logo ipb
logo ipb mobile
x
  • Deutsch
  • English
Login
  • Research
    • Research Mission and Profile

    • Molecular Signal Processing

      • Secretariat & All Staff
      • Technical Resources
      • Publications
      • Research Groups
        • Nutrient Sensing
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Collaborations
        • Symbiosis Signaling
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Collaborations
        • Jasmonate Signaling
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Collaborations
    • Bioorganic Chemistry

      • Secretariat & All Staff
      • Technical Resources
      • Publications
      • Research Groups
        • Bioactives
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Collaborations
        • Natural Products & Metabolomics
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Collaborations
        • Biotechnology
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Collaborations
        • Biofunctional Synthesis
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Collaborations
        • Computational Chemistry
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Collaborations
        • Data & Resources
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Collaborations
    • Biochemistry of Plant Interactions

      • Secretariat & All Staff
      • Technical Resources
      • Publications
      • Research Groups
        • Calcium-dependent Protein Kinases
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Collaborations
        • Cellular Signaling
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Collaborations
        • Nuclear Processes in Plant Defense
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Collaborations
    • Cell and Metabolic Biology

      • Secretariat & All Staff
      • Technical Resources
      • Publications
      • Research Groups
        • Glandular Trichomes and Isoprenoid Biosynthesis
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Collaborations
        • Jasmonate Function & Mycorrhiza
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Collaborations
        • Phenylpropanoid Metabolism
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Collaborations
        • Synthetic Biology
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Collaborations
    • Independent Junior Research Groups

      • Research Groups
        • Receptor Biochemistry
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Collaborations
    • Program Center MetaCom

      • Secretariat & All staff
      • Publikationen
      • Our Equipment
      • Research Groups
        • Metabolomics Facility
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Methods
        • MetaCom Analytical Laboratory
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Methods
        • Computational Plant Biochemistry
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Collaborations
        • Biochemical Genetics of Metabolic Plasticity
          • Projects
          • Staff
          • Publications
          • Collaborations
    • Publications

    • Good Scientific Practice

    • Research Funding

    • Networks and Collaborative Projects

      • Collaborative Projects as Coordinator
        • Completed Projects as Coordinator
      • Collaborative Projects as Partner
        • Completed Projects as Partner
      • Networks
    • Symposia and Colloquia

      • Lectures
        • IPB Seminars
      • Leibniz Plant Biochemistry Symposia
    • Alumni Research Groups

      • Research Groups
        • Auxin Signaling
          • Projects
          • Publications
        • Bioorganic Chemistry
          • Projects
          • Publications
        • Designer Glycans
          • Projects
          • Publications
        • Jasmonate Mode of Action
          • Publications
        • Protein Recognition and Degradation
          • Projects
          • Publications
        • Regulatory RNAs (MLU-associated group)
          • Projects
          • Publications
        • Signal Integration
          • Projects
          • Publications
        • Ubiquitination in Immunity
          • Projects
          • Publications
        • Cellular Coordination
          • Projects
          • Publications
  • Infrastructure
    • Databases and Tools

      • XCMS
      • Rdisop
      • CAMERA
      • MetShot
      • MassBank
      • MetFrag
      • MetFamily
      • PaCeQuant
      • CytoskeletonAnalyzer
      • GoldenMutagenesis
      • cisHighlight
      • FlagScreen
      • RootDetection
    • Technical Resources

    • Imaging Unit

    • Greenhouses and Phytochambers

    • Library Services

      • OPAC
      • Electronic Journals Library
      • Service for Employees
  • Institute
    • Organizational Chart

    • Management and Boards

      • Board of Trustees
      • Scientific Advisory Board
      • IPB Management / Board of Directors
      • Scientific Council
      • Authorized Representatives of the IPB
      • Staff Council
      • Statutes
    • Administration and Infrastructure

      • Secretariat & All Staff
      • Working Groups
        • Human Resources
        • Finance & Accounting
        • Purchasing
        • IT & Technical Support
        • Experimental Nursery
        • Facility Management
        • Library
        • Digitalization
    • Energy Management

      • Objectives and Measures
      • Energy Management Team
    • Diversity, Family and Equality

    • Public Tendering

    • Patents and Licensing

    • The IPB Welcoming Culture

    • Guest Houses

    • IPB Site Map

    • Brief IPB History

      • Bildergalerie zur Historie
      • Alte Filmsequenzen zum Institut
      • Historischer Massenspektrograph
    • Alumni Network

      • The IPB as a career launching pad
  • Career
    • Data protection information for applicants

    • PhD Program

      • PhD Student Representatives
      • DoCou - Doctoral Training Courses
      • PSSC
    • Postdocs

    • Berufsausbildung

  • Public Relations
    • News

      • 2024
      • 2023
      • 2022
      • Archiv Aktuelles
        • 2021
        • 2020
        • 2019
        • 2018
        • 2017
        • 2016
        • 2015
        • 2014
        • vor 2014
    • News Ticker Science

      • News Ticker 2024
      • News Ticker 2023
      • News Ticker 2022
      • News Ticker Archive
        • News Ticker 2021
        • News Ticker 2020
        • News Ticker 2019
    • Press Releases

      • 2024
      • 2023
      • 2022
      • Archive Press Releases
        • 2021
        • 2020
        • 2019
        • 2018
        • 2017
        • 2016
        • 2015
        • 2014
        • 2013
        • 2012
        • 2011
        • 2010
        • 2009
        • 2008
        • 2007
        • 2006
        • 2005
        • 2004
        • 2003
        • 2002
    • IPB Pressespiegel

    • Lange Nacht, die Wissen schafft

      • 2024 Long Night of Sciences
      • 2022 Long Night of Sciences
    • IPB Newsletter

    • Printed / Information Material

    • Scientific Reports / Research Highlights

    • Events

      • 2024 Leibniz Plant Biochemistry Symposium
    • Cover Art

    • Citizen Science: Pilzberatung

      • Das Reich der Pilze
      • Pilzberatung
      • Forschung an Pilzen
  • Contact
    • Directions for Visitors

    • Staff Directory

    • Imprint

    • Data Protection

    • Accessibility

  1. IPB Halle
  2. Research
  3. Publications

    • Research Mission and Profile
    • Trenner 0
    • Molecular Signal Processing
      • Secretariat & All Staff
      • Technical Resources
      • Publications
      • Research Groups
        • Nutrient Sensing
        • Symbiosis Signaling
        • Jasmonate Signaling
    • Bioorganic Chemistry
      • Secretariat & All Staff
      • Technical Resources
      • Publications
      • Research Groups
        • Bioactives
        • Natural Products & Metabolomics
        • Biotechnology
        • Biofunctional Synthesis
        • Computational Chemistry
        • Data & Resources
    • Biochemistry of Plant Interactions
      • Secretariat & All Staff
      • Technical Resources
      • Publications
      • Research Groups
        • Calcium-dependent Protein Kinases
        • Cellular Signaling
        • Nuclear Processes in Plant Defense
    • Cell and Metabolic Biology
      • Secretariat & All Staff
      • Technical Resources
      • Publications
      • Research Groups
        • Glandular Trichomes and Isoprenoid Biosynthesis
        • Jasmonate Function & Mycorrhiza
        • Phenylpropanoid Metabolism
        • Synthetic Biology
    • Independent Junior Research Groups
      • Research Groups
        • Receptor Biochemistry
    • Program Center MetaCom
      • Secretariat & All staff
      • Publikationen
      • Our Equipment
      • Research Groups
        • Metabolomics Facility
        • MetaCom Analytical Laboratory
        • Computational Plant Biochemistry
        • Biochemical Genetics of Metabolic Plasticity
    • Trenner 1
    • Publications
    • Good Scientific Practice
    • Research Funding
    • Trenner
    • Networks and Collaborative Projects
      • Collaborative Projects as Coordinator
        • Completed Projects as Coordinator
      • Collaborative Projects as Partner
        • Completed Projects as Partner
      • Networks
    • Symposia and Colloquia
      • Lectures
        • IPB Seminars
      • Leibniz Plant Biochemistry Symposia
    • Trenner
    • Alumni Research Groups
      • Research Groups
        • Auxin Signaling
        • Bioorganic Chemistry
        • Designer Glycans
        • Jasmonate Mode of Action
        • Protein Recognition and Degradation
        • Regulatory RNAs (MLU-associated group)
        • Signal Integration
        • Ubiquitination in Immunity
        • Cellular Coordination

Advanced Search

  • Type of publication
    • Publication 109
      Books and chapters 8
      Preprints 7
      Printed publications 1
  • Year
    • 1999 1
      2005 1
      2006 3
      2007 6
      2008 5
      2010 5
      2011 2
      2012 5
      2013 11
      2014 7
      2015 11
      2016 11
      2017 6
      2018 10
      2019 11
      2020 5
      2021 7
      2022 8
      2023 8
      2024 1
      2025 1
  • Journal / Volume / Preprint Server Sorted by frequency and by alphabetical order
    • Metabolomics 10
      Anal. Chem. 8
      BMC Bioinformatics 8
      Metabolites 8
      bioRxiv 7
      0 6
      Int. J. Mol. Sci. 4
      Anal. Bioanal. Chem. 3
      Bioinformatics 3
      J. Cheminform. 3
      J. Mass Spectrom. 3
      Mol. Cell. Proteomics 3
      Sci. Data 3
      Sci. Rep. 3
      Sci. Total Environ. 3
      F1000Research 2
      J. Ecol. 2
      J. Exp. Bot. 2
      J. Integr. Bioinformatics 2
      J. Proteome Res. 2
      Lecture Notes in Computer Science 2
      Nat. Biotechnol. 2
      Nature Methods 2
      Plants 2
      Pure and Applied Chemistry 2
      Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 1
      BMC Plant Biol. 1
      Basic and Applied Ecology 1
      Botany 1
      CEUR Workshop Proc. 1
      Ecol. Evol. 1
      Front. Bioeng. Biotechnol. 1
      Front. Plant Sci. 1
      Frontiers in Molecular Biosciences 1
      GigaScience 1
      IMISE-REP. 1
      J. Biotechnol. 1
      Mass Spectrom. 1
      Microbiome 1
      Mol. Plant 1
      Nat. Genet. 1
      New Phytol. 1
      Nucleic Acids Res. 1
      PLOS ONE 1
      Physiol. Plant. 1
      Phytochem. Lett. 1
      Plant Physiol. 1
      Planta 1
      Rapid Commun. Mass Spectrom. 1
      Res. Ideas Outcomes 1
      Sci. Adv. 1
      Stand. Genomic Sci. 1
      TrAC - Trends Anal. Chem. 1
      Vorträge für Pflanzenzüchtung 1
      arXiv 1
  • Author Sorted by frequency and by alphabetical order
    • Wessjohann, L. A. 340
      Hause, B. 202
      Schmidt, J. 195
      Wessjohann, L. 186
      Brandt, W. 175
      Porzel, A. 174
      Wasternack, C. 167
      Scheel, D. 130
      Neumann, S. 125
      Strack, D. 123
      Arnold, N. 97
      Lee, J. 81
      Miersch, O. 81
      Franke, K. 80
      Frolov, A. 80
      Westermann, B. 80
      Tissier, A. 75
      Abel, S. 69
      Hoehenwarter, W. 65
      Ziegler, J. 64
      Feussner, I. 63
      Kaluđerović, G. N. 63
      Farag, M. A. 62
      Rivera, D. G. 53
      Marillonnet, S. 50
      Rosahl, S. 49
      Vogt, T. 49
      Eschen-Lippold, L. 48
      Quint, M. 48
      Kutchan, T. M. 46
      Hussain, H. 45
      Davari, M. D. 44
      Adam, G. 42
      Böttcher, C. 41
      Weissenborn, M. J. 40
      Clemens, S. 39
      Sung, T. V. 39
      Dissmeyer, N. 37
      Hause, G. 35
      Bürstenbinder, K. 34
      Kramell, R. 34
      Schliemann, W. 34
      Milkowski, C. 33
      Voiniciuc, C. 31
      Pahnke, J. 30
      Stenzel, I. 29
      Trujillo, M. 29
      Nürnberger, T. 26
      Wirthmueller, L. 26
      Balcke, G. U. 25
      Peters, K. 24
      Walter, M. H. 24
      Wray, V. 24
      Baumert, A. 23
      Knogge, W. 23
      Schuster, M. 23
      Schymanski, E. L. 22
      Steinbeck, C. 22
      Fester, T. 21
      Naumann, C. 21
      Parthier, B. 21
      Ruttkies, C. 21
      Bilova, T. 20
      Grosse, I. 20
      Maksimović-Ivanić, D. 20
      Mijatović, S. 20
      Rennert, R. 20
      Salek, R. M. 20
      Schwaneberg, U. 20
      Strehmel, N. 20
      Boland, W. 19
      Delker, C. 19
      Flores, R. 19
      Rocca-Serra, P. 19
      Gago, S. 18
      Green, I. R. 18
      Krohn, M. 18
      Steinborn, D. 18
      Westphal, L. 18
      Braga, A. L. 17
      Fernández-Niño, M. 17
      Morgan, I. 17
      Thuy, T. T. 17
      Gago-Zachert, S. 16
      Gasperini, D. 16
      Laub, A. 16
      Romeis, T. 16
      Schnittger, A. 16
      Strnad, M. 16
      Vasco, A. V. 16
      Wagner, C. 16
      Anh, N. T. H. 15
      Bruelheide, H. 15
      Calderón Villalobos, L. I. A. 15
      Dräger, B. 15
      Maier, W. 15
      Majovsky, P. 15
      Medvedev, S. 15
      Sansone, S.-A. 15
      Schmidt, H. 15
  • Year
  • Type of publication
Search narrowed by: Author Sorted by frequency and by alphabetical order: Neumann, S. Remove all filters
Displaying results 1 to 10 of 125.
  • Results as:
  • Print view
  • Endnote (RIS)
  • BibTeX
  • Table: CSV | HTML
Results per page:
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • ....

Publications

Lin, C.-L.; Huang, P.-C.; Gräßle, S.; Grathwol, C.; Tremouilhac, P.; Vanderheiden, S.; Hodapp, P.; Herres-Pawlis, S.; Hoffmann, A.; Fink, F.; Manolikakes, G.; Opatz, T.; Link, A.; Marques, M. M. B.; Daumann, L. J.; Tsotsalas, M.; Biedermann, F.; Mutlu, H.; Täuscher, E.; Bach, F.; Drees, T.; Neumann, S.; Harivyasi, S. S.; Jung, N.; Bräse, S.; Linking research data with physically preserved research materials in chemistry Sci. Data 12 130 (2025) DOI: 10.1038/s41597-025-04404-2
  • Abstract
  • Internet
  • BibText
  • RIS

Results of scientific work in chemistry can usually be obtained in the form of materials and data. A big step towards transparency and reproducibility of the scientific work can be gained if scientists publish their data in research data repositories in a FAIR manner. Nevertheless, in order to make chemistry a sustainable discipline, obtaining FAIR data is insufficient and a comprehensive concept that includes preservation of materials is needed. In order to offer a comprehensive infrastructure to find and access data and materials that were generated in chemistry projects, we combined the infrastructure Chemotion repository with an archive for chemical compounds. Samples play a key role in this concept: we describe how FAIR metadata of a virtual sample representation can be used to refer to a physically available sample in a materials’ archive and to link it with the FAIR research data gained using the said sample. We further describe the measures to make the physically available samples not only FAIR through their metadata but also findable, accessible and reusable.

Publications

Klein, J.; Lam, H.; Mak, T. D.; Bittremieux, W.; Perez-Riverol, Y.; Gabriels, R.; Shofstahl, J.; Hecht, H.; Binz, P.-A.; Kawano, S.; Van Den Bossche, T.; Carver, J.; Neely, B. A.; Mendoza, L.; Suomi, T.; Claeys, T.; Payne, T.; Schulte, D.; Sun, Z.; Hoffmann, N.; Zhu, Y.; Neumann, S.; Jones, A. R.; Bandeira, N.; Vizcaíno, J. A.; Deutsch, E. W.; The Proteomics Standards Initiative Standardized Formats for Spectral Libraries and Fragment Ion Peak Annotations: mzSpecLib and mzPAF Anal. Chem. 96 18491-18501 (2024) DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.4c04091
  • Abstract
  • Internet
  • BibText
  • RIS

Mass spectral libraries are collections of reference spectra, usually associated with specific analytes from which the spectra were generated, that are used for further downstream analysis of new spectra. There are many different formats used for encoding spectral libraries, but none have undergone a standardization process to ensure broad applicability to many applications. As part of the Human Proteome Organization Proteomics Standards Initiative (PSI), we have developed a standardized format for encoding spectral libraries, called mzSpecLib (https://psidev.info/mzSpecLib). It is primarily a data model that flexibly encodes metadata about the library entries using the extensible PSI-MS controlled vocabulary and can be encoded in and converted between different serialization formats. We have also developed a standardized data model and serialization for fragment ion peak annotations, called mzPAF (https://psidev.info/mzPAF). It is defined as a separate standard, since it may be used for other applications besides spectral libraries. The mzSpecLib and mzPAF standards are compatible with existing PSI standards such as ProForma 2.0 and the Universal Spectrum Identifier. The mzSpecLib and mzPAF standards have been primarily defined for peptides in proteomics applications with basic small molecule support. They could be extended in the future to other fields that need to encode spectral libraries for nonpeptidic analytes.

Publications

Walker, T. W. N.; Schrodt, F.; Allard, P.-M.; Defossez, E.; Jassey, V. E. J.; Schuman, M. C.; Alexander, J. M.; Baines, O.; Baldy, V.; Bardgett, R. D.; Capdevila, P.; Coley, P. D.; Dam, N. M.; David, B.; Descombes, P.; Endara, M.; Fernandez, C.; Forrister, D.; Gargallo-Garriga, A.; Glauser, G.; Marr, S.; Neumann, S.; Pellissier, L.; Peters, K.; Rasmann, S.; Roessner, U.; Salguero‐Gómez, R.; Sardans, J.; Weckwerth, W.; Wolfender, J.; Peñuelas, J.; Leaf metabolic traits reveal hidden dimensions of plant form and function Sci. Adv. 9 eadi4029 (2023) DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adi4029
  • Abstract
  • Internet
  • BibText
  • RIS

The metabolome is the biochemical basis of plant form and function, but we know little about its macroecological variation across the plant kingdom. Here, we used the plant functional trait concept to interpret leaf metabolome variation among 457 tropical and 339 temperate plant species. Distilling metabolite chemistry into five metabolic functional traits reveals that plants vary on two major axes of leaf metabolic specialization—a leaf chemical defense spectrum and an expression of leaf longevity. Axes are similar for tropical and temperate species, with many trait combinations being viable. However, metabolic traits vary orthogonally to life-history strategies described by widely used functional traits. The metabolome thus expands the functional trait concept by providing additional axes of metabolic specialization for examining plant form and function.

Publications

Martens, M.; Stierum, R.; Schymanski, E. L.; Evelo, C. T.; Aalizadeh, R.; Aladjov, H.; Arturi, K.; Audouze, K.; Babica, P.; Berka, K.; Bessems, J.; Blaha, L.; Bolton, E. E.; Cases, M.; Damalas, D. ?.; Dave, K.; Dilger, M.; Exner, T.; Geerke, D. P.; Grafström, R.; Gray, A.; Hancock, J. M.; Hollert, H.; Jeliazkova, N.; Jennen, D.; Jourdan, F.; Kahlem, P.; Klanova, J.; Kleinjans, J.; Kondić, T.; Kone, B.; Lynch, I.; Maran, U.; Martinez Cuesta, S.; Ménager, H.; Neumann, S.; Nymark, P.; Oberacher, H.; Ramirez, N.; Remy, S.; Rocca-Serra, P.; Salek, R. M.; Sallach, B.; Sansone, S.-A.; Sanz, F.; Sarimveis, H.; Sarntivijai, S.; Schulze, T.; Slobodnik, J.; Spjuth, O.; Tedds, J.; Thomaidis, N.; Weber, R. J.; van Westen, G. J.; Wheelock, C. E.; Williams, A. J.; Witters, H.; Zdrazil, B.; Županič, A.; Willighagen, E. L.; ELIXIR and Toxicology: a community in development F1000Research 10 1129 (2023) DOI: 10.12688/f1000research.74502.2
  • Abstract
  • Internet
  • BibText
  • RIS

Toxicology has been an active research field for many decades, with academic, industrial and government involvement. Modern omics and computational approaches are changing the field, from merely disease-specific observational models into target-specific predictive models. Traditionally, toxicology has strong links with other fields such as biology, chemistry, pharmacology, and medicine. With the rise of synthetic and new engineered materials, alongside ongoing prioritisation needs in chemical risk assessment for existing chemicals, early predictive evaluations are becoming of utmost importance to both scientific and regulatory purposes. ELIXIR is an intergovernmental organisation that brings together life science resources from across Europe. To coordinate the linkage of various life science efforts around modern predictive toxicology, the establishment of a new ELIXIR Community is seen as instrumental. In the past few years, joint efforts, building on incidental overlap, have been piloted in the context of ELIXIR. For example, the EU-ToxRisk, diXa, HeCaToS, transQST, and the nanotoxicology community have worked with the ELIXIR TeSS, Bioschemas, and Compute Platforms and activities. In 2018, a core group of interested parties wrote a proposal, outlining a sketch of what this new ELIXIR Toxicology Community would look like. A recent workshop (held September 30th to October 1st, 2020) extended this into an ELIXIR Toxicology roadmap and a shortlist of limited investment-high gain collaborations to give body to this new community. This Whitepaper outlines the results of these efforts and defines our vision of the ELIXIR Toxicology Community and how it complements other ELIXIR activities.

Publications

Peters, K.; Blatt-Janmaat, K. L.; Tkach, N.; Dam, N. M.; Neumann, S.; Untargeted metabolomics for integrative taxonomy: Metabolomics, DNA marker-based sequencing, and phenotype bioimaging Plants 12 881 (2023) DOI: 10.3390/plants12040881
  • Abstract
  • Internet
  • BibText
  • RIS

Integrative taxonomy is a fundamental part of biodiversity and combines traditional morphology with additional methods such as DNA sequencing or biochemistry. Here, we aim to establish untargeted metabolomics for use in chemotaxonomy. We used three thallose liverwort species Riccia glauca, R. sorocarpa, and R. warnstorfii (order Marchantiales, Ricciaceae) with Lunularia cruciata (order Marchantiales, Lunulariacea) as an outgroup. Liquid chromatography high-resolution mass-spectrometry (UPLC/ESI-QTOF-MS) with data-dependent acquisition (DDA-MS) were integrated with DNA marker-based sequencing of the trnL-trnF region and high-resolution bioimaging. Our untargeted chemotaxonomy methodology enables us to distinguish taxa based on chemophenetic markers at different levels of complexity: (1) molecules, (2) compound classes, (3) compound superclasses, and (4) molecular descriptors. For the investigated Riccia species, we identified 71 chemophenetic markers at the molecular level, a characteristic composition in 21 compound classes, and 21 molecular descriptors largely indicating electron state, presence of chemical motifs, and hydrogen bonds. Our untargeted approach revealed many chemophenetic markers at different complexity levels that can provide more mechanistic insight into phylogenetic delimitation of species within a clade than genetic-based methods coupled with traditional morphology-based information. However, analytical and bioinformatics analysis methods still need to be better integrated to link the chemophenetic information at multiple scales.

Publications

Parks, N. A.; Fischer, T. G.; Blankenburg, C.; Scalfani, V. F.; McEwen, L. R.; Herres-Pawlis, S.; Neumann, S.; The current landscape of author guidelines in chemistry through the lens of research data sharing Pure and Applied Chemistry aop 1-12 (2023) DOI: 10.1515/pac-2022-1001
  • Abstract
  • Internet
  • BibText
  • RIS

As the primary method of communicating research results, journals garner an enormous impact on community behavior. Publishing the underlying research data alongside journal articles is widely considered good scientific practice. Ideally, journals and their publishers place these recommendations or requirements in their author guidelines and data policies. Several efforts are working to improve the infrastructure, processes, and uptake of research data sharing, including the NFDI4Chem consortium, working groups within the RDA, and IUPAC, including the WorldFAIR Chemistry project. In this article, we present the results of a large-scale analysis of author guidelines from several publishers and journals active in chemistry research, showing how well the publishing landscape supports different criteria and where there is room for improvement. While the requirement for deposition of X-ray diffraction data is commonplace, guidelines rarely mention machine-readable chemical structures and metadata/minimum information standards. Further evaluation criteria included recommendations on persistent identifiers, data availability statements, data deposition into repositories as well as of open analytical data formats. Our survey shows that publishers and journals are starting to include aspects of research data in their guidelines. We as authors should accept and embrace the guidelines with increasing requirements for data availability, data interoperability, and re-usability to improve chemistry research.

Publications

Blatt-Janmaat, K.; Neumann, S.; Schmidt, F.; Ziegler, J.; Qu, Y.; Peters, K.; Impact of in vitro phytohormone treatments on the metabolome of the leafy liverwort Radula complanata (L.) Dumort Metabolomics 19 17 (2023) DOI: 10.1007/s11306-023-01979-y
  • Abstract
  • Internet
  • BibText
  • RIS

Introduction Liverworts are a group of non-vascular plants that possess unique metabolism not found in other plants. Many liverwort metabolites have interesting structural and biochemical characteristics, however the fluctuations of these metabolites in response to stressors is largely unknown. Objectives To investigate the metabolic stress-response of the leafy liverwort Radula complanata. Methods Five phytohormones were applied exogenously to in vitro cultured R. complanata and an untargeted metabolomic analysis was conducted. Compound classification and identification was performed with CANOPUS and SIRIUS while statistical analyses including PCA, ANOVA, and variable selection using BORUTA were conducted to identify metabolic shifts.Results It was found that R. complanata was predominantly composed of carboxylic acids and derivatives, followed by benzene and substituted derivatives, fatty acyls, organooxygen compounds, prenol lipids, and flavonoids. The PCA revealed that samples grouped based on the type of hormone applied, and the variable selection using BORUTA (Random Forest) revealed 71 identified and/or classified features that fluctuated with phytohormone application. The stress-response treatments largely reduced the production of the selected primary metabolites while the growth treatments resulted in increased production of these compounds. 4-(3-Methyl-2-butenyl)-5-phenethylbenzene-1,3-diol was identified as a biomarker for the growth treatments while GDP-hexose was identified as a biomarker for the stress-response treatments. Conclusion Exogenous phytohormone application caused clear metabolic shifts in Radula complanata that deviate from the responses of vascular plants. Further identification of the selected metabolite features can reveal metabolic biomarkers unique to liverworts and provide more insight into liverwort stress responses.

Publications

Blatt-Janmaat, K. L.; Neumann, S.; Ziegler, J.; Peters, K.; Host tree and geography induce metabolic shifts in the epiphytic liverwort Radula complanata Plants 12 571 (2023) DOI: 10.3390/plants12030571
  • Abstract
  • Internet
  • BibText
  • RIS

Bryophytes are prolific producers of unique, specialized metabolites that are not found in other plants. As many of these unique natural products are potentially interesting, for example, pharmacological use, variations in the production regarding ecological or environmental conditions have not often been investigated. Here, we investigate metabolic shifts in the epiphytic Radula complanata L. (Dumort) with regard to different environmental conditions and the type of phorophyte (host tree). Plant material was harvested from three different locations in Sweden, Germany, and Canada and subjected to untargeted liquid chromatography high-resolution mass-spectrometry (UPLC/ESI-QTOF-MS) and data-dependent acquisition (DDA-MS). Using multivariate statistics, variable selection methods, in silico compound identification, and compound classification, a large amount of variation (39%) in the metabolite profiles was attributed to the type of host tree and 25% to differences in environmental conditions. We identified 55 compounds to vary significantly depending on the host tree (36 on the family level) and 23 compounds to characterize R. complanata in different environments. Taken together, we found metabolic shifts mainly in primary metabolites that were associated with the drought response to different humidity levels. The metabolic shifts were highly specific to the host tree, including mostly specialized metabolites suggesting high levels of ecological interaction. As R. complanata is a widely distributed generalist species, we found it to flexibly adapt its metabolome according to different conditions. We found metabolic composition to also mirror the constitution of the habitat, which makes it interesting for conservation measures.

Publications

Dumschott, K.; Dörpholz, H.; Laporte, M.-A.; Brilhaus, D.; Schrader, A.; Usadel, B.; Neumann, S.; Arnaud, E.; Kranz, A.; Ontologies for increasing the FAIRness of plant research data Front. Plant Sci. 14 1279694 (2023) DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2023.1279694
  • Abstract
  • Internet
  • BibText
  • RIS

The importance of improving the FAIRness (findability, accessibility, interoperability, reusability) of research data is undeniable, especially in the face of large, complex datasets currently being produced by omics technologies. Facilitating the integration of a dataset with other types of data increases the likelihood of reuse, and the potential of answering novel research questions. Ontologies are a useful tool for semantically tagging datasets as adding relevant metadata increases the understanding of how data was produced and increases its interoperability. Ontologies provide concepts for a particular domain as well as the relationships between concepts. By tagging data with ontology terms, data becomes both human- and machine- interpretable, allowing for increased reuse and interoperability. However, the task of identifying ontologies relevant to a particular research domain or technology is challenging, especially within the diverse realm of fundamental plant research. In this review, we outline the ontologies most relevant to the fundamental plant sciences and how they can be used to annotate data related to plant-specific experiments within metadata frameworks, such as Investigation-Study-Assay (ISA). We also outline repositories and platforms most useful for identifying applicable ontologies or finding ontology terms.

Publications

Deutsch, E. W.; Vizcaíno, J. A.; Jones, A. R.; Binz, P.-A.; Lam, H.; Klein, J.; Bittremieux, W.; Perez-Riverol, Y.; Tabb, D. L.; Walzer, M.; Ricard-Blum, S.; Hermjakob, H.; Neumann, S.; Mak, T. D.; Kawano, S.; Mendoza, L.; Van Den Bossche, T.; Gabriels, R.; Bandeira, N.; Carver, J.; Pullman, B.; Sun, Z.; Hoffmann, N.; Shofstahl, J.; Zhu, Y.; Licata, L.; Quaglia, F.; Tosatto, S. C. E.; Orchard, S. E.; Proteomics standards initiative at twenty years: Current activities and future work J. Proteome Res. 22 287-301 (2023) DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.2c00637
  • Abstract
  • Internet
  • BibText
  • RIS

The Human Proteome Organization (HUPO) Proteomics Standards Initiative (PSI) has been successfully developing guidelines, data formats, and controlled vocabularies (CVs) for the proteomics community and other fields supported by mass spectrometry since its inception 20 years ago. Here we describe the general operation of the PSI, including its leadership, working groups, yearly workshops, and the document process by which proposals are thoroughly and publicly reviewed in order to be ratified as PSI standards. We briefly describe the current state of the many existing PSI standards, some of which remain the same as when originally developed, some of which have undergone subsequent revisions, and some of which have become obsolete. Then the set of proposals currently being developed are described, with an open call to the community for participation in the forging of the next generation of standards. Finally, we describe some synergies and collaborations with other organizations and look to the future in how the PSI will continue to promote the open sharing of data and thus accelerate the progress of the field of proteomics.

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • ....

Print

  • IPB Halle
  • News
  • Lectures
  • Publications
  • Public Tendering
  • IPB Remote & Mail
  • Imprint
  • Data Protection
  • Accessibility
  • Die Leibniz-Gemeinschaft
  • Wege zu einer pflanzenbasierten Wirtschaft
  • Martin-Luther Universität Halle
  • Erfolgsfaktor Familie
  • TOTAL E-QUALITY
  • Research
    • Research Mission and Profile

    • Molecular Signal Processing

    • Bioorganic Chemistry

    • Biochemistry of Plant Interactions

    • Cell and Metabolic Biology

    • Independent Junior Research Groups

    • Program Center MetaCom

    • Publications

    • Good Scientific Practice

    • Research Funding

    • Networks and Collaborative Projects

    • Symposia and Colloquia

    • Alumni Research Groups

  • Infrastructure
    • Databases and Tools

    • Technical Resources

    • Imaging Unit

    • Greenhouses and Phytochambers

    • Library Services

  • Institute
    • Organizational Chart

    • Management and Boards

    • Administration and Infrastructure

    • Energy Management

    • Diversity, Family and Equality

    • Public Tendering

    • Patents and Licensing

    • The IPB Welcoming Culture

    • Guest Houses

    • IPB Site Map

    • Brief IPB History

    • Alumni Network

  • Career
    • Data protection information for applicants

    • PhD Program

    • Postdocs

    • Berufsausbildung

  • Public Relations
    • News

    • News Ticker Science

    • Press Releases

    • IPB Pressespiegel

    • Lange Nacht, die Wissen schafft

    • IPB Newsletter

    • Printed / Information Material

    • Scientific Reports / Research Highlights

    • Events

    • Cover Art

    • Citizen Science: Pilzberatung

  • IPB Remote & Mail