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Dive into the research topics where Gary Siuzdak is active.

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Featured researches published by Gary Siuzdak.


Therapeutic Drug Monitoring | 2005

METLIN : A metabolite mass spectral database

Colin A. Smith; Grace O'Maille; Elizabeth J. Want; Chuan Qin; Sunia A. Trauger; Theodore R. Brandon; Darlene E. Custodio; Ruben Abagyan; Gary Siuzdak

Endogenous metabolites have gained increasing interest over the past 5 years largely for their implications in diagnostic and pharmaceutical biomarker discovery. METLIN (http://metlin.scripps.edu), a freely accessible web-based data repository, has been developed to assist in a broad array of metabolite research and to facilitate metabolite identification through mass analysis. METLIN includes an annotated list of known metabolite structural information that is easily cross-correlated with its catalogue of high-resolution Fourier transform mass spectrometry (FTMS) spectra, tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) spectra, and LC/MS data.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Metabolomics analysis reveals large effects of gut microflora on mammalian blood metabolites

William R. Wikoff; Andrew T. Anfora; Jun Liu; Peter G. Schultz; Scott A. Lesley; Eric C. Peters; Gary Siuzdak

Although it has long been recognized that the enteric community of bacteria that inhabit the human distal intestinal track broadly impacts human health, the biochemical details that underlie these effects remain largely undefined. Here, we report a broad MS-based metabolomics study that demonstrates a surprisingly large effect of the gut “microbiome” on mammalian blood metabolites. Plasma extracts from germ-free mice were compared with samples from conventional (conv) animals by using various MS-based methods. Hundreds of features were detected in only 1 sample set, with the majority of these being unique to the conv animals, whereas ≈10% of all features observed in both sample sets showed significant changes in their relative signal intensity. Amino acid metabolites were particularly affected. For example, the bacterial-mediated production of bioactive indole-containing metabolites derived from tryptophan such as indoxyl sulfate and the antioxidant indole-3-propionic acid (IPA) was impacted. Production of IPA was shown to be completely dependent on the presence of gut microflora and could be established by colonization with the bacterium Clostridium sporogenes. Multiple organic acids containing phenyl groups were also greatly increased in the presence of gut microbes. A broad, drug-like phase II metabolic response of the host to metabolites generated by the microbiome was observed, suggesting that the gut microflora has a direct impact on the drug metabolism capacity of the host. Together, these results suggest a significant interplay between bacterial and mammalian metabolism.


Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology | 2012

Innovation: Metabolomics: the apogee of the omics trilogy

Gary J. Patti; Oscar Yanes; Gary Siuzdak

Metabolites, the chemical entities that are transformed during metabolism, provide a functional readout of cellular biochemistry. With emerging technologies in mass spectrometry, thousands of metabolites can now be quantitatively measured from minimal amounts of biological material, which has thereby enabled systems-level analyses. By performing global metabolite profiling, also known as untargeted metabolomics, new discoveries linking cellular pathways to biological mechanism are being revealed and are shaping our understanding of cell biology, physiology and medicine.


Nature | 1999

Desorption-ionization mass spectrometry on porous silicon.

Jing Wei; Jillian M. Buriak; Gary Siuzdak

Desorption mass spectrometry has undergone significant improvements since the original experiments were performed more than 90 years ago. The most dramatic change occurred in the early1980s with the introduction of an organic matrix,, to transfer energy to the analyte. This reduces ion fragmentation but also introduces background ions from the matrix. Here we describe a matrix-free strategy forbiomolecular mass spectrometry based on pulsed-laser desorption–ionization from a porous silicon surface. Our method uses porous silicon to trap analytes deposited on the surface, and laser irradiation to vaporize and ionize them. We show that the method works at femtomole and attomole levels of analyte, and induces little or no fragmentation, in contrast to what is typically observed with other such approaches,,,,,. The ability to perform these measurements without a matrix,,, also makes itmore amenable to small-molecule analysis. Chemical and structural modification of the porous silicon has enabled optimization of the ionization characteristics of the surface. Our technique offers good sensitivity as well as compatibility with silicon-based microfluidics and microchip technologies.


Analytical Chemistry | 2012

XCMS Online: A Web-Based Platform to Process Untargeted Metabolomic Data

Ralf Tautenhahn; Gary J. Patti; Duane Rinehart; Gary Siuzdak

Recently, interest in untargeted metabolomics has become prevalent in the general scientific community among an increasing number of investigators. The majority of these investigators, however, do not have the bioinformatic expertise that has been required to process metabolomic data by using command-line driven software programs. Here we introduce a novel platform to process untargeted metabolomic data that uses an intuitive graphical interface and does not require installation or technical expertise. This platform, called XCMS Online, is a web-based version of the widely used XCMS software that allows users to easily upload and process liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry data with only a few mouse clicks. XCMS Online provides a solution for the complete untargeted metabolomic workflow including feature detection, retention time correction, alignment, annotation, statistical analysis, and data visualization. Results can be browsed online in an interactive, customizable table showing statistics, chromatograms, and putative METLIN identities for each metabolite. Additionally, all results and images can be downloaded as zip files for offline analysis and publication. XCMS Online is available at https://xcmsonline.scripps.edu.


Nature | 2007

Clathrate nanostructures for mass spectrometry

Trent R. Northen; Oscar Yanes; Michael T. Northen; Dena Marrinucci; Winnie Uritboonthai; Junefredo V. Apon; Stephen L. Golledge; Anders Nordström; Gary Siuzdak

The ability of mass spectrometry to generate intact biomolecular ions efficiently in the gas phase has led to its widespread application in metabolomics, proteomics, biological imaging, biomarker discovery and clinical assays (namely neonatal screens). Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) and electrospray ionization have been at the forefront of these developments. However, matrix application complicates the use of MALDI for cellular, tissue, biofluid and microarray analysis and can limit the spatial resolution because of the matrix crystal size (typically more than 10 μm), sensitivity and detection of small compounds (less than 500 Da). Secondary-ion mass spectrometry has extremely high lateral resolution (100 nm) and has found biological applications although the energetic desorption/ionization is a limitation owing to molecular fragmentation. Here we introduce nanostructure-initiator mass spectrometry (NIMS), a tool for spatially defined mass analysis. NIMS uses ‘initiator’ molecules trapped in nanostructured surfaces or ‘clathrates’ to release and ionize intact molecules adsorbed on the surface. This surface responds to both ion and laser irradiation. The lateral resolution (ion-NIMS about 150 nm), sensitivity, matrix-free and reduced fragmentation of NIMS allows direct characterization of peptide microarrays, direct mass analysis of single cells, tissue imaging, and direct characterization of blood and urine.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2010

Metabolic oxidation regulates embryonic stem cell differentiation

Oscar Yanes; Julie Clark; Diana M Wong; Gary J. Patti; Antonio Sánchez-Ruiz; H. Paul Benton; Sunia A. Trauger; Caroline Desponts; Sheng Ding; Gary Siuzdak

Metabolites offer an important unexplored complement to understanding the pluripotency of stem cells. Using mass spectrometry-based metabolomics, we show that embryonic stem cells are characterized by abundant metabolites with highly unsaturated structures whose levels decrease upon differentiation. By monitoring the reduced and oxidized glutathione ratio as well as ascorbic acid levels, we demonstrate that the stem cell redox status is regulated during differentiation. Based on the oxidative biochemistry of the unsaturated metabolites, we experimentally manipulated specific pathways in embryonic stem cells while monitoring the effects on differentiation. Inhibition of the eicosanoid signaling pathway promoted pluripotency and maintained levels of unsaturated fatty acids. In contrast, downstream oxidized metabolites (e.g., neuroprotectin D1) and substrates of pro-oxidative reactions (e.g., acyl-carnitines), promoted neuronal and cardiac differentiation. We postulate that the highly unsaturated metabolome sustained by stem cells makes them particularly attuned to differentiate in response to in vivo oxidative processes such as inflammation.


Cell Research | 2012

The metabolome of induced pluripotent stem cells reveals metabolic changes occurring in somatic cell reprogramming

Athanasia D. Panopoulos; Oscar Yanes; Sergio Ruiz; Yasuyuki S. Kida; Dinh Diep; Ralf Tautenhahn; Aída Herrerías; Erika M. Batchelder; Nongluk Plongthongkum; Margaret Lutz; W. Travis Berggren; Kun Zhang; Ronald M. Evans; Gary Siuzdak; Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte

Metabolism is vital to every aspect of cell function, yet the metabolome of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) remains largely unexplored. Here we report, using an untargeted metabolomics approach, that human iPSCs share a pluripotent metabolomic signature with embryonic stem cells (ESCs) that is distinct from their parental cells, and that is characterized by changes in metabolites involved in cellular respiration. Examination of cellular bioenergetics corroborated with our metabolomic analysis, and demonstrated that somatic cells convert from an oxidative state to a glycolytic state in pluripotency. Interestingly, the bioenergetics of various somatic cells correlated with their reprogramming efficiencies. We further identified metabolites that differ between iPSCs and ESCs, which revealed novel metabolic pathways that play a critical role in regulating somatic cell reprogramming. Our findings are the first to globally analyze the metabolome of iPSCs, and provide mechanistic insight into a new layer of regulation involved in inducing pluripotency, and in evaluating iPSC and ESC equivalence.


Nature Biotechnology | 2012

An accelerated workflow for untargeted metabolomics using the METLIN database.

Ralf Tautenhahn; Kevin Cho; Winnie Uritboonthai; Zheng-Jiang Zhu; Gary J. Patti; Gary Siuzdak

Metabolites, typically recognized as small molecules that are involved in cellular reactions, provide a functional signature of phenotype that is complimentary to the upstream biochemical information obtained from genes, transcripts, and proteins. The high-level of correlation between metabolites and phenotype has created a surge of interest in the field that is reflected in the number of metabolomic publications growing from just a few articles in 1999 to over five thousand in 2011. Although relatively new compared to its genomic and proteomic predecessors, already metabolomics has led to the discovery of biomarkers for disease, fundamental insights into cellular biochemistry, and clues related to disease pathogenesis.1,2


Nature | 2010

Microbial metalloproteomes are largely uncharacterized

Aleksandar Cvetkovic; Angeli Lal Menon; Michael P. Thorgersen; Joseph W. Scott; Farris L. Poole; Francis E. Jenney; W. Andrew Lancaster; Jeremy L. Praissman; Saratchandra Shanmukh; Brian J. Vaccaro; Sunia A. Trauger; Ewa Kalisiak; Junefredo V. Apon; Gary Siuzdak; Steven M. Yannone; John A. Tainer; Michael W. W. Adams

Metal ion cofactors afford proteins virtually unlimited catalytic potential, enable electron transfer reactions and have a great impact on protein stability. Consequently, metalloproteins have key roles in most biological processes, including respiration (iron and copper), photosynthesis (manganese) and drug metabolism (iron). Yet, predicting from genome sequence the numbers and types of metal an organism assimilates from its environment or uses in its metalloproteome is currently impossible because metal coordination sites are diverse and poorly recognized. We present here a robust, metal-based approach to determine all metals an organism assimilates and identify its metalloproteins on a genome-wide scale. This shifts the focus from classical protein-based purification to metal-based identification and purification by liquid chromatography, high-throughput tandem mass spectrometry (HT-MS/MS) and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) to characterize cytoplasmic metalloproteins from an exemplary microorganism (Pyrococcus furiosus). Of 343 metal peaks in chromatography fractions, 158 did not match any predicted metalloprotein. Unassigned peaks included metals known to be used (cobalt, iron, nickel, tungsten and zinc; 83 peaks) plus metals the organism was not thought to assimilate (lead, manganese, molybdenum, uranium and vanadium; 75 peaks). Purification of eight of 158 unexpected metal peaks yielded four novel nickel- and molybdenum-containing proteins, whereas four purified proteins contained sub-stoichiometric amounts of misincorporated lead and uranium. Analyses of two additional microorganisms (Escherichia coli and Sulfolobus solfataricus) revealed species-specific assimilation of yet more unexpected metals. Metalloproteomes are therefore much more extensive and diverse than previously recognized, and promise to provide key insights for cell biology, microbial growth and toxicity mechanisms.

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Gary J. Patti

Washington University in St. Louis

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H. Paul Benton

Scripps Research Institute

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Brian Bothner

Scripps Research Institute

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Linh Hoang

Scripps Research Institute

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Zhouxin Shen

University of California

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Oscar Yanes

Rovira i Virgili University

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Duane Rinehart

Scripps Research Institute

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