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Discover how PEPperPRINT Peptide Microarray products have been used in different fields of research.

Gdf-15 as a diagnostic marker to predict the clinical outcome of a treatment with immune checkpoint blockers

WISCHHUSEN, Jörg; Haake, Markus; DUMMER, Reinhard; MEHLING, Matthias
Aug 2018
The present invention relates to methods for predicting the probability of a treatment response of a human cancer patient to an immune checkpoint blocker treatment e.g. with anti PD-1, and to methods for predicting the probability of survival of a human cancer patient following an immune checkpoint blocker treatment, and to apparatuses and kits which can be used in these methods.

Detecting agents and epitopes mapping for detecting glycogen phosphorylase isoenzyme bb

Kapetanovic, Ernest; Yastas, Samir
Jul 2018
Described are an oligopeptide sequence of any of RDHLVGRWIR (E1), IRRFKSSKFGCR (E2), RHLEIIYAINQR (E3). LIIKLVT (E4), WGDRLKVIF (E5), any combination of E1 to E3; or combination of E4 and E5. Further described is a detecting agent for specific detecting glycogen phosphorylase iso-enzyme BB (GPBB), wherein the detecting agent is characterized by specific recognizing and binding to (1) an epitope of the GPBB comprising an oligo-peptide sequence of any of RDHLVGRWIR (E1), IRRFKSSKFGCR (E2), RHLEIIYAINQR (E3) or any combination of E1 to E3; or (2)an epitope of GPBB comprising an oiigo-peptide sequence of LIIKLVT (E4), and/or WGDRLKVIF (E5), or combination of E4 and E5.

Antibodies to human alpha-synuclein

MARTINEZ, Terina N.; DAVE, Kuldip D.; DAS, Sonal
Jun 2018

Antigenic peptides and uses thereof for diagnosing and treating autism

Water, Judy Van De; EDMISTON, Elizabeth
May 2018
The present invention provides peptides that specifically bind to maternal autoantibodies that are generated in the mother or potential mother against one or more endogenous polypeptide antigens selected from lactate dehydrogenase A (LDH A), lactate dehydrogenase B (LDH B), stress-induced phosphoprotein 1 (STIP1), guanine deaminase (GDA), Y Box Binding Protein 1 (YBX1), collapsin response mediator protein 1 (CRMP1), and collapsin response mediator protein 2 (CRMP2). The peptides described herein are useful for determining a risk of an offspring for developing an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) by detecting the presence of maternal autoantibodies in a biological sample of the mother or potential mother. The peptides or mimotopes thereof can also be administered to the mother or potential mother to block the binding between maternal autoantibodies and their antigens, thereby neutralizing the maternal autoantibodies.

Magnetic particle-binding peptides

Berensmeier, Sonja; BLANK-SHIM, Silvia; SCHWAMINGER, Sebastian; GARCIA, Paula FRAGA; Wenzel, Wolfgang; FINK, Karin; ANAND, Priya; BORKOWSKA-PANEK, Monika
Mar 2018
The present invention relates to a peptide consisting of a sequence of 5 to 30, preferably 6 to 12, most preferably 10 to 12 amino acids, wherein (a) at least 2/3 of said amino acids have a functional group or side chain which is negatively charged at neutral pH; (b) amino acids which do not have a functional group or side chain which is negatively charged at neutral pH, if present, meet one or both of requirements (i) and (ii): (i) none of them has a functional group or side chain which is positively charged at neutral pH; and (ii) at least one of them has a side chain which does not bear a net charge at neutral pH or which has a functional group or side chain that does not bear a net charge at neutral pH.

Anti-apoc3 antibodies and methods of use thereof

Dasilva-Jardine, Paul; Haard, Hans De; Landro, James A.
Jan 2018

High-Density Peptide Arrays for Malaria Vaccine Development

Loeffler, Felix F.; Pfeil, Johannes; Heiss, Kirsten
The development of an efficacious and practicable vaccine conferring sterile immunity towards a Plasmodium infection represents a not yet achieved goal. A crucial factor for the impact of a given anti-plasmodial subunit vaccine is the identification of the most potent parasitic components required to induce protection from both infection and disease. Here, we present a method based on a novel high-density peptide array technology that allows for a flexible readout of malaria antibodies. Peptide arrays applied as a screening method can be used to identify novel immunogenic antibody epitopes under a large number of potential antigens/peptides. Ultimately, discovered antigen candidates and/or epitope sequences can be translated into vaccine prototype design. The technology can be further utilized to unravel antibody-mediated immune responses (e.g., involved in the establishment of semi-immunity) and moreover to confirm vaccine potency during the process of clinical development by verifying the induced antibody responses following vaccination.

Marker Sequences for Diagnosing and Stratifying Systemic Sclerosis Patients

Budde, Petra; Zucht, Dieter; Lüking, Angelika; Schneider, Matthias
Nov 2015
The invention relates to a method for identifying markers for systemic sclerosis (scleroderma, SSc) and to the markers identified by means of said method, which can differentiate between SSc and other autoimmune diseases and between different SSc sub-groups. The invention also relates to panels, diagnostic means, and test kits which comprise said markers and to the use and application thereof, for example for the diagnosis, prognosis, and therapy control for SSc. The invention further relates to methods for screening and validating active ingredients for use in SSc sub-groups.

Monoclonal antibodies to growth and differentiation factor 15 (gdf-15), and uses thereof for treating cancer cachexia and cancer

WISCHHUSEN, Jörg; JUNKER, Markus; SCHÄFER, Tina; PÜHRINGER, Dirk
Oct 2015
The present invention relates to monoclonal anti-human-GDF-15 antibodies. The antibodies include chimeric antibodies and humanized antibodies. The invention also relates to monoclonal anti-human-GDF-15 antibodies including murine antibodies, chimeric antibodies and humanized antibodies for use in methods for the treatment of cancer cachexia and also for the treatment of cancer. The invention also provides pharmaceutical compositions, kits, methods and uses and cell lines capable of producing the monoclonal antibodies of the invention.

Peptide Arrays with a Chip

Nesterov, Alexander; Dörsam, Edgar; Cheng, Yun-Chien; Schirwitz, Christopher; Märkle, Frieder; Löffler, Felix; König, Kai; Stadler, Volker; Bischoff, Ralf; Breitling, Frank
Today, lithographic methods enable combinatorial synthesis of >50,000 oligonucleotides per cm2, an advance that has revolutionized the whole field of genomics. A similar development is expected for the field of proteomics, provided that affordable, very high-density peptide arrays are available. However, peptide arrays lag behind oligonucleotide arrays. This is mainly due to the monomer-by-monomer repeated consecutive coupling of 20 different amino acids associated with lithography, which adds up to an excessive number of coupling cycles. A combinatorial synthesis based on electrically charged solid amino acid particles resolves this problem. A computer chip consecutively addresses the different charged particles to a solid support, where, when completed, the whole layer of solid amino acid particles is melted at once. This frees hitherto immobilized amino acids to couple all 20 different amino acids in one single coupling reaction to the support. The method should allow for the translation of entire genomes into a set of overlapping peptides to be used in proteome research.

A Novel Combinatorial Approach to High-Density Peptide Arrays

Beyer, Mario; Block, Ines; König, Kai; Nesterov, Alexander; Fernandez, Simon; Felgenhauer, Thomas; Schirwitz, Christopher; Leibe, Klaus; Bischoff, Ralf F.; Breitling, Frank; Stadler, Volker
Combinatorial synthesis of peptides on solid supports (1), either as spots on cellulose membranes (2) or with split-pool-libraries on polymer beads (3), substantially forwarded research in the field of peptide-protein interactions. Admittedly, these concepts have specific limitations, on one hand the number of synthesizable peptide sequences per area, on the other hand elaborate decoding/encoding strategies, false-positive results and sequence limitations. We recently established a method to produce high-density peptide arrays on microelectronic chips (4). Solid amino acid microparticles were charged by friction and transferred to defined pixel electrodes onto the chip’s surface, where they couple to a functional polymer coating simply upon melting (Fig. 16.1 A-D,F). By applying standard Fmoc chemistry according to Merrifield, peptide array densities of up to 40,000 spots per square centimetre were achieved (Fig. 16.1G). The term Merrifield synthesis describes the consecutive linear coupling and deprotecting of L-amino acids modified with base-labile fluorenylmethoxy (Fmoc) groups at the N-terminus and different acid-sensitive protecting groups at their side chains. Removing side chain protecting groups takes place only once at the very end of each synthesis and generates the natural peptide sequence thereby.

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