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  4. Identification of a Tetanus Toxin Specific Epitope in Single Amino Acid Resolution
 
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Identification of a Tetanus Toxin Specific Epitope in Single Amino Acid Resolution

Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2017-10-01
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Palermo, Andrea  
Weber, Laura K.  
Rentschler, Simone  
Isse, Awale  
Sedlmayr, Martyna  
Herbster, Karin  
List, Volker  
Hubbuch, Jürgen  
Löffler, Felix F.  
Nesterov-Müller, Alexander  
Breitling, Frank  
TORE-URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11420/59489
Journal
Biotechnology journal  
Volume
12
Issue
10
Article Number
1700197
Citation
Biotechnology Journal 12 (10): 1700197 (2017)
Publisher DOI
10.1002/biot.201700197
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85031661778
ISSN
18606768
Vaccinations are among the most potent tools to fight infectious diseases. However, cross-reactions are an ongoing problem and there is an urgent need to fully understand the mechanisms of the immune response. For the development of a methodological workflow, the linear epitopes in the immune response to the tetanus toxin is investigated in sera of 19 vaccinated Europeans applying epitope mapping with peptide arrays. The most prominent epitope, appearing in nine different sera (923IHLVNNESSEVIVHK937), is investigated in a substitution analysis to identify the amino acids that are crucial for the binding of the corresponding antibody species − the antibody fingerprint. The antibody fingerprints of different individuals are compared and found to be strongly conserved (929ExxEVIVxK937), which is astonishing considering the randomness of their development. Additionally, the corresponding antibody species is isolated from one serum with batch chromatography using the amino acid sequence of the identified epitope and the tetanus specificity of the isolated antibody is verified by ELISA. Studying antibody fingerprints with peptide arrays should be transferable to any kind of humoral immune response toward protein antigens. Furthermore, antibody fingerprints have shown to be highly disease-specific and, therefore, can be employed as reliable biomarkers enabling the study of cross-reacting antigens.
Subjects
Antibody specificity
Biomarker development
Epitope Mapping
Substitution analysis
Tetanus
DDC Class
600: Technology
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