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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

High-throughput identification of immunoreactive peptides and corresponding proteins fromandusing peptide microarray chips.

Journal:
Frontiers in cellular and infection microbiology
Year:
2025
Authors:
Llanes, Alejandro et al.
Affiliation:
Divisi&#xf3
Species:
dog

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: andare rickettsial pathogens infecting dogs, with a worldwide distribution. Both species are obligate intracellular pathogens and colonize bone marrow-derived cells, with coinfections frequently reported in dogs. Althoughimmunodominant proteins have been thoroughly characterized, very few high-throughput studies have been conducted to identify immunogenic proteins fromspp. In this study, we used a methodology based on peptide microarray chips to identify immunoreactive peptides, either shared or species-specific, in the complete theoretical proteomes of both pathogens. METHODS: B-cell epitopes were predicted in the corresponding proteins from both species and ranked for synthesis on the peptide microarrays. These microarrays were screened with serum samples from antibody-positive dogs, as well as negative control sera from unexposed dogs. Additionally, we assessed the feasibility of integrating evidence gathered at the level of individual peptides to identify potentially immunogenic proteins contributing to the patterns of immunoreactivity observed on microarrays. RESULTS: Screening of peptide microarrays resulted in complex antibody reactivity patterns against thousands of peptides. After discarding peptides with cross-reactivity to negative control sera, we identified over 1,200 immunoreactive peptides, including ~80 peptides shared between the two species with almost identical sequences. Despite screening linear peptides, we were able to identify proteins previously reported as immunodominant in, some of which contain predominantly conformational epitopes. DISCUSSION: Our results suggest that a high-throughput strategy based on peptide microarrays is an effective approach for the rapid identification of immunoreactive peptides and the underlying immunogenic proteins. This study provides a foundation for developing novel diagnostic tools and vaccine candidates againstand, including potential combined or multivalent formulations targeting both pathogens.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41574292/