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

Characterization of antibodies against the replication protein (Rep) encoded by bovine meat and milk factors (BMMFs)

Frehtman, Veronika; Shukla, Gunjan; Gentz, Michael; Müller, Marcus; Duduyemi, Oladimeji Paul; Grewe, Imke; Ernst, Claudia; Tessmer, Claudia; Didier, Andrea; Hofmann, Ilse; Bund, Timo; Leuchs, Barbara
Appl Microbiol Biotechnol.
Apr 2026
Abstract Bovine Meat and Milk Factors (BMMFs) are DNA elements with similarity to bacterial plasmids, are frequently identified in bovine meat and milk and were proposed to contribute to cancer development. All known BMMFs encode a conserved replication protein (Rep), allowing for histologic BMMF detection in clinical specimens based on Rep-directed mouse monoclonal antibodies (mAbs), which, however, have only been partially characterized so far. Here, 20 anti-BMMF Rep antibodies were assessed for biophysical properties, reactivity, specificity and binding sensitivity to five distinct BMMF Reps and other prokaryotic/eukaryotic target antigens using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA)-based anti-BMMF Rep antibody binding assay. We demonstrated sensitive and specific antibody reaction with their respective Rep targets, according to the antibody immunization. Consensus antibodies raised against defined peptides of conserved Rep amino acid stretches interacted with most of the Rep antigens. Antibodies produced based on immunization with the Rep encoded on the BMMF isolate H1MSB.1, including rabbit and human chimeric variants, reacted only with the cognate H1MSB.1 Rep, with only two outliers targeting additional Reps. Completely new antibodies raised against the Rep of another isolate (C1HB.4) specifically detected the cognate C1HB.4 Rep antigen – not interacting with other Reps. New antibodies generated by triple Rep immunization (H1MSB.2/C1MI.3M.1/C1MI.9M.1 Rep) reacted to either all three or two immunization antigens without interacting with any other Reps. None of the antibodies cross-reacted against Reps of bacteria occurring during milk production or lysates of mammalian hosts. Competitive inhibition confirmed antigen-specificity across the antibody panel, which additionally did not show aberrancies concerning purity or antibody size for the majority of the tested Abs. These findings authenticate a highly specific panel of anti-BMMF Rep antibodies, which can serve as tools for BMMF detection in cancer and chronic diseases.**Key Points** • Anti-BMMF Rep antibodies are important to judge BMMFs’ role as cancer risk factors. • Selective binding of anti-BMMF Rep antibodies to BMMF Rep antigens. • No cross-reactivity of anti-BMMF Rep antibodies with bacterial and mammalian outgroup specimens.

Integrated reiterative pipeline for rapid epitope-based pan-alphavirus vaccines

Versiani, Alice F.; McCaffrey, Peter; Ribeiro-Filho, Helder V.; Silva, Natalia I. O.; Lopes-de-Oliveira, Paulo S.; Carrera, Jean-Paul; Nogueira, Mauricio L.; Marques, Rafael E.; Rossi, Shannan L.; Vasilakis, Nikos
Sci Adv.
Mar 2026
10.1126/sciadv.aeb2066
The vast diversity of the virosphere underscores the need for rapid, adaptable vaccine development infrastructures. Arthropod-borne zoonotic alphaviruses, in particular, continue to pose substantial threats to human and animal health. We present a fast, multitarget vaccine design pipeline integrating machine learning-based epitope prediction, protein modeling, and docking to prioritize viral peptides by immunogenicity, allele coverage, solubility, and stability. T cell epitopes were validated using peptide microarrays and molecular dynamics simulations, confirming receptor binding accuracy. Flow cytometry of murine and human peripheral blood mononuclear cells demonstrated robust T cell activation and cytokine secretion (IFN-γ, TNF-α, or IL-2), dependent on species and HLA allele. Final candidates were selected by composite immunogenicity scores. While this study primarily validates the T cell-specific arm of our predictive pipeline, complementary B cell epitope analyses are ongoing. Our findings support the development of broadly protective pan-alphaviral vaccines and the establishment of efficient, tunable processes for global vaccine development.

Identification of a conformational epitope on the E antigen implicated in anti-E alloimmunization

Matsuura, Hideaki; Yamada, Ayuna; Doi, Hiroki; Fujii, Sumie; Miura, Yasuo
Blood Adv.
Mar 2026
10.1182/bloodadvances.2025018046

Selective Targeting of Tip Endothelial Cells as a Therapeutic Strategy for Tumor Angiogenesis

Kim, Byoungmo; Lee, Ha Kyeong; Azam, Zulfikar; Choi, Jeong Uk; Wahab, Riajul; Lee, Na Kyeong; Ko, Yoon Gun; Choi, So‐Young; Lee, Se‐Ra; Shim, Wan Seob; Kim, Taeeung; Kim, In‐San; Alam, Farzana; Kim, Sang Yoon; Kim, Seong Who; Byun, Youngro; Al‐Hilal, Taslim A
Advanced Science.
Mar 2026
ABSTRACT Tip endothelial cells (TipEC), the leading edge of angiogenic sprouts, are essential for pathological neo‐vascularization but remain difficult to target due to the lack of specific druggable markers. Here, we identify Doppel as a selective and druggable regulator of endothelial tip cell function. Doppel expression enhances TipEC selection, directional migration, and regulates tip‐stalk cell dynamics by spatially controlling VEGFR2/Dll4/Src pathway. Genetic ablation of PRND (Doppel) reduces tip cell formation without affecting the stalk cells (StalkECs) number in tumors, indicating its selective role in TipECs. Importantly, depletion of TipECs using the first‐in‐class monoclonal antibodies against a highly conserved WQF‐motif of Doppel robustly decreased the growth of tumors by selectively downregulating VEGFR2+ TipECs but not StalkECs. These findings position Doppel as a tumor TipEC‐specific, druggable target that may offer a new avenue to enhance and refine anti‐angiogenic therapies in cancer treatment.

Potent Adjuvanticity of a Pure TLR7-Agonistic Imidazoquinoline Dendrimer

Shukla, Nikunj M.; Salunke, Deepak B.; Balakrishna, Rajalakshmi; Mutz, Cole A.; Malladi, Subbalakshmi S.; David, Sunil A.
PLoS ONE.
Aug 2012
Engagement of toll-like receptors (TLRs) serve to link innate immune responses with adaptive immunity and can be exploited as powerful vaccine adjuvants for eliciting both primary and anamnestic immune responses. TLR7 agonists are highly immunostimulatory without inducing dominant proinflammatory cytokine responses. We synthesized a dendrimeric molecule bearing six units of a potent TLR7/TLR8 dual-agonistic imidazoquinoline to explore if multimerization of TLR7/8 would result in altered activity profiles. A complete loss of TLR8-stimulatory activity with selective retention of the TLR7-agonistic activity was observed in the dendrimer. This was reflected by a complete absence of TLR8-driven proinflammatory cytokine and interferon (IFN)-γ induction in human PBMCs, with preservation of TLR7-driven IFN-α induction. The dendrimer was found to be superior to the imidazoquinoline monomer in inducing high titers of high-affinity antibodies to bovine α-lactalbumin. Additionally, epitope mapping experiments showed that the dendrimer induced immunoreacti

Sensing Immune Responses with Customized Peptide Microarrays

Schirwitz, Christopher; Loeffler, Felix F.; Felgenhauer, Thomas; Stadler, Volker; Breitling, Frank; Bischoff, F. Ralf
Biointerphases.
Aug 2012
The intent to solve biological and biomedical questions in high-throughput led to an immense interest in microarray technologies. Nowadays, DNA microarrays are routinely used to screen for oligonucleotide interactions within a large variety of potential interaction partners. To study interactions on the protein level with the same efficiency, protein and peptide microarrays offer similar advantages, but their production is more demanding. A new technology to produce peptide microarrays with a laser printer provides access to affordable and highly complex peptide microarrays. Such a peptide microarray can contain up to 775 peptide spots per cm², whereby the position of each peptide spot and, thus, the amino acid sequence of the corresponding peptide, is exactly known. Compared to other techniques, such as the SPOT synthesis, more features per cm² at lower costs can be synthesized which paves the way for laser printed peptide microarrays to take on roles as efficient and affordable biomedical sensors. Here, we describe the laser printer-based synthesis of peptide microarrays and focus on an application involving the blood sera of tetanus immunized individuals, indicating the potential of peptide arrays to sense immune responses.

Physical Characterization of the “Immunosignaturing Effect”

Stafford, Phillip; Halperin, Rebecca; Legutki, Joseph Bart; Magee, Dewey Mitchell; Galgiani, John; Johnston, Stephen Albert
Mol Cell Proteomics.
Apr 2012
Identifying new, effective biomarkers for diseases is proving to be a challenging problem. We have proposed that antibodies may offer a solution to this problem. The physical features and abundance of antibodies make them ideal biomarkers. Additionally, antibodies are often elicited early in the ontogeny of different chronic and infectious diseases. We previously reported that antibodies from patients with infectious disease and separately those with Alzheimer’s disease display a characteristic and reproducible immunosignature on a microarray of 10,000 random sequence peptides. Here we investigate the physical and chemical parameters underlying how immunosignaturing works. We first show that a variety of monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies raised against different classes of antigens produce distinct profiles on this microarray and the relative affinities are determined. A proposal for how antibodies bind the random sequences is tested. Sera from vaccinated mice and people suffering from a fugal infection are individually assayed to determine the complexity of signals that can be distinguished. Based on these results, we propose that this simple, general and inexpensive system could be optimized to generate a new class of antibody biomarkers for a wide variety of diseases.

Combinatorial Peptide Synthesis on a Microchip

Schirwitz, Christopher; Block, Ines; König, Kai; Nesterov, Alexander; Fernandez, Simon; Felgenhauer, Thomas; Leibe, Klaus; Torralba, Gloria; Hausmann, Michael; Lindenstruth, Volker; Stadler, Volker; Breitling, Frank; Bischoff, F. Ralf
Current Protocols in Protein Science.
Aug 2009
Microchips are used in the combinatorial synthesis of peptide arrays by means of amino acid microparticle deposition. The surface of custom-built microchips can be equipped with an amino-modified poly(ethylene glycol)methacrylate (PEGMA) graft polymer coating, which permits high loading of functional groups and resists nonspecific protein adsorption. Specific microparticles that are addressed to the polymer-coated microchip surface in a well defined pattern release preactivated amino acids upon melting, and thus allow combinatorial synthesis of high-complexity peptide arrays directly on the chip surface. Currently, arrays with densities of up to 40,000 peptide spots/cm2 can be generated in this way, with a minimum of coupling cycles required for full combinatorial synthesis. Without using any additional blocking agent, specific peptide recognition has been verified by background-free immunostaining on the chip-based array. This unit describes microchip surface modification, combinatorial peptide array synthesis on the chip, and a typical immunoassay employing the resulting high-density peptide arrays.

Particle-Based Synthesis of Peptide Arrays

Breitling, Frank; Felgenhauer, Thomas; Nesterov, Alexander; Lindenstruth, Volker; Stadler, Volker; Bischoff, F. Ralf
ChemBioChem.
Mar 2009
Lithographic methods allow for the combinatorial synthesis of >50,000 oligonucleotides per cm(2), and this has revolutionized the field of genomics. High-density peptide arrays promise to advance the field of proteomics in a similar way, but currently lag behind. 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. Combinatorial synthesis based on electrically charged solid amino acid particles resolves this problem. A color laser printer or a chip addresses the different charged particles consecutively 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 to the support in one single coupling reaction. The method should allow for the translation of entire genomes into sets of overlapping peptides to be used in proteome research.

High-density peptide arrays

Breitling, Frank; Nesterov, Alexander; Stadler, Volker; Felgenhauer, Thomas; Bischoff, F. Ralf
Mol. BioSyst..
Jan 2009
Arrays promise to advance biology by allowing parallel screening for many different binding partners. Meanwhile, 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 review discusses recent developments in the field with an emphasis on methods that lead to very high-density peptide arrays.

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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