👤 Claudia Baumann

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6
Articles
6
Name variants
Also published as: Hannah M Baumann, Lillian Baumann, M Baumann, Marc H Baumann, William T Baumann
articles
James A Langeland, Lillian Baumann, Eva M DeYoung +4 more · 2024 · Biology · MDPI · added 2026-04-24
Alzheimer's disease is characterized, in part, by the accumulation of β-amyloid (Aβ) in the brain. Aβ is produced via the proteolysis of APP by BACE1 and γ-secretase. Since BACE1 is the rate-limiting Show more
Alzheimer's disease is characterized, in part, by the accumulation of β-amyloid (Aβ) in the brain. Aβ is produced via the proteolysis of APP by BACE1 and γ-secretase. Since BACE1 is the rate-limiting enzyme in the production of Aβ, and a target for therapeutics, it is of interest to know when its proteolytic function evolved and for what purpose. Here, we take a functional evolutionary approach to show that BACE1 likely evolved from a gene duplication event near the base of the animal clade and that BACE1 APP/Aβ proteolytic function evolved during early animal diversification, hundreds of millions of years before the evolution of the APP/Aβ substrate. Our examination of BACE1 APP/Aβ proteolytic function includes cnidarians, ctenophores, and choanoflagellates. The most basal BACE1 ortholog is found in cnidarians, while ctenophores, placozoa, and choanoflagellates have genes equally orthologous to BACE1 and BACE2. BACE1 from a cnidarian ( Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3390/biology13050320
BACE1
Hannah M Baumann, David L Mobley · 2024 · Journal of computational chemistry · Wiley · added 2026-04-24
In binding free energy calculations, simulations must sample all relevant conformations of the system in order to obtain unbiased results. For instance, different ligands can bind to different metasta Show more
In binding free energy calculations, simulations must sample all relevant conformations of the system in order to obtain unbiased results. For instance, different ligands can bind to different metastable states of a protein, and if these protein conformational changes are not sampled in relative binding free energy calculations, the contribution of these states to binding is not accounted for and thus calculated binding free energies are inaccurate. In this work, we investigate the impact of different beta-sectretase 1 (BACE1) protein conformations obtained from x-ray crystallography on the binding of BACE1 inhibitors. We highlight how these conformational changes are not adequately sampled in typical molecular dynamics simulations. Furthermore, we show that insufficient sampling of relevant conformations induces substantial error in relative binding free energy calculations, as judged by a variation in calculated relative binding free energies up to 2 kcal/mol depending on the starting protein conformation. These results emphasize the importance of protein conformational sampling and pose this BACE1 system as a challenge case for further method development in the area of enhanced protein conformational sampling, either in combination with binding calculations or as an endpoint correction. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/jcc.27365
BACE1
Shrivatsav Pattabiraman, Claudia Baumann, Daniela Guisado +3 more · 2015 · The Journal of cell biology · added 2026-04-24
Postmeiotic gene expression is essential for development and maturation of sperm and eggs. We report that the dual bromodomain-containing protein BRWD1, which is essential for both male and female fer Show more
Postmeiotic gene expression is essential for development and maturation of sperm and eggs. We report that the dual bromodomain-containing protein BRWD1, which is essential for both male and female fertility, promotes haploid spermatid-specific transcription but has distinct roles in oocyte meiotic progression. Brwd1 deficiency caused down-regulation of ∼300 mostly spermatid-specific transcripts in testis, including nearly complete elimination of those encoding the protamines and transition proteins, but was not associated with global epigenetic changes in chromatin, which suggests that BRWD1 acts selectively. In females, Brwd1 ablation caused severe chromosome condensation and structural defects associated with abnormal telomere structure but only minor changes in gene expression at the germinal vesicle stage, including more than twofold overexpression of the histone methyltransferase MLL5 and LINE-1 elements transposons. Thus, loss of BRWD1 function interferes with the completion of oogenesis and spermatogenesis through sexually dimorphic mechanisms: it is essential in females for epigenetic control of meiotic chromosome stability and in males for haploid gene transcription during postmeiotic sperm differentiation. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1083/jcb.201404109
BRWD1
Cihan Oguz, Alida Palmisano, Teeraphan Laomettachit +3 more · 2014 · PloS one · PLOS · added 2026-04-24
In this study, we focus on a recent stochastic budding yeast cell cycle model. First, we estimate the model parameters using extensive data sets: phenotypes of 110 genetic strains, single cell statist Show more
In this study, we focus on a recent stochastic budding yeast cell cycle model. First, we estimate the model parameters using extensive data sets: phenotypes of 110 genetic strains, single cell statistics of wild type and cln3 strains. Optimization of stochastic model parameters is achieved by an automated algorithm we recently used for a deterministic cell cycle model. Next, in order to test the predictive ability of the stochastic model, we focus on a recent experimental study in which forced periodic expression of CLN2 cyclin (driven by MET3 promoter in cln3 background) has been used to synchronize budding yeast cell colonies. We demonstrate that the model correctly predicts the experimentally observed synchronization levels and cell cycle statistics of mother and daughter cells under various experimental conditions (numerical data that is not enforced in parameter optimization), in addition to correctly predicting the qualitative changes in size control due to forced CLN2 expression. Our model also generates a novel prediction: under frequent CLN2 expression pulses, G1 phase duration is bimodal among small-born cells. These cells originate from daughters with extended budded periods due to size control during the budded period. This novel prediction and the experimental trends captured by the model illustrate the interplay between cell cycle dynamics, synchronization of cell colonies, and size control in budding yeast. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0096726
CLN3
Enzo Scifo, Agnieszka Szwajda, Janusz Dębski +8 more · 2013 · Journal of proteome research · ACS Publications · added 2026-04-24
Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCL) are the most common inherited progressive encephalopathies of childhood. One of the most prevalent forms of NCL, Juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (JNCL) or Show more
Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCL) are the most common inherited progressive encephalopathies of childhood. One of the most prevalent forms of NCL, Juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (JNCL) or CLN3 disease (OMIM: 204200), is caused by mutations in the CLN3 gene on chromosome 16p12.1. Despite progress in the NCL field, the primary function of ceroid-lipofuscinosis neuronal protein 3 (CLN3) remains elusive. In this study, we aimed to clarify the role of human CLN3 in the brain by identifying CLN3-associated proteins using a Tandem Affinity Purification coupled to Mass Spectrometry (TAP-MS) strategy combined with Significance Analysis of Interactome (SAINT). Human SH-SY5Y-NTAP-CLN3 stable cells were used to isolate native protein complexes for subsequent TAP-MS. Bioinformatic analyses of isolated complexes yielded 58 CLN3 interacting partners (IP) including 42 novel CLN3 IP, as well as 16 CLN3 high confidence interacting partners (HCIP) previously identified in another high-throughput study by Behrends et al., 2010. Moreover, 31 IP of ceroid-lipofuscinosis neuronal protein 5 (CLN5) were identified (18 of which were in common with the CLN3 bait). Our findings support previously suggested involvement of CLN3 in transmembrane transport, lipid homeostasis and neuronal excitability, as well as link it to G-protein signaling and protein folding/sorting in the ER. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1021/pr301125k
CLN3
M Haltia, R Herva, J Suopanki +2 more · 2001 · European journal of paediatric neurology : EJPN : official journal of the European Paediatric Neurology Society · added 2026-04-24
Epilepsy is a common manifestation in all childhood-onset forms of neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis. In order to document hippocampal lesions and their relationship to epilepsy we studied autopsy specim Show more
Epilepsy is a common manifestation in all childhood-onset forms of neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis. In order to document hippocampal lesions and their relationship to epilepsy we studied autopsy specimens from the hippocampi of a series of patients with the infantile (CLN1), classic late infantile (CLN2), Finnish variant late infantile (CLN5), and juvenile (CLN3) neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis as well as Northern epilepsy (CLN8), using a battery of histological and immunocytochemical staining methods. Despite striking differences in the overall degree of neocortical neuronal storage and loss, these genetically heterogeneous forms of neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis showed a common lesional pattern in the hippocampi: a relative sparing of the CA1 sector and severe involvement of the neighbouring CA2 sector, with intermediate degrees of involvement of the CA3 and CA4 sectors. These findings distinguish the hippocampal pathology associated with the neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses from classical 'mesial temporal sclerosis' and show that the selective lesional pattern in the neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses is not a secondary anoxic-ischaemic phenomenon. It is rather a consequence of the primary metabolic defects and may be directly involved in the causation of the epileptic discharges. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1053/eipn.2000.0464
CLN3