Epitope Extraction Technique Using a Proteolytic Magnetic Reactor Combined with Fourier-Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance Mass Spectrometry as a Tool for the Screening of Potential Vaccine Lead Peptides

2005 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 489-495 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. Bílková ◽  
R. Stefanescu ◽  
R. Cecal ◽  
L. Korecká ◽  
Š. Ouzká ◽  
...  

Epitope extraction technique is based on the specific digestion of a target protein followed by immunoaffinity isolation of a specific recognition peptide. This technique, in combination with mass spectrometry, has been efficiently used for epitope identification. The major goal of this work was to utilize newly developed enzyme and immunoaffinity magnetic reactors for the epitope extraction procedure and confirm the efficiency of this improved system for epitope screening of proteins. Alginic acid-coated magnetite microparticles with immobilized TPCK-trypsin provided high working efficiency with low non-specific adsorption, digestion time in minutes and low frequency of missed cleavages. The sensitivity and specificity of tryptic fragmentation of the ß-amyloid-peptide Aβ (1–40) as a model polypeptide was confirmed by Fourier-transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry analysis. The Sepharose reactor or immunoaffinity magnetic reactors, both with anti-amyloid-β monoclonal antibodies, were used for specific isolation and identification of target peptides. In this way, the epitope extraction technique combined with mass spectrometric analysis is shown to be an excellent base for molecular screening of potential vaccine lead proteins.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Konstantin O. Nagornov ◽  
Oleg Y. Tsybin ◽  
Edith Nicol ◽  
Anton N. Kozhinov ◽  
Yury O. Tsybin

2011 ◽  
Vol 29 (6) ◽  
pp. 711-741 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sumei Li ◽  
Xiongqi Pang ◽  
Quan Shi ◽  
Baoshou Zhang ◽  
Haizu Zhang ◽  
...  

Nine marine and two terrestrial oils from the Tarim Basin in Western China were analyzed by Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry. Sulfur compounds with 8–47 carbon atoms and double-bond equivalent (DBE) values of 0–21 are abundant in the crude oils. The most abundant sulfur species in Tazhong marine oils are S1 species (80.57–85.22%), followed by O1S1 (6.95–14.78%) and S2 (0.71–6.69%) species. The dominant species in Yingmaili terrestrial oils are S1 (51.41–52.76%), O1S1 (26.83–35.27%) and O2S1 (11.97–21.76%) species; no S2 species were detected. The results suggest that the sulfur compounds present in oil vary with the oil type. For the S1 and S2 species, as the thermal maturity increased, the degree of condensation increased, and the median and range of the number of carbon atoms decreased. Compounds with DBE values of 9, which are most likely dibenzothiophenes, became concentrated as the thermal maturity increased. Therefore, the unusually high abundance of dibenzothiophenes in the Lower Ordovician oils could be related to the thermal maturity. The TZ83 (O1) oil has an abnormal distribution of S1 species, and is characterized by sulfur species with relatively low DBE values (0–7). This abnormal distribution could be caused by thermochemical sulfate reduction, and a relatively high content of H2S in the associated gases and abundant sulfo-diamantane in the oil supported this theory. In conclusion, the thermal maturity, organic facies, paleoenvironment of the source rock, and possibly thermochemical sulfate reduction have a large impact on the sulfur compounds present in the oils. The O1S1/S1 and S2/S1 ratios could be used as indicators of the precursors/paleoenvironment, and C10–19/C20–50 DBE9 and DBE1,3,6 /DBE9 could be used as indicators of thermal maturity. Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry is very useful for detecting sulfur compounds, especially those with high molecular weights, in the crude oils. This technique has potential for determining the formation mechanisms of some unusual oils and the geochemical implications of the sulfur compounds they contain.


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