Publications by authors named "Schuck B"

Metalloenzymes play vital roles in various biological processes, requiring the search for inhibitors to develop treatment options for diverse diseases. While compound library screening is a conventional approach, the exploration of virtual chemical spaces housing trillions of compounds has emerged as an alternative strategy. In this study, we investigated the suitability of selected screening libraries and chemical spaces for discovering inhibitors of metalloenzymes featuring common ions (Mg, Mn, and Zn).

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Article Synopsis
  • The rise of SARS-CoV-2 sparked the development of numerous serology assays to detect antibodies, leading to a trans-government collaboration in April 2020 aimed at evaluating these assays for FDA regulatory purposes.
  • Three evaluation panels were formed, consisting of 110 samples each, to test for anti-SARS-CoV-2 antibodies using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA), ensuring agreement on seropositivity from reliable labs.
  • By January 2021, the results of 91 tests showed varying sensitivity and specificity rates, with about one-third of the assays receiving FDA authorization for emergency use, establishing a framework for future assessments during outbreaks.
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Using pooled European Social Survey data (Rounds 4-7, 2008-2014), we investigate the relationship between intergenerational educational mobility and subjective well-being (SWB) for young Europeans (N = 16,050 individuals aged 25-34 from 18 countries). Previous research has been struggling with inconclusive results due to the methodological challenge of disentangling the independent (i.e.

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Reporter-biased artifacts-i.e., compounds that interact directly with the reporter enzyme used in a high-throughput screening (HTS) assay and not the biological process or pharmacology being interrogated-are now widely recognized to reduce the efficiency and quality of HTS used for chemical probe and therapeutic development.

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We have combined affinity purification concepts with novel renewable-surface microcolumns in a sequential injection system for the automated and rapid isolation and purification of nucleic acids directly from crude soil extracts. Geobacter chapellii DNA was spiked at femtomolar concentrations into clean solutions or crude soil extracts containing picomolar concentrations of competitive DNA, humic acids and other soluble soil constituents. The 16S rDNA targets (indigenous and spiked) were purified and eluted in less than 20 min in a form suitable for direct polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification and detection.

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Bispeptide nucleic acids (bis-PNAs; PNA clamps), PNA oligomers, and DNA oligonucleotides were evaluated as affinity purification reagents for subfemtomolar 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) and rRNA targets in soil, sediment, and industrial air filter nucleic acid extracts. Under low-salt hybridization conditions (10 mM NaPO(4), 5 mM disodium EDTA, and 0.025% sodium dodecyl sulfate [SDS]) a PNA clamp recovered significantly more target DNA than either PNA or DNA oligomers.

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The efficacy of PNA vs DNA oligomers for the recovery of femtomolar concentrations of 16S rDNA targets was determined with solution- and mixed-phase hybridization formats and limiting dilution quantitative PCR. Several results contradict existing perceptions of expected PNA behavior deduced from hybridization studies with oligonucleotide targets at high concentration. For example, DNA probes in the solution hybridization format performed as well as or better than PNA probes under high- or low-salt conditions, regardless of hybridization time or target size.

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We have characterized a gene encoding an Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) Binding Cassette (ABC) transmembrane protein from Trichomonas vaginalis, an early-diverging protozoan parasite. This gene, Tvpgp1, encodes a 589-amino acid protein with an amino-terminal hydrophobic region, 6 potential membrane-spanning segments and a carboxy-terminal ATP binding site. Tvpgp1 is most similar in sequence to mammalian P-glycoproteins, 170 kDa transport proteins which are frequently overexpressed in multiple drug-resistant (Mdr) tumor cell lines.

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