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Epitope mapping of Gliadin - A trigger of Celiac Disease

Epitope mapping of Gliadin - A trigger of Celiac Disease. Ph.D. Student Nicole H. Petersen Bioorganic Chemistry KU LIFE. Presentation of speaker. Who am I ? Nicole H. Petersen Ph.D. student at KU LIFE, Bioorganic Chemistry group I started my Ph.D. project in December 2009

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Epitope mapping of Gliadin - A trigger of Celiac Disease

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  1. Epitope mapping of Gliadin - A trigger of Celiac Disease Ph.D. Student Nicole H. Petersen Bioorganic Chemistry KU LIFE

  2. Presentation of speaker • Who am I ? • Nicole H. Petersen • Ph.D. student at KU LIFE, Bioorganic Chemistry group • I started my Ph.D. project in December 2009 • Project title: ”Characterization of antibody response using epitope libraries” • Experimental work is performed at KU LIFE and at Statens Serum Institut, in the department of Clinical Biochemistry and Immunology • Supervisers: Paul R. Hansen and Gunnar Houen

  3. Outline • Brief introduction to antibody response and autoimmune diseases • Celiac Disease • Epitope mapping and different strategies for epitope mapping • Solid-phase peptide synthesis • Results with epitope mapping of a gliadin peptide • Why is this relevant and how can it be applied • Conclusion and future perspectives

  4. Introduction- Antibody response and autoimmune diseases • Antibody response ~ antibodies produced upon exposure to an antigen • The interaction between an antibody and its antigen is the heart of antibody response • What is an antigen? • What is an antibody? • How is an antibody response generated? • How are these things related to autoimmune diseases?

  5. Introduction- Antibody response and autoimmune diseases • Antigen is recognized by the immune system and stimulates an antibody response • Can be a bacteria, virus, a protein… • Originally the term antigen came from antibody generator Antigen

  6. Introduction- Antibody response and autoimmune diseases • An • Antigen is recognized as foreign by the immune system and is engulfed by antigen presenting cells, such as macrophages, monocytes and dendritic cells Antigen Antigen presenting cell

  7. Introduction- Antibody response and autoimmune diseases • The antigen is degrated into smaller fragments and displayed on the cell surface together with specialized glycoproteins Antigen Antigen presenting cell

  8. Introduction- Antibody response and autoimmune diseases • T-cells recognize the antigen-glycoprotein complex Antigen T-cell Antigen presenting cell

  9. Introduction- Antibody response and autoimmune diseases • T-cells stimulate B-cells to produce • antibodies towards the specific antigen Antigen T-cell Antigen presenting cell B-cell Antibodies

  10. Introduction- Antibody response and autoimmune diseases • Antibodies are antigen-binding immunoglobulin proteins • They are composed of 4 peptide chains, which are connected through disulfide bonds. These interactions give the antibody molecule a characteristic Y-shaped structure • The antigen-binding site is located in the N-terminal region of the antibody Antibodies

  11. T-cells stimulates B-cells to produce antibodies towards the specific antigen Introduction- Antibody response and autoimmune diseases Antigen T-cell Antigen presenting cell B-cell Antibodies

  12. Introduction- Antibody response and autoimmune diseases • The antibodies interact with the antigen • The region of an antigen that interact with the antibody is defined as an epitope Antigen T-cell Antigen presenting cell B-cell Epitope Antigen Antibodies

  13. Introduction- Antibody response and autoimmune diseases • Finally the antigen is neutralized Antigen T-cell Antigen presenting cell B-cell Antigen Antibodies

  14. Introduction- Antibody response and autoimmune diseases • Abnormal functioning of the immune system, it fails to recognize protein/tissue ~ antibody response is produced against these • A disease that results from such an immune response is termed an autoimmune disease T-cell Self protein (auto-antigen) Antigen presenting cell B-cell Auto-antibodies

  15. Celiac Disease • Celiac disease: • is triggered by the ingestion of wheat gluten – especially the wheat protein gliadin • leads to inflammation in the small intestine • is characterized by the presence of antibodies directed against gliadin and the enzyme transglutaminase(auto-antigen), which is involved in the digestion of gliadin • upon ingestion of gliadin, the gliadin protein is fragmented and central glutamines are deamidated to glutamic acid, some of these deamidated peptide fragments have shown to induce celiac disease in sensitive patiens • occurs in 1 % of the population throughout Europe and America, more predominant among females than males by 3:1 ratio • Gluten-free diet is currently the only effective mode of treatment

  16. Celiac Disease- Gliadin • Gliadin is a wheat protein with a molecular weight of 30 kDa Central repetitive domain, rich in Pro and Gln Long C-terminal domain, containing several charged amino acid residues Short N-terminal domain

  17. Celiac Disease- Gliadin Gliadin is a wheat protein with a molecular weight of 30 kDa Several peptide fragments which trigger celiac disease are located in the central domain Especially a deamidated peptide, which corresponds to amino acids 58-73 from the central domain induce celiac disease. This peptide contains the motif PQPELPY, which has been suggested to be an immunodominant epitope of gliadin Central repetitive domain, rich in Pro and Gln Long C-terminal domain, containing several charged amino acid residues Short N-terminal domain

  18. Using this knowledge Skovbjerg and colleagues produced a monoclonal antibody directed against the deamidated gliadin peptide 58-73, LQPFPQPELPYPQPQ • The glutamine in position 65 was replaced by glutamic acid • Thus, a mAb anti-gliadin antibody has been generated, but how do we identify the epitope on the peptide that interact with the antibody? Glutamine Glutamic acid (Skovbjerg et al., 2004)

  19. Epitope mapping • Epitope mapping is the process of identifying the binding sites of antibodies on their target antigens • Several strategies for epitope mapping exist: • recombinant proteins • X-ray co-crystallography • phage-display • peptide scanning • truncated resin-bound peptides

  20. Epitope mapping • Epitope mapping is the process of identifying the binding sites of antibodies on their target antigens • Several strategies for epitope mapping exist: • recombinant proteins • X-ray co-crystallography • phage-display • peptide scanning • truncated resin-bound peptides

  21. Epitope mapping • Epitope mapping is the process of identifying the binding sites of antibodies on their target antigens • Several strategies for epitope mapping exist: • recombinant proteins • X-ray co-crystallography • phage-display • peptide scanning • truncated resin-bound peptides • Synthetic peptides • modified amino acids • secondary structures

  22. Different strategies for epitope mapping - Peptide scanning • Peptide scanning is used for linear epitope mapping of entire proteins/large sequences • This method involves a series of overlapping linear peptides that cover the sequence in question Protein sequence Overlapping peptides

  23. Different strategies for epitope mapping - Peptide scanning • Peptide scanning is used for linear epitope mapping of entire proteins/large sequences • This method involves a series of overlapping linear peptides that cover the sequence in question Protein sequence Overlapping peptides

  24. Different strategies for epitope mapping - Resin-bound peptides • Mainly used for epitope mapping of small sequences and to distinguish closely related epitopes • Truncated versions of peptides, usually N- or C-terminal, are synthetised on a solid support and examined for reactivity on this support • First described in 1985, where the approach was used for epitope mapping of rat cytochrome C • Example of N-terminal truncated • peptide library. • A number of peptides is synthesized • in one batch, by removing resin after • each coupling cycle (Patersen, Y. 1985)

  25. Different strategies for epitope mapping - Solid-phase peptide synthesis • SPPS is based on: • addition of α-amino • and side-chain protected • amino acids to an insoluble • support • Removal of N-terminal • protection • Activation and coupling • of the next amino acid • Resultant peptide is • cleaved from the resin • to yield a free peptide • Synthesized from the C- to the N-terminal

  26. Results • Experimental data is based on: • mAb anti-gliadin produced by Skovbjerg and colleagues • deamidated gliadin peptide, LQPFPQPELPYPQPQ corresponding to amino acids 58-73 in the gliadin protein, except that the glutamine in position 65 was replaced by glutamic acid

  27. Results - mAb anti-gliadin and gliadin peptide interaction examined by Luminex • Interaction between mAb anti-gliadin and the gliadin peptide is concentration dependent ~ interaction is specific

  28. Results - Interaction between mAb anti-gliadin and random selected peptides examined by ELISA • Peptides were selected based on their content of amino acids found in the gliadin peptide, such as Pro, Gln, Glu • No interaction between mAb anti-gliadin random selected peptides • ~ interaction is specific

  29. Results- Interaction between mAb anti-gliadin and PQPELPY sequence examined by inhibition ELISA • Assumption ~ PQPELPY may be an epitope of the gliadin peptide • A vague inhibition in antibody binding was observed (15 %) ~ the PQPELPY peptide does not constitute the actual epitope

  30. Results- Screening of epitope using N-terminally truncated resin-bound peptides examined by modified ELISA • The peptide ELPYPQPQ was the first peptide to interact with mAb anti-gliadin • The epitope is located in the first 8-10 amino acids of the gliadin peptide

  31. Results - Interaction between mAb anti-gliadin and epitope candidates examined by inhibition ELISA • Screening using resin-bound peptides ~ QPELPYPQPQ • Center of the peptide does not inhibit antibody binding • Minimum epitope ~ PELPYPQPQ • C-terminal Q (glutamine) and N-terminal P (proline) is essential for antibody binding 56 % 74 % 76 %

  32. Results - Interaction between mAb anti-gliadin and gliadin peptide examined by elution ELISA • Current theory ~ ionic and hydrogen bonds are essential for antibody-antigen interaction • Three ELISA Eluents (1M) • Urea (U) ~ hydrogen bonds • Tween (T) ~ hydrophilic and hydrophobic interactions • Ammoniumacetate(A) ~ ionic bonds (Rubinstein et al. , 2008)

  33. Results - Interaction between mAb anti-gliadin and gliadin peptide examined by elution ELISA • Neither of the eluents could • reduce the interaction on their own • Tween together with urea or • ammoniumacetate could not reduce binding • AU could reduce the interaction together • ~ionic bonds and hydrogen bonds are essential for antibody-peptide interaction (1M)

  34. Results- Interaction between mAb anti-gliadin and gliadin peptide examined by elution ELISA • AU solution used as eluent • mAb anti-gliadin – gliadin peptide interaction, relative high AU concentration to see elution effect ~ strong interaction

  35. Why is this relevant and how can it be applied • The precise localization of epitopes is essential in the development of new and improved biological applications such as: • designed vaccines • diagnostic • immuno-therapeutics • Characterization of epitopes is fundamental to the understanding of immunological discrimination between self and non-self and in mechanisms of bio-recognition in general • Hopefully these results in the long term will contribute to the determine the etiology of celiac disease • Improve existing treatment

  36. Conclusion and future perspective • Minimum immunodominant epitope was identified as PELPYPQPQ • C-terminal glutamine and N-terminal proline is essential • for antibody binding • ionic bonds and hydrogen bonds are essential in regard to mAb anti-gliadin and gliadin peptide interaction • Examine the secondary structure of some of the reactive peptides • How do these data relate to patient sera, is the identified epitope of the gliadin peptide a natural epitope as well?

  37. Thank you for your attention

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