Profiling the humoral immune response to infection by using proteome microarrays: High-throughput vaccine and diagnostic antigen discovery
Top Cited Papers
- 12 January 2005
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 102 (3) , 547-552
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0408782102
Abstract
Despite the increasing availability of genome sequences from many human pathogens, the production of complete proteomes remains at a bottleneck. To address this need, a high-throughput PCR recombination cloning and expression platform has been developed that allows hundreds of genes to be batch-processed by using ordinary laboratory procedures without robotics. The method relies on high-throughput amplification of each predicted ORF by using gene specific primers, followed by in vivo homologous recombination into a T7 expression vector. The proteins are expressed in an Escherichia coli-based cell-free in vitro transcription/translation system, and the crude reactions containing expressed proteins are printed directly onto nitrocellulose microarrays without purification. The protein microarrays are useful for determining the complete antigen-specific humoral immune-response profile from vaccinated or infected humans and animals. The system was verified by cloning, expressing, and printing a vaccinia virus proteome consisting of 185 individual viral proteins. The chips were used to determine Ab profiles in serum from vaccinia virus-immunized humans, primates, and mice. Human serum has high titers of anti-E. coli Abs that require blocking to unmask vaccinia-specific responses. Naive humans exhibit reactivity against a subset of 13 antigens that were not associated with vaccinia immunization. Naive mice and primates lacked this background reactivity. The specific profiles between the three species differed, although a common subset of antigens was reactive after vaccinia immunization. These results verify this platform as a rapid way to comprehensively scan humoral immunity from vaccinated or infected humans and animals.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- High-Throughput Cloning of Campylobacter jejuni ORFs by in Vivo Recombination in Escherichia coliJournal of Proteome Research, 2004
- Serodiagnosis of infectious diseases with antigen microarraysJournal of Applied Microbiology, 2004
- Cutting Edge: Long-Term B Cell Memory in Humans after Smallpox VaccinationThe Journal of Immunology, 2003
- Utilization of genomic sequence information to develop malaria vaccinesJournal of Experimental Biology, 2003
- Transcriptionally Active Polymerase Chain Reaction (TAP)Journal of Biological Chemistry, 2002
- Complete Genome Sequence of Neisseria meningitidis Serogroup B Strain MC58Science, 2000
- Identification of Vaccine Candidates Against Serogroup B Meningococcus by Whole-Genome SequencingScience, 2000
- Recombinogenic targeting: a new approach to genomic analysis—a reviewGene, 1998
- In vivocloning of PCR products inE.coliNucleic Acids Research, 1993