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Featured researches published by Karsten Schnatbaum.


Nature | 2014

Mass-spectrometry-based draft of the human proteome

Mathias Wilhelm; Judith Schlegl; Hannes Hahne; Amin Moghaddas Gholami; Marcus Lieberenz; Mikhail M. Savitski; Emanuel Ziegler; Lars Butzmann; Siegfried Gessulat; Harald Marx; Toby Mathieson; Simone Lemeer; Karsten Schnatbaum; Ulf Reimer; Holger Wenschuh; Martin Mollenhauer; Julia Slotta-Huspenina; Joos-Hendrik Boese; Marcus Bantscheff; Anja Gerstmair; Franz Faerber; Bernhard Kuster

Proteomes are characterized by large protein-abundance differences, cell-type- and time-dependent expression patterns and post-translational modifications, all of which carry biological information that is not accessible by genomics or transcriptomics. Here we present a mass-spectrometry-based draft of the human proteome and a public, high-performance, in-memory database for real-time analysis of terabytes of big data, called ProteomicsDB. The information assembled from human tissues, cell lines and body fluids enabled estimation of the size of the protein-coding genome, and identified organ-specific proteins and a large number of translated lincRNAs (long intergenic non-coding RNAs). Analysis of messenger RNA and protein-expression profiles of human tissues revealed conserved control of protein abundance, and integration of drug-sensitivity data enabled the identification of proteins predicting resistance or sensitivity. The proteome profiles also hold considerable promise for analysing the composition and stoichiometry of protein complexes. ProteomicsDB thus enables navigation of proteomes, provides biological insight and fosters the development of proteomic technology.


Journal of The American Society of Nephrology | 2008

Complement 5a Receptor Inhibition Improves Renal Allograft Survival

Faikah Gueler; Song Rong; Wilfried Gwinner; Michael Mengel; Verena Bröcker; Sylvia Schön; Tim Friedrich Greten; Heiko Hawlisch; Thomas Polakowski; Karsten Schnatbaum; Jan Menne; Hermann Haller; Nelli Shushakova

Complement activation plays a key role in mediating apoptosis, inflammation, and transplant rejection. In this study, the role of the complement 5a receptor (C5aR) was examined in human renal allografts and in an allogenic mouse model of renal transplant rejection. In human kidney transplants with acute rejection, C5aR expression was increased in renal tissue and in cells infiltrating the tubulointerstitium. Similar findings were observed in mice. When recipient mice were treated once daily with a C5aR antagonist before transplantation, long-term renal allograft survival was markedly improved compared with vehicle-treatment (75 versus 0%), and apoptosis was reduced. Furthermore, treatment with a C5aR antagonist significantly attenuated monocyte/macrophage infiltration, perhaps a result of reduced levels of monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 and the intercellular adhesion molecule 1. In vitro, C5aR antagonism inhibited intercellular adhesion molecule 1 upregulation in primary mouse aortic endothelial cells and reduced adhesion of peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Furthermore, C5aR blockade markedly reduced alloreactive T cell priming. These results demonstrate that C5aR plays an important role in mediating acute kidney allograft rejection, suggesting that pharmaceutical targeting of C5aR may have potential in transplantation medicine.


Nature Methods | 2017

Building ProteomeTools based on a complete synthetic human proteome

Daniel Paul Zolg; Mathias Wilhelm; Karsten Schnatbaum; Johannes Zerweck; Tobias Knaute; Bernard Delanghe; Derek J. Bailey; Siegfried Gessulat; Hans-Christian Ehrlich; Maximilian Weininger; Peng Yu; Judith Schlegl; Karl J. Kramer; Tobias Schmidt; Ulrike Kusebauch; Eric W. Deutsch; Ruedi Aebersold; Robert L. Moritz; Holger Wenschuh; Thomas Moehring; Stephan Aiche; Andreas Huhmer; Ulf Reimer; Bernhard Kuster

We describe ProteomeTools, a project building molecular and digital tools from the human proteome to facilitate biomedical research. Here we report the generation and multimodal liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry analysis of >330,000 synthetic tryptic peptides representing essentially all canonical human gene products, and we exemplify the utility of these data in several applications. The resource (available at http://www.proteometools.org) will be extended to >1 million peptides, and all data will be shared with the community via ProteomicsDB and ProteomeXchange.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Novel Small Molecule Bradykinin B2 Receptor Antagonists

Christoph Gibson; Karsten Schnatbaum; Jochen Pfeifer; Elsa Locardi; Matthias Paschke; Ulf Reimer; Uwe Richter; Dirk Scharn; Alexander Faussner; Thomas Tradler

Blockade of the bradykinin B(2) receptor provides therapeutic benefit in hereditary angioedema (HAE) and potentially in many other diseases. Herein, we describe the development of highly potent B(2) receptor antagonists with a molecular weight of approximately 500 g/mol. First, known quinoline-based B(2) receptor antagonists were stripped down to their shared core motif 53, which turned out to be the minimum pharmacophore. Targeted modifications of 53 resulted in the highly water-soluble lead compound 8a. Extensive exploration of its structure-activity relationship resulted in a series of highly potent B(2) receptor antagonists, featuring a hydrogen bond accepting functionality, which presumably interacts with the side chain of Asn-107 of the B(2) receptor. Optimization of the microsomal stability and cytochrome P450 inhibition eventually led to the discovery of the highly potent and orally available B(2) receptor antagonist 52e (JSM10292), which showed the best overall properties.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Novel small molecule bradykinin B1 receptor antagonists. Part 2: 5-membered diaminoheterocycles.

Gunther Zischinsky; Roland Stragies; Marco Schaudt; Jochen Pfeifer; Christoph Gibson; Elsa Locardi; Dirk Scharn; Uwe Richter; Holger Kalkhof; Klaus Dinkel; Karsten Schnatbaum

Efforts to find new bradykinin B(1) receptor antagonists identified 2-aminobenzimidazole as a novel core. Subsequent transformation into five-membered diaminoheterocycle derivatives and their synthesis and SAR is described. This resulted in compounds with low nanomolar activity.


Biotechnology Journal | 2014

Peptide microarrays enable rapid mimotope optimization for pharmacokinetic analysis of the novel therapeutic antibody IMAB362

Karsten Schnatbaum; Hans-ulrich Schmoldt; Matin Daneschdar; Laura M. Plum; Janina Jansong; Johannes Zerweck; Yvonne Kühne; Antonia Masch; Holger Wenschuh; Markus Fiedler; Özlem Türeci; Ugur Sahin; Ulf Reimer

As membrane proteins play an important role in a variety of life-threatening diseases, the development of therapeutic monoclonal antibodies against membrane proteins is of significant interest. Among many other requirements, the process of antibody drug development requires a set of tailor-made assays for the characterization of the antibodies and for monitoring their activity. Designing assays to characterize antibodies directed to membrane proteins is challenging, because the natural targets are often not available in a format that is compatible with a biochemical assay setup. Thus, alternatives that mimic the targeted membrane proteins are needed. In this study, we developed optimal peptidic mimotopes for the ELISA-based detection of the novel therapeutic antibody IMAB362 in biological samples. Initial hits were identified using phage display and these hits were optimized with the help of structure-activity relationship analysis on peptide microarrays. The optimized peptides showed binding constants in the low nanomolar to picomolar range, an improvement by a factor of up to 30 compared to the initial hits. The best mimotope (apparent KD = 0.15 nM) was successfully used for the ELISA-based quantification of IMAB362 in samples from a mouse pharmacokinetic study. The process described allows the rapid discovery of mimotopes for target proteins that are difficult to produce or handle, which can then be used in pre-clinical and clinical assays or for the purification of biological products.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Novel small molecule bradykinin B1 receptor antagonists. Part 1: benzamides and semicarbazides.

Marco Schaudt; Elsa Locardi; Gunther Zischinsky; Roland Stragies; Jochen Pfeifer; Christoph Gibson; Dirk Scharn; Uwe Richter; Holger Kalkhof; Klaus Dinkel; Karsten Schnatbaum

The synthesis and SAR of two series of bradykinin B(1) receptor antagonists is described. The benzamide moiety proved to be a suitable replacement for the aryl ester functionality of biaryl based antagonists. In addition, it was found that semicarbazides can effectively replace cyclopropyl amino acids. The compounds with the best overall profile were biaryl semicarbazides which display high antagonistic activity, low Caco-2 efflux and high oral bioavailability in the rat.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2010

Novel small molecule bradykinin B1 receptor antagonists. Part 3: hydroxyurea derivatives.

Karsten Schnatbaum; Marco Schaudt; Roland Stragies; Jochen Pfeifer; Christoph Gibson; Elsa Locardi; Dirk Scharn; Uwe Richter; Holger Kalkhof; Klaus Dinkel; Gunther Zischinsky

Hydroxy urea moieties are introduced as a new class of bradykinin B(1) receptor antagonists. First, the SAR of the lead compound was systematically explored. Subsequent optimization resulted in the identification of several biaryl-based hydroxyurea bradykinin B(1) receptor antagonists with low-nanomolar activity and very high oral bioavailability in the rat.


Proteomics | 2017

PROCAL: A Set of 40 Peptide Standards for Retention Time Indexing, Column Performance Monitoring, and Collision Energy Calibration

Daniel Paul Zolg; Mathias Wilhelm; Peng Yu; Tobias Knaute; Johannes Zerweck; Holger Wenschuh; Ulf Reimer; Karsten Schnatbaum; Bernhard Kuster

Beyond specific applications, such as the relative or absolute quantification of peptides in targeted proteomic experiments, synthetic spike‐in peptides are not yet systematically used as internal standards in bottom‐up proteomics. A number of retention time standards have been reported that enable chromatographic aligning of multiple LC–MS/MS experiments. However, only few peptides are typically included in such sets limiting the analytical parameters that can be monitored. Here, we describe PROCAL (ProteomeTools Calibration Standard), a set of 40 synthetic peptides that span the entire hydrophobicity range of tryptic digests, enabling not only accurate determination of retention time indices but also monitoring of chromatographic separation performance over time. The fragmentation characteristics of the peptides can also be used to calibrate and compare collision energies between mass spectrometers. The sequences of all selected peptides do not occur in any natural protein, thus eliminating the need for stable isotope labeling. We anticipate that this set of peptides will be useful for multiple purposes in individual laboratories but also aiding the transfer of data acquisition and analysis methods between laboratories, notably the use of spectral libraries.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2018

Mining the human tissue proteome for protein citrullination

Chien-Yun Lee; Dongxue Wang; Mathias Wilhelm; Daniel Paul Zolg; Tobias Schmidt; Karsten Schnatbaum; Ulf Reimer; Fredrik Pontén; Mathias Uhlén; Hannes Hahne; Bernhard Kuster

Citrullination is a posttranslational modification of arginine catalyzed by five peptidylarginine deiminases (PADs) in humans. The loss of a positive charge may cause structural or functional alterations, and while the modification has been linked to several diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and cancer, its physiological or pathophysiological roles remain largely unclear. In part, this is owing to limitations in available methodology to robustly enrich, detect, and localize the modification. As a result, only a few citrullination sites have been identified on human proteins with high confidence. In this study, we mined data from mass-spectrometry-based deep proteomic profiling of 30 human tissues to identify citrullination sites on endogenous proteins. Database searching of ∼70 million tandem mass spectra yielded ∼13,000 candidate spectra, which were further triaged by spectrum quality metrics and the detection of the specific neutral loss of isocyanic acid from citrullinated peptides to reduce false positives. Because citrullination is easily confused with deamidation, we synthetized ∼2,200 citrullinated and 1,300 deamidated peptides to build a library of reference spectra. This led to the validation of 375 citrullination sites on 209 human proteins. Further analysis showed that >80% of the identified modifications sites were new, and for 56% of the proteins, citrullination was detected for the first time. Sequence motif analysis revealed a strong preference for Asp and Gly, residues around the citrullination site. Interestingly, while the modification was detected in 26 human tissues with the highest levels found in the brain and lung, citrullination levels did not correlate well with protein expression of the PAD enzymes. Even though the current work represents the largest survey of protein citrullination to date, the modification was mostly detected on high abundant proteins, arguing that the development of specific enrichment methods would be required in order to study the full extent of cellular protein citrullination.

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