A NOVEL YERSINIA PESTIS PROTEOME MICROARRAY FOR ANALYSIS OF COMPLEX ANTIBODY RESPONSES
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Date
2007-11
Department
Hood College Biology
Program
Biomedical and Environmental Science
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Abstract
Innovations in high-throughput protein production and microarray surface technologies
have enabled the development of addressable, high density protein arrays. Protein-based
microarrays allow the global observation a biochemical activities on an unprecedented
scale, where hundreds or thousands of proteins can be simultaneously screened for
protein-protein, protein-nucleic acid, and small molecule interactions. A novel Yersinia
pestis whole proteome microarray was developed and an assay was optimized for
validating the array in measuring diversity of antibody responses during plague. Analysis
of antisera produced against the Y. pestis proteome and against proteomes of several
evolutionarily related Gram-negative bacteria resulted in identification of specific
biomarkers for each disease. Antibodies from convalescent and acute phase sera was also
analyzed and resulted in identification of specific antibody binding patterns. This
technology holds great potential for basic molecular biology research, disease marker
identification, toxicological response profiling, vaccine development and pharmaceutical
target screening.