Antibody based strategies for multiplexed diagnostics
abstract: Peptide microarrays are to proteomics as sequencing is to genomics. As microarrays become more content-rich, higher resolution proteomic studies will parallel deep sequencing of nucleic acids. Antigen-antibody interactions can be studied at a much higher resolution using microarrays than w...
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ndltd-asu.edu-item-257902018-06-22T03:05:19Z Antibody based strategies for multiplexed diagnostics abstract: Peptide microarrays are to proteomics as sequencing is to genomics. As microarrays become more content-rich, higher resolution proteomic studies will parallel deep sequencing of nucleic acids. Antigen-antibody interactions can be studied at a much higher resolution using microarrays than was possible only a decade ago. My dissertation focuses on testing the feasibility of using either the Immunosignature platform, based on non-natural peptide sequences, or a pathogen peptide microarray, which uses bioinformatically-selected peptides from pathogens for creating sensitive diagnostics. Both diagnostic applications use relatively little serum from infected individuals, but each approaches diagnosis of disease differently. The first project compares pathogen epitope peptide (life-space) and non-natural (random-space) peptide microarrays while using them for the early detection of Coccidioidomycosis (Valley Fever). The second project uses NIAID category A, B and C priority pathogen epitope peptides in a multiplexed microarray platform to assess the feasibility of using epitope peptides to simultaneously diagnose multiple exposures using a single assay. Cross-reactivity is a consistent feature of several antigen-antibody based immunodiagnostics. This work utilizes microarray optimization and bioinformatic approaches to distill the underlying disease specific antibody signature pattern. Circumventing inherent cross-reactivity observed in antibody binding to peptides was crucial to achieve the goal of this work to accurately distinguishing multiple exposures simultaneously. Dissertation/Thesis Navalkar, Krupa Arun (Author) Johnston, Stephen A (Advisor) Stafford, Phillip (Advisor) Sykes, Kathryn (Committee member) Jacobs, Bertram (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Bioinformatics Immunology Medicine antibody diagnostic immunosignature infectious disease Multiplexed peptide microarray eng 369 pages Doctoral Dissertation Biological Design 2014 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25790 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2014 |
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language |
English |
format |
Doctoral Thesis |
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Bioinformatics Immunology Medicine antibody diagnostic immunosignature infectious disease Multiplexed peptide microarray |
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Bioinformatics Immunology Medicine antibody diagnostic immunosignature infectious disease Multiplexed peptide microarray Antibody based strategies for multiplexed diagnostics |
description |
abstract: Peptide microarrays are to proteomics as sequencing is to genomics. As microarrays become more content-rich, higher resolution proteomic studies will parallel deep sequencing of nucleic acids. Antigen-antibody interactions can be studied at a much higher resolution using microarrays than was possible only a decade ago. My dissertation focuses on testing the feasibility of using either the Immunosignature platform, based on non-natural peptide sequences, or a pathogen peptide microarray, which uses bioinformatically-selected peptides from pathogens for creating sensitive diagnostics. Both diagnostic applications use relatively little serum from infected individuals, but each approaches diagnosis of disease differently. The first project compares pathogen epitope peptide (life-space) and non-natural (random-space) peptide microarrays while using them for the early detection of Coccidioidomycosis (Valley Fever). The second project uses NIAID category A, B and C priority pathogen epitope peptides in a multiplexed microarray platform to assess the feasibility of using epitope peptides to simultaneously diagnose multiple exposures using a single assay. Cross-reactivity is a consistent feature of several antigen-antibody based immunodiagnostics. This work utilizes microarray optimization and bioinformatic approaches to distill the underlying disease specific antibody signature pattern. Circumventing inherent cross-reactivity observed in antibody binding to peptides was crucial to achieve the goal of this work to accurately distinguishing multiple exposures simultaneously. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Biological Design 2014 |
author2 |
Navalkar, Krupa Arun (Author) |
author_facet |
Navalkar, Krupa Arun (Author) |
title |
Antibody based strategies for multiplexed diagnostics |
title_short |
Antibody based strategies for multiplexed diagnostics |
title_full |
Antibody based strategies for multiplexed diagnostics |
title_fullStr |
Antibody based strategies for multiplexed diagnostics |
title_full_unstemmed |
Antibody based strategies for multiplexed diagnostics |
title_sort |
antibody based strategies for multiplexed diagnostics |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25790 |
_version_ |
1718700468254801920 |