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

A Trifunctional Linker for Purified 3D Assembled Peptide Structure Arrays

Mattes, Daniela S.; Rentschler, Simone; Foertsch, Tobias C.; Münch, Stephan W.; Loeffler, Felix F.; Nesterov-Mueller, Alexander; Bräse, Stefan; Breitling, Frank
Small Methods.
Feb 2018
Microarrays are an important tool in modern research that allow the rapid screening of many different interactions simultaneously. Peptide arrays, which bear different peptides arranged in separate spots, permit high-throughput screening to investigate linear and cyclic binding sites. To study conformational or discontinuous binding sites, protein arrays are the major choice. However, the tremendous costs for the generation of high-density protein arrays of high purity restrict progress in protein research. Therefore, peptide-based arrays, which can mimic assembled peptide structures, have an enormous potential. Here, a method is presented to create such structures in the array format as an alternative to protein arrays. A trifunctional linker is developed with an azide, a protected alkyne, and a carboxyl group, which can react with two or three different peptides. Due to the spatial proximity, the peptides interact and can form an assembled peptide structure. As a proof of concept, assembled peptide structures are demonstrated on beads and on a polymer surface and the approach can be validated via matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization spectrometry. Furthermore, a multistep transfer of peptide arrays is shown, generating purified assembled peptide structure arrays in high density.

Spot peptide arrays and SPR measurements: throughput and quantification in antibody selectivity studies: Peptide Arrays for Antibody Selectivity Studies

Vernet, Thierry; Choulier, Laurence; Nominé, Yves; Bellard, Laure; Baltzinger, Mireille; Travé, Gilles; Altschuh, Danièle
J. Mol. Recognit..
Oct 2015
Antibody selectivity represents a major issue in the development of efficient immuno-therapeutics and detection assays. Its description requires a comparison of the affinities of the antibody for a significant number of antigen variants. In the case of peptide antigens, this task can now be addressed to a significant level of details owing to improvements in spot peptide array technologies. They allow the high-throughput mutational analysis of peptides with, depending on assay design, an evaluation of binding stabilities. Here, we examine the cross-reactive capacity of an antibody fragment using the PEPperCHIP® technology platform (PEPperPRINT GmbH, Heidelberg, Germany; >8800 peptides per microarray) combined with the surface plasmon resonance characterization (Biacore® technology; GE-Healthcare Biacore, Uppsala, Sweden) of a subset of interactions. ScFv1F4 recognizes the N-terminal end of oncoprotein E6 of human papilloma virus 16. The spot permutation analysis (i.e. each position substituted by all amino acids except cysteine) of the wild type decapeptide (sequence 6TAMFQDPQER15) and of 15 variants thereof defined the optimal epitope and provided a ranking for variant recognition. The SPR affinity measurements mostly validated the ranking of complex stabilities deduced from array data and defined the sensitivity of spot fluorescence intensities, bringing further insight into the conditions for cross-reactivity. Our data demonstrate the importance of throughput and quantification in the assessment of antibody selectivity.

Combinatorial Synthesis of Peptide Arrays with a Laser Printer

Stadler, Volker; Felgenhauer, Thomas; Beyer, Mario; Fernandez, Simon; Leibe, Klaus; Güttler, Stefan; Gröning, Martin; König, Kai; Torralba, Gloria; Hausmann, Michael; Lindenstruth, Volker; Nesterov, Alexander; Block, Ines; Pipkorn, Rüdiger; Poustka, Annemarie; Bischoff, F. Ralf; Breitling, Frank
Angew. Chem. Int. Ed..
Sep 2008
Special delivery: The “freezing” of activated amino acid derivatives within solid particles enables a laser printer to deliver these “postal packages” to defined locations on a solid support with high resolution. Subsequent parallel coupling is initiated simply by melting a whole layer of 20 different amino acid particles (see schematic representation; Fmoc=9-fluorenylmethoxycarbonyl).

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