Publications by authors named "Christiane Kilian"

Article Synopsis
  • - Accessing the genetic diversity of species uncovers hidden traits and helps clarify gene functions, especially in natural isolates of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, where around 20% exhibit aneuploidy, which is contradicted by laboratory findings showing its fitness costs.
  • - The research generates a proteomic resource for 796 euploid and aneuploid isolates, revealing that natural aneuploids have better protein dosage compensation compared to lab-generated ones, where many protein subunits show reduced expression.
  • - Findings indicate that natural aneuploidy involves enhanced protein turnover and structural changes in the proteasome, suggesting that studying natural genetic diversity can provide valuable insights into the biological mechanisms behind aneupl
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The COVID-19 pandemic is an unprecedented global challenge, and point-of-care diagnostic classifiers are urgently required. Here, we present a platform for ultra-high-throughput serum and plasma proteomics that builds on ISO13485 standardization to facilitate simple implementation in regulated clinical laboratories. Our low-cost workflow handles up to 180 samples per day, enables high precision quantification, and reduces batch effects for large-scale and longitudinal studies.

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An efficient immunosurveillance of CD8 T cells in the periphery depends on positive/negative selection of thymocytes and thus on the dynamics of antigen degradation and epitope production by thymoproteasome and immunoproteasome in the thymus. Although studies in mouse systems have shown how thymoproteasome activity differs from that of immunoproteasome and strongly impacts the T cell repertoire, the proteolytic dynamics and the regulation of human thymoproteasome are unknown. By combining biochemical and computational modeling approaches, we show here that human 20S thymoproteasome and immunoproteasome differ not only in the proteolytic activity of the catalytic sites but also in the peptide transport.

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