Discovery of Native Autoantigens Via Antigen Surrogate Technology: Application to Type I Diabetes (original) (raw)

Discovery of Native Autoantigens via Antigen Surrogate Technology: Application to Type 1 Diabetes

ACS Chemical Biology, 2015

A fundamental goal in understanding the mechanisms of autoimmune disease is the characterization of autoantigens that are targeted by autoreactive antibodies and T cells. Unfortunately, the identification of autoantigens is a difficult problem. We have begun to explore a novel route to the discovery of autoantibody/autoantigen pairs that involves comparative screening of combinatorial libraries of unnatural, synthetic molecules for compounds that bind antibodies present at much higher levels in the serum of individuals with a given autoimmune disease than in the serum of control individuals. We have shown that this approach can yield "antigen surrogates" capable of capturing disease-specific autoantibodies from serum. In this report, we demonstrate that the synthetic antigen surrogates can be used to affinity purify the autoantibodies from serum and that these antibodies can then be used to identify their cognate autoantigen in an appropriate tissue lysate. Specifically, we report the discovery of a peptoid able to bind autoantibodies present in about one-third of nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice. The peptoid-binding autoantibodies were highly enriched through peptoid affinity chromatography and employed to probe mouse pancreatic and brain lysates. This resulted in identification of murine GAD65 as the native autoantigen. GAD65 is a known humoral autoantigen in human type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM), but its existence in mice had been controversial. This study demonstrates the potential of this chemical approach for the unbiased identification of autoantigen/autoantibody complexes.

Autoantigen microarrays for multiplex characterization of autoantibody responses

Nature Medicine, 2002

We constructed miniaturized autoantigen arrays to perform large-scale multiplex characterization of autoantibody responses directed against structurally diverse autoantigens, using submicroliter quantities of clinical samples. Autoantigen microarrays were produced by attaching hundreds of proteins, peptides and other biomolecules to the surface of derivatized glass slides using a robotic arrayer. Arrays were incubated with patient serum, and spectrally resolvable fluorescent labels were used to detect autoantibody binding to specific autoantigens on the array. We describe and characterize arrays containing the major autoantigens in eight distinct human autoimmune diseases, including systemic lupus erythematosus and rheumatoid arthritis. This represents the first report of application of such technology to multiple human disease sera, and will enable validated detection of antibodies recognizing autoantigens including proteins, peptides, enzyme complexes, ribonucleoprotein complexes, DNA and post-translationally modified antigens. Autoantigen microarrays represent a powerful tool to study the specificity and pathogenesis of autoantibody responses, and to identify and define relevant autoantigens in human autoimmune diseases.

Strategy for the characterization of autoantigens in autoimmune diseases

Journal of Immunological Methods, 1988

We present a strategy to characterize specific antigen/autoantibody systems using polyclonal sera from patients as a probe and crude antigenic preparations such as mitoplasts. Sera from patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) are characterized by at least one of two specific subtypes of antimitochondrial antibodies (AMA), anti-p48 or anti-p62. Immunoblotting of such sera with mitoplast preparations derived from human, rat and rabbit livers revealed three proteins of approximately 27, 48 and 68 kDa as target antigens. On the basis of the molecular weight of these antigens we were able to purify them by elution from preparative SDS gels. Immunization of NZB mice with the high molecular weight component (the 68 kDa antigen from human liver mitoplasts) elicited a monoclonal antibody. The 68 kDa protein was then isolated by affinity chromatography and may well represent the prime target antigen of anti-p62 antimitochondrial antibodies. This experimental approach could be applied to protein target antigens of other autoantibodies.

Autoantibody profiling for the study and treatment of autoimmune disease

Arthritis research, 2002

Proteomics technologies enable profiling of autoantibody responses using biological fluids derived from patients with autoimmune disease. They provide a powerful tool to characterize autoreactive B-cell responses in diseases including rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, autoimmune diabetes, and systemic lupus erythematosus. Autoantibody profiling may serve purposes including classification of individual patients and subsets of patients based on their 'autoantibody fingerprint', examination of epitope spreading and antibody isotype usage, discovery and characterization of candidate autoantigens, and tailoring antigen-specific therapy. In the coming decades, proteomics technologies will broaden our understanding of the underlying mechanisms of and will further our ability to diagnose, prognosticate and treat autoimmune disease.

New autoantibody detection technologies yield novel insights into autoimmune disease

Current opinion in rheumatology, 2014

The purpose of this review is to highlight recent progress in autoantibody detection technologies and describe how these methods are providing novel information and insights into autoimmune disorders. In recent years, alternative methods such as comprehensive phage display, fluid-phase immunoassays, and antigen microarrays have been developed for autoantigen discovery and profiling autoantibody responses. Compared with classic approaches such as Western blot and ELISA, these methods show improved diagnostic performance, the ability to measure antibody responses to multiple targets, and/or allow more quantitative analyses. Specific notable findings include uncovering previously unrecognized autoantigens, the improved classification of patient clinical phenotypes, and the discovery of pathogenic autoantibodies promoting disease. Advances in immunoassay technologies offer many opportunities for understanding the relationship between autoantibody detection and the myriad complex, clinic...

Proteomic analysis of the autoantibody response following immunization with a single autoantigen

Proteomics, 2006

In most autoimmune diseases, the autoantibody response is directed against several antigens of the target organ whose identification is crucial for understanding the physiopathological process. Thus, technologies allowing a characterization of the whole autoantibody pattern of both human and experimental autoimmune diseases are required. Here we have used immunoproteomic analysis of human epidermal extracts to characterize the diversity of the anti-desmosome antibody response induced in normal mice immunized with desmoglein 1, the major autoantigen of pemphigus foliaceus, an autoimmune blistering skin disease. In particular, this analysis enables us to characterize the binding properties of anti-desmosome mAbs derived from these mice and to show that the autoantibody response induced upon immunization with a single autoantigen targets different epidermal autoantigens with a pattern similar to that observed in certain variety of human pemphigus.

Autoantigen discovery with a synthetic human peptidome

Nature Biotechnology, 2011

Immune responses targeting self-proteins (autoantigens) can lead to a variety of autoimmune diseases. Identification of these antigens is important for both diagnostic and therapeutic reasons. However, current approaches to characterize autoantigens have, in most cases, met only with limited success. Here we present a synthetic representation of the complete human proteome, the T7 peptidome phage display library (T7-Pep), and demonstrate its application to autoantigen discovery. T7-Pep is composed of >413,000 36-residue, overlapping peptides that cover all open reading frames in the human genome, and can be analyzed using high-throughput DNA sequencing. We developed a phage immunoprecipitation sequencing (PhIP-Seq) methodology to identify known and previously unreported autoantibodies contained in the spinal fluid of three individuals with paraneoplastic neurological syndromes. We also show how T7-Pep can be used more generally to identify peptide-protein interactions, suggesting the broader utility of our approach for proteomic research.

Discovery of biomarkers for systemic lupus erythematosus using a library of synthetic autoantigen surrogates

Journal of Immunological Methods, 2014

Antibodies to a wide range of self-antigens, including those directed against nucleic acids or nucleic acid-binding proteins are the essential biomarkers for diseases such as systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Highly complex libraries of nonamers consisting of N-substituted glycines (peptoids) were screened for compounds that bound IgG from patients with SLE and earlier, incomplete autoimmune syndromes. Peptoids were identified that could identify subjects with SLE and related syndromes with a high sensitivity (70%) and specificity (97.5%). Immobilized peptoids were used to isolate IgG from both healthy subjects and SLE patients that reacted with known RNA-binding proteins. In the case of SLE patients, the peptoid-purified IgG reacted with several autoantigens, suggesting that the peptoids are capable of interacting with multiple, structurally similar molecules. These results show that the measurement of IgG binding to peptoids can identify subjects with high levels of pathogenic autoantibodies.

Autoantigenomics: Holistic characterization of autoantigen repertoires for a better understanding of autoimmune diseases

Autoimmunity Reviews, 2019

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