Publications by authors named "Patricia Klemmer"

Development of the brain involves the formation and maturation of numerous synapses. This process requires prominent changes of the synaptic proteome and potentially involves thousands of different proteins at every synapse. To date the proteome analysis of synapse development has been studied sparsely.

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Neurobeachin (Nbea) is a multidomain scaffold protein abundant in the brain, where it is highly expressed during development. Nbea-null mice have severe defects in neuromuscular synaptic transmission resulting in lethal paralysis of the newborns. Recently, it became clear that Nbea is important also for the functioning of central synapses, where it is suggested to play a role in trafficking membrane proteins to both, the pre- and post-synaptic sites.

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A typical high-sensitivity antibody affinity purification-mass spectrometry experiment easily identifies hundreds of protein interactors. However, most of these are non-valid resulting from multiple causes other than interaction with the bait protein. To discriminate true interactors from off-target recognition, we propose to differentially include an (peptide) antigen during the antibody incubation in the immuno-precipitation experiment.

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Article Synopsis
  • Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is a genetic condition linked to a mutation in the Fmr1 gene, leading to issues in brain function and synaptic development.
  • A study using FXS mouse models identified 23 proteins with significant differences in the hippocampal synapses compared to wild-type mice, indicating alterations in synaptic protein abundance.
  • The findings suggest that these changes, along with immature synapse structure and impaired synaptic plasticity, contribute to dysfunctional glutamatergic transmission in FXS during development.
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The brain integrates complex types of information, and executes a wide range of physiological and behavioral processes. Trillions of tiny organelles, the synapses, are central to neuronal communication and information processing in the brain. Synaptic transmission involves an intricate network of synaptic proteins that forms the molecular machinery underlying transmitter release, activation, and modulation of transmitter receptors and signal transduction cascades.

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