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Featured researches published by Martin Kussmann.


Journal of Proteomics | 2012

Mass spectrometry for nutritional peptidomics: How to analyze food bioactives and their health effects ☆

Alexandre Panchaud; Michael Affolter; Martin Kussmann

We describe nutritional peptidomics for discovery and validation of bioactive food peptide and their health effects. Understanding nature and bioactivity of nutritional peptides means comprehending an important level of environmental regulation of the human genome, because diet is the environmental factor with the most profound life-long influence on health. We approach the theme from three angles, namely the analysis, the discovery and the biology perspective. Food peptides derive from parent food proteins via in vitro hydrolysis (processing) or in vivo digestion by various unspecific and specific proteases, as opposed to the tryptic peptides typically generated in biomarker proteomics. A food bioactive peptide may be rare or unique in terms of sequence and modification, and many food genomes are less well annotated than e.g. the human genome. Bioactive peptides can be discovered either empirically or by prediction: we explain both the classical hydrolysis strategy and the bioinformatics-driven reversed genome engineering. In order to exert bioactivity, food peptides must be either ingested and then reach the intestine in their intact form or be liberated in situ from their parent proteins to act locally, that is in the gut, or even systemically, i.e. through the blood stream. This article is part of a Special Section entitled: Understanding genome regulation and genetic diversity by mass spectrometry.


Journal of Proteomics | 2010

Qualitative and quantitative profiling of the bovine milk fat globule membrane proteome

Michael Affolter; Laetitia Grass; Frank Vanrobaeys; Begoña Casado; Martin Kussmann

Milk is a biological fluid of unique quality and complexity. It has co-evolved with mammals and mankind to nourish offspring and contains macro- and micronutrients for growth and development of the newborn. The milk fat globule membrane (MFGM) represents an important milk fraction, which is rich in bioactive proteins. In order to better understand functionality of milk fractions and, thereby, enhance the benefits of milk products, detailed qualitative and quantitative protein knowledge of fractions such as MFGM is required. We report the qualitative and quantitative profiling of two MFGM-enriched milk fractions, a whey protein concentrate (WPC) and a buttermilk protein concentrate (BMP), as derived from three different analytical workflows. First, an LC-MS/MS-based shotgun approach revealed 244 protein identities in WPC and 133 in BMP, respectively, and provided an extensive characterisation of the protein content in those two fractions. Second, label-free profiling resulted in rapid and efficient semi-quantitative comparison and yielded valuable protein fingerprints. Third, absolute quantification of selected MFGM proteins was achieved by stable isotope dilution (SID)-MS, in combination with multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) detection. In summary, we provide new information on composition, quantity and possible health benefits of two MFGM-enriched milk fractions highly valuable for future nutritional applications.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2013

The Biology/Disease-driven Human Proteome Project (B/D-HPP): Enabling Protein Research for the Life Sciences Community

Ruedi Aebersold; Gary D. Bader; A. Edwards; Jennifer E. Van Eyk; Martin Kussmann; Jun Qin; Gilbert S. Omenn

The biology and disease oriented branch of the Human Proteome Project (B/D-HPP) was established by the Human Proteome Organization (HUPO) with the main goal of supporting the broad application of state-of the-art measurements of proteins and proteomes by life scientists studying the molecular mechanisms of biological processes and human disease. This will be accomplished through the generation of research and informational resources that will support the routine and definitive measurement of the process or disease relevant proteins. The B/D-HPP is highly complementary to the C-HPP and will provide datasets and biological characterization useful to the C-HPP teams. In this manuscript we describe the goals, the plans, and the current status of the of the B/D-HPP.


Journal of Proteomics | 2009

OMICS-rooted studies of milk proteins, oligosaccharides and lipids.

Begoña Casado; Michael Affolter; Martin Kussmann

Milk has co-evolved with mammals and mankind to nourish their offspring and is a biological fluid of unique complexity and richness. It contains all necessary nutrients for the growth and development of the newborn. Structure and function of biomolecules in milk such as the macronutrients (glyco-) proteins, lipids, and oligosaccharides are central topics in nutritional research. Omics disciplines such as proteomics, glycomics, glycoproteomics, and lipidomics enable comprehensive analysis of these biomolecule components in food science and industry. Mass spectrometry has largely expanded our knowledge on these milk bioactives as it enables identification, quantification and characterization of milk proteins, carbohydrates, and lipids. In this article, we describe the biological importance of milk macronutrients and review the application of proteomics, glycomics, glycoproteomics, and lipidomics to the analysis of milk. Proteomics is a central platform among the Omics tools that have more recently been adapted and applied to nutrition and health research in order to deliver biomarkers for health and comfort as well as to discover beneficial food bioactives.


Current Opinion in Biotechnology | 2008

Profiling techniques in nutrition and health research

Martin Kussmann; Serge Rezzi; Hannelore Daniel

Nutrition sciences apply transcriptomics, proteomics and metabolomics to molecularly assess nutritional adaptations. Transcriptomics can generate a holistic overview on molecular changes to dietary interventions. Proteomics is most challenging because of the higher complexity of proteomes as compared to transcriptomes and metabolomes. However, it delivers not only markers but also targets of intervention, such as enzymes or transporters, and it is the platform of choice for discovering bioactive food proteins and peptides. Metabolomics is a tool for metabolic characterization of individuals and can deliver metabolic endpoints possibly related to health or disease. Omics in nutrition should be deployed in an integrated fashion to elucidate biomarkers for defining an individuals susceptibility to diet in nutritional interventions and for assessing food ingredient efficacy.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2010

Proteomics in Nutrition: Status Quo and Outlook for Biomarkers and Bioactives

Martin Kussmann; Alexandre Panchaud; Michael Affolter

Food and beverages are the only physical matter we take into our body, if we disregard the air we inhale and the drugs we may have to apply. While traditional nutrition research has aimed at providing nutrients to nourish populations and preventing specific nutrient deficiencies, it more recently explores health-related aspects of individual bioactive components as well as entire diets and this at group rather than population level. The new era of nutrition research translates empirical knowledge to evidence-based molecular science. Modern nutrition research focuses on promoting health, preventing or delaying the onset of disease, optimizing performance, and assessing risk. Personalized nutrition is a conceptual analogue to personalized medicine and means adapting food to individual needs. Nutrigenomics and nutrigenetics build the science foundation for understanding human variability in preferences, requirements, and responses to diet and may become the future tools for consumer assessment motivated by personalized nutritional counseling for health maintenance and disease prevention. The scope of this paper is to review the current and future aspects of nutritional proteomics, focusing on the two main outputs: identification of health biomarkers and analysis of food bioactives.


Cellular Signalling | 2015

Motif affinity and mass spectrometry proteomic approach for the discovery of cellular AMPK targets: identification of mitochondrial fission factor as a new AMPK substrate.

Serge Ducommun; Maria Deak; David Sumpton; Rebecca J. Ford; Antonio Núñez Galindo; Martin Kussmann; Benoit Viollet; Gregory R. Steinberg; Marc Foretz; Loïc Dayon; Nicholas A. Morrice; Kei Sakamoto

AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a key cellular energy sensor and regulator of metabolic homeostasis. Although it is best known for its effects on carbohydrate and lipid metabolism, AMPK is implicated in diverse cellular processes, including mitochondrial biogenesis, autophagy, and cell growth and proliferation. To further our understanding of energy homeostasis through AMPK-dependent processes, the design and application of approaches to identify and characterise novel AMPK substrates are invaluable. Here, we report an affinity proteomicstrategy for the discovery and validation of AMPK targets using an antibody to isolate proteins containing the phospho-AMPK substrate recognition motif from hepatocytes that had been treated with pharmacological AMPK activators. We identified 57 proteins that were uniquely enriched in the activator-treated hepatocytes, but were absent in hepatocytes lacking AMPK. We focused on two candidates, cingulin and mitochondrial fission factor (MFF), and further characterised/validated them as AMPK-dependent targets by immunoblotting with phosphorylation site-specific antibodies. A small-molecule AMPK activator caused transient phosphorylation of endogenous cingulin at S137 in intestinal Caco2 cells. Multiple splice-variants of MFF appear to express in hepatocytes and we identified a common AMPK-dependent phospho-site (S129) in all the 3 predominant variants spanning the mass range and a short variant-specific site (S146). Collectively, our proteomic-based approach using a phospho-AMPK substrate antibody in combination with genetic models and selective AMPK activators will provide a powerful and reliable platform for identifying novel AMPK-dependent cellular targets.


Frontiers in Genetics | 2011

The extended nutrigenomics - understanding the interplay between the genomes of food, gut microbes, and human host

Martin Kussmann; Peter J. van Bladeren

Comprehensive investigation of nutritional health effects at the molecular level requires the understanding of the interplay between three genomes, the food, the gut microbial, and the human host genome. Food genomes are researched for discovery and exploitation of macro- and micronutrients as well as specific bioactives, with those genes coding for bioactive proteins and peptides being of central interest. The human gut microbiota encompasses a complex ecosystem in the intestine with profound impact on host metabolism. It is being studied at genomic and, more recently, also at proteomic and metabonomic level. Humans are being characterized at the level of genetic pre-disposition and inter-individual variability in terms of (i) response to nutritional interventions and direction of health trajectories; (ii) epigenetic, metabolic programming at certain life stages with health consequences later in life and even for subsequent generations; and (iii) acute genomic expression as a holistic response to diet, monitored at gene transcript, protein and metabolite level. Modern nutrition science explores health-related aspects of bioactive food components, thereby promoting health, preventing, or delaying the onset of disease, optimizing performance and assessing benefits and risks in individuals and subpopulations. Personalized nutrition means adapting food to individual needs, depending on the human host’s life stage, -style, and -situation. Traditionally, nutrigenomics and nutri(epi)genetics are seen as the key sciences to understand human variability in preferences and requirements for diet as well as responses to nutrition. This article puts the three nutrition and health-relevant genomes into perspective, namely the food, the gut microbial and the human host’s genome, and calls for an “extended nutrigenomics” approach in order to build the future tools for personalized nutrition, health maintenance, and disease prevention. We discuss examples of these genomes, proteomes, transcriptomes, and metabolomes under the definition of genomics as the overarching term covering essentially all Omics rather than the sole study of DNA and RNA.


Personalized Medicine | 2008

Nutrigenomics and personalized nutrition: science and concept

Martin Kussmann; Laurent B. Fay

Diet and genomes interact. Nutrition has the most important life-long environmental impact on human health. While nutrigenetics addresses how an individuals genetic makeup predisposes for dietary susceptibility, nutrigenomics asks how nutrition influences the expression of the genome. Nutrigenomics builds on the three omics disciplines transcriptomics, proteomics and metabolomics. They are a prerequisite for nutritional systems biology, the understanding of the interaction between food components and diet with cells, organs and the whole body. Personalized nutrition is a conceptual analog to personalized medicine. While there are food products available that address requirements or preferences of specific consumer groups, these products are based on empirical consumer science rather than on nutrigenomics and nutrigenetics. The latter two build the science foundation for understanding human variability in preferences, requirements and responses to diet, and may become the future tools for consumer assessment motivated by personalized nutritional counseling for health maintenance and disease prevention.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2008

ANIBAL, Stable Isotope-based Quantitative Proteomics by Aniline and Benzoic Acid Labeling of Amino and Carboxylic Groups

Alexandre Panchaud; Jenny Hansson; Michael Affolter; Rachid Bel Rhlid; Stéphane Piu; Philippe Moreillon; Martin Kussmann

Identification and relative quantification of hundreds to thousands of proteins within complex biological samples have become realistic with the emergence of stable isotope labeling in combination with high throughput mass spectrometry. However, all current chemical approaches target a single amino acid functionality (most often lysine or cysteine) despite the fact that addressing two or more amino acid side chains would drastically increase quantifiable information as shown by in silico analysis in this study. Although the combination of existing approaches, e.g. ICAT with isotope-coded protein labeling, is analytically feasible, it implies high costs, and the combined application of two different chemistries (kits) may not be straightforward. Therefore, we describe here the development and validation of a new stable isotope-based quantitative proteomics approach, termed aniline benzoic acid labeling (ANIBAL), using a twin chemistry approach targeting two frequent amino acid functionalities, the carboxylic and amino groups. Two simple and inexpensive reagents, aniline and benzoic acid, in their 12C and 13C form with convenient mass peak spacing (6 Da) and without chromatographic discrimination or modification in fragmentation behavior, are used to modify carboxylic and amino groups at the protein level, resulting in an identical peptide bond-linked benzoyl modification for both reactions. The ANIBAL chemistry is simple and straightforward and is the first method that uses a 13C-reagent for a general stable isotope labeling approach of carboxylic groups. In silico as well as in vitro analyses clearly revealed the increase in available quantifiable information using such a twin approach. ANIBAL was validated by means of model peptides and proteins with regard to the quality of the chemistry as well as the ionization behavior of the derivatized peptides. A milk fraction was used for dynamic range assessment of protein quantification, and a bacterial lysate was used for the evaluation of relative protein quantification in a complex sample in two different biological states.

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