
Rafael Brüschweiler
· Professor and Ohio Research ScholarOhio State University · Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Active 1987–2024
About
Rafael Brüschweiler received his Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry from ETH Zurich, Switzerland, and completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the Department of Molecular Biology at the Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla. He has held positions at Florida State University, Tallahassee, including full professor and Associate Director for Biophysics at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory. In 2013, he joined Ohio State University with joint appointments at the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and the Department of Biological Chemistry and Pharmacology. He is a full Professor, an Ohio Research Scholar (endowed), and serves as the NMR Executive Director for the Ohio State Campus Chemical Instrument Center and the NSF-funded National Gateway Ultrahigh Field NMR Center, which features the first 1.2 GHz NMR Spectrometer in the U.S. His research is primarily funded by the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health. Professor Brüschweiler's research is highly cross-disciplinary, focusing on biophysical chemistry and analytical chemistry. His work emphasizes understanding the role of dynamics and interactions of proteins for their function and analyzing complex biological mixtures in metabolomics. His main research tools include high-field nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and high-performance computation, with efforts directed toward developing new techniques to enhance resolution, sensitivity, and speed. His biological research includes studying proteins such as GTPase K-Ras and its mutants, p53/MDM2, sodium-calcium exchanger NCX, Cu2+-ATPase, ubiquitin, and enzymes like arginine kinase and glucokinase. He also conducts metabolic studies on microbes, drosophila, E. coli, yeast, and cancer cell lines to identify biomarkers, biochemical pathways, and novel metabolites related to health and disease. Additionally, his work combines biophysical chemistry with nano-science, including nanoparticle-assisted NMR spin relaxation, and involves developing machine-learning tools for automated NMR data analysis and interpretation. He is actively accepting new graduate students interested in protein dynamics, computational biomolecular studies, metabolomics, and NMR method development.
Research topics
- Computer Science
- Biological system
- Data Mining
- Physics
- Biochemistry
- Nuclear magnetic resonance
- Chemistry
- Artificial Intelligence
- Biology
- Algorithm
- Statistics
- Materials science
- Chromatography
- Mathematics
- Nanotechnology
- Stereochemistry
Selected publications
Predicting protein flexibility with <scp>AlphaFold</scp>
Proteins Structure Function and Bioinformatics · 2023 · 68 citations
Senior authorCorresponding- Computer Science
- Biological system
- Chemistry
order parameter profiles. The method is demonstrated for a set nine proteins of different sizes and variable amounts of dynamics and disorder.
Nature Communications · 2021 · 169 citations
Senior authorCorresponding- Computer Science
- Artificial Intelligence
- Computer Science
The analysis of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra for the comprehensive and unambiguous identification and characterization of peaks is a difficult, but critically important step in all NMR analyses of complex biological molecular systems. Here, we introduce DEEP Picker, a deep neural network (DNN)-based approach for peak picking and spectral deconvolution which semi-automates the analysis of two-dimensional NMR spectra. DEEP Picker includes 8 hidden convolutional layers and was trained on a large number of synthetic spectra of known composition with variable degrees of crowdedness. We show that our method is able to correctly identify overlapping peaks, including ones that are challenging for expert spectroscopists and existing computational methods alike. We demonstrate the utility of DEEP Picker on NMR spectra of folded and intrinsically disordered proteins as well as a complex metabolomics mixture, and show how it provides access to valuable NMR information. DEEP Picker should facilitate the semi-automation and standardization of protocols for better consistency and sharing of results within the scientific community.
2D NMR-Based Metabolomics with HSQC/TOCSY NOAH Supersequences
Analytical Chemistry · 2021 · 42 citations
Senior authorCorresponding- Chemistry
- Biological system
- Nuclear magnetic resonance
H detection) for the compact acquisition of multiple 2D NMR data sets with significant gains in sensitivity, resolution, and/or time. The new pulse sequences, which are demonstrated for both metabolite model mixtures and mouse urine, offer an attractive approach for the efficient measurement of multiple 2D NMR spectra (HSQCsi and/or HSQCsi-TOCSY and TOCSY) of metabolomics samples in a single experiment for the accurate and comprehensive identification and quantitation of metabolites. These new methods bring to bear the advantages of 2D NMR to metabolomics studies with larger cohorts of samples.
Frequent coauthors
- 156 shared
Dawei Li
The Ohio State University
- 149 shared
Martin Blackledge
CEA Grenoble
- 144 shared
Guillaume Bouvignies
École Normale Supérieure - PSL
- 123 shared
Lei Brüschweiler-Li
The Ohio State University
- 80 shared
Fengli Zhang
University of Jinan
- 70 shared
Phineus R. L. Markwick
University of California, San Diego
- 49 shared
Stephan Grzesiek
University of Basel
- 49 shared
Kerem Bingol
Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory
Awards & honors
- John S. Swenton Award for Outstanding Teaching
- William Lloyd Evans Lecture
- Devon W. Meek Lecture
- Edward Mack, Jr. Lecture
- David J. Hart Symposium
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