Publications by authors named "Daniel Brune"

Article Synopsis
  • A phase 1 trial tested the safety and immune response of an mRNA-based vaccine, mRNA-1647, for cytomegalovirus (CMV) in both seronegative and seropositive adults.
  • 154 participants were involved, with most reporting mild to moderate adverse reactions and no serious side effects noted.
  • The results indicated that mRNA-1647 was safe and effective in stimulating both antibody and cell-mediated immune responses in participants.
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Background: Concomitant seasonal influenza vaccination with a COVID-19 vaccine booster could help to minimise potential disruption to the seasonal influenza vaccination campaign and maximise protection against both diseases among individuals at risk of severe disease and hospitalisation. This study aimed to assess the safety and immunogenicity of concomitant administration of high-dose quadrivalent influenza vaccine (QIV-HD) and a mRNA-1273 vaccine booster dose in older adults.

Methods: This study is an ongoing, phase 2, multicentre, open-label, descriptive trial at six clinical research sites in the USA.

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The function of somatic stem cells declines with age. Understanding the molecular underpinnings of this decline is key to counteract age-related disease. Here, we report a dramatic drop in the neural stem cells (NSCs) number in the aging murine brain.

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Promoter-proximal pausing of RNA polymerase II (Pol II) is a widespread transcriptional regulatory step across metazoans. Here we find that the nuclear exon junction complex (pre-EJC) is a critical and conserved regulator of this process. Depletion of pre-EJC subunits leads to a global decrease in Pol II pausing and to premature entry into elongation.

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Here we provide reflections of and a tribute to John M. Olson, a pioneering researcher in photosynthesis. We trace his career, which began at Wesleyan University and the University of Pennsylvania, and continued at Utrech in The Netherlands, Brookhaven National Laboratory, and Odense University in Denmark.

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Objective: Amino acid composition is a sequence feature that has been extensively used to characterize proteomes of many species and protein families. Yet the analysis of amino acid composition of protein domains and the linkers connecting them has received less attention. Here, we perform both a comprehensive full-proteome amino acid composition analysis and a similar analysis focusing on domains and linkers, to uncover domain- or linker-specific differential amino acid usage patterns.

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Acinar cells make up the majority of all cells in the pancreas, yet the source of new acinar cells during homeostasis remains unknown. Using multicolor lineage-tracing and organoid-formation assays, we identified the presence of a progenitor-like acinar cell subpopulation. These cells have long-term self-renewal capacity, albeit in a unipotent fashion.

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A traditional 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complex is missing in the cyanobacterial tricarboxylic acid cycle. To determine pathways that convert 2-oxoglutarate into succinate in the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, a series of mutant strains, Δsll1981, Δslr0370, Δslr1022 and combinations thereof, deficient in 2-oxoglutarate decarboxylase (Sll1981), succinate semialdehyde dehydrogenase (Slr0370), and/or in γ-aminobutyrate metabolism (Slr1022) were constructed.

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We have developed a purification protocol for photoactive reaction centers (HbRC) from Heliobacterium modesticaldum. HbRCs were purified from solubilized membranes in two sequential chromatographic steps, resulting in the isolation of a fraction containing a single polypeptide, which was identified as PshA by LC-MS/MS of tryptic peptides. All polypeptides reported earlier as unknown proteins (in Heinnickel et al.

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The half-life times of photosystem I and II proteins were determined using (15)N-labeling and mass spectrometry. The half-life times (30-75h for photosystem I components and <1-11h for the large photosystem II proteins) were similar when proteins were isolated from monomeric vs. oligomeric complexes on Blue-Native gels, suggesting that the two forms of both photosystems can interchange on a timescale of <1h or that only one form of each photosystem exists in thylakoids in vivo.

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To gain insight in the lifetimes of photosystem II (PSII) chlorophyll and proteins, a combined stable isotope labeling (15N)/mass spectrometry method was used to follow both old and new pigments and proteins. Photosystem I-less Synechocystis cells were grown to exponential or post-exponential phase and then diluted in BG-11 medium with [15N]ammonium and [15N]nitrate. PSII was isolated, and the masses of PSII protein fragments and chlorophyll were determined.

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Amyloid-β (Aβ) peptides are intimately involved in the inflammatory pathology of atherosclerotic vascular disease (AVD) and Alzheimer's disease (AD). Although substantial amounts of these peptides are produced in the periphery, their role and significance to vascular disease outside the brain requires further investigation. Amyloid-β peptides present in the walls of human aorta atherosclerotic lesions as well as activated and non-activated human platelets were isolated using sequential size-exclusion columns and HPLC reverse-phase methods.

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Background: Highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1 viruses remain a threat to human health, with potential to become pandemic agents.

Methods: This phase III, placebo-controlled, observer-blinded study evaluated the immunogenicity, cross-reactivity, safety, and lot consistency of 2 doses of oil-in-water (AS03(A)) adjuvanted H5N1 A/Indonesia/05/2005 (3.75 μg hemagglutinin antigen) prepandemic candidate vaccine in 4561 adults aged 18-91 years.

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Our purpose is to apply a fatty acid secretion strategy in photosynthetic microbial biofuel production, which will avoid the costly biomass recovery processes currently applied in algal biofuel systems. Starting with introducing acyl-acyl carrier protein thioesterases, we made five successive generations of genetic modifications into cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803.

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We investigated the morphology and biochemistry of the amyloid-beta (Abeta) peptides produced in TgCRND8 Tg mice carrying combined amyloid precursor protein (APP) Swedish (K670M/N671L) and Indiana (V717F) mutations. Histological analyses employing amyloid-specific staining and electron microscopy revealed that the TgCRND8 Tg mice produce an aggressive pathology, evident as early as 3 months of age, that is a composite of core plaques and peculiar floccular diffuse parenchymal deposits. The Abeta peptides were purified using combined FPLC-HPLC, Western blots, and immunoprecipitation methods and characterized by MALDI-TOF/SELDI-TOF mass spectrometry.

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Two different pathways for thiosulphate oxidation are present in the purple sulphur bacterium Allochromatium vinosum: oxidation to tetrathionate and complete oxidation to sulphate with obligatory formation of sulphur globules as intermediates. The tetrathionate:sulphate ratio is strongly pH-dependent with tetrathionate formation being preferred under acidic conditions. Thiosulphate dehydrogenase, a constitutively expressed monomeric 30 kDa c-type cytochrome with a pH optimum at pH 4.

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Experiments with amyloid-beta (Abeta)-42-immunized transgenic mouse models of Alzheimer's disease have revealed amyloid plaque disruption and apparent cognitive function recovery. Neuropathological examination of patients vaccinated against purified Abeta-42 (AN-1792) has demonstrated that senile plaque disruption occurred in immunized humans as well. Here, we examined tissue histology and quantified and biochemically characterized the remnant amyloid peptides in the gray and white matter and leptomeningeal/cortical vessels of two AN-1792-vaccinated patients, one of whom developed meningoencephalitis.

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A peptidomimetic, 2-amino-6-[(2-amino-5{guanidino}pentanoyl) amino] hexanoic acid, was synthesized using Lys and Arg to produce a compound that mimics the biological activity of a cell adhesive Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) peptide, GRGDSP. When immobilized on solid substrates, the peptidomimetic promoted cell adhesion similar to substrates with immobilized GRGDSP. Ligand competition studies demonstrated that cell interactions with the peptidomimetic were integrin-mediated.

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A scanning laser system has been used to generate three-dimensional trimethylolpropane trimethacrylate (TRIM) cross-linked poly(2-hydroxylethyl methacrylate) polymer microstructures through azo-bis(isobutyro)nitrile (AIBN) photopolymerization using a 20 x 0.5 NA microscope objective and 365 nm laser excitation. Macropores are observed to form without the use of porogens in regions of highest light flux.

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A novel supercomplex of Photosystem I (PSI) with light harvesting complex I (LHCI) was isolated from the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. This novel supercomplex is unique as it is the first stable supercomplex of PSI together with its external antenna. The supercomplex contains 256 chlorophylls per reaction center.

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Central to the pathology of Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the profuse accumulation of amyloid-beta (Abeta) peptides in the brain of affected individuals, and several amyloid precursor protein (APP) transgenic (Tg) mice models have been created to mimic Abeta deposition. Among these, the PDAPP Tg mice carrying the familial AD APP 717 Val --> Phe mutation have been widely used to test potential AD therapeutic interventions including active and passive anti-Abeta immunizations. The structure and biochemistry of the PDAPP Tg mice Abeta-related peptides were investigated using acid and detergent lysis of brain tissue, ultracentrifugation, FPLC, HPLC, enzymatic and chemical cleavage of peptides, Western blot, immunoprecipitation, and MALDI-TOF and SELDI-TOF mass spectrometry.

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A new class of bacterial multisubunit membrane-bound electron-transfer complexes has been identified based on biochemical and bioinformatic data. It contains subunits homologous to the three-subunit molybdopterin oxidoreductases and four additional subunits, two of which are c-type cytochromes. The complex was purified from the filamentous anoxygenic phototrophic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus, and putative operons for similar complexes were identified in a wide range of bacteria.

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Rates of chlorophyll synthesis and degradation were analyzed in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 wild type and mutants lacking one or both photosystems by labeling cells with ((15)NH(4))(2)SO(4) and Na(15)NO(3). Pigments extracted from cells were separated by HPLC and incorporation of the (15)N label into porphyrins was subsequently examined by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry.

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Seven new genes designated dsrLJOPNSR were identified immediately downstream of dsrABEFHCMK, completing the dsr gene cluster of the phototrophic sulfur bacterium Allochromatium vinosum D (DSM 180(T)). Interposon mutagenesis proved an essential role of the encoded proteins for the oxidation of intracellular sulfur, an obligate intermediate during the oxidation of sulfide and thiosulfate. While dsrR and dsrS encode cytoplasmic proteins of unknown function, the other genes encode a predicted NADPH:acceptor oxidoreductase (DsrL), a triheme c-type cytochrome (DsrJ), a periplasmic iron-sulfur protein (DsrO), and an integral membrane protein (DsrP).

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