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Dive into the research topics where Brigitte F. Schmidt is active.

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Featured researches published by Brigitte F. Schmidt.


Nature Biotechnology | 2008

Fluorogen-activating single-chain antibodies for imaging cell surface proteins

Christopher Szent-Gyorgyi; Brigitte F. Schmidt; Yehuda Creeger; Gregory W. Fisher; Kelly L Zakel; Sally A. Adler; James A.J. Fitzpatrick; Carol A. Woolford; Qi Yan; Kalin V. Vasilev; Peter B. Berget; Marcel P. Bruchez; Jonathan W. Jarvik; Alan S. Waggoner

Imaging of live cells has been revolutionized by genetically encoded fluorescent probes, most famously green and other fluorescent proteins, but also peptide tags that bind exogenous fluorophores. We report here the development of protein reporters that generate fluorescence from otherwise dark molecules (fluorogens). Eight unique fluorogen activating proteins (FAPs) have been isolated by screening a library of human single-chain antibodies (scFvs) using derivatives of thiazole orange and malachite green. When displayed on yeast or mammalian cell surfaces, these FAPs bind fluorogens with nanomolar affinity, increasing green or red fluorescence thousands-fold to brightness levels typical of fluorescent proteins. Spectral variation can be generated by combining different FAPs and fluorogen derivatives. Visualization of FAPs on the cell surface or within the secretory apparatus of mammalian cells can be achieved by choosing membrane permeant or impermeant fluorogens. The FAP technique is extensible to a wide variety of nonfluorescent dyes.


Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 1997

Signal Amplification in the Detection of Single-copy DNA and RNA by Enzyme-catalyzed Deposition (CARD) of the Novel Fluorescent Reporter Substrate Cy3.29-Tyramide

Brigitte F. Schmidt; Jean Chao; Zhengrong Zhu; Robin L. DeBiasio; Gregory W. Fisher

We demonstrate that the CAtalyzed Reporter Deposition method (CARD), utilizing the novel fluorescent reporter Cy3.29-tyramide, is successful in the Fluorescent In Situ Hybridization (FISH) detection of RNA and single-copy DNA. Histone 4 expression is detected in RNA extracts of S-phase, synchronized HeLa cells by dot-blot analysis. Gene expression of histone 4 in HeLa cells is demonstrated by FISH via CARD, utilizing oligonucleotide probes. Fluorescence intensity measurements on CARD-amplified histone 4 RNA detection showed (a) a 25-fold amplification of the signal brightness by biotinylated oligonucleotide probes and (b) a sixfold amplification of the signal brightness by horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-labeled histone 4 probes vs the directly stained control. The sensitivity of the CARD method is demonstrated by the FISH detection of single-copy DNA on human corneal fibroblast and HeLa S3 interphase nuclei. Chromosomal localization of the single copy DNA is demonstrated on HeLa S3 metaphase chromosome spreads. (J Histochem Cytochem 45:365–373, 1997)


Angewandte Chemie | 2012

Genetically Encoded pH Sensor for Tracking Surface Proteins through Endocytosis

Anmol Grover; Brigitte F. Schmidt; Russell D. Salter; Simon C. Watkins; Alan S. Waggoner; Marcel P. Bruchez

Traffic cam: a tandem dye prepared from a FRET acceptor and a fluorogenic donor functions as a cell surface ratiometric pH indicator, which upon internalization serves to follow protein trafficking during endocytosis. This sensor was used to analyze agonist-dependent internalization of β(2)-adrenergic receptors. It was also used as a surrogate antigen to reveal direct surface-to-endosome antigen transfer between dendritic cells (not shown).


Cytometry | 1996

Immunofluorescence signal amplification by the enzyme-catalyzed deposition of a fluorescent reporter substrate (CARD).

Jean Chao; Robbin DeBiasio; Zhengrong Zhu; Kenneth A. Giuliano; Brigitte F. Schmidt

Progress has been made in improving the immunohistochemical detection of antigens for imaging and flow cytometry. We report the synthesis of a novel fluorescent horseradish peroxidase substrate, Cy3.29-tyramide, and its application in an enzyme-based signal amplification system, catalyzed reporter deposition (CARD). The catalyzed deposition of Cy3.29-tyramide was used to detect cell surface markers such as CD8 and CD25 on tonsil tissue and human lymphocytes. We compared the fluorescence CARD method to standard indirect immunofluorescence detection methods and found that an amplification of up to 15-fold was possible with CARD. The detection of the intracellular protein myosin II in fibroblastic cells and rabbit serum proteins blotted onto nitrocellulose was also improved. Thus, fluorescent CARD is a simple modification that can be made to standard immunofluorescence staining protocols to enhance significantly the detection of antigens.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Fluorogenic dendrons with multiple donor chromophores as bright genetically targeted and activated probes.

Christopher Szent-Gyorgyi; Brigitte F. Schmidt; James A.J. Fitzpatrick; Marcel P. Bruchez

We have developed a class of dendron-based fluorogenic dyes (termed dyedrons) comprised of multiple cyanine (Cy3) donors coupled to a single malachite green (MG) acceptor that fluoresce only when the MG is noncovalently but specifically bound to a cognate single chain antibody (scFv). These cell-impermeant dyedrons exploit efficient intramolecular energy transfer from Cy3 donors to stoichiometrically amplify the fluorescence of MG chromophores that are activated by binding to the scFv. These chromophore enhancements, coupled with our optimized scFv, can significantly increase fluorescence emission generated by the dyedron/scFv complex to brightness levels several-fold greater than that for single fluorescent proteins and targeted small molecule fluorophores. Efficient intramolecular quenching of free dyedrons enables sensitive homogeneous (no wash) detection under typical tissue culture conditions, with undetectable nonspecific activation.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Intracellular pH measurements using perfluorocarbon nanoemulsions.

Michael J. Patrick; Jelena M. Janjic; Haibing Teng; Meredith R. O’Hear; Cortlyn W. Brown; Jesse A. Stokum; Brigitte F. Schmidt; Eric T. Ahrens; Alan S. Waggoner

We report the synthesis and formulation of unique perfluorocarbon (PFC) nanoemulsions enabling intracellular pH measurements in living cells via fluorescent microscopy and flow cytometry. These nanoemulsions are formulated to readily enter cells upon coincubation and contain two cyanine-based fluorescent reporters covalently bound to the PFC molecules, specifically Cy3-PFC and CypHer5-PFC conjugates. The spectral and pH-sensing properties of the nanoemulsions were characterized in vitro and showed the unaltered spectral behavior of dyes after formulation. In rat 9L glioma cells loaded with nanoemulsion, the local pH of nanoemulsions was longitudinally quantified using optical microscopy and flow cytometry and displayed a steady decrease in pH to a level of 5.5 over 3 h, indicating rapid uptake of nanoemulsion to acidic compartments. Overall, these reagents enable real-time optical detection of intracellular pH in living cells in response to pharmacological manipulations. Moreover, recent approaches for in vivo cell tracking using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) employ intracellular PFC nanoemulsion probes to track cells using (19)F MRI. However, the intracellular fate of these imaging probes is poorly understood. The pH-sensing nanoemulsions allow the study of the fate of the PFC tracer inside the labeled cell, which is important for understanding the PFC cell loading dynamics, nanoemulsion stability and cell viability over time.


Photochemistry and Photobiology | 2004

Synthesis, Photophysical, Photochemical and Biological Properties of Caged GABA, 4-[[(2H-1-Benzopyran-2-one-7-amino-4-methoxy) carbonyl] amino] Butanoic Acid¶

Beate Cürten; Paul H. M. Kullmann; Mark E. Bier; Karl Kandler; Brigitte F. Schmidt

The photorelease of a caged neurotransmitter can be used to investigate the function of neuronal circuits in tissues. We have designed and synthesized a stable, caged γ‐aminobutyric acid (GABA) derivative, 4‐[[(2H‐1‐benzopyran‐2‐one‐7‐amino‐4‐methoxy)carbonyl]amino] butanoic acid (BC204), that releases the neurotransmitter in physiological medium when irradiated with UV light at 300–400 nm in PBS at pH 7.4. The release of GABA occurs with the formation of the major photoproduct, 7‐amino‐4‐(hydroxymethyl)‐2H‐1‐benzopyran‐2‐one, via a solvolytic photodegradation mechanism of the coumarin moiety and was confirmed by electrospray mass spectrometry/mass spectrometry (ESI MS/MS). BC204 is chemically stable and shows no intrinsic activity after many hours under physiological dark conditions. These properties suggest that BC204 is an excellent form of caged GABA that is well suited for long‐term biological studies.


Epilepsia | 2010

Optical suppression of experimental seizures in rat brain slices

Xiao-Feng Yang; Brigitte F. Schmidt; Daniel L. Rode; Steven M. Rothman

Purpose:  To determine if a small ultraviolet emitting diode (UV LED) could release sufficient γ‐aminobutyric acid (GABA) from a caged precursor to suppress paroxysmal activity in rat brain slices.


Bioconjugate Chemistry | 2015

Fluorogen Activating Protein–Affibody Probes: Modular, No-Wash Measurement of Epidermal Growth Factor Receptors

Yi Wang; Cheryl A. Telmer; Brigitte F. Schmidt; Josef D. Franke; Stephan Ort; Donna J. Arndt-Jovin; Marcel P. Bruchez

Fluorescence is essential for dynamic live cell imaging, and affinity reagents are required for quantification of endogenous proteins. Various fluorescent dyes can report on different aspects of biological trafficking, but must be independently conjugated to affinity reagents and characterized for specific biological readouts. Here we present the characterization of a new modular platform for small anti-EGFR affinity probes for studying rapid changes in receptor pools. A protein domain (FAP dL5**) that binds to malachite-green (MG) derivatives for fluorescence activation was expressed as a recombinant fusion to one or two copies of the compact EGFR binding affibody ZEGFR:1907. This is a recombinant and fluorogenic labeling reagent for native EGFR molecules. In vitro fluorescence assays demonstrated that the binding of these dyes to the FAP–affibody fusions produced thousand-fold fluorescence enhancements, with high binding affinity and fast association rates. Flow cytometry assays and fluorescence microscopy demonstrated that these probes label endogenous EGFR on A431 cells without disruption of EGFR function, and low nanomolar surface Kd values were observed with the double-ZEGFR:1907 constructs. The application of light-harvesting fluorogens (dyedrons) significantly improved the detected fluorescence signal. Altering the order of addition of the ligand, probe, and dyes allowed differentiation between surface and endocytotic pools of receptors to reveal the rapid dynamics of endocytic trafficking. Therefore, FAP/affibody coupling provides a new approach to construct compact and modular affinity probes that label endogenous proteins on living cells and can be used for studying rapid changes in receptor pools involved in trafficking.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2018

Structural analyses of NEAT1 lncRNAs suggest long-range RNA interactions that may contribute to paraspeckle architecture

Yizhu Lin; Brigitte F. Schmidt; Marcel P. Bruchez; C. Joel McManus

Abstract Paraspeckles are nuclear bodies that regulate multiple aspects of gene expression. The long non-coding RNA (lncRNA) NEAT1 is essential for paraspeckle formation. NEAT1 has a highly ordered spatial organization within the paraspeckle, such that its 5′ and 3′ ends localize on the periphery of paraspeckle, while central sequences of NEAT1 are found within the paraspeckle core. As such, the structure of NEAT1 RNA may be important as a scaffold for the paraspeckle. In this study, we used SHAPE probing and computational analyses to investigate the secondary structure of human and mouse NEAT1. We propose a secondary structural model of the shorter (3,735 nt) isoform hNEAT1_S, in which the RNA folds into four separate domains. The secondary structures of mouse and human NEAT1 are largely different, with the exception of several short regions that have high structural similarity. Long-range base-pairing interactions between the 5′ and 3′ ends of the long isoform NEAT1 (NEAT1_L) were predicted computationally and verified using an in vitro RNA–RNA interaction assay. These results suggest that the conserved role of NEAT1 as a paraspeckle scaffold does not require extensively conserved RNA secondary structure and that long-range interactions among NEAT1 transcripts may have an important architectural function in paraspeckle formation.

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Marcel P. Bruchez

Carnegie Mellon University

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Alan S. Waggoner

Carnegie Mellon University

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James A.J. Fitzpatrick

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Lydia A. Perkins

Carnegie Mellon University

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Qi Yan

Carnegie Mellon University

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Gregory W. Fisher

Carnegie Mellon University

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Lauren A. Ernst

Carnegie Mellon University

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