S

Sebastian Schmitt

University of Bonn

ORCID: 0000-0002-3906-2933

Publishes on MicroRNA in disease regulation, Cellular Mechanics and Interactions, Neurogenesis and neuroplasticity mechanisms. 27 papers and 2.3k citations.

27Publications
2.3kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Thiol-Based Redox Switches in Eukaryotic Proteins
Nicolas Brandes, Sebastian Schmitt, Ursula Jakob|Antioxidants and Redox Signaling|2008
Cited by 371Open Access

For many years, oxidative thiol modifications in cytosolic proteins were largely disregarded as in vitro artifacts, and considered unlikely to play significant roles within the reducing environment of the cell. Recent developments in in vivo thiol trapping technology combined with mass spectrometric analysis have now provided convincing evidence that thiol-based redox switches are used as molecular tools in many proteins to regulate their activity in response to reactive oxygen and nitrogen species. Reversible oxidative thiol modifications have been found to modulate the function of proteins involved in many different pathways, starting from gene transcription, translation and protein folding, to metabolism, signal transduction, and ultimately apoptosis. This review will focus on three well-characterized eukaryotic proteins that use thiol-based redox switches to influence gene transcription, metabolism, and signal transduction. The transcription factor Yap1p is a good illustration of how oxidative modifications affect the function of a protein without changing its activity. We use glyeraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase to demonstrate how thiol modification of an active site cysteine re-routes metabolic pathways and converts a metabolic enzyme into a pro-apoptotic factor. Finally, we introduce the redox-sensitive protein tyrosine phosphatase PTP1B to illustrate that reversibility is one of the fundamental aspects of redox-regulation.

BCAS1 expression defines a population of early myelinating oligodendrocytes in multiple sclerosis lesions
Maryam K. Fard, Franziska van der Meer, Paula Sánchez et al.|Science Translational Medicine|2017
Cited by 244Open Access

oligodendrocytes are reformed after experimental demyelination and found in a proportion of chronic white matter lesions of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) even in a subset of patients with advanced disease. Our work identifies a means to map ongoing myelin formation in health and disease and presents a potential cellular target for remyelination therapies in MS.