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1.
Peptide libraries can be used to identify ligands that bind specifically to a desired protein. These peptides may have significant advantages as specific ligands for affinity chromatography separations. This article describes the use of one of such peptide, Try-Asn-Phe-Glu-Val-Leu, as a ligand for the purification of S-protein using affinity chromatography. General strategies for peptide immobilization are discussed and the conditions for peptide immobilization to Emphazetrade mark gel are optimized. The effects of peptide orientation and peptide densities on protein binding are studied. Results indicate that the peptide affinity is not affected by the orientation of the peptide during immobilization, but association constants can be reduced by one order of magnitude when compared with the values in solution.With increased peptide density, the protein binding capacity of the gel increases, but both the percentage of peptide utilization and apparent binding constant between immobilized peptide and S-protein decrease. S-protein is separated from a mixture with BSA via affinity chromatography using specific elution with the peptide in solution.Finally, direct purification of S-protein from an enzymatic digestion mixture of ribonuclease A is demonstrated.(c) 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

2.
Short cyclic peptides have a great interest in therapeutic, diagnostic and affinity chromatography applications. The screening of ‘one‐bead‐one‐peptide’ combinatorial libraries combined with mass spectrometry (MS) is an excellent tool to find peptides with affinity for any target protein. The fragmentation patterns of cyclic peptides are quite more complex than those of their linear counterparts, and the elucidation of the resulting tandem mass spectra is rather more difficult. Here, we propose a simple protocol for combinatorial cyclic libraries synthesis and ring opening before MS analysis. In this strategy, 4‐hydroxymethylbenzoic acid, which forms a benzyl ester with the first amino acid, was used as the linker. A glycolamidic ester group was incorporated after the combinatorial positions by adding glycolic acid. The library synthesis protocol consisted in the following: (i) incorporation of Fmoc‐Asp[2‐phenylisopropyl (OPp)]‐OH to Ala‐Gly‐oxymethylbenzamide‐ChemMatrix, (ii) synthesis of the combinatorial library, (iii) assembly of a glycolic acid, (iv) couple of an Ala residue in the N‐terminal, (v) removal of OPp, (vi) peptide cyclisation through side chain Asp and N‐Ala amino terminus and (vii) removal of side chain protecting groups. In order to simultaneously open the ring and release each peptide, benzyl and glycolamidic esters were cleaved with ammonia. Peptide sequences could be deduced from the tandem mass spectra of each single bead evaluated. The strategy herein proposed is suitable for the preparation of one‐bead‐one‐cyclic depsipeptide libraries that can be easily open for its sequencing by matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionisation MS. It employs techniques and reagents frequently used in a broad range of laboratories without special expertise in organic synthesis. Copyright © 2014 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

3.
The pFc' fragments of a humanized IgG1 monoclonal antibody were generated by digestion with immobilized pepsin. These pFc' fragments were separated from F(ab')2 fragments by affinity chromatography. The pFc' fragments corresponding to the constant region of the humanized IgG1 monoclonal antibody were used as targets for phage display using variable-length peptide libraries. Interacting phage-displayed peptides were selected by repetitious cycles of target screening and phage amplification. Peptide sequences, deduced by sequencing DNA from isolated phage, were aligned and analyzed for amino acid motifs against each other and protein A. These results indicated that an amino acid motif has been identified using phage display technology that is sufficient for pFc' binding. Furthermore, the peptides derived from this study may prove useful in the development of peptidomimetic alternatives to protein A for use in affinity chromatography.  相似文献   

4.
Here we report on a novel peptide library based method for HLA class II binding motif identification. The approach is based on water soluble HLA class II molecules and soluble dedicated peptide libraries. A high number of different synthetic peptides are competing to interact with a limited amount of HLA molecules, giving a selective force in the binding. The peptide libraries can be designed so that the sequence length, the alignment of binding registers, the numbers and composition of random positions are controlled, and also modified amino acids can be included. Selected library peptides bound to HLA are then isolated by size exclusion chromatography and sequenced by tandem mass spectrometry online coupled to liquid chromatography. The MS/MS data are subsequently searched against a library defined database using a search engine such as Mascot, followed by manual inspection of the results. We used two dodecamer and two decamer peptide libraries and HLA-DQ2.5 to test possibilities and limits of this method. The selected sequences which we identified in the fraction eluted from HLA-DQ2.5 showed a higher average of their predicted binding affinity values compared to the original peptide library. The eluted sequences fit very well with the previously described HLA-DQ2.5 peptide binding motif. This novel method, limited by library complexity and sensitivity of mass spectrometry, allows the analysis of several thousand synthetic sequences concomitantly in a simple water soluble format.  相似文献   

5.
The syntheses of HBV S-protein partial sequences: Thr-Lys-Pro-Thr (I), Thr-Lys-Pro-Thr-Asp (II), and Thr-Lys-Pro-Thr-Asp-Gly (III) and also of pentapeptide Thr-Lys-Pro-Gly-Arg (IV), are described. For the peptides II and III inhibitory activity against tuftsin was found. Peptide IV (an analogue of tuftsin-inhibitor Thr-Lys-Pro-Pro-Arg) demonstrated a tuftsin-like activity in the phagocytosis experiments.  相似文献   

6.
High-performance immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography was utilized to evaluate the adsorption properties of 67 synthetic, biologically active, peptides ranging in size from 5 to 42 residues. The metal ions, Cu(II), Ni(II) and Zn(II), were immobilized by iminodiacetic acid (IDA) coupled to TSK gel 5PW (10 microns). Two types of gradient elution (imidazole and pH) were used to evaluate peptide retention by the metal ions. A decreasing pH gradient and an increasing imidazole gradient eluted the peptides in similar order. IDA-Cu(II) and IDA-Zn(II) showed very similar selectivities for the peptides analyzed; however, IDA-Zn(II) displayed a weaker affinity for the peptides. IDA-Ni(II) showed a slightly different pattern of selectivity. Peptide adsorption effects contributed by the metal-free gel matrix were found to be relatively minor. The concentration and type of salt included in the mobile phase could affect the relative affinities of the peptides for the immobilized metal ions. Retention coefficients were assigned to individual amino acid residues by multiple linear regression analysis. Histidine showed the largest positive correlation with retention, followed by aromatic amino acid residues. Modified N-terminal residues resulted in negative contributions to retention. Analyses of peptide amino acid composition alone allowed prediction of peptide retention behavior on immobilized metal ion affinity columns.  相似文献   

7.
Bracci L  Lozzi L  Lelli B  Pini A  Neri P 《Biochemistry》2001,40(22):6611-6619
Peptide libraries allow selecting new molecules, defined as mimotopes, which are able to mimic the structural and functional features of a native protein. This technology can be applied for the development of new reagents, which can interfere with the action of specific ligands on their target receptors. In the present study we used a combinatorial library approach to produce synthetic peptides mimicking the snake neurotoxin binding site of nicotinic receptors. On the basis of amino acid sequence comparison of different alpha-bungarotoxin binding receptors, we designed a 14 amino acid combinatorial synthetic peptide library with five invariant, four partially variant, and five totally variant positions. Peptides were synthesized using SPOT synthesis on cellulose membranes, and binding sequences were selected using biotinylated alpha-bungarotoxin. Each variant position was systematically identified, and all possible combinations of the best reacting amino acids in each variant position were tested. The best reactive sequences were identified, produced in soluble form, and tested in BIACORE to compare their kinetic constants. We identified several different peptides that can inhibit the binding of alpha-bungarotoxin to both muscle and neuronal nicotinic receptors. Peptide mimotopes have a toxin-binding affinity that is considerably higher than peptides reproducing native receptor sequences.  相似文献   

8.
Various naturally occurring peptides containing l-arginine at the carboxyl termini were tightly adsorbed at pH 5 on anhydrotrypsin, a chemical derivative of bovine trypsin, immobilized on Sepharose, and desorbed by washing with 5 mm HCl. The largest of the peptides examined was Fragment 2 (“histidine-rich peptide”) with 41 amino acid residues, which had been released from bovine high-molecular-weight kininogen by plasma kallikrein. When only the carboxyl-terminal arginine was removed by carboxypeptidase B, the peptides lost their specific affinity toward the immobilized anhydrotrypsin. The peptide fragments in the tryptic digests of reduced and S-carboxymethylated erabutoxin a were also fractionated effectively by chromatography on this affinity adsorbent. The fragments containing l-lysine at the carboxyl termini showed weaker affinity for the adsorbent than those containing l-arginine at the termini.  相似文献   

9.
We cloned and expressed the SH2 domain of human GRB2 as glutathione S-transferase and maltose binding protein fusion proteins. We screened three phagemid-based fd pVIII-protein phage display libraries against SH2 domain fusion proteins. Sequence analysis of the peptide extensions yielded a variety of related peptides. By examining the ability of the phage clones to bind other SH2 domains, we demonstrated that the phage were specific for the SH2 domain of GRB2. Based on the sequence motif identified in the "random" library screening experiment, we also built and screened a phage display library based on a Tyr-X-Asn motif (X5-Tyr-X-Asn-X8). To examine the affinity of the phage derived peptides for GRB2, we set up a radioligand competition binding assay based on immobilized GRB2 and radiolabelled autophosphorylated EGFR ICD as the radioligand. Results obtained with peptide competitors derived from the phage sequences demonstrated that nonphosphotyrosine-containing peptides identified with the phage display technology had an affinity for the receptor similar to tyrosine-phosphorylated peptides derived from the EGFR natural substrate. Interestingly, when the phage display peptides were then phosphorylated on tyrosine, their affinity for GRB2 increased dramatically. We also demonstrated the ability of the peptides to block the binding of the GRB2 SH2 domain to EGFR in a mammalian cell-based binding assay.  相似文献   

10.
Searching spectral libraries in MS/MS is an important new approach to improving the quality of peptide and protein identification. The idea relies on the observation that ion intensities in an MS/MS spectrum of a given peptide are generally reproducible across experiments, and thus, matching between spectra from an experiment and the spectra of previously identified peptides stored in a spectral library can lead to better peptide identification compared to the traditional database search. However, the use of libraries is greatly limited by their coverage of peptide sequences: even for well‐studied organisms a large fraction of peptides have not been previously identified. To address this issue, we propose to expand spectral libraries by predicting the MS/MS spectra of peptides based on the spectra of peptides with similar sequences. We first demonstrate that the intensity patterns of dominant fragment ions between similar peptides tend to be similar. In accordance with this observation, we develop a neighbor‐based approach that first selects peptides that are likely to have spectra similar to the target peptide and then combines their spectra using a weighted K‐nearest neighbor method to accurately predict fragment ion intensities corresponding to the target peptide. This approach has the potential to predict spectra for every peptide in the proteome. When rigorous quality criteria are applied, we estimate that the method increases the coverage of spectral libraries available from the National Institute of Standards and Technology by 20–60%, although the values vary with peptide length and charge state. We find that the overall best search performance is achieved when spectral libraries are supplemented by the high quality predicted spectra.  相似文献   

11.
Peptide expression libraries are valuable probes of cellular function. SICLOPPS technology merges the principal advantages of both genetic methods and small-molecule approaches in yielding superior library sizes of operationally stable, structurally well-defined entities with an established biological and medicinal record. Here, we describe development, application, and the first-generation library implementation of an expressed affinity tag for a library of cyclic peptides. A tripeptide streptavidin-binding motif (HPQ) proved to be compatible with presentation from a backbone cyclized template. A resulting peptide was employed as a sensitive indicator of peptide splicing, expression, and recovery as well as an affinity tag for one-step purification. Specific recognition of the tag by streptavidin was also critical for an analysis of intein mutants. Finally, the initially identified probe was used as a template for design of a streptavidin-responsive cyclic peptide library.  相似文献   

12.
Peptide array consisting of hundreds of peptides spatially addressed and synthesized on a cellulose membrane support was used to screen ligand-inhibitory peptides. As a model, angiotensin II (Ang II), a significant peptide related to the treatment of cardiovascular diseases, was chosen as the target ligand. Peptide arrays covering the Ang II receptor type 1 sequence were prepared, and peptide domains with high affinity to the Ang II fluorescein conjugate were investigated. The peptide (VVIVIY) within the first transmembrane region exhibited the highest affinity to Ang II. The synthesized soluble VVIVIY peptide had an 84% inhibitory effect on Ang II-induced aorta contraction. These results indicate that our screening strategy utilizing peptide array is an effective approach for the peptide drug development.  相似文献   

13.
A proof-of-principle study was initiated to determine whether phage-display technology could be used to identify peptides as leads in the customization of ligands for affinity chromatography and to identify a peptide or peptidomimetic for use as a Protein A alternative in the affinity purification of monoclonal antibodies. The constant region of humanized anti-Tac (HAT), prepared by pepsin digestion and receptor-affinity chromatography, was used as the target for phage display in this study. As such, 20 phage-derived peptide sequences were identified from four rounds of biopanning with two linear phage-display libraries (7-mer, containing 100 copies of 2 x 10(9) sequences and 12-mer, containing 70 copies of 1.4 x 10(9) sequences). Five peptides were synthesized for use as affinity ligands, based on sequence homology to Protein A, sequence redundancy, and amino acid motifs. The best HAT binding immobilized peptide was EPIHRSTLTALL. The best-fit analysis of this peptide sequence with Protein A yielded an alignment well within the Fc binding domain of Protein A. These results suggest that phage display can serve as a tool in the identification of peptides as model ligands for affinity chromatography.  相似文献   

14.
Transient macromolecular complexes are often formed by protein-protein interaction domains (e.g. PDZ, SH2, SH3, WW) which recognize linear sequence motifs with in vitro affinities typically in the micromolar range. The analysis of the resulting interaction networks requires a quantification of domain specificity and selectivity towards all possible ligands with physiologically relevant affinity. As representative examples, we determined specificity as a function of ligand sequence-dependent affinity contributions by statistical analysis of peptide library screens for the AF6, ERBIN and SNA1 (alpha-1-syntrophin) PDZ domains. For this purpose, the three PDZ domains were first screened for binding with a peptide library comprising 6223 human C termini created by SPOT synthesis. Based on the detected ligand preferences, we designed focused peptide libraries (profile libraries). These libraries were used to quantify the affinity contributions of the four C-terminal ligand residues by means of ANOVA models (analysis of variance) relating the C-terminal ligand sequences to the corresponding dissociation constants. Our models agreed well with experimentally determined dissociation constants and allowed us to design super binding peptides. The latter were shown experimentally to bind to their cognate PDZ domains with the highest affinity. In addition, we determined structure-activity relationships and thereby rationalized the position-specific affinity contributions. Furthermore, we used the statistical models to predict the dissociation constants for the complete ligand sequence space and thus determined the specificity overlap for the three investigated PDZ domains (). Altogether, we present an efficient method for profiling protein-protein interaction domains that provides a biophysical picture of specificity and selectivity. This approach allows the rational design of functional experiments and provides a basis for simulating interaction networks in the field of systems biology.  相似文献   

15.
Artificial peptides designed for molecular recognition of a bacterial toxin have been developed. Vacuolating cytotoxin A protein (VacA) is a major virulence factor of Helicobacter pylori, a gram‐negative microaerophilic bacterium inhabiting the upper gastrointestinal tract, particularly the stomach. This study attempted to identify specific peptide sequences with high affinity for VacA using systematic directed evolution in vitro, a cDNA display method. A surface plasmon resonance‐based biosensor and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy to examine binding of peptides with VacA identified a peptide (GRVNQRL) with high affinity. Cyclization of the peptide by attaching cysteine residues to both termini improved its binding affinity to VacA, with a dissociation constant (Kd) of 58 nm . This study describes a new strategy for the development of artificial functional peptides, which are promising materials in biochemical analyses and medical applications. Copyright © 2015 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

16.
A library of 17 nanoparticles made of acrylate and methacrylate copolymers is prepared, characterized, and screened against six epitopes of adeno‐associated viruses (AAV)‐neutralizing antibodies to assess their affinity and specificity. Peptide epitopes are immobilized onto the surface of glass beads, packed in filtration microplates, and incubated with fluorescein‐labelled nanoparticles. Following intense washing, the affinity of nanoparticles to immobilized epitopes is assessed by measuring the fluorescence of captured nanoparticles. The results show that polar monomers, acrylic acid in particular, have a positive impact on polymer affinity towards all peptides used in this study. The presence of hydrophobic monomers, on other hand, has a negative impact on polymer binding. The composition of peptides used in this study has no noticeable impact on the affinity of synthesized nanoparticles. The affinity of nanoparticles with the highest affinity to peptide targets does not exceed millimolar level. Overall, it is found that the synthesized library showed modest affinity but lacked specificity, which should be further “tuned,” for example, by using molecular imprinting to achieve an acceptable level of affinity and specificity for practical application.  相似文献   

17.
Two peptides corresponding to amino acid sequences predicted from the nucleotide sequence of the dopamine D2 receptor were synthesized. Peptide I (CGSEG-KADRPHYC) and peptide II (NNTDQNECIIY), corresponding to 24-34 and 176-185 from the NH2 terminus, respectively, were conjugated to keyhold limpet hemocyanin and injected into rabbits. Peptide I showed a greater immunogenic response than did peptide II. Both peptide antibodies exhibited high titer for the homologous antigens, but showed little or no cross-reactivity with heterogeneous peptides. Peptide I antibodies reacted with striatal membrane proteins of apparent molecular masses of 120, 90, 85, and 30 kDa on a western blot. Furthermore, the 90-kDa band was identified as denatured D2 receptor by its high affinity for the D2 selective photoaffinity probe 125I-N'-azidospiperone (125I-NAPS). Photoaffinity labeling of the 90-kDa protein by 125I-NAPS was reduced by 40% in the presence of the peptide I antibody. In addition, evidence is also presented to show the low level of 90-kDa protein in cerebellum which contains little or no D2 ligand binding sites. The antibody to peptide I inhibited the binding of [3H]YM-09151-2, a dopamine D2 receptor selective antagonist, to striatal membranes in a concentration-dependent manner; a 50% inhibition was obtained at a 1:500 dilution of the antisera with 20 pM ligand concentration. The data on the equilibrium inhibition kinetics of [3H]YM-09151-2 binding to striatal membranes were examined in the presence of antibody and showed a 25-30% decrease in Bmax (203.5 +/- 11.0 and 164.6 +/- 3.3 fmol/mg of protein in presence of preimmune and immune sera, respectively) with no change in KD.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
The unambiguous assignment of tandem mass spectra (MS/MS) to peptide sequences remains a key unsolved problem in proteomics. Spectral library search strategies have emerged as a promising alternative for peptide identification, in which MS/MS spectra are directly compared against a reference library of confidently assigned spectra. Two problems relate to library size. First, reference spectral libraries are limited to rediscovery of previously identified peptides and are not applicable to new peptides, because of their incomplete coverage of the human proteome. Second, problems arise when searching a spectral library the size of the entire human proteome. We observed that traditional dot product scoring methods do not scale well with spectral library size, showing reduction in sensitivity when library size is increased. We show that this problem can be addressed by optimizing scoring metrics for spectrum-to-spectrum searches with large spectral libraries. MS/MS spectra for the 1.3 million predicted tryptic peptides in the human proteome are simulated using a kinetic fragmentation model (MassAnalyzer version2.1) to create a proteome-wide simulated spectral library. Searches of the simulated library increase MS/MS assignments by 24% compared with Mascot, when using probabilistic and rank based scoring methods. The proteome-wide coverage of the simulated library leads to 11% increase in unique peptide assignments, compared with parallel searches of a reference spectral library. Further improvement is attained when reference spectra and simulated spectra are combined into a hybrid spectral library, yielding 52% increased MS/MS assignments compared with Mascot searches. Our study demonstrates the advantages of using probabilistic and rank based scores to improve performance of spectrum-to-spectrum search strategies.  相似文献   

19.
An efficient strategy has been devised for the construction of diverse peptide libraries in bacteriophage vectors. This strategy was used to generate a library of 4 x 10(8) random decapeptide inserts in the pIII protein of bacteriophage fd. A novel method for evaluating the genetic diversity of bacteriophage libraries based on colony hybridization with partially degenerate oligonucleotides has been developed. The decapeptide library was affinity-selected with a previously characterized monoclonal antibody specific for the V3 loop of the gp120 protein of HIV-1. Immunological screening, an efficient technique for the rapid identification of putative binding bacteriophage, is described. Hexapeptide sequences similar to those obtained from affinity selection of a hexapeptide bacteriophage library were obtained from the decapeptide library in all five frames. Immunological screening of 20,000 clones from the two libraries after two rounds of affinity selection rapidly identified antibody-binding sequences; 93% and 86% of the sequences obtained from the hexapeptide and decapeptide libraries, respectively, had IC50 values < or = 10 mM as free peptides.  相似文献   

20.
Phage display was performed against human IgG (hIgG) through five rounds of 'biopanning'. Each round consisted of: (1) incubating a library of phage-displayed 12-mer peptides sequences on hIgG-coated magnetic beads, (2) washing the unbound phages, and (3) eluting the bound phages. The eluted phages were either amplified to enrich the pool of positive clones or subjected to the next round without amplification. Through ELISA, four clones (F9, D1, G5, and A10) showing specific binding affinity to hIgG were identified. Among these, F9 had the highest affinity (K(d)=6.2nM), only one order of magnitude lower than the native anti-hIgG antibody (0.66nM). Following the DNA sequences of the selected clones, four 12-mer peptides were chemically synthesized. Among them, D1 peptide showed the highest binding affinity to hIgG via SPR biosensor measurements. This peptide was conjugated to biofunctionalized magnetic beads, and its immuno-binding ability was compared with that of the native antibody immobilized to magnetic beads. The mol-to-mol binding efficacy of the peptide-coated magnetic beads was approximately 1000-fold lower than that of the antibody-coated magnetic beads. Our results suggest a feasibility of using antibody-mimicking peptides identified by phage display technique for immuno-magnetic separation of an antigen.  相似文献   

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