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

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.

Clinical outcomes-dependent IgG epitope profiling in HTLV-1 reveals differential recognition of pathogen-derived antigens

Cilento, Natali Espasiani; Borges, João Vitor Da Silva; Machado, Nicolle Rakanidis; Do Nascimento, Lais Alves; Moreira, Anna Luisa Baratelli; Passos, Lhays Ozório; Santamarina, Aline Boveto; Casseb, Jorge; Sanabani, Sabri Saeed; Victor, Jefferson Russo
Front. Immunol..
Feb 2026
Human T-lymphotropic virus type 1 (HTLV-1) infection presents a wide clinical spectrum ranging from lifelong asymptomatic carriage to severe inflammatory neurodegeneration (HAM/TSP) or adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATLL). Although IgG responses contribute to viral control and immunopathology, the extent to which HTLV-1 clinical outcomes shape pathogen-derived IgG repertoires remains unclear. In this study, we applied a high-density infectious-disease epitope microarray containing 4,345 linear epitopes from viral, bacterial, parasitic, and fungal pathogens to profile IgG responses in healthy controls (HCs), asymptomatic carriers (ACs), HAM/TSP patients, and ATLL patients. Signal intensities were quantified in arbitrary units, and recognized epitopes were evaluated using similarity clustering (80% identity threshold) to assess repertoire structure. HTLV-1–infected individuals exhibited extensive remodeling of humoral immunity, with marked differences in the breadth and intensity of IgG recognition across clinical groups. HAM/TSP patients displayed broad and high-magnitude responses consistent with chronic inflammation and heightened Th1 activation, whereas ATLL patients recognized the largest number of epitopes but with distinct patterns indicative of altered B-cell regulation. Enhanced IgG responses to Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Strongyloides stercoralis, Toxoplasma gondii, and Plasmodium species were consistent with known co-infection susceptibilities in HTLV-1. Epitope similarity analysis revealed hundreds of low-redundancy clusters across all groups, arguing against simple linear cross-reactivity and suggesting phenotype-specific reshaping of B-cell selection and idiotypic networks. These findings demonstrate that HTLV-1 infection produces distinct, clinically dependent IgG epitope signatures across multiple pathogen classes, with potential relevance for understanding HTLV-1 pathogenesis and informing future studies integrating epitope mapping with B-cell repertoire analysis.

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.

Predicting HBsAg clearance in genotype A chronic hepatitis B using HBsAg epitope profiling: A biomarker for functional cure

Walsh, Renae; Hammond, Rachel; Yuen, Lilly; Deerain, Joshua; O’Donnell, Tanya; Leary, Thomas; Cloherty, Gavin; Gaggar, Anuj; Kitrinos, Kathryn; Subramanian, Mani; Wong, Darren; Locarnini, Stephen
Liver Int.
Nov 2019
Background and Aim Functional cure is the major goal of chronic hepatitis B (CHB) therapy though few biomarkers predict this outcome. HBsAg epitope occupancy can be influenced by therapeutic and immune pressure. The aim of this study was to map the HBsAg epitope profiles during long-term nucleos(t)ide analogue therapy in patients with genotype A CHB, in the context of HBsAg loss (SL)/seroconversion. Methods We evaluated 25 genotype A CHB patients in the GS-US-174-0103 trial of HBeAg-positive CHB patients treated with tenofovir or adefovir for 4 years, 14 who achieved SL whilst 11 had no change. We epitope mapped the major domains of HBsAg to identify those patients with HBsAg clearance profile (CP) (loss of binding at both loops 1 and 2 epitopes of the ‘a’ determinant) vs non-clearance profile (no change in epitope recognition, or loss of epitope binding at one loop only), correlating this to on-treatment HBsAg responses. Complexed anti-HBs was also measured. Results Analysis of the HBsAg epitope profiles of the 25 patients at baseline identified no predictive correlation with SL. In contrast, analysis at week 48 and end of study (week 192) or prior to SL identified significant predictive associations between development of HBsAg CPs and outcome of functional cure. The detection of a CP also correlated with the development of an alanine aminotransferase flare and detection of anti-HBs complexed with HBsAg. Conclusion The detection of HBsAg CPs by epitope mapping represents a novel viral biomarker, reflecting an emerging anti-HBs selection pressure prior to functional cure.

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.

Immunization of cats to induce neutralizing antibodies against Fel d 1, the major feline allergen in human subjects

Thoms, Franziska; Jennings, Gary T.; Maudrich, Melanie; Vogel, Monique; Haas, Stefanie; Zeltins, Andris; Hofmann-Lehmann, Regina; Riond, Barbara; Grossmann, Jonas; Hunziker, Peter; Fettelschoss-Gabriel, Antonia; Senti, Gabriela; Kündig, Thomas M.; Bachmann, Martin F.
Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.
Jul 2019
Background Cat allergy in human subjects is usually caused by the major cat allergen Fel d 1 and is found in approximately 10% of the Western population. Currently, there is no efficient and safe therapy for cat allergy available. Allergic patients usually try to avoid cats or treat their allergy symptoms. Objective We developed a new strategy to treat Fel d 1–induced allergy in human subjects by immunizing cats against their own major allergen, Fel d 1. Methods A conjugate vaccine consisting of recombinant Fel d 1 and a virus-like particle derived from the cucumber mosaic virus containing the tetanus toxin–derived universal T-cell epitope tt830-843 (CuMVTT) was used to immunize cats. A first tolerability and immunogenicity study, including a boost injection, was conducted by using the Fel-CuMVTT vaccine alone or in combination with an adjuvant. Results The vaccine was well tolerated and had no overt toxic effect. All cats induced a strong and sustained specific IgG antibody response. The induced anti–Fel d 1 antibodies were of high affinity and exhibited a strong neutralization ability tested both in vitro and in vivo. A reduction in the endogenous allergen level and a reduced allergenicity of tear samples, were observed. Conclusion Vaccination of cats with Fel-CuMVTT induces neutralizing antibodies and might result in reduced symptoms of allergic cat owners. Both human subjects and animals could profit from this treatment because allergic cat owners would reduce their risk of developing chronic diseases, such as asthma, and become more tolerant of their cats, which therefore could stay in the households and not need to be relinquished to animal shelters.

Performance evaluation of 3 serodiagnostic peptide epitopes and the derived multi-epitope peptide OvNMP-48 for detection of Onchocerca volvulus infection

Lagatie, Ole; Verheyen, Ann; Nijs, Erik; Batsa Debrah, Linda; Debrah, Yaw A.; Stuyver, Lieven J.
Parasitol Res.
Jul 2019
Current diagnostic tools to determine infection with the helminth parasite Onchocerca volvulus have limited performance characteristics. In previous studies, a proteome-wide screen was conducted to identify linear epitopes in this parasite’s proteome, resulting in the discovery of 1110 antigenic peptide fragments. Here, we investigated three of these peptides using peptide ELISA’s and evaluated their sensitivity and specificity. Epitope mapping was performed, and peptides were constructed that contained only the minimal epitope, flanked by a linker. Investigation of the performance of these minimal epitope peptides demonstrated that all three of them have a specificity (as defined by lack of response in non-helminth-infected individuals) of 100%, low cross-reactivity (5.6%, 5.6%, and 9.3%, respectively), but low sensitivity (36.9%, 46.5%, and 41.2%, respectively). Some cross-reactivity was observed in samples from individuals infected with soil-transmitted helminths or Brugia malayi. Combining these three minimal epitopes in a single peptide, called OvNMP-48, resulted in a performance that exceeded the sum of the individual epitopes, with a sensitivity of 76.0%, a specificity of 97.4%, and a cross-reactivity of 11.1%. Cross-reactivity was observed in some STH and Brugia malayi-infected individuals. This work opens the opportunity to start exploring how these novel linear epitope markers might become part of the O. volvulus diagnostic toolbox.

LRPAP1 is a frequent proliferation-inducing antigen of BCRs of mantle cell lymphomas and can be used for specific therapeutic targeting

Thurner, Lorenz; Hartmann, Sylvia; Fadle, Natalie; Kemele, Maria; Bock, Theresa; Bewarder, Moritz; Regitz, Evi; Neumann, Frank; Nimmesgern, Anna; von Müller, Lutz; Pott, Christiane; Kim, Yoo-Jin; Bohle, Rainer Maria; Wasik, Mariusz; Schuster, Stephen J.; Hansmann, Martin-Leo; Preuss, Klaus-Dieter; Pfreundschuh, Michael
Leukemia.
Jun 2019
The predominant usage of VH4-34 and V3-21 and reports of stereotyped CDR3s suggest a shared antigenic target of B-cell receptors (BCR) from mantle cell lymphomas (MCL). To identify the target antigens of MCL–BCRs, BCRs from 21 patients and seven MCL cell lines were recombinantly expressed and used for antigen screening. The BCRs from 8/21 patients and 2/7 MCL cell lines reacted specifically with the autoantigen low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein-associated protein 1 (LRPAP1). High-titered and light chain-restricted anti-LRPAP1 serum antibodies were found in MCL patients, but not in controls. LRPAP1 induced proliferation by BCR pathway activation, while an LRPAP1–ETA′ toxin-conjugate specifically killed MCL cells with LRPAP1-specific BCRs. Our results suggest a role of LRPAP1 in lymphomagenesis and maintenance of a considerable proportion of MCL cases by chronic autoantigenic stimulation, likely evolving from a chronic autoreactive B-cell response. Importantly, LRPAP1 can be used for a novel therapeutic approach that targets MCL with LRPAP1-reactive BCRs with high specificity.

Miniaturized and Automated Synthesis of Biomolecules—Overview and Perspectives

Mattes, Daniela S.; Jung, Nicole; Weber, Laura K.; Bräse, Stefan; Breitling, Frank
Adv. Mater..
Jun 2019
Chemical synthesis is performed by reacting different chemical building blocks with defined stoichiometry, while meeting additional conditions, such as temperature and reaction time. Such a procedure is especially suited for automation and miniaturization. Life sciences lead the way to synthesizing millions of different oligonucleotides in extremely miniaturized reaction sites, e.g., pinpointing active genes in whole genomes, while chemistry advances different types of automation. Recent progress in matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS) imaging could match miniaturized chemical synthesis with a powerful analytical tool to validate the outcome of many different synthesis pathways beyond applications in the life sciences. Thereby, due to the radical miniaturization of chemical synthesis, thousands of molecules can be synthesized. This in turn should allow ambitious research, e.g., finding novel synthesis routes or directly screening for photocatalysts. Herein, different technologies are discussed that might be involved in this endeavor. A special emphasis is given to the obstacles that need to be tackled when depositing tiny amounts of materials to many different extremely miniaturized reaction sites.

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