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Dive into the research topics where Dirk Eberhard is active.

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Featured researches published by Dirk Eberhard.


Nature Cell Biology | 2004

A physical and functional map of the human TNF-α/NF-κB signal transduction pathway

Tewis Bouwmeester; Angela Bauch; Heinz Ruffner; Pierre-Olivier Angrand; Giovanna Bergamini; Karen Croughton; Cristina Cruciat; Dirk Eberhard; Julien Gagneur; Sonja Ghidelli; Carsten Hopf; Bettina Huhse; Raffaella Mangano; Anne-Marie Michon; Markus Schirle; Judith Schlegl; Markus Schwab; Martin Stein; Andreas Bauer; Georg Casari; Gerard Drewes; Anne-Claude Gavin; David B. Jackson; Gerard Joberty; Gitte Neubauer; Jens Rick; Bernhard Kuster; Giulio Superti-Furga

Signal transduction pathways are modular composites of functionally interdependent sets of proteins that act in a coordinated fashion to transform environmental information into a phenotypic response. The pro-inflammatory cytokine tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-α triggers a signalling cascade, converging on the activation of the transcription factor NF-κB, which forms the basis for numerous physiological and pathological processes. Here we report the mapping of a protein interaction network around 32 known and candidate TNF-α/NF-κB pathway components by using an integrated approach comprising tandem affinity purification, liquid-chromatography tandem mass spectrometry, network analysis and directed functional perturbation studies using RNA interference. We identified 221 molecular associations and 80 previously unknown interactors, including 10 new functional modulators of the pathway. This systems approach provides significant insight into the logic of the TNF-α/NF-κB pathway and is generally applicable to other pathways relevant to human disease.


Nature Biotechnology | 2007

Quantitative chemical proteomics reveals mechanisms of action of clinical ABL kinase inhibitors

Marcus Bantscheff; Dirk Eberhard; Yann Abraham; Sonja Bastuck; Markus Boesche; Scott Hobson; Toby Mathieson; Jessica Perrin; Manfred Raida; Christina Rau; Valerie Reader; Gavain Sweetman; Andreas Bauer; Tewis Bouwmeester; Carsten Hopf; Ulrich Kruse; Gitte Neubauer; Nigel Ramsden; Jens Rick; Bernhard Kuster; Gerard Drewes

We describe a chemical proteomics approach to profile the interaction of small molecules with hundreds of endogenously expressed protein kinases and purine-binding proteins. This subproteome is captured by immobilized nonselective kinase inhibitors (kinobeads), and the bound proteins are quantified in parallel by mass spectrometry using isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantification (iTRAQ). By measuring the competition with the affinity matrix, we assess the binding of drugs to their targets in cell lysates and in cells. By mapping drug-induced changes in the phosphorylation state of the captured proteome, we also analyze signaling pathways downstream of target kinases. Quantitative profiling of the drugs imatinib (Gleevec), dasatinib (Sprycel) and bosutinib in K562 cells confirms known targets including ABL and SRC family kinases and identifies the receptor tyrosine kinase DDR1 and the oxidoreductase NQO2 as novel targets of imatinib. The data suggest that our approach is a valuable tool for drug discovery.


Nature | 2012

A selective jumonji H3K27 demethylase inhibitor modulates the proinflammatory macrophage response

Laurens Kruidenier; Chun-wa Chung; Zhongjun Cheng; John Liddle; KaHing Che; Gerard Joberty; Marcus Bantscheff; C. Bountra; Angela Bridges; Hawa Diallo; Dirk Eberhard; Sue Hutchinson; Emma Jones; Roy Katso; Melanie Leveridge; Palwinder K. Mander; Julie Mosley; Cesar Ramirez-Molina; Paul Rowland; Christopher J. Schofield; Robert J. Sheppard; Julia E. Smith; Catherine Swales; Robert Tanner; Pamela J. Thomas; Anthony Tumber; Gerard Drewes; U. Oppermann; Dinshaw J. Patel; Kevin Lee

The jumonji (JMJ) family of histone demethylases are Fe2+- and α-ketoglutarate-dependent oxygenases that are essential components of regulatory transcriptional chromatin complexes. These enzymes demethylate lysine residues in histones in a methylation-state and sequence-specific context. Considerable effort has been devoted to gaining a mechanistic understanding of the roles of histone lysine demethylases in eukaryotic transcription, genome integrity and epigenetic inheritance, as well as in development, physiology and disease. However, because of the absence of any selective inhibitors, the relevance of the demethylase activity of JMJ enzymes in regulating cellular responses remains poorly understood. Here we present a structure-guided small-molecule and chemoproteomics approach to elucidating the functional role of the H3K27me3-specific demethylase subfamily (KDM6 subfamily members JMJD3 and UTX). The liganded structures of human and mouse JMJD3 provide novel insight into the specificity determinants for cofactor, substrate and inhibitor recognition by the KDM6 subfamily of demethylases. We exploited these structural features to generate the first small-molecule catalytic site inhibitor that is selective for the H3K27me3-specific JMJ subfamily. We demonstrate that this inhibitor binds in a novel manner and reduces lipopolysaccharide-induced proinflammatory cytokine production by human primary macrophages, a process that depends on both JMJD3 and UTX. Our results resolve the ambiguity associated with the catalytic function of H3K27-specific JMJs in regulating disease-relevant inflammatory responses and provide encouragement for designing small-molecule inhibitors to allow selective pharmacological intervention across the JMJ family.


Nature Biotechnology | 2011

Chemoproteomics profiling of HDAC inhibitors reveals selective targeting of HDAC complexes

Marcus Bantscheff; Carsten Hopf; Mikhail M. Savitski; Antje Dittmann; Paola Grandi; Anne-Marie Michon; Judith Schlegl; Yann Abraham; Isabelle Becher; Giovanna Bergamini; Markus Boesche; Manja Delling; Birgit Dümpelfeld; Dirk Eberhard; Carola Huthmacher; Toby Mathieson; Daniel Poeckel; Valerie Reader; Katja Strunk; Gavain Sweetman; Ulrich Kruse; Gitte Neubauer; Nigel Ramsden; Gerard Drewes

The development of selective histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors with anti-cancer and anti-inflammatory properties remains challenging in large part owing to the difficulty of probing the interaction of small molecules with megadalton protein complexes. A combination of affinity capture and quantitative mass spectrometry revealed the selectivity with which 16 HDAC inhibitors target multiple HDAC complexes scaffolded by ELM-SANT domain subunits, including a novel mitotic deacetylase complex (MiDAC). Inhibitors clustered according to their target profiles with stronger binding of aminobenzamides to the HDAC NCoR complex than to the HDAC Sin3 complex. We identified several non-HDAC targets for hydroxamate inhibitors. HDAC inhibitors with distinct profiles have correspondingly different effects on downstream targets. We also identified the anti-inflammatory drug bufexamac as a class IIb (HDAC6, HDAC10) HDAC inhibitor. Our approach enables the discovery of novel targets and inhibitors and suggests that the selectivity of HDAC inhibitors should be evaluated in the context of HDAC complexes and not purified catalytic subunits.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2008

Robust and Sensitive iTRAQ Quantification on an LTQ Orbitrap Mass Spectrometer

Marcus Bantscheff; Markus Boesche; Dirk Eberhard; Toby Matthieson; Gavain Sweetman; Bernhard Kuster

Isobaric stable isotope tagging reagents such as tandem mass tags or isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantification enable multiplexed quantification of peptides via reporter ion signals in the low mass range of tandem mass spectra. Until recently, the poor recovery of low mass fragments observed in tandem mass spectra acquired on ion trap mass spectrometers precluded the use of these reagents on this widely available instrument platform. The Pulsed Q Dissociation (PQD) technique allows negotiating this limitation but suffers from poor fragmentation efficiency, which has raised doubts in the community as to its practical utility. Here we show that by carefully optimizing instrument parameters such as collision energy, activation Q, delay time, ion isolation width, number of microscans, and number of trapped ions, low m/z fragment ion intensities can be generated that enable accurate peptide quantification at the 100 amol level. Side by side comparison of PQD on an LTQ Orbitrap with CID on a five-year old Q-Tof Ultima using complex protein digests shows that whereas precision of quantification of 10–15% can be achieved by both approaches, PQD quantifies twice as many proteins. PQD on an LTQ Orbitrap also outperforms “higher energy collision induced dissociation” on the same instrument using the recently introduced octapole collision cell in terms of lower limit of quantification. Finally, we demonstrate the significant analytical potential of iTRAQ quantification using PQD on an LTQ Orbitrap by quantitatively measuring the kinase interaction profile of the small molecule drug imatinib in K-562 cells. This article gives practical guidance for the implementation of PQD, discusses its merits, and for the first time, compares its performance to higher energy collision-induced dissociation.


Science | 2014

Tracking cancer drugs in living cells by thermal profiling of the proteome

Mikhail M. Savitski; Friedrich Reinhard; Holger Franken; Thilo Werner; Maria Fälth Savitski; Dirk Eberhard; Daniel Martinez Molina; Rozbeh Jafari; Rebecca Dovega; Susan Klaeger; Bernhard Kuster; Pär Nordlund; Marcus Bantscheff; Gerard Drewes

INTRODUCTION Understanding drug mechanism poses the daunting challenge of determining the affinity of the drug for all potential targets. Drug target engagement can be assessed by means of a cellular thermal shift assay (CETSA) based on ligand-induced changes in protein thermal stability. We combined the CETSA method with quantitative mass spectrometry to study the effect of drugs on the thermal profile of a cellular proteome comprising more than 7000 proteins. The approach enabled the monitoring of drug targets and downstream effectors. Tracking drugs in living cells. Drugs alter the thermal stability of proteins directly through compound binding or indirectly through changes in overall protein state. Thermal proteome profiling determines melting curves for thousands of proteins and tracks drug action in cells. RATIONALE We devised a method for the thermal profiling of cellular proteomes. Cells were cultured with or without drugs and heated to different temperatures so as to induce protein denaturation, and remaining soluble proteins were extracted with buffer. At each temperature, soluble proteins were quantified by means of high-resolution mass spectrometry, yielding denaturation curves. This allowed determination of thermal stability and the identification of ligand-induced shifts. To rank binding affinities among multiple targets, we determined stability profiles across a range of compound concentrations at a defined temperature. Comparison of the thermal profiles obtained after drug treatment of intact cells versus cell extract allowed us to distinguish effects induced by ligand binding from those induced by downstream modifications. RESULTS We performed thermal proteome profiling (TPP) on human K562 cells by heating intact cells or cell extracts and observed marked differences in melting properties between the two settings, with a trend toward increased protein stability in cell extract. Adenosine triphosphatase (ATP)–binding proteins showed a significant trend toward increased stability in intact cells, suggesting stabilization by the endogenous ligand. This was confirmed with the addition of ATP to cell extract, which resulted in increased stability for this protein group. The ability of TPP to identify target binding was validated by using the broad-specificity inhibitors staurosporine and GSK3182571, which induced shifts in the melting temperatures of many kinase targets and also affected the thermal profiles of other proteins, including regulatory subunits of kinase complexes. We identified the heme biosynthesis enzyme ferrochelatase (FECH) as an off-target of several kinase inhibitors and showed that the drug vemurafenib reaches full target occupancy of its cognate target BRAF and the off-target FECH within a narrow concentration window. FECH deficiency is genetically linked to protoporphyria, suggesting that the photosensitivity induced by vemurafenib and other drugs is mediated by FECH. Drug treatment of live cells affected not only direct target proteins but also downstream effectors. The ABL inhibitor dasatinib induced thermal shifts in several proteins downstream of BCR-ABL, including CRKL, and at concentrations in good agreement with the effect on cell growth. CONCLUSION Thermal profiling of cellular proteomes enables the differential assessment of protein ligand binding and other protein modifications, providing an unbiased measure of drug-target occupancy for multiple targets and facilitating the identification of markers for drug efficacy and toxicity. Mapping human drug targets in the cell To understand both the beneficial and the side effects of a drug, one would need to know its full binding profile to all cellular proteins. Savitski et al. take significant steps toward meeting this daunting challenge. They monitored the unfolding or “melting” of over 7000 human proteins and measured how small-molecule binding changes individual melting profiles. As a proof of principle, over 50 targets were identified for an inhibitor known to bind a broad spectrum of kinases. Two cancer drugs, vemurafib and Alectinib, are known to have a side effect of photosensitivity. The thermal profiling approach identified drug-protein interactions responsible for these side effects. Science, this issue 10.1126/science.1255784 Monitoring drug effects on the thermal profile of a cell’s proteins identifies drug targets and off-targets. The thermal stability of proteins can be used to assess ligand binding in living cells. We have generalized this concept by determining the thermal profiles of more than 7000 proteins in human cells by means of mass spectrometry. Monitoring the effects of small-molecule ligands on the profiles delineated more than 50 targets for the kinase inhibitor staurosporine. We identified the heme biosynthesis enzyme ferrochelatase as a target of kinase inhibitors and suggest that its inhibition causes the phototoxicity observed with vemurafenib and alectinib. Thermal shifts were also observed for downstream effectors of drug treatment. In live cells, dasatinib induced shifts in BCR-ABL pathway proteins, including CRK/CRKL. Thermal proteome profiling provides an unbiased measure of drug-target engagement and facilitates identification of markers for drug efficacy and toxicity.


Nature Methods | 2015

Thermal proteome profiling monitors ligand interactions with cellular membrane proteins.

Friedrich Reinhard; Dirk Eberhard; Thilo Werner; Holger Franken; Dorothee Childs; Carola Doce; Maria Fälth Savitski; Wolfgang Huber; Marcus Bantscheff; Mikhail M. Savitski; Gerard Drewes

We extended thermal proteome profiling to detect transmembrane protein–small molecule interactions in cultured human cells. When we assessed the effects of detergents on ATP-binding profiles, we observed shifts in denaturation temperature for ATP-binding transmembrane proteins. We also observed cellular thermal shifts in pervanadate-induced T cell–receptor signaling, delineating the membrane target CD45 and components of the downstream pathway, and with drugs affecting the transmembrane transporters ATP1A1 and MDR1.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2012

Chemical Proteomic Analysis Reveals the Drugability of the Kinome of Trypanosoma brucei

Michael D. Urbaniak; Toby Mathieson; Marcus Bantscheff; Dirk Eberhard; Raffaella Grimaldi; Diego Miranda-Saavedra; Paul W. Wyatt; Michael A. J. Ferguson; Julie A. Frearson; Gerard Drewes

The protozoan parasite Trypanosoma brucei is the causative agent of African sleeping sickness, and there is an urgent unmet need for improved treatments. Parasite protein kinases are attractive drug targets, provided that the host and parasite kinomes are sufficiently divergent to allow specific inhibition to be achieved. Current drug discovery efforts are hampered by the fact that comprehensive assay panels for parasite targets have not yet been developed. Here, we employ a kinase-focused chemoproteomics strategy that enables the simultaneous profiling of kinase inhibitor potencies against more than 50 endogenously expressed T. brucei kinases in parasite cell extracts. The data reveal that T. brucei kinases are sensitive to typical kinase inhibitors with nanomolar potency and demonstrate the potential for the development of species-specific inhibitors.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2016

Interrogating the Druggability of the 2-Oxoglutarate-Dependent Dioxygenase Target Class by Chemical Proteomics

Gerard Joberty; Markus Boesche; Jack A. Brown; Dirk Eberhard; Neil Stuart Garton; Philip G. Humphreys; Toby Mathieson; Marcel Muelbaier; Nigel Ramsden; Valerie Reader; Anne Rueger; Robert J. Sheppard; Susan Marie Westaway; Marcus Bantscheff; Kevin Lee; David Wilson; Rab K. Prinjha; Gerard Drewes

The 2-oxoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase target class comprises around 60 enzymes including several subfamilies with relevance to human disease, such as the prolyl hydroxylases and the Jumonji-type lysine demethylases. Current drug discovery approaches are largely based on small molecule inhibitors targeting the iron/2-oxoglutarate cofactor binding site. We have devised a chemoproteomics approach based on a combination of unselective active-site ligands tethered to beads, enabling affinity capturing of around 40 different dioxygenase enzymes from human cells. Mass-spectrometry-based quantification of bead-bound enzymes using a free-ligand competition-binding format enabled the comprehensive determination of affinities for the cosubstrate 2-oxoglutarate and for oncometabolites such as 2-hydroxyglutarate. We also profiled a set of representative drug-like inhibitor compounds. The results indicate that intracellular competition by endogenous cofactors and high active site similarity present substantial challenges for drug discovery for this target class.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2012

Determination of Kinase Inhibitor Potencies in Cell Extracts by Competition Binding Assays and Isobaric Mass Tags

Carsten Hopf; Dirk Eberhard; Markus Boesche; Sonja Bastuck; Birgit Dümpelfeld; Marcus Bantscheff

Chemical proteomics offers a unique approach for target identification of small molecule inhibitors directly from cell extracts, thus enabling characterization of target proteins under close to physiological conditions. Here, we describe a competition binding procedure that is based on affinity enrichment of potential target proteins on a probe matrix in the presence of increasing amounts of free test compound in solution. Reduced binding of target proteins to the probe matrix as a function of test compound concentration can be measured and thus, enables calculation of IC(50) values. The method employs quantitative mass spectrometry using isobaric mass tags which enables determination of potency for a large number of target proteins in a single analysis.

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Manfred Raida

National University of Singapore

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