu; Quiping Shu; Isabelle Laroche; Zhimin Zhou; Velizar T. Tchernev; Jason Christiansen; Mark Velleca; Stephen F. Kingsmore

Fluorescent-sandwich immunoassays on microarrays hold appeal for proteomics studies, because equipment and antibodies are readily available, and assays are simple, scalable, and reproducible. The achievement of adequate sensitivity and specificity, however, requires a general method of immunoassay amplification. We describe coupling of isothermal rolling-circle amplification (RCA) to universal antibodies for this purpose. A total of 75 cytokines were measured simultaneously on glass arrays with signal amplification by RCA with high specificity, femtomolar sensitivity, 3 log quantitative range, and economy of sample consumption. A 51-feature RCA cytokine glass array was used to measure secretion from human dendritic cells (DCs) induced by lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α). As expected, LPS induced rapid secretion of inflammatory cytokines such as macrophage inflammatory protein (MIP)-1β, interleukin (IL)-8, and interferon-inducible protein (IP)-10. We found that eotaxin-2 and I-309 were induced by LPS; in addition, macrophage-derived chemokine (MDC), thymus and activation-regulated chemokine (TARC), soluble interleukin 6 receptor (sIL-6R), and soluble tumor necrosis factor receptor I (sTNF-RI) were induced by TNF-α treatment. Because microarrays can accommodate ∼1,000 sandwich immunoassays of this type, a relatively small number of RCA microarrays seem to offer a tractable approach for proteomic surveys.


Nature Biotechnology | 2003

Analyzing antibody specificity with whole proteome microarrays

Gregory A. Michaud; Michael Salcius; Fang Zhou; Rhonda Bangham; Jaclyn Bonin; Hong Guo; Michael Snyder; Paul F. Predki; Barry Schweitzer

Although approximately 10,000 antibodies are available from commercial sources, antibody reagents are still unavailable for most proteins. Furthermore, new applications such as antibody arrays and monoclonal antibody therapeutics have increased the demand for more specific antibodies to reduce cross-reactivity and side effects. An array containing every protein for the relevant organism represents the ideal format for an assay to test antibody specificity, because it allows the simultaneous screening of thousands of proteins for possible cross-reactivity. As an initial test of this approach, we screened 11 polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies to ∼5,000 different yeast proteins deposited on a glass slide and found that, in addition to recognizing their cognate proteins, the antibodies cross-reacted with other yeast proteins to varying degrees. Some of the interactions of the antibodies with noncognate proteins could be deduced by alignment of the primary amino acid sequences of the antigens and cross-reactive proteins; however, these interactions could not be predicted a priori. Our findings show that proteome array technology has potential to improve antibody design and selection for applications in both medicine and research.


Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2001

Combining nucleic acid amplification and detection.

Barry Schweitzer; Stephen F. Kingsmore

Major recent advances in molecular amplification in the past year were initial validation of two new amplification technologies (rolling circle amplification and Invader), a significant increase in the number of molecular diagnostic assays, achievement of amplification directly on microarrays (by strand displacement amplification and rolling circle amplification), and description of two new read-out probes (Scorpions and nanoparticles).


The FASEB Journal | 1990

Dihydrofolate reductase as a therapeutic target.

Barry Schweitzer; Adam P. Dicker; Joseph R. Bertino

The folate antagonists are an important class of therapeutic compounds, as evidenced by their use as antiinfective, antineoplastic, and antiinflammatory drugs. Thus far, all of the clinically useful drugs of this class have been inhibitors of dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR), a key enzyme in the synthesis of thymidylate, and therefore, of DNA. The basis of the antiinfective selectivity of these compounds is clear; the antifolates trimethoprim and pyrimethamine are potent inhibitors of bacterial and protozoal DHFRs, respectively, but are only weak inhibitors of mammalian DHFRs. These species‐selective agents apparently exploit the differences in the active site regions of the parasite and host enzymes. Methotrexate is the DHFR inhibitor used most often in a clinical setting as an anticancer drug and as an antiinflammatory and immunosuppressive agent. Considerable progress has been made recently in understanding the biochemical basis for the selectivity of this drug and the biochemical mechanism (or mechanisms) responsible for the development of resistance to treatment with the drug. This understanding has led to a new generation of DHFR inhibitors that are now in clinical trials.— Schweitzer, B. I.; Dicker, A. D.; Bertino, J. R. Dihydrofolate reductase as a therapeutic target. FASEB J. 4: 2441‐2452; 1990.


Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2002

Measuring proteins on microarrays

Barry Schweitzer; Stephen F. Kingsmore

A prerequisite of proteomics is the ability to quantify many selected proteins simultaneously. Immunoassays on microarrays are an attractive solution, as equipment and antibodies are available and assays are simple, scalable and reproducible. Recently, considerable progress has been made in this area as evidenced by increased sensitivity and coverage (degree of multiplexing). Routine use of antibody microarrays in research and diagnostic settings will require increased availability of binding reagents, novel signal amplification procedures, inexpensive and robust platforms for microarray production and detection, and turn-key systems for running high-throughput assays.


Current Biology | 2007

A Critical Role for Cortactin Phosphorylation by Abl-Family Kinases in PDGF-Induced Dorsal-Wave Formation

Scott N. Boyle; Gregory A. Michaud; Barry Schweitzer; Paul F. Predki; Anthony J. Koleske

Proper regulation of cell morphogenesis and migration by adhesion and growth-factor receptors requires Abl-family tyrosine kinases [1-3]. Several substrates of Abl-family kinase have been identified, but they are unlikely to mediate all of the downstream actions of these kinases on cytoskeletal structure. We used a human protein microarray to identify the actin-regulatory protein cortactin as a novel substrate of the Abl and Abl-related gene (Arg) nonreceptor tyrosine kinases. Cortactin stimulates cell motility [4-6], and its upregulation in several cancers correlates with poor prognosis [7]. Even though cortactin can be tyrosine phosphorylated by Src-family kinases in vitro [8], we show that Abl and Arg are more adept at binding and phosphorylating cortactin. Importantly, we demonstrate that platelet-derived growth-factor (PDGF)-induced cortactin phosphorylation on three tyrosine residues requires Abl or Arg. Cortactin triggers F-actin-dependent dorsal waves in fibroblasts after PDGF treatment and thus results in actin reorganization and lamellipodial protrusion [9]. We provide evidence that Abl/Arg-mediated phosphorylation of cortactin is required for this PDGF-induced dorsal-wave response. Our results reveal that Abl-family kinases target cortactin as an effector of cytoskeletal rearrangements in response to PDGF.


Journal of Immunology | 2004

Human Ribonuclease A Superfamily Members, Eosinophil-Derived Neurotoxin and Pancreatic Ribonuclease, Induce Dendritic Cell Maturation and Activation

De Yang; Qian Chen; Helene F. Rosenberg; Susanna M. Rybak; Dianne L. Newton; Zhao Yuan Wang; Qin Fu; Velizar T. Tchernev; Minjuan Wang; Barry Schweitzer; Stephen F. Kingsmore; Dhavalkumar D. Patel; Joost J. Oppenheim; O. M. Zack Howard

A number of mammalian antimicrobial proteins produced by neutrophils and cells of epithelial origin have chemotactic and activating effects on host cells, including cells of the immune system. Eosinophil granules contain an antimicrobial protein known as eosinophil-derived neurotoxin (EDN), which belongs to the RNase A superfamily. EDN has antiviral and chemotactic activities in vitro. In this study, we show that EDN, and to a lesser extent human pancreatic RNase (hPR), another RNase A superfamily member, activates human dendritic cells (DCs), leading to the production of a variety of inflammatory cytokines, chemokines, growth factors, and soluble receptors. Human angiogenin, a RNase evolutionarily more distant to EDN and hPR, did not display such activating effects. Additionally, EDN and hPR also induced phenotypic and functional maturation DCs. These RNases were as efficacious as TNF-α, but induced a different set of cytokine mediators. Furthermore, EDN production by human macrophages could be induced by proinflammatory stimuli. The results reveal the DC-activating activity of EDN and hPR and suggest that they are likely participants of inflammatory and immune responses. A number of endogenous mediators in addition to EDN have been reported to have both chemotactic and activating effects on APCs, and can thus amplify innate and Ag-specific immune responses to danger signals. We therefore propose these mediators be considered as endogenous multifunctional immune alarmins.


American Journal of Pathology | 2001

Rolling Circle Amplification: A New Approach to Increase Sensitivity for Immunohistochemistry and Flow Cytometry

Yuriy Gusev; Jason Sparkowski; Arumugham Raghunathan; Harley R. Ferguson; Jane Montano; Nancy Bogdan; Barry Schweitzer; Steven Wiltshire; Stephen F. Kingsmore; Warren Maltzman; Vanessa Wheeler

Immunohistochemistry is a method that can provide complementary diagnostic and prognostic information to morphological observations and soluble assays. Sensitivity, specificity, or requirements for arduous sample preparation or signal amplification procedures often limit the application of this approach to routine clinical specimens. Rolling circle amplification (RCA) generates a localized signal via an isothermal amplification of an oligonucleotide circle. The application of this approach to immunohistochemistry could extend the utility of these methods to include a more complete set of immunological and molecular probes. RCA-mediated signal amplification was successfully applied to the sensitive and specific detection of a variety of cell surface antigens (CD3, CD20, and epithelial membrane antigen) and intracellular molecules (vimentin and prostate-specific antigen) within a variety of routinely fixed specimens, as well as samples prepared for flow cytometry. RCA technology, which has an intrinsically wide dynamic range, is a robust and simple procedure that can provide a universal platform for the localization of a wide variety of molecules as a function of either antigenicity or nucleic acid sequence. The use of RCA in this way could enhance the use of markers of current interest as well as permit the integration of emerging information from genomics and proteomics into cell- and tissue-based analyses.


Journal of Biomolecular NMR | 1993

Two- and three-dimensional 31P-driven NMR procedures for complete assignment of backbone resonances in oligodeoxyribonucleotides

Gregory W. Kellogg; Barry Schweitzer

SummaryWe describe a strategy for sequential assignment of 31P and deoxyribose 1H NMR resonances in oligodeoxyribonucleotides. The approach is based on 31P−1H J-cross-polarization (hetero TOCSY) experiments, recently demonstrated for the assignment of resonances in RNA [Kellogg, G.W. (1992) J. Magn. Reson., 98, 176; Kellogg, G.W. et al. (1992) J. Am. Chem. Soc., 114, 2727]. Two-dimensional hetero TOCSY and hetero TOCSY-NOESY experiments are used to connect proton spin systems from adjacent nucleotides in the dodecamer d(CGCGAATTCGCG)2 entirely on the basis of through-bond scalar connectivities. All phosphorus resonances of the dodecamer are assigned by this method, and many deoxyribose 1H resonances can be assigned as well. A new three-dimensional hetero TOCSY-NOESY experiment is used for backbone proton 4′, 5′ and 5″ resonance assignments, completing assignments begun on this molecule in 1983 [Hare, D.R. et al. (1983) J. Mol. Biol., 171, 319]. Numerical simulations of the time dependence of coherence transfer aid in the interpretation of hetero TOCSY spectra of oligonucleotides and address the dependence of hetero TOCSY and related spectra on structural features of nucleic acids. The possibility of a generalized backbone-driven 1H and 31P resonance-assignment strategy for oligonucleotides is discussed.

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Joseph R. Bertino

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Debabrata Banerjee

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Paul Predki

United States Department of Energy

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James T. Lin

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Adam P. Dicker

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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