B
Bernhard Kuster
Researcher at Technische Universität München
Publications - 310
Citations - 37543
Bernhard Kuster is an academic researcher from Technische Universität München. The author has contributed to research in topics: Proteome & Proteomics. The author has an hindex of 79, co-authored 277 publications receiving 31872 citations. Previous affiliations of Bernhard Kuster include GlaxoSmithKline & German Cancer Research Center.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Dynamic Proteome Alteration and Functional Modulation of Human Saliva Induced by Dietary Chemosensory Stimuli.
Matthias Bader,Andreas Dunkel,Mareike Wenning,Bernd Kohler,Guillaume Médard,Estela del Castillo,Amin Moghaddas Gholami,Bernhard Kuster,Siegfried Scherer,Thomas Hofmann +9 more
TL;DR: Gene ontology enrichment analysis showed evidence for stimulus-induced alterations of the saliva proteome to boot an efficient molecular defense network of the oral cavity, and microbial growth experiments clearly demonstrated for the first time that the increase of the salivary lysozyme abundance upon oral citric acid stimulation translates into an enhanced biological function.
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Bacterial Cellulose Shifts Transcriptome and Proteome of Cultured Endothelial Cells Towards Native Differentiation.
Gerhard Feil,Ralf Horres,Julia Schulte,Andreas F. Mack,Svenja Petzoldt,Caroline Arnold,Chen Meng,Lukas Jost,Jochen Boxleitner,Nicole Kiessling-Wolf,Ender Serbest,Dominic Helm,Bernhard Kuster,Isabel Hartmann,Thomas Korff,Hannes Hahne +15 more
TL;DR: This is one of the most comprehensive transcriptomic and proteomic studies of native and propagated HUVEC, which underscores the importance of the morphology of the cellular microenvironment to regulate cellular differentiation, and demonstrates, for the first time, the potential of Xellulin as versatile tool promoting an in vivo-like phenotype in primary and propagate cell culture.
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Quantitative chemical proteomics reveals a Plk1 inhibitor-compromised cell death pathway in human cells
Monika Raab,Fiona Pachl,Andrea Krämer,Elisabeth Kurunci-Csacsko,Christina Dötsch,Rainald Knecht,Sven Becker,Bernhard Kuster,Klaus Strebhardt +8 more
TL;DR: Quantitative chemical proteomics reveals a Plk1 inhibitor-compromised cell death pathway in human cells that is linked to cell death in animals and humans.
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Sucrose-Induced Proteomic Response and Carbohydrate Utilization of Lactobacillus sakei TMW 1.411 During Dextran Formation
Roman M. Prechtl,Dorothee Janßen,Jürgen Behr,Christina Ludwig,Bernhard Kuster,Rudi F. Vogel,Frank Jakob +6 more
TL;DR: This study highlights the intrinsic adaption of L. sakei to plant environments, where sucrose is abundant, and provides fundamental knowledge regarding the use of L., sakei as starter culture for sucrose-based food fermentation processes with in-situ dextran formation.
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Chemoproteomic Selectivity Profiling of PIKK and PI3K Kinase Inhibitors.
Maria Reinecke,Benjamin Ruprecht,Sandra Poser,Svenja Wiechmann,Mathias Wilhelm,Stephanie Heinzlmeir,Bernhard Kuster,Bernhard Kuster,Guillaume Médard +8 more
TL;DR: A novel version of Kinobeads is reported that extends kinome coverage to native protein kinases from cell line or tissue lysates and shows that NVP-BEZ235 is not a PI3K inhibitor, and the utility of the new affinity matrix is demonstrated by the profiling of 13 clinical and preclinical PIKK/PI3K inhibitors.