Home » Publications

Publications

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

Anti-TRPV2 Autoantibody Linked to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome

Maguy, Ange; Tessier, Agnès; Mahendran, Yuvaraj; Denis, Manon; Lauzier, Benjamin; Charpentier, Flavien; Li, Jin
As a leading cause of infant death, sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) remains a perplexing diagnosis with no clear underlying biological substrate.1 In the past decade, studies have emerged demonstrating that circulating autoantibodies targeting cardiac antigens can underlie life-threatening arrhythmias.2 Because autoimmunity as a cause of SIDS has not yet been explored, we screened infant serum samples for the presence of autoantibodies targeting cardiac ion channels and examined how immunoglobulins may play a driving role in the pathogenesis of SIDS. Comparing cases of SIDS and accidental suffocation and strangulation in bed with healthy controls, we established the autoantibody profile of 47 serum samples using peptide microarray (Figure [A]), as previously described.2 Strikingly, only 1 single autoantibody targeting the transient receptor potential vanilloid 2 (TRPV2) channel (PTGPNATESVQPMEGQEDEG) was significantly associated with SIDS (P=0.028 versus controls, the default correction in limma). Collectively, we detected anti-TRPV2 autoantibodies in 84.6% of infants with SIDS compared with 50.0% in cases of accidental suffocation and strangulation in bed and 25.0% in controls.

Mapping autoantibody targets of full-length C-reactive protein in systemic lupus erythematosus: importance for neutrophil function and classical complement activation

Karlsson, Jesper; Wirestam, Lina; Duàn, Hanna; Ahmad, Suhana; Appelgren, Daniel; Enocsson, Helena; Wetterö, Jonas; Sjöwall, Christopher
Front. Immunol..
May 2025
C-reactive protein (CRP) is an important pattern recognition molecule of innate immunity. Autoantibodies targeting CRP are common in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and the levels correlate with disease activity. The purpose of this study was to investigate binding sites of IgG autoantibodies on the full linear sequence of CRP and identify potential associations with clinical variables in well-characterized SLE patients; a secondary aim was to investigate the effect of an epitope-based synthesized peptide motif on neutrophil functions. The levels of anti-CRP and SLE-associated antibodies were assessed, and a microarray-based linear epitope mapping was performed to detect binding sites on the full CRP monomer. We observed that anti-CRP antibodies bind to a variety of linear epitopes with a higher prevalence in SLE compared to healthy blood donors. Eleven unique epitopes were identified, of which five were found exclusively in SLE. Furthermore, we show that patients with anticardiolipin IgG and/or anti-β2GPI IgG antibodies have a higher number of positive CRP epitopes, and some CRP autoantibody-specificities associate with antiphospholipid antibodies, disease activity, and classical complement activation. In addition, one identified motif was selected, synthesized, and used for studying neutrophil function. This peptide showed modulatory capacity on neutrophil oxidative burst and chemotaxis, but not on neutrophil extracellular trap formation. Our results implicate a wide variation of anti-CRP autoantibody binding motifs of the linear structure of CRP in SLE patients. Some epitopes have the potential to modify innate host responses of relevance to the pathogenesis of SLE.

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.

Paediatric autoimmune uveitis is associated with intraocular antibodies against Epstein–Barr virus Nuclear Antigen 1 (EBNA-1)

Hendrikse, Jytte; Bont, Louis J.; Schellekens, Peter A.W.J.F.; De Groot-Mijnes, Jolanda D.F.; De Boer, Joke H.; Kuiper, Jonas J.W.
eBioMedicine.
Mar 2025
**Background** Non-infectious uveitis is an immune-mediated disease characterized by vision-threatening inflammation within the eye. Increasing evidence indicates that microbial agents promote non-infectious uveitis, but the natural history of immune responses to pathogens in patients remains unexplored. We determined intraocular antibodies against pathogens in paediatric uveitis. **Methods** We used peptide microarrays containing 3760 linear B-cell epitopes from 196 human pathogens to profile IgG levels in eye fluid biopsies and paired serum samples from 18 Dutch paediatric patients and 6 age-matched controls. We compared intensities of single epitopes and clusters based on overlapping amino acid sequence of peptides. Next-generation sequencing data was obtained to determine the HLA-DRB1∗15:01 genotype. **Findings** Intraocular antibody profiles largely matched serum profiles and were characterized by high IgG against the conserved PALTAVET-motif of enterovirus family members, as well as broad epitope reactivity against Epstein–Barr virus (EBV). The aqueous humour of patients showed elevated levels of antibodies against peptides containing the RRPFFHPV-motif of Epstein–Barr Virus Nuclear Antigen 1 [EBNA-1]. Antibody levels against the RRPFFHPV-motif of EBNA1 were significantly higher in individuals that carry the HLA-DRB1∗15:01 risk allele of paediatric uveitis. **Interpretation** Intraocular antibodies against an immunogenic epitope of EBV showed an association with paediatric uveitis, particularly HLA-DRB1∗15:01 positive uveitis, indicating a potential link between EBV-specific immune responses and autoimmune uveitis. **Funding** Funding for this research was received from Fischer Stichting (UZ2022-3), ODAS (2021-02), LSBS and ANVVB.

A tumor-binding antibody with cross-reactivity to viral antigens

Campa, Michael J.; Gottlin, Elizabeth B.; Wiehe, Kevin; Patz, Edward F.
Cancer Immunol Immunother.
Feb 2025
**Background** We previously identified in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients an autoantibody to complement factor H (CFH) that is associated with non-metastatic disease and longer time to progression in patients with stage I disease. A recombinant human antibody, GT103, was cloned from single B cells isolated from patients with the autoantibody. GT103 inhibits tumor growth and establishes an antitumor microenvironment. The anti-CFH autoantibody and GT103 recognize the epitope PIDNGDIT within the SCR19 domain of CFH. Here, we asked if this autoantibody could have originally arisen as a humoral response to a similar epitope in a viral protein from a prior infection. **Methods** Homologous viral peptides with high sequence identity to the core PIDNGDIT epitope sequence were identified and synthesized. NSCLC patient plasma containing anti-CFH autoantibodies were assayed by ELISA against these peptides. GT103 was assayed on a 4345-peptide pathogen microarray. **Results** Epitopes similar to the GT103 epitope are present in several viruses, including human metapneumovirus-1 (HMPV-1) that contains a sequence within attachment glycoprotein G that differs by one amino acid. Anti-CFH autoantibodies in NSCLC patient plasma weakly bound to an HMPV-1 peptide containing the epitope. GT103 cross-reacted with multiple viral epitopes on a peptide microarray, with the top hits being peptides in the human endogenous retrovirus-K polymerase (HERV-K pol) protein and measles hemagglutinin glycoprotein. GT103 bound the viral HMPV-1, HERV-K pol, and measles epitope peptides but with lower affinity compared to the GT103 epitope peptide. **Conclusion** These findings suggest that memory B cells against a viral target could have affinity matured to produce an antibody that recognizes a similar epitope on tumor cells and exhibits antitumor properties.

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.

The antibody repertoire of autoimmune sensory neuronopathies targets pathways of the innate and adaptative immune system. An autoantigenomic approach.

Moritz, Christian P.; Tholance, Yannick; Boutahar, Nadia; Borowczyk, Coralie; Berger, Anne-Emmanuelle; Paul, Stéphane; Antoine, Jean-Christophe; Camdessanché, Jean-Philippe
Journal of Translational Autoimmunity.
Jan 2025
Sensory neuronopathies (SNN) encompasses diverse etiologies, with autoimmunity playing a major role through both cellular and humoral responses. To investigate the humoral autoantibody repertoire in autoimmune SNN, we conducted a retrospective cohort study using large Human Proteome-wide protein microarrays (HuProt 3.1, HuProt 4.0, ProtoArrays). We specifically focused on immune system pathways within the repertoire of targeted antigens (the autoantigenome). We included 131 participants: 44 patients with non-paraneoplastic autoimmune SNN (12 with anti-FGFR3 and/or anti-AGO antibodies), 8 with paraneoplastic SNN and 79 controls. Results were validated in an independent cohort of 16 SNN patients. Overrepresentation of immune-system-related proteins was assessed via the Reactome database, and serum levels of IFN-γ and IL-6 were measured using the Bio-Plex Pro™ Reagent Kit. Autoimmune SNN sera interact with more immune system proteins than healthy controls (ProtoArrays: 271/863 vs. 14/863, HuProt: 112/1694 vs. 39/1694, both p<0.0001). Overrepresentation was observed in all immune sub-pathways, including innate, adaptive immune responses, and cytokine signaling. Anti-FGFR3-positive SNN patients were more reactive with immune system proteins than negative ones. The independent SNN cohort validated the finding of overrepresentatively targeted immune system pathways. Validation with dot blot and ELISA confirmed reactivity to TRIM21 and IL-6, and identified anti-IFN-γ-positive SNN patients. IFN-γ levels correlated weakly with levels of anti-IFN-γ antibodies (Pearson’s r = 0.22, p=0.03). We conclude that the antibody repertoire of autoimmune SNN targets pathways of the innate and adaptative immune system, potentially reflecting key disease-related immune pathways and highlighting the systemic role of immune dysregulation in SNN.

Discovery of putative breast cancer antigens using an integrative platform of genomics-driven immunoproteomics

Qendro, Veneta; Lundgren, Deborah H.; Palczewski, Samuel; Hegde, Poornima; Stevenson, Christina; Perpetua, Laurie; Latifi, Ardian; Merriman, Jesse; Bugos, Grace; Han, David K.
Proteomics.
Aug 2018
Recent advances in cancer immuno-therapeutics such as checkpoint inhibitors, chimeric antigen-receptor T cells, and tumor infiltrating T cells (TIL) are now significantly impacting cancer patients in a positive manner. Although very promising, reports indicate no more than 25% of cases result in complete remission. One of the limitations of these treatments is the identity of putative cancer antigens in each patient, as it is technically challenging to identify cancer antigens in a rapid fashion. Thus, identification of cancer antigens followed by targeted treatment will increase the efficacy of cancer immunotherapies. To achieve this goal, a combined technologies platform of deep genomic sequencing and personalized immune assessment was devised, termed Genomics Driven Immunoproteomics (GDI). Using this technological platform, we report the discovery of 149 tumor antigens from human breast cancer patients. Significant number of these putative cancer antigens arise from single nucleotide variants (SNVs), as well as insertions and deletions that results into frame-shift mutations. We propose a general model of anti-cancer immunity and suggest that the GDI platform may help identify patient-specific tumor antigens in a timely fashion for precision immunotherapies.

Circulating GRP78 antibodies from ovarian cancer patients: a promising tool for cancer cell targeting drug delivery system?

Van Hoesen, Kylie; Meynier, Sonia; Ribaux, Pascale; Petignat, Patrick; Delie, Florence; Cohen, Marie
Oncotarget.
Dec 2017
Glucose-regulated protein 78 (GRP78) is a chaperone protein that has a high frequency in tumor cells. Normally it is found in the endoplasmic reticulum to assist in protein folding, but under cellular stress, GRP78 influences proliferative signaling pathways at the cell surface. The increased expression elicits autoantibody production, providing a biomarker of ovarian cancer, as well as other types of cancer. This study aims to determine the epitope recognition of GRP78 autoantibodies isolated from serum of ovarian cancer patients and use the identified antibodies to design new drug delivery systems to specifically target cancer cells. We first confirmed that the membrane GRP78 levels are increased in ovarian cancer cells and positively correlate with proliferation. However, the level of circulating GRP78 autoantibodies did not correlate with membrane GRP78 expression in ovarian cancer cells and was lower, although not significantly, compared to control patients. We then determined the epitope recognition of GRP78 autoantibodies and showed that treatment with paclitaxel-loaded nanoparticles coated with anti-GRP78 antibodies significantly decreased tumor development in chick embryo culture of ovarian cancer cell tumors compared to paclitaxel treatment alone. This evidence suggests that nanoparticle drug delivery systems coupled with antibodies against GRP78 has potential as a powerful therapy against ovarian cancer.

Bayesian Analysis of MicroScale Thermophoresis Data to Quantify Affinity of Protein:Protein Interactions with Human Survivin

Garcia-Bonete, Maria-Jose; Jensen, Maja; Recktenwald, Christian V.; Rocha, Sandra; Stadler, Volker; Bokarewa, Maria; Katona, Gergely
Sci Rep.
Dec 2017
A biomolecular ensemble exhibits different responses to a temperature gradient depending on its diffusion properties. MicroScale Thermophoresis technique exploits this effect and is becoming a popular technique for analyzing interactions of biomolecules in solution. When comparing affinities of related compounds, the reliability of the determined thermodynamic parameters often comes into question. The thermophoresis binding curves can be assessed by Bayesian inference, which provides a probability distribution for the dissociation constant of the interacting partners. By applying Bayesian machine learning principles, binding curves can be autonomously analyzed without manual intervention and without introducing subjective bias by outlier rejection. We demonstrate the Bayesian inference protocol on the known survivin:borealin interaction and on the putative protein-protein interactions between human survivin and two members of the human Shugoshin-like family (hSgol1 and hSgol2). These interactions were identified in a protein microarray binding assay against survivin and confirmed by MicroScale Thermophoresis.

A novel neutralizing human monoclonal antibody broadly abrogates hepatitis C virus infection in vitro and in vivo

Desombere, Isabelle; Mesalam, Ahmed Atef; Urbanowicz, Richard A.; Van Houtte, Freya; Verhoye, Lieven; Keck, Zhen-Yong; Farhoudi, Ali; Vercauteren, Koen; Weening, Karin E.; Baumert, Thomas F.; Patel, Arvind H.; Foung, Steven K.H.; Ball, Jonathan; Leroux-Roels, Geert; Meuleman, Philip
Antiviral Research.
Dec 2017
Infections with hepatitis C virus (HCV) represent a worldwide health burden and a prophylactic vaccine is still not available. Liver transplantation (LT) is often the only option for patients with HCV-induced end-stage liver disease. However, immediately after transplantation, the liver graft becomes infected by circulating virus, resulting in accelerated progression of liver disease. Although the efficacy of HCV treatment using direct-acting antivirals has improved significantly, immune compromised LT-patients and patients with advanced liver disease remain difficult to treat. As an alternative approach, interfering with viral entry could prevent infection of the donor liver. We generated a human monoclonal antibody (mAb), designated 2A5, which targets the HCV envelope. The neutralizing activity of mAb 2A5 was assessed using multiple prototype and patient-derived HCV pseudoparticles (HCVpp), cell culture produced HCV (HCVcc), and a human-liver chimeric mouse model. Neutralization levels observed for mAb 2A5 were generally high and mostly superior to those obtained with AP33, a well-characterized HCV-neutralizing monoclonal antibody. Using humanized mice, complete protection was observed after genotype 1a and 4a HCV challenge, while only partial protection was achieved using gt1b and 6a isolates. Epitope mapping revealed that mAb 2A5 binding is conformation-dependent and identified the E2-region spanning amino acids 434 to 446 (epitope II) as the predominant contact domain. Conclusion: mAb 2A5 shows potent anti-HCV neutralizing activity both in vitro and in vivo and could hence represent a valuable candidate to prevent HCV recurrence in LT-patients. In addition, the detailed identification of the neutralizing epitope can be applied for the design of prophylactic HCV vaccines.

Efficacy of an Adenoviral Vectored Multivalent Centralized Influenza Vaccine

Lingel, Amy; Bullard, Brianna L.; Weaver, Eric A.
Sci Rep.
Nov 2017
Mice were immunized with Adenovirus expressing the H1-con, H2-con, H3-con and H5-con HA consensus genes in combination (multivalent) and compared to mice immunized with the traditional 2010–2011 FluZone and FluMist seasonal vaccines. Immunized mice were challenged with 10–100 MLD50 of H1N1, H3N1, H3N2 and H5N1 influenza viruses. The traditional vaccines induced robust levels of HA inhibition (HI) titers, but failed to protect against five different heterologous lethal influenza challenges. Conversely, the multivalent consensus vaccine (1 × 1010 virus particles (vp)/mouse) induced protective HI titers of ≥40 against 8 of 10 influenza viruses that represent a wide degree of divergence within the HA subtypes and protected 100% of mice from 8 of 9 lethal heterologous influenza virus challenges. The vaccine protection was dose dependent, in general, and a dose as low as 5 × 107 vp/mouse still provided 100% survival against 7 of 9 lethal heterologous influenza challenges. These data indicate that very low doses of Adenovirus-vectored consensus vaccines induce superior levels of immunity against a wide divergence of influenza subtypes as compared to traditional vaccines. These doses are scalable and translatable to humans and may provide the foundation for complete and long-lasting anti-influenza immunity.

Quote form