Publications by authors named "Daniel Bak"

Iron-sulfur (Fe-S) clusters are essential redox-active metallocofactors participating in electron transfer, radical chemistry, primary metabolism, and gene regulation. Successful trafficking and incorporation of Fe-S clusters into target proteins are critical to proper cellular function. While biophysical studies of isolated Fe-S proteins provide insight into the structure and function of these inorganic cofactors, few strategies currently exist to directly interrogate Fe-S cluster binding within a cellular environment.

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Iron-sulfur (Fe-S) clusters are required for essential biological pathways, including respiration and isoprenoid biosynthesis. Complex Fe-S cluster biogenesis systems have evolved to maintain an adequate supply of this critical protein cofactor. In Escherichia coli, two Fe-S biosynthetic systems, the "housekeeping" Isc and "stress responsive" Suf pathways, interface with a network of cluster trafficking proteins, such as ErpA, IscA, SufA, and NfuA.

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Iron‑sulfur (Fe-S) clusters, inorganic cofactors composed of iron and sulfide, participate in numerous essential redox, non-redox, structural, and regulatory biological processes within the cell. Though structurally and functionally diverse, the list of all proteins in an organism capable of binding one or more Fe-S clusters is referred to as its Fe-S proteome. Importantly, the Fe-S proteome is highly dynamic, with continuous cluster synthesis and delivery by complex Fe-S cluster biogenesis pathways.

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The natural product holomycin contains a unique cyclic ene-disulfide and exhibits broad-spectrum antimicrobial activities. Reduced holomycin chelates metal ions with a high affinity and disrupts metal homeostasis in the cell. To identify cellular metalloproteins inhibited by holomycin, reactive-cysteine profiling was performed using isotopic tandem orthogonal proteolysis-activity-based protein profiling (isoTOP-ABPP).

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Iron-sulfur (Fe-S) clusters are ubiquitous metallocofactors involved in redox chemistry, radical generation and gene regulation. Common methods to monitor Fe-S clusters include spectroscopic analysis of purified proteins and autoradiographic visualization of radiolabeled iron distribution in proteomes. Here, we report a chemoproteomic strategy that monitors changes in the reactivity of Fe-S cysteine ligands to inform on Fe-S cluster occupancy.

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Article Synopsis
  • Hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell carcinoma (HLRCC) is linked to mutations in the fumarate hydratase (FH) tumor suppressor, leading to the accumulation of fumarate, which promotes cancer development.
  • The study explores the concept of "conditional covalent lethality," suggesting that the unique metabolites produced in HLRCC may create specific vulnerabilities to certain small molecules, particularly covalent ligands.
  • Researchers identified a covalent ligand, MP-1, that selectively kills FH-deficient cancer cells and demonstrated its mechanism by revealing interactions with functional cysteines, including its effects on the tRNA methyltransferase TRMT1, which can mitigate the ligand's cytotoxicity.
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Oxidative stress is a defining feature of most cancers, including those that stem from carcinogenic infections. Reactive oxygen species can drive tumor formation, yet the molecular oxidation events that contribute to tumorigenesis are largely unknown. Here we show that inactivation of a single, redox-sensitive cysteine in the host protease legumain, which is oxidized during infection with the gastric cancer-causing bacterium Helicobacter pylori, accelerates tumor growth.

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Selenoproteins comprise a small group of selenocysteine (Sec) containing proteins, often involved in redox homeostasis. While Sec is functionally similar to cysteine (Cys), with both acting as protein-centered nucleophiles, chemoproteomic strategies employing electrophilic probes have often failed to rigorously identify Sec residues, due to their relatively low abundance with respect to Cys across a proteome. To improve the enrichment and detection of selenoproteins, herein we describe a chemoproteomic strategy that relies on the unique properties of Sec as compared to Cys, such as reduced pK and the unique isotopic distribution of selenium.

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Purpose: To evaluate the impact of FDA's 2013 zolpidem Drug Safety Communications (DSCs), which recommended lowering the initial dose to mitigate drowsiness, on national estimates of zolpidem users and zolpidem exposure cases.

Methods: We analyzed trend changes of national zolpidem users from the IQVIA Total Patient Tracker (TPT) and zolpidem exposure cases reported to the National Poison Data System (NPDS), 2009-2018. To control for time varying confounding, the adjusted trends were analyzed using simple and controlled interrupted time series (ITS).

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Article Synopsis
  • * Between 2001 and 2018, only 19 drugs were withdrawn for safety-related reasons, showing a decline in the number of market withdrawals compared to earlier years; notable heart rhythm issues and liver toxicity were highlighted as gender-specific risks.
  • * The FDA has improved its approach to incorporating sex and gender considerations in drug trials, promoting women's inclusion in research, enhancing safety reviews, and advancing surveillance practices to better protect public health.
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Article Synopsis
  • HLRCC is a genetic cancer syndrome linked to mutations in the fumarate hydratase enzyme, leading to the accumulation of fumarate, which can alter gene activity and promote tumor formation.
  • A chemoproteomic analysis of kidney-derived HLRCC cell lines revealed a significant change in cysteine reactivity when fumarate levels were reduced by reintroducing functional FH, indicating both transcriptional and posttranslational mechanisms at play.
  • The study identified new targets and pathways affected by FH mutations and emphasized the diversity of protein responses in different HLRCC models, suggesting the need for further exploration of tissue-specific adaptations for potential cancer therapies.
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Background: Oral, live-attenuated rotavirus vaccines suffer from impaired immunogenicity and efficacy in low-income countries. Increasing the inoculum of vaccine might improve vaccine response, but this approach has been inadequately explored in low-income countries.

Methods: We performed a double-blind, parallel group, randomized controlled trial from June 2017 through June 2018 in the urban Mirpur slum of Dhaka, Bangladesh to compare vaccine take (primary outcome) among healthy infants randomized to receive either the standard dose or double the standard dose of oral Rotarix (GlaxoSmithKline) vaccine at 6 and 10 weeks of life.

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Selenocysteine (Sec) is the 21st genetically encoded amino acid in organisms across all domains of life. Although structurally similar to cysteine (Cys), the Sec selenol group has unique properties that are attractive for protein engineering and biotechnology applications. Production of designer proteins with Sec (selenoproteins) at desired positions is now possible with engineered translation systems in However, obtaining pure selenoproteins at high yields is limited by the accumulation of free Sec in cells, causing undesired incorporation of Sec at Cys codons due to the inability of cysteinyl-tRNA synthetase (CysRS) to discriminate against Sec.

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Unlike most other tissues, the colon epithelium is exposed to high levels of HS derived from gut microbial metabolism. HS is a signaling molecule that modulates various physiological effects. It is also a respiratory toxin that inhibits complex IV in the electron transfer chain (ETC).

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Mitochondria are cellular sites of diverse redox biology, including ROS production, iron-sulfur biogenesis, and secondary metabolism, which all rely on proteogenic reactive cysteine residues. Mass spectrometry-based proteomic methods to monitor the reactivity and functionality of cysteine residues across complex proteomes have greatly expanded over the past decade. Here we describe a mitochondrial isolation procedure coupled with cysteine-reactive IA labeling that affords identification and characterization of functional mitochondrial cysteine residues that were heretofore inaccessible to whole-cell proteomic analysis.

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Hereditary cancer disorders often provide an important window into novel mechanisms supporting tumor growth. Understanding these mechanisms thus represents a vital goal. Toward this goal, here we report a chemoproteomic map of fumarate, a covalent oncometabolite whose accumulation marks the genetic cancer syndrome hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell carcinoma (HLRCC).

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Cysteine residues are concentrated at key functional sites within proteins, performing diverse roles in metal binding, catalysis, and redox chemistry. Chemoproteomic platforms to interrogate the reactive cysteinome have developed significantly over the past 10 years, resulting in a greater understanding of cysteine functionality, modification, and druggability. Recently, chemoproteomic methods to examine reactive cysteine residues from specific subcellular organelles have provided significantly improved proteome coverage and highlights the unique functionalities of cysteine residues mediated by cellular localization.

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Selenium (Se), as an essential trace element, plays crucial roles in many organisms including humans. The biological functions of selenium are mainly mediated by selenoproteins, a unique class of selenium-containing proteins in which selenium is inserted in the form of selenocysteine. Due to their low abundance and uneven tissue distribution, detection of selenoproteins within proteomes is very challenging, and therefore functional studies of these proteins are limited.

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Mammalian selenocysteine (Sec)-containing proteins, selenoproteins, are important to (patho)physiological processes, including redox homeostasis. Sec residues have been recalcitrant to mass spectrometry-based chemoproteomic methods that enrich for reactive cysteine (Cys) residues with electrophilic chemical probes, despite confirmed reactivity of Sec with these electrophiles. Highly abundant Cys peptides likely suppress low-abundant Sec peptides.

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Cruciferous vegetables such as broccoli and kale have well documented chemopreventative and anticancer effects that are attributed to the presence of isothiocyanates (ITCs). ITCs modulate the levels of many oncogenic proteins, but the molecular mechanisms of ITC action are not understood. We previously reported that phenethyl isothiocyanate (PEITC) inhibits two deubiquitinases (DUBs), USP9x and UCH37.

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The mitochondria are dynamic organelles that regulate oxidative metabolism and mediate cellular redox homeostasis. Proteins within the mitochondria are exposed to large fluxes in the surrounding redox environment. In particular, cysteine residues within mitochondrial proteins sense and respond to these redox changes through oxidative modifications of the cysteine thiol group.

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Cysteine residues play critical roles in protein function and are susceptible to numerous post-translational modifications (PTMs) that serve to modulate the activity and localization of diverse proteins. Many of these PTMs are highly transient and labile, thus necessitating methods to study these modifications directly within the context of living cells. We previously reported a caged electrophilic probe, CBK1, that can be activated by UV for temporally controlled covalent modification of cysteine residues in living cells.

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In the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, inactivating mutations in the insulin/IGF-1 receptor, DAF-2, result in a 2-fold increase in lifespan mediated by DAF-16, a FOXO-family transcription factor. Downstream protein activities that directly regulate longevity during impaired insulin/IGF-1 signaling (IIS) are poorly characterized. Here, we use global cysteine-reactivity profiling to identify protein activity changes during impaired IIS.

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Background: Radiofrequency ablation (RFA) is an effective treatment for Barrett's esophagus (BE) dysplasia. For patients with dysplasia refractory to RFA, data are limited regarding efficacy of endoscopic therapy.

Objective: To assess the efficacy and safety of cryotherapy in patients with BE dysplasia who failed RFA.

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