Milos V Novotny

Milos V Novotny

Indiana University Bloomington

H-index: 101

North America-United States

About Milos V Novotny

Milos V Novotny, With an exceptional h-index of 101 and a recent h-index of 35 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Indiana University Bloomington, specializes in the field of biology, chemistry, cancer.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

N-glycan profiling of tissue samples to aid breast cancer subtyping

Effects of short-term experimental manipulation of captive social environment on uropygial gland microbiome and preen oil volatile composition

Songbird preen oil odour reflects haemosporidian parasite load

A graphical representation of glycan heterogeneity

Assessing the effect of compounds from plantar foot sweat, nesting material, and urine on social behavior in male mice, Mus musculus

Fractionation and characterization of sialyl linkage isomers of serum N‐glycans by CE–MS

Compounds from plantar foot sweat, nesting material, and urine show strain patterns associated with agonistic and affiliative behaviors in group housed male mice, Mus musculus

Composition and compound proportions affect the response to complex chemical signals in a spiny lizard

Milos V Novotny Information

University

Indiana University Bloomington

Position

Houston Stockholm LKB Produkter AB Brno Czechoslovakian Academy of Sciences

Citations(all)

34427

Citations(since 2020)

5178

Cited By

31205

hIndex(all)

101

hIndex(since 2020)

35

i10Index(all)

424

i10Index(since 2020)

160

Email

University Profile Page

Indiana University Bloomington

Milos V Novotny Skills & Research Interests

biology

chemistry

cancer

Top articles of Milos V Novotny

N-glycan profiling of tissue samples to aid breast cancer subtyping

Authors

Iva Benesova,Rudolf Nenutil,Adam Urminsky,Erika Lattova,Lukas Uhrik,Peter Grell,Filip Zavadil Kokas,Jana Halamkova,Zbynek Zdrahal,Borivoj Vojtesek,Milos V Novotny,Lenka Hernychova

Journal

Scientific Reports

Published Date

2024/1/3

Breast cancer is a highly heterogeneous disease. Its intrinsic subtype classification for diagnosis and choice of therapy traditionally relies on the presence of characteristic receptors. Unfortunately, this classification is often not sufficient for precise prediction of disease prognosis and treatment efficacy. The N-glycan profiles of 145 tumors and 10 healthy breast tissues were determined using Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometry. The tumor samples were classified into Mucinous, Lobular, No-Special-Type, Human Epidermal Growth Factor 2 + , and Triple-Negative Breast Cancer subtypes. Statistical analysis was conducted using the reproducibility-optimized test statistic software package in R, and the Wilcoxon rank sum test with continuity correction. In total, 92 N-glycans were detected and quantified, with 59 consistently observed in over half of the samples. Significant …

Effects of short-term experimental manipulation of captive social environment on uropygial gland microbiome and preen oil volatile composition

Authors

Danielle J Whittaker,Amruth Atyam,Nathan A Burroughs,Jonathan M Greenberg,Travis J Hagey,Milos V Novotny,Helena A Soini,Kevin R Theis,Tricia A Van Laar,Joel WG Slade

Journal

Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution

Published Date

2023/1/6

Introduction Avian preen oil, secreted by the uropygial gland, is an important source of volatile compounds that convey information about the sender’s identity and quality, making preen oil useful for the recognition and assessment of potential mates and rivals. Although intrinsic factors such as hormone levels, genetic background, and diet can affect preen oil volatile compound composition, many of these compounds are not the products of the animal’s own metabolic processes, but rather those of odor-producing symbiotic microbes. Social behavior affects the composition of uropygial microbial communities, as physical contact results in microbe sharing. We experimentally manipulated social interactions in captive dark-eyed juncos (Junco hyemalis) to assess the relative influence of social interactions, subspecies, and sex on uropygial gland microbial composition and the resulting preen oil odor profiles. Methods We captured 24 birds at Mountain Lake Biological Station in Virginia, USA, including birds from two seasonally sympatric subspecies – one resident, one migratory. We housed them in an outdoor aviary in three phases of social configurations: first in same-sex, same-subspecies flocks, then in male-female pairs, and finally in the original flocks. Using samples taken every four days of the experiment, we characterized their uropygial gland microbiome through 16S rRNA gene sequencing and their preen oil volatile compounds via GC-MS. Results We predicted that if social environment was the primary driver of uropygial gland microbiome composition, and if microbiome composition in turn affected preen oil volatile profiles, then birds …

Songbird preen oil odour reflects haemosporidian parasite load

Authors

KM Talbott,DJ Becker,HA Soini,BJ Higgins,MV Novotny,ED Ketterson

Journal

Animal behaviour

Published Date

2022/6/1

Investigating the impact of parasitism on host phenotype is key to understanding parasite transmission ecology, host behavioural ecology and host–parasite coevolution. Previous studies have provided evidence that avian odour is one such phenotypic trait, as mosquitoes that vector the haemosporidian blood parasite Plasmodium tend to prefer birds that are already infected. Preen oil is a major source of avian odour, yet studies to date have not identified differences in preen oil odour based on the presence or absence of haemosporidian infection. Because preen oil can vary with physiological dynamics, we predicted that the composition of preen oil odours might vary according to parasite load, rather than solely by the presence or absence of infection. We used gas chromatography–mass spectrometry to characterize the composition of volatile compounds in preen oil taken from female dark-eyed juncos, Junco …

A graphical representation of glycan heterogeneity

Authors

Xuyao Zeng,Milos V Novotny,David E Clemmer,Jonathan C Trinidad

Journal

Glycobiology

Published Date

2022/3/1

A substantial shortcoming of large-scale datasets is often the inability to easily represent and visualize key features. This problem becomes acute when considering the increasing technical ability to profile large numbers of glycopeptides and glycans in recent studies. Here, we describe a simple, concise graphical representation intended to capture the microheterogeneity associated with glycan modification at specific sites. We illustrate this method by showing visual representations of the glycans and glycopeptides from a variety of species. The graphical representation presented allows one to easily discern the compositions of all glycans, similarities and differences of modifications found in different samples and, in the case of N-linked glycans, the initial steps in the biosynthetic pathway.

Assessing the effect of compounds from plantar foot sweat, nesting material, and urine on social behavior in male mice, Mus musculus

Authors

Amanda J Barabas,Helena A Soini,Milos V Novotny,Jeffrey R Lucas,Marisa A Erasmus,Heng-Wei Cheng,Rupert Palme,Brianna N Gaskill

Journal

PloS one

Published Date

2022/11/2

Home cage aggression causes poor welfare in male laboratory mice and reduces data quality. One of the few proven strategies to reduce aggression involves preserving used nesting material at cage change. Volatile organic compounds from the nesting material and several body fluids not only correlate with less home cage aggression, but with more affiliative allo-grooming behavior. To date, these compounds have not been tested for a direct influence on male mouse social behavior. This study aimed to determine if 4 previously identified volatile compounds impact home cage interactions. A factorial design was used with cages equally split between C57BL/6N and SJL male mice (N = 40). Treatments were randomly assigned across cages and administered by spraying one compound solution on each cage’s nesting material. Treatments were refreshed after day 3 and during cage change on day 7. Home cage social behavior was observed throughout the study week and immediately after cage change. Several hours after cage change, feces were collected from individual mice to measure corticosterone metabolites as an index of social stress. Wound severity was also assessed after euthanasia. Measures were analyzed with mixed models. Compound treatments did not impact most study measures. For behavior, SJL mice performed more aggression and submission, and C57BL/6N mice performed more allo-grooming. Wound severity was highest in the posterior region of both strains, and the middle back region of C57BL/6N mice. Posterior wounding also increased with more observed aggression. Corticosterone metabolites were higher …

Fractionation and characterization of sialyl linkage isomers of serum N‐glycans by CE–MS

Authors

Xiaomei Zhou,Woran Song,Milos V Novotny,Stephen C Jacobson

Journal

Journal of separation science

Published Date

2022/9

Structural isomers of sialylated N‐glycans contribute to the diversity of the N‐glycome and to a range of biological functions. Sialyl linkage isomers can be readily distinguished by mass spectrometry with mass differences between α2,3‐ and α2,6‐linkages generated by a two‐step sialic acid linkage‐specific alkylamidation. To improve the identification of N‐glycans from complex mixtures, we added a delactonization step after the first alkylamidation step, which regenerates negatively charged carboxylic acids on α2,3‐sialic acids. N‐glycan isomers with α2,3‐sialic acids are then fractionated by ion‐exchange chromatography prior to the second alkylamidation step. With this modified alkylamidation method, sialylated N‐glycans were enriched and stabilized for structural characterization by capillary electrophoresis–mass spectrometry and tandem mass spectrometry. We identified 52 sialylated N‐glycan structures …

Compounds from plantar foot sweat, nesting material, and urine show strain patterns associated with agonistic and affiliative behaviors in group housed male mice, Mus musculus

Authors

Amanda J Barabas,Helena A Soini,Milos V Novotny,David R Williams,Jacob A Desmond,Jeffrey R Lucas,Marisa A Erasmus,Heng-Wei Cheng,Brianna N Gaskill

Journal

PloS one

Published Date

2021/5/14

Excessive home cage aggression often results in severe injury and subsequent premature euthanasia of male laboratory mice. Aggression can be reduced by transferring used nesting material during cage cleaning, which is thought to contain aggression appeasing odors from the plantar sweat glands. However, neither the composition of plantar sweat nor the deposits on used nesting material have been evaluated. The aims of this study were to (1) identify and quantify volatile compounds deposited in the nest site and (2) determine if nest and sweat compounds correlate with social behavior. Home cage aggression and affiliative behavior were evaluated in 3 strains: SJL, C57BL/6N, and A/J. Individual social rank was assessed via the tube test, because ranking may influence compound levels. Sweat and urine from the dominant and subordinate mouse in each cage, plus cage level nest samples were analyzed for volatile compound content using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Behavior data and odors from the nest, sweat, and urine were statistically analyzed with separate principal component analyses (PCA). Significant components, from each sample analysis, and strain were run in mixed models to test if odors were associated with behavior. Aggressive and affiliative behaviors were primarily impacted by strain. However, compound PCs were also impacted by strain, showing that strain accounts for any relationship between odors and behavior. C57BL/6N cages displayed the most allo-grooming behavior and had high scores on sweat PC1. SJL cages displayed the most aggression, with high scores on urine PC2 and low scores …

Composition and compound proportions affect the response to complex chemical signals in a spiny lizard

Authors

Cristina Romero-Diaz,Stephanie M Campos,Morgan A Herrmann,Helena A Soini,Milos V Novotny,Diana K Hews,Emília P Martins

Journal

Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology

Published Date

2021/2

Abstract Most animal signals across sensory modalities are multicomponent traits that can be broken down into discrete elements. If different elements are perceived as unique, independent units (elemental perception), instead of as integrated percepts (configural perception), single changes in the presence/absence or the abundance of specific elements of a multicomponent signal may be enough to impact communication. Here, we found that male Yarrow’s spiny lizards (Sceloporus jarrovii) can discriminate single compounds of a multicomponent chemical signal (femoral gland secretions), different concentrations of a signaling compound, and a single compound from a mixture of compounds. In addition, one chemical compound elicited a response similar to that evoked by the complete natural scent. We conclude that perception of chemical signals in S. jarrovii lizards is elemental but also …

N-Glycome changes reflecting resistance to platinum-based chemotherapy in ovarian cancer

Authors

Martina Zahradnikova,Ivana Ihnatova,Erika Lattova,Lukas Uhrik,Eliska Stuchlikova,Rudolf Nenutil,Dalibor Valik,Monika Nalezinska,Josef Chovanec,Zbynek Zdrahal,Borivoj Vojtesek,Lenka Hernychova,Milos V Novotny

Journal

Journal of proteomics

Published Date

2021/1/6

A number of studies have reported aberrant glycosylation in connection with malignancy. Our investigation further expands on this topic through the examination of N-glycans, which could be associated with the resistance of advanced stage, high-grade non-mucinous ovarian cancer to platinum/taxane based chemotherapy. We used tissue samples of 83 ovarian cancer patients, randomly divided into two independent cohorts (basic and validation). Both groups involved either cases with/without postoperative tumor residue or the cases determined either resistant or sensitive to this chemotherapy. In the validation cohort, preoperative serum samples were also available. N-glycans released from tumors and sera were permethylated and analyzed by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS). The MS analysis yielded a consecutive detection of 68 (tissue) and 63 (serum) N-glycan …

Charge detection mass spectrometry measurements of exosomes and other extracellular particles enriched from bovine milk

Authors

Brooke A Brown,Xuyao Zeng,Aaron R Todd,Lauren F Barnes,Jonathan MA Winstone,Jonathan C Trinidad,Milos V Novotny,Martin F Jarrold,David E Clemmer

Journal

Analytical chemistry

Published Date

2020/1/28

The masses of particles in a bovine milk extracellular vesicle (EV) preparation enriched for exosomes were directly determined for the first time by charge detection mass spectrometry (CDMS). In CDMS, both the mass-to-charge ratio (m/z) and z are determined simultaneously for individual particles, enabling mass determinations for particles that are far beyond the mass limit (∼1.0 MDa) of conventional mass spectrometry (MS). Particle masses and charges span a wide range from m ∼ 2 to ∼90 MDa and z ∼ 50 to ∼1300 e (elementary charges) and are highly dependent upon the conditions used to extract and isolate the EVs. EV particles span a continuum of masses, reflecting the highly heterogeneous nature of these samples. However, evidence for unique populations of particles is obtained from correlation of the charges and masses. An analysis that uses a two-dimensional Gaussian model, provides …

Glycoproteomic analysis of human urinary exosomes

Authors

Christopher J Brown,Stefan Gaunitz,Ziyu Wang,Lena Strindelius,Stephen C Jacobson,David E Clemmer,Jonathan C Trinidad,Milos V Novotny

Journal

Analytical chemistry

Published Date

2020/9/28

Exosomes represent a class of secreted biological vesicles, which have recently gained attention due to their function as intertissue and interorganism transporters of genetic materials, small molecules, lipids, and proteins. Although the protein constituents of these exosomes are often glycosylated, a large-scale characterization of the glycoproteome has not yet been completed. This study identified 3144 unique glycosylation events belonging to 378 glycoproteins and 604 unique protein sites of glycosylation. With these data, we investigated the level of glycan microheterogeneity within the urinary exosomes, finding on average 5.9 glycans per site. The glycan family abundance on individual proteins showed subtle differences, providing an additional level of molecular characterization compared to the unmodified proteome. Finally, we show protein site-specific changes in regard to the common urinary glycoprotein …

Exosome-mediated crosstalk between keratinocytes and macrophages in cutaneous wound healing

Authors

Xiaoju Zhou,Brooke A Brown,Amanda P Siegel,Mohamed S El Masry,Xuyao Zeng,Woran Song,Amitava Das,Puneet Khandelwal,Andrew Clark,Kanhaiya Singh,Poornachander R Guda,Mahadeo Gorain,Lava Timsina,Yi Xuan,Stephen C Jacobson,Milos V Novotny,Sashwati Roy,Mangilal Agarwal,Robert J Lee,Chandan K Sen,David E Clemmer,Subhadip Ghatak

Journal

ACS nano

Published Date

2020/9/15

Bidirectional cell–cell communication involving exosome-borne cargo such as miRNA has emerged as a critical mechanism for wound healing. Unlike other shedding vesicles, exosomes selectively package miRNA by SUMOylation of heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteinA2B1 (hnRNPA2B1). In this work, we elucidate the significance of exosome in keratinocyte–macrophage crosstalk following injury. Keratinocyte-derived exosomes were genetically labeled with GFP-reporter (Exoκ-GFP) using tissue nanotransfection (TNT), and they were isolated from dorsal murine skin and wound-edge tissue by affinity selection using magnetic beads. Surface N-glycans of Exoκ-GFP were also characterized. Unlike skin exosome, wound-edge Exoκ-GFP demonstrated characteristic N-glycan ions with abundance of low-base-pair RNA and was selectively engulfed by wound macrophages (ωmϕ) in granulation tissue. In vitro …

Principles and Applications of Photodiode Array Fluorescence Detection in Microcolumn LC

Authors

Jennifer C Gluckman,Milos V Novotny

Published Date

2020/8/26

Capillary column liquid chromatography can provide the resolution needed to separate the complex mixtures of large, polar, and thermally labile compounds which are frequently found in technologically and biologically important samples. Since slurry-packed capillary columns generally exhibit chromatographic peak widths of 30 s or more, little band broadening is introduced by the detector. In the separation of complex mixtures, it is important to maintain the full resolving power of the slurry-packed capillary column, and therefore the detector itself can add little extra column broadening to the chromatographic system. The miniaturized, rapid-scan rapid-scanning intensified photodiode array system described has, however, been able to maintain excellent chromatographic efficiency without sacrificing the detection sensitivity. In the application of a miniaturized photodiode array fluorescence detector, samples which …

Volatile fatty acid and aldehyde abundances evolve with behavior and habitat temperature in Sceloporus lizards

Authors

Emília P Martins Stephanie M Campos,Jake A Pruett,Helena A Soini,J Jaime Zúñiga-Vega,Jay K Goldberg,Cuauhcihuatl Vital-García,Diana K Hews,Milos V Novotny

Journal

Behavioral Ecology

Published Date

2020

Animal signals evolve by striking a balance between the need to convey information through particular habitats and the limitations of what types of signals can most easily be produced and perceived. Here, we present new results from field measures of undisturbed behavior and biochemical analyses of scent marks from 12 species of Sceloporus lizards to explore whether evolutionary changes in chemical composition are better predicted by measures of species behavior, particularly those associated with visual displays, chemoreception, and locomotion, or by measures of habitat climate (precipitation and temperature). We found that more active lizard species used fewer compounds in their volatile scent marks, perhaps conveying less specific information about individual and species identity. Scent marks from more active lizard species also had higher proportions of saturated fatty acids, and the evolution of …

Structural identification, synthesis and biological activity of two volatile cyclic dipeptides in a terrestrial vertebrate

Authors

Cristina Romero-Diaz,Stephanie M Campos,Morgan A Herrmann,Kristen N Lewis,David R Williams,Helena A Soini,Milos V Novotny,Diana K Hews,Emília P Martins

Journal

Scientific reports

Published Date

2020/3/9

Single substances within complex vertebrate chemical signals could be physiologically or behaviourally active. However, the vast diversity in chemical structure, physical properties and molecular size of semiochemicals makes identifying pheromonally active compounds no easy task. Here, we identified two volatile cyclic dipeptides, cyclo(L-Leu-L-Pro) and cyclo(L-Pro-L-Pro), from the complex mixture of a chemical signal in terrestrial vertebrates (lizard genus Sceloporus), synthesised one of them and investigated their biological activity in male intra-specific communication. In a series of behavioural trials, lizards performed more chemosensory behaviour (tongue flicks, lip smacks and substrate lickings) when presented with the synthesised cyclo(L-Pro-L-Pro) chemical blend, compared to the controls, the cyclo(L-Leu-L-Pro) blend, or a combined blend with both cyclic dipeptides. The results suggest a potential …

Odorants differentiate Australian Rattus with increased complexity in sympatry

Authors

Kevin C Rowe,Helena A Soini,Karen MC Rowe,Mark Adams,V Novotny Milos

Journal

Records of the Australian Museum

Published Date

2020/11/25

Odorant cues play a critical role in premating isolation among many species. In mammals, they have been most well-studied in rodents, but only in a handful of species. The genus Rattus is one of the most species-rich genera of mammals, with a natural distribution from Asia to Australia and a nearly global distribution for a few species that spread through human commensalism. More than one-third of Rattus species are the result of a recent and rapid radiation on continental Australia (Sahul) centred on the island of New Guinea. The two most widespread species resulting from this radiation, Rattus fuscipes and Rattus leucopus, occur sympatrically in the Wet Tropics region of Queensland, Australia. Despite their recent divergence, morphological similarity, and ability to produce fertile offspring in captivity, hybrids of the two species have not been reported in the wild, suggesting that premating isolation mechanisms maintain the species' boundaries. Odorant cues are a plausible mechanism that these species could use to identify mates of the same species, but the chemical composition of their odours has not been characterized. With allozyme data from 166 specimens of the two species we confirmed the absence of gene flow between the species in sympatry. From chemical analysis of preputial glands of 32 males from sympatric and al lopatric populations of the two species we identified 120 volatile organic compounds of which 80 were reliably quantitated for statistical analysis. Some of these chemicals have been indicated as signalling compounds in other species of mammals, including seven thiazolines. Among them two (2-sec-butylthiazoline …

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Milos V Novotny FAQs

What is Milos V Novotny's h-index at Indiana University Bloomington?

The h-index of Milos V Novotny has been 35 since 2020 and 101 in total.

What are Milos V Novotny's top articles?

The articles with the titles of

N-glycan profiling of tissue samples to aid breast cancer subtyping

Effects of short-term experimental manipulation of captive social environment on uropygial gland microbiome and preen oil volatile composition

Songbird preen oil odour reflects haemosporidian parasite load

A graphical representation of glycan heterogeneity

Assessing the effect of compounds from plantar foot sweat, nesting material, and urine on social behavior in male mice, Mus musculus

Fractionation and characterization of sialyl linkage isomers of serum N‐glycans by CE–MS

Compounds from plantar foot sweat, nesting material, and urine show strain patterns associated with agonistic and affiliative behaviors in group housed male mice, Mus musculus

Composition and compound proportions affect the response to complex chemical signals in a spiny lizard

...

are the top articles of Milos V Novotny at Indiana University Bloomington.

What are Milos V Novotny's research interests?

The research interests of Milos V Novotny are: biology, chemistry, cancer

What is Milos V Novotny's total number of citations?

Milos V Novotny has 34,427 citations in total.

What are the co-authors of Milos V Novotny?

The co-authors of Milos V Novotny are Catherine Costello, David Clemmer, Yehia Mechref, William S. York, Ellen D. Ketterson, Haixu Tang.

    Co-Authors

    H-index: 95
    Catherine Costello

    Catherine Costello

    Boston University

    H-index: 81
    David Clemmer

    David Clemmer

    Indiana University Bloomington

    H-index: 73
    Yehia Mechref

    Yehia Mechref

    Texas Tech University

    H-index: 72
    William S. York

    William S. York

    University of Georgia

    H-index: 71
    Ellen D. Ketterson

    Ellen D. Ketterson

    Indiana University Bloomington

    H-index: 59
    Haixu Tang

    Haixu Tang

    Indiana University Bloomington

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