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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.

Anti-allodynic effect of intrathecal antibodies against macrophage-inducible C-type lectin in spinal nerve ligation model in rat

Kang, Dong Ho; Kim, Woong Mo; Bae, Hong Beom; Yang, Jihoon; Choi, Jeong Il
Heliyon.
Nov 2024
*Introduction* Macrophage-inducible C-type lectin (Mincle) has emerged as a potential contributor to neuropathic pain induction and neuroinflammatory responses within the spinal cord. Moreover, evidence suggests a close association between toll-like receptor (TLR) and Mincle expression in myeloid cells. This study evaluated the effectiveness of Mincle antibodies in neuropathic pain and identified the epitope of these antibodies. In addition, the mode of interaction between Mincle and TLR inhibition was explored using isobolographic analysis. *Methods* Three different Mincle antibodies and a specific TLR4 inhibitor (TAK-242) were intrathecally administered, and mechanical allodynia was evaluated using the von Frey test in a rat model of spinal nerve ligation (SNL). Isobolographic analysis was conducted on the effect of combination of TAK-242 and Mincle Ab. Microarray analysis examined the specific region of Mincle targeted by the antibodies. *Results* All Mincle antibodies and TAK-242 significantly alleviated mechanical allodynia in a dose-dependent manner. However, the maximal possible effects (MPE) produced by the antibodies ranged widely from 37.1% to 91.8%, comparable to that of TAK-242 (88.7%). The combination of TAK-242 and the antibody with the highest MPE resulted in an additive interaction for their anti-allodynic effects. Epitope mapping revealed that each antibody targeted the extracellular domain, with epitope lengths ranging from 5 to 15 amino acids. *Conclusions* The current study demonstrates the anti-allodynic effect of Mincle antibodies and additive interaction with TLR4 inhibition in spinal nerve ligation model, suggesting the potential of blocking of Mincle signaling with its antibodies as a novel treatment strategy for neuropathic pain.

Discovery of a novel highly specific, fully human PSCA antibody and its application as an antibody-drug conjugate in prostate cancer

Chu, Xiaojie; Shin, Seungmin; Baek, Du-San; Zhang, Liyong; Conard, Alex; Shi, Megan; Kim, Ye-Jin; Adams, Cynthia; Hines, Maggie; Liu, Xianglei; Chen, Chuan; Sun, Zehua; Jelev, Dontcho V.; Mellors, John W.; Dimitrov, Dimiter S.; Li, Wei
Prostate stem cell antigen (PSCA) is expressed in all stages of prostate cancer, including in advanced androgen-independent tumors and bone metastasis. PSCA may associate with prostate carcinogenesis and lineage plasticity in prostate cancer. PSCA is also a promising theranostic marker for a variety of other solid tumors, including pancreatic adenocarcinoma and renal cell carcinoma. Here, we identified a novel fully human PSCA antibody using phage display methodology. The structure-based affinity maturation yielded a high-affinity binder, F12, which is highly specific and does not bind to 6,000 human membrane proteins based on a membrane proteome array assay. F12 targets PSCA amino acids 63–69 as tested by the peptide scanning microarray, and it cross-reacts with the murine PSCA. IgG1 F12 efficiently internalizes into PSCA-expressing tumor cells. The antimitotic reagent monomethyl auristatin E (MMAE)-conjugated IgG1 F12 (ADC, F12-MMAE) exhibits dose-dependent efficacy and specificity in a human prostate cancer PC-3-PSCA xenograft NSG mouse model. This is a first reported ADC based on a fully human PSCA antibody and MMAE that is characterized in a xenograft murine model, which warrants further optimizations and investigations in additional preclinical tumor models, including prostate and other solid tumors.

Antigen-Heterologous Vaccination Regimen Triggers Alternate Antibody Targeting in SARS-CoV-2-DNA-Vaccinated Mice

Frische, Anders; Krogfelt, Karen Angeliki; Fomsgaard, Anders; Lassaunière, Ria
Vaccines.
Feb 2024
An in-depth analysis of antibody epitopes following vaccination with different regimens provides important insight for developing future vaccine strategies. B-cell epitopes conserved across virus variants may be ideal targets for vaccine-induced antibodies and therapeutic drugs. However, challenges lie in identifying these key antigenic regions, and directing the immune system to target them. We previously evaluated the immunogenicity of two candidate DNA vaccines encoding the unmodified spike protein of either the SARS-CoV-2 Index strain or the Beta variant of concern (VOC). As a follow-on study, we characterized here the antibody binding profiles of three groups of mice immunized with either the DNA vaccine encoding the SARS-CoV-2 Index strain spike protein only, the Beta VOC spike protein only, or a combination of both as an antigen-heterologous prime-boost regimen. The latter induced an antibody response targeting overlapping regions that were observed for the individual vaccines but with additional high levels of antibody directed against epitopes in the SD2 region and the HR2 region. These heterologous-vaccinated animals displayed improved neutralization breadth. We believe that a broad-focused vaccine regimen increases neutralization breadth, and that the in-depth analysis of B-cell epitope targeting used in this study can be applied in future vaccine research.

Molecular mimicry, genetic homology, and gene sharing proteomic “molecular fingerprints” using an EBV (Epstein-Barr virus)-derived microarray as a potential diagnostic method in autoimmune disease

Dreyfus, David H.; Farina, Antonella; Farina, Giuseppina Alessandra
Immunol Res.
Dec 2018
EBV (Epstein-Barr Virus) and other human DNA viruses are associated with autoimmune syndromes in epidemiologic studies. In this work, immunoglobulin G response to EBV-encoded proteins which share regions with human immune response proteins from the human host including ZEBRA (BZLF-1 encoded protein), BALF-2 recombinase expressed primarily during the viral lytic replication cycle, and EBNA-1 (Epstein-Barr Virus Nuclear Antigen) expressed during the viral latency cycle respectively were characterized using a laser-printed micro-array (PEPperprint.com). IgG response to conserved “A/T hooks” in EBV-encoded proteins such as EBNA-1 and the BALF-2 recombinase related to host DNA-binding proteins including RAG-1 recombinase and histones, and EBV-encoded virokines such as the IL-10 homologue BCRF-1 suggest further directions for clinical research. The author suggests that proteomic “molecular fingerprints” of the immune response to viral proteins shared with human immune response genes are potentially useful in early diagnosis and monitoring of autoantibody production and response to therapy in EBV-related autoimmune syndromes.

Regulatory T-cell deficiency leads to pathogenic bullous pemphigoid antigen 230 autoantibody and autoimmune bullous disease

Haeberle, Stefanie; Wei, Xiaoying; Bieber, Katja; Goletz, Stephanie; Ludwig, Ralf J.; Schmidt, Enno; Enk, Alexander H.; Hadaschik, Eva N.
Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.
Dec 2018
Background Autoimmune bullous diseases/dermatoses (AIBDs) are severe autoantibody-mediated skin diseases. The pathogenic relevance of autoreactive CD4+ T cells for the induction of autoantibody production remains to be fully evaluated. Scurfy mice lack functional regulatory T (Treg) cells, experience spontaneous activation of autoreactive CD4+ T cells, and display severe erosive skin lesions suggestive of AIBDs. Objective We sought to determine whether AIBDs develop in Treg cell–deficient scurfy mice. Methods Histology, indirect immunofluorescence (IF) microscopy, direct IF, and ELISA were used to prove the presence of AIBDs in scurfy mice. Monoclonal autoantibodies from sera of scurfy mice were screened by using indirect IF on murine skin, and immunoprecipitation and mass spectrometry were used for target antigen identification, followed by confirmation in modified human embryonic kidney cells and murine keratinocytes. Pathogenicity was determined by injecting the autoantibody into neonatal mice and transferring scurfy CD4+ T cells into nu/nu mice. Results Autoantibodies against different known autoantigens of AIBDs spontaneously develop in scurfy mice. Histology reveals subepidermal blisters, and direct IF of skin of scurfy mice shows a predominant linear staining pattern. The mAb 20B12 shows a linear staining pattern in indirect IF, recognizes the murine hemidesmosomal protein bullous pemphigoid antigen 230 (BP230) as the target antigen, and cross-reacts with human BP230. Purified mAb 20B12 induces subepidermal blisters in neonatal mice. Transfer of scurfy CD4+ T cells is sufficient to induce antibodies with reactivity to AIBD autoantigens and subepidermal blisters in the skin of recipient T cell–deficient nu/nu mice. Conclusion We show that the absence of Treg cells leads to AIBDs by pathogenic autoantibodies targeting BP230.

Soybean Allergy Related Epitopes

Kern, Karolin; Spiegel, Holger; Havenith, Heide; Szardenings, Michael
Nov 2018
The invention relates to a compilation comprising at least five different peptides, each peptide comprising at least one sequence element corresponding to an epitope selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID NO.: 1-354, wherein at least five different epitopes are represented. The invention further relates to an in vitro method for determining a patient’s immune status to soybean allergens, to a method for detecting at least one soybean allergen in a substance and to a method for determining the allergenicity of a soybean variety. Additionally, the invention relates to a kit comprising at least one composition containing a compound comprising at least five different sequence elements each corresponding to an epitope selected from the group consisting of SEQ ID NO.: 1-354, wherein at least five different epitopes are represented. Furthermore, the invention relates to the use of a peptide comprising a sequence element corresponding to an epitope for providing a molecule binding to a protein or peptide comprising the epitope.

Linear epitopes in Onchocerca volvulus vaccine candidate proteins and excretory-secretory proteins

Lagatie, Ole; Verheyen, Ann; Van Dorst, Bieke; Batsa Debrah, Linda; Debrah, Alex; Stuyver, Lieven J.
Parasite Immunol.
Nov 2018
In our previous study, a proteome-wide screen was conducted to identify linear epitopes in this parasite’s proteome, resulting in the discovery of three immunodominant motifs. Here, we investigated whether such antigenic peptides were found in proteins that were already known as vaccine candidates and excretome/secretome proteins for Onchocerca volvulus This approach led to the identification of 71 immunoreactive stretches in 46 proteins. A deep-dive into the immunoreactivity profiles of eight vaccine candidates that were chosen as most promising candidates for further development (Ov-CPI-2, Ov-ALT-1, Ov-RAL-2, Ov-ASP-1, Ov-103, Ov-RBP-1, Ov-CHI-1, and Ov-B20), resulted in the identification of a poly-glutamine stretch in Ov-RAL-2 that has properties for use as a serodiagnostic marker for O. volvulus infection. A peptide ELISA was developed, and the performance of this assay was evaluated. Based on this assessment, it was found that this assay has a sensitivity of 75.0% [95% CI: 64.9%-83.5%] and a specificity of 98.5% [95% CI: 94.6%-99.8%]. Furthermore, 8.7% reactivity in Asian parasite-infected individuals (8 out of 92) was observed. Besides this identification of a linear epitope marker, the information on the presence of linear epitopes in vaccine candidate proteins might be useful in the study of vaccines for river blindness.

Potential therapeutic antibodies targeting specific adiponectin isoforms in rheumatoid arthritis

Lee, Yeon-Ah; Hahm, Dae-Hyun; Kim, Jung Yeon; Sur, Bonjun; Lee, Hyun Min; Ryu, Chun Jeih; Yang, Hyung-In; Kim, Kyoung Soo
Arthritis Res Ther.
Oct 2018
Background Different adiponectin isoforms appear to be differentially involved in the pathogenesis of various diseases. The purpose of this study was to generate monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) specific to different adiponectin isoforms and investigate whether these mAbs have potential as therapeutic agents for such diseases. Methods Hybridoma cells producing monoclonal antibodies were generated and screened using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and Western blotting for the production of mAbs recognizing human adiponectin isoforms. Results The mAb from hybridoma clone KH7–41 recognized both the middle molecular weight (MMW) (hexamer) and low molecular weight (LMW) (trimer) isoforms of adiponectin in human serum, whereas the KH7–33 mAb detected only MMW (hexamer) adiponectin. The KH4–8 clone recognized both the high molecular weight (HMW) (multimer) and MMW adiponectin isoforms. However, in mouse and rat sera, the abovementioned antibodies recognized only the MMW isomer. These mAbs also recognized adiponectin in various human tissues, such as lung, kidney, and adipose tissues, although the three mAbs had different staining intensities. The mAb from clone KH4–8 effectively inhibited increases in interleukin-6 (IL-6) and IL-8 expression in recombinant adiponectin-stimulated human osteoblasts and human umbilical vein endothelial cells. Also, the mAbs KH7–33 and KH4–8 significantly ameliorated rheumatic symptoms in a collagen-induced arthritis mouse model. This result suggests that these mAb treatments may ameliorate adiponectin-mediated inflammatory response. Conclusions mAbs against human adiponectin isomers can potentially be developed as therapeutic antibodies to target specific detrimental isoforms of adiponectin while maintaining the functions of beneficial isoforms.

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