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Tikira Temu

Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry

Publishes on Advanced Proteomics Techniques and Applications, Mass Spectrometry Techniques and Applications, Metabolomics and Mass Spectrometry Studies. 5 papers and 14.5k citations.

5Publications
14.5kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Visualization of LC‐MS/MS proteomics data in MaxQuant
Stefka Tyanova, Tikira Temu, Arthur Carlson et al.|PROTEOMICS|2015
Cited by 277Open Access

Modern software platforms enable the analysis of shotgun proteomics data in an automated fashion resulting in high quality identification and quantification results. Additional understanding of the underlying data can be gained with the help of advanced visualization tools that allow for easy navigation through large LC-MS/MS datasets potentially consisting of terabytes of raw data. The updated MaxQuant version has a map navigation component that steers the users through mass and retention time-dependent mass spectrometric signals. It can be used to monitor a peptide feature used in label-free quantification over many LC-MS runs and visualize it with advanced 3D graphic models. An expert annotation system aids the interpretation of the MS/MS spectra used for the identification of these peptide features.

Proteomics reveals dynamic assembly of repair complexes during bypass of DNA cross-links
Cited by 240Open Access

DNA interstrand cross-links (ICLs) block replication fork progression by inhibiting DNA strand separation. Repair of ICLs requires sequential incisions, translesion DNA synthesis, and homologous recombination, but the full set of factors involved in these transactions remains unknown. We devised a technique called chromatin mass spectrometry (CHROMASS) to study protein recruitment dynamics during perturbed DNA replication in Xenopus egg extracts. Using CHROMASS, we systematically monitored protein assembly and disassembly on ICL-containing chromatin. Among numerous prospective DNA repair factors, we identified SLF1 and SLF2, which form a complex with RAD18 and together define a pathway that suppresses genome instability by recruiting the SMC5/6 cohesion complex to DNA lesions. Our study provides a global analysis of an entire DNA repair pathway and reveals the mechanism of SMC5/6 relocalization to damaged DNA in vertebrate cells.

Homology-driven assembly of NOn-redundant protEin sequence sets (NOmESS) for mass spectrometry
Tikira Temu, Matthias Mann, Markus Räschle et al.|Bioinformatics|2015
Cited by 11Open Access

UNLABELLED: To enable mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomic studies with poorly characterized organisms, we developed a computational workflow for the homology-driven assembly of a non-redundant reference sequence dataset. In the automated pipeline, translated DNA sequences (e.g. ESTs, RNA deep-sequencing data) are aligned to those of a closely related and fully sequenced organism. Representative sequences are derived from each cluster and joined, resulting in a non-redundant reference set representing the maximal available amino acid sequence information for each protein. We here applied NOmESS to assemble a reference database for the widely used model organism Xenopus laevis and demonstrate its use in proteomic applications. AVAILABILITY AND IMPLEMENTATION: NOmESS is written in C#. The source code as well as the executables can be downloaded from http://www.biochem.mpg.de/cox Execution of NOmESS requires BLASTp and cd-hit in addition. CONTACT: cox@biochem.mpg.de SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.