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

Preclinical characterization of an active immunotherapy targeting calcitonin gene-related peptide

Boyd, Justin D.; Wang, Shixia; Lin, Hsiao-Wen; Hsieh, Yueh-Ting; Sun, Yu Shuang; Thibodeaux, Brett A.; Lu, Hanxin; Sahni, Jaya; Wiggins, Jonathan; Longo, Matthew S.; Brooks, Jeanne K.; Vroom, Madeline M.; Chang, Yi-Pin; Liu, Zhi; Ding, Shuang; Dodart, Jean-Cosme
Commun Med.
Apr 2025
Abstract **Background** The success of passive immunotherapies targeting Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) for managing migraine has prompted our efforts towards developing an active immunotherapy that induces the production of endogenous antibodies against CGRP. Achieving efficacious antibody titers via immunization could provide a more convenient and cost-effective treatment alternative to anti-CGRP monoclonal antibody (mAb) therapies. However, immunization against endogenous CGRP faces multiple challenges such as breaking immune tolerance, inducing sufficient antibody titers, and avoiding immune response-associated toxicity. **Methods** Synthetic peptide immunogens formulated in adjuvants were delivered intramuscularly. Serum samples were collected post immunization and used to measure antibody titers as well as for the isolation of antibodies specific to CGRP. Antibodies were characterized for their binding affinities and specificities. The capsaicin-induced increase in dermal blood flow model was used in rats for the assessment of the pharmacodynamic effect of immunization. **Results** Here we demonstrate that a peptide-based active immunotherapy designed to induce antibodies against CGRP promotes robust antibody titers across preclinical species. Characterization of the immune response strongly suggests that this peptide immunogen primarily stimulates a humoral response and only induced CGRP-specific antibodies. Antibodies produced by immunization are primarily IgG1 and demonstrate binding and activity potencies similar to marketed monoclonal antibodies against CGRP. Finally, immunization demonstrates in vivo efficacy in a rat pharmacodynamic model. **Conclusion** Our results strongly suggest that a peptide-based active immunotherapy against CGRP could provide an affordable and convenient therapeutic for the prevention of migraine.

HCV immunodominant peptide mapping reveals unique HLA-A*02-restricted signatures: insights for CD8+ T-cell-based vaccines and immunotherapies

Cardoso Corrêa-Dias, Laura; Lopes-Ribeiro, Ágata; Marques-Ferreira, Geovane; Gomes-de-Pontes, Letícia; Pereira-Santos, Thaiza Aline; De Sousa Reis, Erik Vinicius; Silva Moraes, Thaís De Fátima; Assis Martins-Filho, Olindo; Figueiredo Barbosa-Stancioli, Edel; Guimarães Da Fonseca, Flávio; Coelho-dos-Reis, Jordana Grazziela
Immunogenetics.
Jan 2025
Several barriers for the development of an HCV vaccine still exist, including the genetic diversity of the virus, and the shortage of assessable models for in vitro and in vivo assays. Therefore, in this study, HCV epitope mapping was performed for 59 polyprotein sequences from 7 HCV genotypes. Around 2,880 peptides were considered epitopes for CD8+ T cells. The peptide induction of cytokines from Th1 and/or Th2 axes of the cellular immune response was assessed, indicating a tendency for Th2 axis. In vitro evaluation was performed using peptide microarray and a recombinant HLA-A*02:01 molecule. A total of 615 peptides of high reactivity to HLA-A*02:01 were identified, with predominance of leucine and tryptophan residues, highlighting their importance for TCR-epitope binding and CD8+ T activation. Finally, HCV-derived peptide patterns restricted to HLA-A2*02:01 observed in this study provide important information for the development of a multi-epitope-based pan-genotypic vaccine against the virus.

Location and expression kinetics of Tc24 in different life stages of Trypanosoma cruzi

Versteeg, Leroy; Adhikari, Rakesh; Poveda, Cristina; Villar-Mondragon, Maria Jose; Jones, Kathryn M.; Hotez, Peter J.; Bottazzi, Maria Elena; Tijhaar, Edwin; Pollet, Jeroen
PLoS Negl Trop Dis.
Sep 2021
Tc24-C4, a modified recombinant flagellar calcium-binding protein of Trypanosoma cruzi, is under development as a therapeutic subunit vaccine candidate to prevent or delay progression of chronic Chagasic cardiomyopathy. When combined with Toll-like receptor agonists, Tc24-C4 immunization reduces parasitemia, parasites in cardiac tissue, and cardiac fibrosis and inflammation in animal models. To support further research on the vaccine candidate and its mechanism of action, murine monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against Tc24-C4 were generated. Here, we report new findings made with mAb Tc24-C4/884 that detects Tc24-WT and Tc24-C4, as well as native Tc24 in T. cruzi on ELISA, western blots, and different imaging techniques. Surprisingly, detection of Tc24 by Tc24-C/884 in fixed T. cruzi trypomastigotes required permeabilization of the parasite, revealing that Tc24 is not exposed on the surface of T. cruzi, making a direct role of antibodies in the induced protection after Tc24-C4 immunization less likely. We further observed that after immunostaining T. cruzi–infected cells with mAb Tc24-C4/884, the expression of Tc24 decreases significantly when T. cruzi trypomastigotes enter host cells and transform into amastigotes. However, Tc24 is then upregulated in association with parasite flagellar growth linked to re-transformation into the trypomastigote form, prior to host cellular escape. These observations are discussed in the context of potential mechanisms of vaccine immunity.

Landscape and selection of vaccine epitopes in SARS-CoV-2

Smith, Christof C.; Olsen, Kelly S.; Gentry, Kaylee M.; Sambade, Maria; Beck, Wolfgang; Garness, Jason; Entwistle, Sarah; Willis, Caryn; Vensko, Steven; Woods, Allison; Fini, Misha; Carpenter, Brandon; Routh, Eric; Kodysh, Julia; O’Donnell, Timothy; Haber, Carsten; Heiss, Kirsten; Stadler, Volker; Garrison, Erik; Sandor, Adam M.; Ting, Jenny P. Y.; Weiss, Jared; Krajewski, Krzysztof; Grant, Oliver C.; Woods, Robert J.; Heise, Mark; Vincent, Benjamin G.; Rubinsteyn, Alex
Genome Medicine.
Jun 2021
Early in the pandemic, we designed a SARS-CoV-2 peptide vaccine containing epitope regions optimized for concurrent B cell, CD4+ T cell, and CD8+ T cell stimulation. The rationale for this design was to drive both humoral and cellular immunity with high specificity while avoiding undesired effects such as antibody-dependent enhancement (ADE).

SARS-CoV-2 spike protein stabilized in the closed state induces potent neutralizing responses.

Carnell, George W.; Ciazynska, Katarzyna A.; Wells, David A.; Xiong, Xiaoli; Aguinam, Ernest T.; McLaughlin, Stephen H.; Mallery, Donna; Ebrahimi, Soraya; Ceron-Gutierrez, Lourdes; Asbach, Benedikt; Einhauser, Sebastian; Wagner, Ralf; James, Leo C.; Doffinger, Rainer; Heeney, Jonathan L.; Briggs, John A. G.
The majority of SARS-CoV-2 vaccines in use or advanced development are based on the viral spike protein (S) as their immunogen. S is present on virions as pre-fusion trimers in which the receptor binding domain (RBD) is stochastically open or closed. Neutralizing antibodies have been described against both open and closed conformations. The long-term success of vaccination strategies depends upon inducing antibodies that provide long-lasting broad immunity against evolving SARS-CoV-2 strains. Here we have assessed the results of immunization in a mouse model using an S protein trimer stabilized in the closed state to prevent full exposure of the receptor binding site and therefore interaction with receptor. We compared this with other modified S protein constructs, including representatives used in current vaccines. We found that all trimeric S proteins induced a T cell response and long-lived, strongly neutralizing antibody responses against 2019 SARS-CoV-2 and variants of concern B.1.248 and B.1.351. Notably, the protein binding properties of sera induced by the closed spike differed from those induced by standard S protein constructs. Closed S proteins induced more potent neutralizing responses than expected based on the degree to which they inhibit interactions between the RBD and ACE2. These observations suggest that closed spikes recruit different, but equally potent, immune responses than open spikes, and that this is likely to include neutralizing antibodies against conformational epitopes present in the closed conformation. Together with their improved stability and storage properties we suggest that closed spikes may be a valuable component of refined, next-generation vaccines. Importance Vaccines in use against SARS-CoV-2 induce immune responses against the spike protein. There is intense interest in whether the antibody response induced by vaccines will be robust against new variants, as well as in next-generation vaccines for use in previously infected or immunized individuals. We assessed the use as an immunogen of a spike protein engineered to be conformationally stabilized in the closed state where the receptor binding site is occluded. Despite occlusion of the receptor binding site, the spike induces potently neutralizing sera against multiple SARS-CoV-2 variants. Antibodies are raised against a different pattern of epitopes to those induced by other spike constructs, preferring conformational epitopes present in the closed conformation. Closed spikes, or mRNA vaccines based on their sequence, can be a valuable component of next generation vaccines.

Epitope Mapping of Exposed Tegument and Alimentary Tract Proteins Identifies Putative Antigenic Targets of the Attenuated Schistosome Vaccine

Farias, Leonardo P.; Vance, Gillian M.; Coulson, Patricia S.; Vitoriano-Souza, Juliana; Neto, Almiro Pires da Silva; Wangwiwatsin, Arporn; Neves, Leandro Xavier; Castro-Borges, William; McNicholas, Stuart; Wilson, Keith S.; Leite, Luciana C. C.; Wilson, R. Alan
amjor.
Mar 2021
The radiation-attenuated cercarial vaccine remains the gold standard for the induction of protective immunity against Schistosoma mansoni. Furthermore, the protection can be passively transferred to naïve recipient mice from multiply vaccinated donors, especially IFNgR KO mice. We have used such sera versus day 28 infection serum, to screen peptide arrays and identify likely epitopes that mediate the protection. The arrays encompassed 56 secreted or exposed proteins from the alimentary tract and tegument, the principal interfaces with the host bloodstream. The proteins were printed onto glass slides as overlapping 15mer peptides, reacted with primary and secondary antibodies, and reactive regions detected using an Agilent array scanner. Pep Slide Analyser software provided a numerical value above background for each peptide from which an aggregate score could be derived for a putative epitope. The reactive regions of 26 proteins were mapped onto crystal structures using the CCP4 molecular graphics, to aid selection of peptides with the greatest accessibility and reactivity, prioritising vaccine over infection serum. A further eight MEG proteins were mapped to regions conserved between family members. The result is a list of priority peptides from 44 proteins for further investigation in multiepitope vaccine constructs and as targets of monoclonal antibodies.

Immunity to Influenza is dependent on MHC II polymorphism: study with 2 HLA transgenic strains

Luckey, David; Weaver, Eric A.; Osborne, Douglas G.; Billadeau, Daniel D.; Taneja, Veena
Sci Rep.
Dec 2019
Major histocompatibility complex II (MHC II) molecules are involved in antigen presentation and the development of a functional adaptive immune response. Evolutionary selection for MHC molecules that effectively clear infectious agents provides an advantage to humans. However, certain class II molecules are associated with autoimmune diseases. In this study we infected autoimmune-susceptible DRB1*0401.AEo and non-susceptible *0402.AEo mice with H1N1 influenza and determined clearance and protective immunity to H3N2 virus. *0401 mice generated a robust TLR-triggered immune response and cleared H1N1 influenza virus infection. After vaccination and challenge with H1N1, *0401 mice, when challenged with H3N2, generated cross-protective immunity to heterosubtypic H3N2 influenza strain whereas *0402 mice cleared the H1N1 infection but did not generate cross-protective immunity against the H3N2 influenza strain. The intracellular trafficking route of MHCII revealed that *0401 molecules traffic through the late endosome/lysosomes while *0402 molecules traffic into early endosomes. This suggested that trafficking of MHCII could affect the functional output of the innate immune response and clearance of viral infections. Also, DRB1*0401 mice live longer than HLA-DRB1*0402 mice. The study provides a potential hypothesis for evolutionary selection of *0401 molecule, even though it is associated with autoreactivity, which may be dependent on the availability of peptide repertoire of self-antigens.

Analysis of humoral immune responses in chikungunya virus (CHIKV) infected patients and individuals vaccinated with a candidate CHIKV vaccine

Henss, Lisa; Yue, Constanze; von Rhein, Christine; Tschismarov, Roland; Lewis-Ximenez, Lia Laura; Dölle, Albert; Baylis, Sally A; Schnierle, Barbara S
Abstract Background Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) is a mosquito-transmitted alphavirus that causes severe flu like symptoms. The acute symptoms disappear after one week, but chronic arthralgia can persist for years. Here, humoral immune responses in CHIKV-infected patients and vaccinees were analyzed. Methods Alphavirus neutralization activity was analyzed with pseudotyped lentiviral vectors and antibody epitope mapping was performed with a peptide array. Results Greatest CHIKV neutralization activity was observed 60-92 days after onset of symptoms. The amount of CHIKV-specific antibodies, their binding avidity and cross-reactivity with other alphaviruses increased over time. CHIKV and o’nyong-nyong virus (ONNV) were both neutralized to a similar extent. Linear antibody binding epitopes were mainly found in E2 domain B and the acid-sensitive regions (ASRs). In addition, serum samples from healthy volunteers vaccinated with a measles-vectored chikungunya vaccine candidate, MV-CHIK, were analyzed. Neutralization activity in the samples from the vaccine cohort was 2–6-fold lower than in samples from CHIKV-infected patients. In contrast to infection, vaccination only induced cross-neutralization with ONNV and the E2 ASR1 was the major antibody target. Conclusion These data could assist vaccine design and enable the identification of correlates of protection necessary for vaccine efficacy.

Diagnostic Profiling of the Human Public IgM Repertoire With Scalable Mimotope Libraries

Pashov, Anastas; Shivarov, Velizar; Hadzhieva, Maya; Kostov, Victor; Ferdinandov, Dilyan; Heintz, Karen-Marie; Pashova, Shina; Todorova, Milena; Vassilev, Tchavdar; Kieber-Emmons, Thomas; Meza-Zepeda, Leonardo A.; Hovig, Eivind
Front. Immunol..
Dec 2019
Specific antibody reactivities are routinely used as biomarkers, but the antibody repertoire reactivity (igome) profiles are still neglected. Here, we propose rationally designed peptide arrays as efficient probes for these system level biomarkers. Most IgM antibodies are characterized by few somatic mutations, polyspecificity, and physiological autoreactivity with housekeeping function. Previously, probing this repertoire with a set of immunodominant self-proteins provided a coarse analysis of the respective repertoire profiles. In contrast, here, we describe the generation of a peptide mimotope library that reflects the common IgM repertoire of 10,000 healthy donors. In addition, an appropriately sized subset of this quasi-complete mimotope library was further designed as a potential diagnostic tool. A 7-mer random peptide phage display library was panned on pooled human IgM. Next-generation sequencing of the selected phage yielded 224,087 sequences, which clustered in 790 sequence clusters. A set of 594 mimotopes, representative of the most significant sequence clusters, was shown to probe symmetrically the space of IgM reactivities in patients’ sera. This set of mimotopes can be easily scaled including a greater proportion of the mimotope library. The trade-off between the array size and the resolution can be explored while preserving the symmetric sampling of the mimotope sequence and reactivity spaces. BLAST search of the non-redundant protein database with the mimotopes sequences yielded significantly more immunoglobulin J region hits than random peptides, indicating a considerable idiotypic connectivity of the targeted igome. The proof of principle predictors for random diagnoses was represented by profiles of mimotopes. The number of potential reactivity profiles that can be extracted from this library is estimated at more than 1070. Thus, a quasi-complete IgM mimotope library and a scalable representative subset thereof are found to address very efficiently the dynamic diversity of the human public IgM repertoire, providing informationally dense and structurally interpretable IgM reactivity profiles.

A Low‐Cost Laser‐Based Nano‐3D Polymer Printer for Rapid Surface Patterning and Chemical Synthesis of Peptide and Glycan Microarrays

Eickelmann, Stephan; Tsouka, Alexandra; Heidepriem, Jasmin; Paris, Grigori; Zhang, Junfang; Molinari, Valerio; Mende, Marco; Loeffler, Felix F.
Adv. Mater. Technol..
Nov 2019
A low-cost laser-based printing setup is presented, which allows for the spot-wise patterning of surfaces with defined polymer nanolayers. These nanolayer spots serve as a “solid solvent,” embedding different chemicals, chemical building blocks, materials, or precursors and can be stacked on top of each other. By melting the spot pattern, the polymer-embedded molecules are released for chemical reaction. This enables researchers to quickly pattern a surface with different molecules and materials, mixing them directly on the surface for high-throughput chemical synthesis to generate and screen diverse microarray libraries. In contrast to expensive ink-jet or contact printing, this approach does not require premixing of inks, which enables in situ combinatorial mixing. Easy access and versatility of this patterning approach are shown by generating microarrays of various biomolecules, such as glycans for the first time, to screen interactions of antibodies and lectins. In addition, a layer-by-layer solid-phase synthesis of peptides directly on the microarray is presented. Amino acid–containing nanolayers are repeatedly laser-transferred and reacted with the functionalized acceptor surface in defined patterns. This simple system enables a reproducible array production, down to spot-to-spot distances of 100 µm, and offers a flexible and cheap alternative to expensive spotting robot technology.

Immunization of mice with chimeric antigens displaying selected epitopes confers protection against intestinal colonization and renal damage caused by Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli

Montero, David A.; Del Canto, Felipe; Salazar, Juan C.; Cespedes, Sandra; Cádiz, Leandro; Arenas-Salinas, Mauricio; Reyes, José; Oñate, Ángel; Vidal, Roberto M.
Sep 2019
Abstract Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) cause diarrhea and dysentery, which may progress to hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS). Vaccination has been proposed as a preventive approach against STEC infection; however, there is no vaccine for humans and those used in animals reduce but do not eliminate the intestinal colonization of STEC. The OmpT, Cah and Hes proteins are widely distributed among clinical STEC strains and are recognized by serum IgG and IgA in patients with HUS. Here, we develop a vaccine formulation based on two chimeric antigens containing epitopes of OmpT, Cah and Hes proteins against STEC strains. Intramuscular and intranasal immunization of mice with these chimeric antigens elicited systemic and local long-lasting humoral responses. However, the class of antibodies generated was dependent on the adjuvant and the route of administration. Moreover, while intramuscular immunization with the combination of the chimeric antigens conferred protection against colonization by STEC O157:H7 and the intranasal conferred protection against renal damage caused by STEC O91:H21. This pre-clinical study supports the potential use of this formulation based on recombinant chimeric proteins as a preventive strategy against STEC infections.

Genomics-Driven Immunoproteomics: An Integrative Platform to Uncover Important Biomarkers for Human Diseases

Giri, Raghavendra; Qendro, Veneta; Rani, Pooja; Jepchumba, Carren; Bugos, Grace; Stadler, Volker; Han, David K.
Genomics-driven immunoproteomics (GDI) is a platform that helps identify antigenic protein targets of mutations and other deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) variations that are commonly associated with pathological states. This platform utilizes data generated from deep sequencing of exomic DNA or ribonucleic acid (RNA) as input to synthesize mutant peptides into microarrays, which then can be used to detect antigenic proteins that invoke immune response in patients. The technology has been used to detect antigenic targets of multiple sclerosis, an autoimmune disease [1], and cancer to identify mutant proteins that invoke immune response in breast cancer patients [2]. This technology has many potential applications to select genomic changes that are specifically recognized by the immune system in a rapid and efficient manner.

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