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

Systematic analysis of the RGS2 degron reveals characteristics of substrate recognition by the F-box protein FBXO44

McNabb, Harrison J.; Cho, Eugene; Pitman, Mary; Rushton, Phillip S.; Mobley, David; Sjögren, Benita
Journal of Biological Chemistry.
Nov 2025
Regulator of G protein signaling 2 (RGS2) negatively modulates signaling downstream of G protein–coupled receptors by accelerating GTP hydrolysis at Gα subunits of heterotrimeric G proteins. Decreased RGS2 levels are implicated in numerous diseases, including cardiovascular disease and asthma. Thus, identifying selective means of enhancing RGS2 protein levels would be a viable therapeutic strategy. RGS2 is rapidly degraded through the ubiquitin–proteasomal pathway, and we previously identified F-box only protein 44 (FBXO44) as the substrate recognition component of the E3 ligase responsible for facilitating RGS2 degradation. As such, the RGS2–FBXO44 interaction is a potential target for pharmacological intervention. Detailed information on the FBXO44 recognition site (degron) in RGS2 will aid in structure-based small-molecule inhibitor design, as well as in identifying additional FBXO44 targets, which would help predict possible side effects of targeting this interaction. Thus, the goal of this study was to dissect the molecular properties for FBXO44 binding of the RGS2 degron. We used a peptide array utilizing systematic residue substitution, combined with AlphaFold modeling and molecular dynamics simulations, to identify several amino acid changes that altered binding both positively and negatively. Finally, we experimentally confirmed our results in cells through coimmunoprecipitation and proteasomal inhibition, using full-length RGS2. Altogether, these results provide structural insights into RGS2–FBXO44 binding, which will aid in structure-guided drug discovery efforts. It also provides a framework for building a consensus recognition motif for FBXO44, which could aid in identifying more substrates for this understudied F-box protein.

Identification of Tripeptide Modulators of ACE2 Activity Using a High Throughput Screen (Abstract ID: 165381)

Walker, David F.; Karamyan, Vardan T.
The Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics.
Mar 2025
Angiotensin converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) works in the renin angiotensin aldosterone system to decrease circulating levels of angiotensin II by removing the C-terminal phenylalanine and converting it to angiotensin (1-7). In addition, ACE2 has received increased interest in research due to its role in COVID-19 pathogenesis, as the binding site and cell entry gate for the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). While ACE2 inhibitors have been primarily used as pharmacological tools to study the renin-angiotensin system, small molecule ACE2 enhancers (aka activators) are highly desired because of their hypothesized therapeutic potential. This study was designed to identify peptide-based enhancers of ACE2. First, binding of human recombinant ACE2 to all possible tripeptides composed of the 20 proteinogenic amino acids, was evaluated using a proprietary immunofluorescence-based peptide microarray. Binding of 6xHis-tagged ACE2 to the 8000 tripeptides immobilized on a microchip was evaluated at 10 µg/ml and 100 µg/ml concentrations of the peptidase using a DyLight680-conjugated anti-6xHis-tag antibody. Hemagglutinin (HA) immobilized on the microchip served as a positive control peptide in the microarray and it was tracked using a DyLight800-conjugated anti-HA antibody. The read-out was performed with an Innopsys InnoScan 710-IR Microarray Scanner at scanning gains of 50/10 (red/green). In the result of the microarray a number of tripeptides were identified as potential ACE2 binders. Among them, 22 tripeptides were selected to represent several the most pronounced binders as well as a number of structurally similar tripeptides that did not show appreciable binding to ACE2 to serve as negative control. The effect of the selected peptides (at 1, 10 and 100 µM) on activity of human recombinant ACE2 was tested in a continuous enzymatic assay using a fluorogenic substrate. Contrary to our expectation, none of the peptides affected the activity of ACE2 in a significant manner. These results suggest that the selected peptides do not alter activity of ACE2, but they do not exclude the possibility that some of the peptides may still bind to the peptidase. Our subsequent experiments will apply differential scanning fluorometry (DSF) to determine whether these peptides physically interact with recombinant ACE2.

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.

The cellular modifier MOAG-4/SERF drives amyloid formation through charge complementation

Pras, Anita; Houben, Bert; Aprile, Francesco A.; Seinstra, Renée; Gallardo, Rodrigo; Janssen, Leen; Hogewerf, Wytse; Gallrein, Christian; De Vleeschouwer, Matthias; Mata-Cabana, Alejandro; Koopman, Mandy; Stroo, Esther; de Vries, Minke; Louise Edwards, Samantha; Kirstein, Janine; Vendruscolo, Michele; Falsone, Salvatore Fabio; Rousseau, Frederic; Schymkowitz, Joost; Nollen, Ellen A. A.
EMBO J.
Nov 2021
While aggregation-prone proteins are known to accelerate aging and cause age-related diseases, the cellular mechanisms that drive their cytotoxicity remain unresolved. The orthologous proteins MOAG-4, SERF1A, and SERF2 have recently been identified as cellular modifiers of such proteotoxicity. Using a peptide array screening approach on human amyloidogenic proteins, we found that SERF2 interacted with protein segments enriched in negatively charged and hydrophobic, aromatic amino acids. The absence of such segments, or the neutralization of the positive charge in SERF2, prevented these interactions and abolished the amyloid-promoting activity of SERF2. In protein aggregation models in the nematode worm Caenorhabditis elegans, protein aggregation and toxicity were suppressed by mutating the endogenous locus of MOAG-4 to neutralize charge. Our data indicate that MOAG-4 and SERF2 drive protein aggregation and toxicity by interactions with negatively charged segments in aggregation-prone proteins. Such charge interactions might accelerate primary nucleation of amyloid by initiating structural changes and by decreasing colloidal stability. Our study points at charge interactions between cellular modifiers and amyloidogenic proteins as potential targets for interventions to reduce age-related protein toxicity.

Human Antibody Domains and Fragments Targeting Neutrophil Elastase as Candidate Therapeutics for Cancer and Inflammation-Related Diseases

Chu, Xiaojie; Sun, Zehua; Baek, Du-San; Li, Wei; Mellors, John W.; Shapiro, Steven D.; Dimitrov, Dimiter S.
Int J Mol Sci.
Oct 2021
Neutrophil elastase (NE) is a serine protease released during neutrophil maturation. High levels of NE are related to lung tissue damage and poor prognosis in cancer; thus, NE is a potential target for therapeutic immunotherapy for multiple lung diseases and cancers. Here, we isolate and characterize two high-affinity, specific, and noncompetitive anti-NE antibodies Fab 1C10 and VH 1D1.43 from two large phage-displayed human Fab and VH libraries. After fusion with human IgG1 Fc, both of them (VH-Fc 1D1.43 and IgG1 1C10) inhibit NE enzymatic activity with VH-Fc 1D1.43 showing comparable inhibitory effects to that of the small molecule NE inhibitor SPCK and IgG1 1C10 exhibiting even higher (2.6-fold) activity than SPCK. Their epitopes, as mapped by peptide arrays combined with structural modeling, indicate different mechanisms for blocking NE activity. Both VH-Fc and IgG1 antibodies block NE uptake by cancer cells and fibroblast differentiation. VH-Fc 1D1.43 and IgG1 1C10 are promising for the antibody-based immunotherapy of cancer and inflammatory diseases.

HSP70iQ435A to subdue autoimmunity and support anti-tumor responses

Jaishankar, Dinesh; Cosgrove, Cormac; Ramesh, Prathyaya; Mahon, James; Shivde, Rohan; Dellacecca, Emilia R.; Yang, Shiayin F.; Mosenson, Jeffrey; Guevara-Patiño, José A.; Le Poole, I. Caroline
Cell Stress and Chaperones.
Sep 2021
Developing immunosuppressive therapies for autoimmune diseases comes with a caveat that immunosuppression may promote the risk of developing other conditions or diseases. We have previously shown that biolistic delivery of an expression construct encoding inducible HSP70 (HSP70i) with one amino acid modification in the dendritic cell (DC) activating moiety 435–445 (HSP70iQ435A) to mouse skin resulted in significant immunosuppressive activity of autoimmune vitiligo, associated with fewer tissue infiltrating T cells. To prepare HSP70iQ435A as a potential therapeutic for autoimmune vitiligo, in this study we evaluated whether and how biolistic delivery of HSP70iQ435A in mice affects anti-tumor responses. We found that HSP70iQ435A in fact supports anti-tumor responses in melanoma-challenged C57BL/6 mice. Biolistic delivery of the HSP70iQ435A-encoding construct to mice elicited significant anti-HSP70 titers, and anti-HSP70 IgG and IgM antibodies recognize surface-expressed and cytoplasmic HSP70i in human and mouse melanoma cells. A peptide scan revealed that the anti-HSP70 antibodies recognize a specific C-terminal motif within the HSP70i protein. The antibodies elicited surface CD107A expression among mouse NK cells, representative of antibody-mediated cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC), supporting the concept, that HSP70iQ435A-encoding DNA elicits a humoral response to the stress protein expressed selectively on the surface of melanoma cells. Thus, besides limiting autoimmunity and inflammation, HSP70iQ435A elicits humoral responses that limit tumor growth and may be used in conjunction with immune checkpoint inhibitors to not only control tumor but to also limit adverse events following tumor immunotherapy.

Non-invasive immunoPET imaging of PD-L1 using anti-PD-L1-B11 in breast cancer and melanoma tumor model

Bansal, Aditya; Pandey, Mukesh K.; Barham, Whitney; Liu, Xin; Harrington, Susan M.; Lucien, Fabrice; Dong, Haidong; Park, Sean S.; DeGrado, Timothy R.
Nuclear Medicine and Biology.
May 2021
Introduction Immunotherapy targeting PD-1/PD-L1 immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI) is efficacious in various solid and hematologic malignancies. However, the response rate to PD-1/PD-L1 therapy is only 15–35%. To obtain optimal clinical response to ICI therapies, a reliable assessment of tumor PD-L1 expression is needed to select appropriate patients, and a non-invasive imaging-based assessment of PD-L1 expression is critically needed. Although radiolabeled PET probes based on PD-L1 targeted therapeutic antibodies (e.g. atezolizumab) have shown encouraging results, there is concern that residual therapeutic antibody may compete for binding with the radiotracer thereby compromising imaging studies that follow treatment. Methods and results In this study, we used novel anti-PD-L1-B11 clone antibody known to bind to a different epitope of PD-L1 than the therapeutic antibodies to avoid potential saturation effects. The anti-PD-L1-B11 clone was radiolabeled with zirconium-89 and evaluated to detect PD-L1 expression in various in vitro and in vivo cancer model systems in comparison with [89Zr]Zr-DFO-NCS-atezolizumab. In vitro binding parameters of anti-PD-L1-B11 were like those of atezolizumab. [89Zr]Zr-DFO-NCS-anti-PD-L1-B11 clone showed favorable properties to [89Zr]Zr-DFO-NCS-atezolizumab in an in vivo breast cancer tumor model system with higher uptake in PD-L1 expressing tumors. Conclusion Our data demonstrates that [89Zr]Zr-DFO-NCS-anti-PD-L1-B11 exhibits excellent imaging properties for the assessment PD-L1 expression. The independent binding site of anti-PD-L1-B11 relative to therapeutic anti-PD-L1 antibodies may be advantageous for anti-PD-L1 therapy monitoring.

Analysis of chronic inflammatory lesions of the colon for BMMF Rep antigen expression and CD68 macrophage interactions

Bund, Timo; Nikitina, Ekaterina; Chakraborty, Deblina; Ernst, Claudia; Gunst, Karin; Boneva, Boyana; Tessmer, Claudia; Volk, Nadine; Brobeil, Alexander; Weber, Achim; Heikenwalder, Mathias; Zur Hausen, Harald; de Villiers, Ethel-Michele
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A.
Mar 2021
Consumption of Eurasian bovine meat and milk has been associated with cancer development, in particular with colorectal cancer (CRC). In addition, zoonotic infectious agents from bovine products were proposed to cause colon cancer (zur Hausen et al., 2009). Bovine meat and milk factors (BMMF) are small episomal DNA molecules frequently isolated from bovine sera and milk products, and recently, also from colon cancer (de Villiers et al., 2019). BMMF are bioactive in human cells and were proposed to induce chronic inflammation in precancerous tissue leading to increased radical formation: for example, reactive oxygen and reactive nitrogen species and elevated levels of DNA mutations in replicating cells, such as cancer progenitor cells (zur Hausen et al., 2018). Mouse monoclonal antibodies against the replication (Rep) protein of H1MSB.1 (BMMF1) were used to analyze BMMF presence in different cohorts of CRC peritumor and tumor tissues and cancer-free individuals by immunohistochemistry and Western blot. BMMF DNA was isolated by laser microdissection from immunohistochemistry-positive tissue regions. We found BMMF Rep protein present specifically in close vicinity of CD68+ macrophages in the interstitial lamina propria adjacent to CRC tissues, suggesting the presence of local chronic inflammation. BMMF1 (modified H1MSB.1) DNA was isolated from the same tissue regions. Rep and CD68+ detection increased significantly in peritumor cancer tissues when compared to tissues of cancer-free individuals. This strengthens previous postulations that BMMF function as indirect carcinogens by inducing chronic inflammation and DNA damage in replicating cells, which represent progress to progenitor cells for adenoma (polyps) formation and cancer.

Comparison of Monoclonal Gammopathies Linked to Poliovirus or Coxsackievirus vs. Other Infectious Pathogens

Harb, Jean; Mennesson, Nicolas; Lepetit, Cassandra; Fourny, Maeva; Louvois, Margaux; Bosseboeuf, Adrien; Allain-Maillet, Sophie; Decaux, Olivier; Moreau, Caroline; Tallet, Anne; Piver, Eric; Moreau, Philippe; Salle, Valéry; Bigot-Corbel, Edith; Hermouet, Sylvie
Chronic stimulation by infectious pathogens or self-antigen glucosylsphingosine (GlcSph) can lead to monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) and multiple myeloma (MM). Novel assays such as the multiplex infectious antigen microarray (MIAA) and GlcSph assays, permit identification of targets for >60% purified monoclonal immunoglobulins (Igs). Searching for additional targets, we selected 28 purified monoclonal Igs whose antigen was not represented on the MIAA and GlcSph assays; their specificity of recognition was then analyzed using microarrays consisting of 3760 B-cell epitopes from 196 pathogens. The peptide sequences PALTAVETG and PALTAAETG of the VP1 coat proteins of human poliovirus 1/3 and coxsackievirus B1/B3, respectively, were specifically recognized by 6/28 monoclonal Igs. Re-analysis of patient cohorts showed that purified monoclonal Igs from 10/155 MGUS/SM (6.5%) and 3/147 MM (2.0%) bound to the PALTAVETG or PALTAAETG epitopes. Altogether, PALTAV/AETG-initiated MGUS are not rare and few seem to evolve toward myeloma.

Nutrient transceptors physically interact with the yeast S6/protein kinase B homolog, Sch9, a TOR kinase target

Zhang, Zhiqiang; Cottignie, Ines; Van Zeebroeck, Griet; Thevelein, Johan M.
Biochem J.
Jan 2021
Multiple starvation-induced, high-affinity nutrient transporters in yeast function as receptors for activation of the protein kinase A (PKA) pathway upon re-addition of their substrate. We now show that these transceptors may play more extended roles in nutrient regulation. The Gap1 amino acid, Mep2 ammonium, Pho84 phosphate and Sul1 sulfate transceptors physically interact in vitro and in vivo with the PKA-related Sch9 protein kinase, the yeast homolog of mammalian S6 protein kinase and protein kinase B. Sch9 is a phosphorylation target of TOR and well known to affect nutrient-controlled cellular processes, such as growth rate. Mapping with peptide microarrays suggests specific interaction domains in Gap1 for Sch9 binding. Mutagenesis of the major domain affects the upstart of growth upon the addition of L-citrulline to nitrogen-starved cells to different extents but apparently does not affect in vitro binding. It also does not correlate with the drop in L-citrulline uptake capacity or transceptor activation of the PKA target trehalase by the Gap1 mutant forms. Our results reveal a nutrient transceptor–Sch9–TOR axis in which Sch9 accessibility for phosphorylation by TOR may be affected by nutrient transceptor–Sch9 interaction under conditions of nutrient starvation or other environmental challenges.

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