Publications by authors named "Casey A Chamberlain"

An integrated evaluation of the tissue distribution and pharmacodynamic properties of a therapeutic is essential for successful translation to the clinic. To date, however, cost-effective methods to measure these parameters at the systems level in model organisms are lacking. Here, we introduce a multidimensional workflow to evaluate drug activity that combines mass spectrometry-based imaging, absolute drug quantitation across different biological matrices, in vivo isotope tracing and global metabolome analysis in the adult zebrafish.

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Introduction: Intellectual disorders involving deletions of the X chromosome present a difficult task in the determination of a connection between symptoms and metabolites that could lead to treatment options. One specific disorder of X-chromosomal deletion, Fragile X syndrome, is the most frequently occurring of intellectual disabilities. Previous metabolomic studies have been limited to mouse models that may not have sufficiently revealed the full biochemical diversity of the disease in humans.

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Paper spray ionization mass spectrometry (PSI-MS) is a direct MS analysis technique with several reported bacterial metabolomics applications. As with most MS-based bacterial studies, all currently reported PSI-MS bacterial analyses have focused on the chemical signatures of the cellular unit. One dimension of the bacterial metabolome that is often lost in such analyses is the exometabolome (extracellular metabolome), including secreted metabolites, lipids, and peptides.

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Introduction: Studies investigating crop resistance to abiotic and biotic stress have largely focused on plant responses to singular forms of stress and individual biochemical pathways that only partially represent stress responses. Thus, combined abiotic and biotic stress treatments and the global assessment of their elicited metabolic expression remains largely unexplored. In this study, we employed targeted and untargeted metabolomics to investigate the molecular responses of maize (Zea mays) to abiotic, biotic, and combinatorial stress.

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Introduction: In the search for new potential therapies for pathologies of oxalate, such as kidney stone disease and primary hyperoxaluria, the intestinal microbiome has generated significant interest. Resident oxalate-degrading bacteria inhabit the gastrointestinal tract and reduce absorption of dietary oxalate, thereby potentially lowering the potency of oxalate as a risk factor for kidney stone formation. Although several species of bacteria have been shown to degrade oxalate, select strains of Oxalobacter formigenes (O.

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has been investigated for years due to its proposed ability to produce a secretagogue compound that initiates net intestinal oxalate secretion, thereby theoretically reducing circulating oxalate and risk of kidney stone formation. Strains which have been shown to exhibit this function in vivo across native tissue include the human strain, HC1, and the wild rat strain, OxWR. While previous work on these secretagogue-relevant strains has focused on profiling their metabolome and lipidome in vitro, efforts to characterize their influence on host intestinal mucosal biochemistry in vivo are yet to be reported.

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Introduction: LC-MS-based untargeted metabolomics has become increasingly popular due to the vast amount of information gained in a single analysis. Many studies utilize metabolomics to profile metabolic changes in various representative biofluids, tissues, or other sample types. Most analyses are performed measuring changes in the metabolic pool of a single biological matrix due to an altered phenotype, such as disease versus normal.

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Oxalate, a ubiquitous compound in many plant-based foods, is absorbed through the intestine and precipitates with calcium in the kidneys to form stones. Over 80% of diagnosed kidney stones are found to be calcium oxalate. People who form these stones often experience a high rate of recurrence and treatment options remain limited despite decades of dedicated research.

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Extracellular vesicles (EVs) from osteoclasts are important regulators in intercellular communication. Here, we investigated the proteome of EVs from clastic cells plated on plastic (clasts), bone (osteoclasts) and dentin (odontoclasts) by two-dimensional high performance liquid chromatography mass spectrometry seeking differences attributable to distinct mineralized matrices. A total of 1,952 proteins were identified.

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Paper spray ionization mass spectrometry (PSI-MS) is a relatively new analytical technique allowing for rapid mass spectrometric analysis of biological samples with little or no sample preparation. The expeditious nature of the analysis and minimal requirement for sample preparation make PSI-MS a promising avenue for future clinical assays with one potential application in the identification of different types of bacteria. Although past PSI-MS studies have demonstrated the ability to distinguish between bacteria of different species and morphological classes, achieving within-species strain-level differentiation has never been performed.

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Diseases of oxalate, such as nephrolithiasis and primary hyperoxaluria, affect a significant portion of the US population and have limited treatment options. Oxalobacter formigenes, an obligate oxalotrophic bacterium in the mammalian intestine, has generated great interest as a potential probiotic or therapeutic treatment for oxalate-related conditions due to its ability to degrade both exogenous (dietary) and endogenous (metabolic) oxalate, lowering the risk of hyperoxaluria/hyperoxalemia. Although all oxalotrophs degrade dietary oxalate, Oxalobacter formigenes is the only species shown to initiate intestinal oxalate secretion to draw upon endogenous, circulating oxalate for consumption.

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