Matching Items (79)
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Description
Elucidation of Antigen-Antibody (Ag-Ab) interactions is critical to the understanding of humoral immune responses to pathogenic infection. B cells are crucial components of the immune system that generate highly specific antibodies, such as IgG, towards epitopes on antigens. Serum IgG molecules carry specific molecular recognition information concerning the antigens that

Elucidation of Antigen-Antibody (Ag-Ab) interactions is critical to the understanding of humoral immune responses to pathogenic infection. B cells are crucial components of the immune system that generate highly specific antibodies, such as IgG, towards epitopes on antigens. Serum IgG molecules carry specific molecular recognition information concerning the antigens that initiated their production. If one could read it, this information can be used to predict B cell epitopes on target antigens in order to design effective epitope driven vaccines, therapies and serological assays. Immunosignature technology captures the specific information content of serum IgG from infected and uninfected individuals on high density microarrays containing ~105 nearly random peptide sequences. Although the sequences of the peptides are chosen to evenly cover amino acid sequence space, the pattern of serum IgG binding to the array contains a consistent signature associated with each specific disease (e.g., Valley fever, influenza) among many individuals. Here, the disease specific but agnostic behavior of the technology has been explored by profiling molecular recognition information for five pathogens causing life threatening infectious diseases (e.g. DENV, WNV, HCV, HBV, and T.cruzi). This was done by models developed using a machine learning algorithm to model the sequence dependence of the humoral immune responses as measured by the peptide arrays. It was shown that the disease specific binding information could be accurately related to the peptide sequences used on the array by the machine learning (ML) models. Importantly, it was demonstrated that the ML models could identify or predict known linear epitopes on antigens of the four viruses. Moreover, the models identified potential novel linear epitopes on antigens of the four viruses (each has 4-10 proteins in the proteome) and of T.cruzi (a eukaryotic parasite which has over 12,000 proteins in its proteome). Finally, the predicted epitopes were tested in serum IgG binding assays such as ELISAs. Unfortunately, the assay results were inconsistent due to problems with peptide/surface interactions. In a separate study for the development of antibody recruiting molecules (ARMs) to combat microbial infections, 10 peptides from the high density peptide arrays were tested in IgG binding assays using sera of healthy individuals to find a set of antibody binding termini (ABT, a ligand that binds to a variable region of the IgG). It was concluded that one peptide (peptide 7) may be used as a potential ABT. Overall, these findings demonstrate the applications of the immunosignature technology ranging from developing tools to predict linear epitopes on pathogens of small to large proteomes to the identification of an ABT for ARMs.
ContributorsCHOWDHURY, ROBAYET (Author) / Woodbury, Neal (Thesis advisor) / LaBaer, Joshua (Committee member) / Sulc, Petr (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020
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Description
Interactions between proteins form the basis of almost all biological mechanisms. The majority of proteins perform their functions as a part of an assembled complex, rather than as an isolated species. Understanding the functional pathways of these protein complexes helps in uncovering the molecular mechanisms involved in the interactions. In

Interactions between proteins form the basis of almost all biological mechanisms. The majority of proteins perform their functions as a part of an assembled complex, rather than as an isolated species. Understanding the functional pathways of these protein complexes helps in uncovering the molecular mechanisms involved in the interactions. In this thesis, this has been explored in two fundamental ways. First, a biohybrid complex was assembled using the photosystem I (PSI) protein complex to translate the biochemical pathways into a non-cellular environment. This involved incorporating PSI on a porous antimony-doped tin oxide electrode using cytochrome c. Photocurrent was generated upon illumination of the PSI/electrode system alone at microamp/cm2 levels, with reduced oxygen apparently as the primary carrier. When the PSI/electrode system was coupled with ferredoxin, ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase (FNR), and NADP+, the resulting light-powered NADPH production was coupled to a dehydrogenase system for enzymatic carbon reduction. The results demonstrated that light-dependent reduction readily takes place. However, the pathways do not always match the biological pathways of PSI in nature. To create a complex self-assembled system such as the one involving PSI that is structurally well defined, there is a need to develop ways to guide the molecular interactions. In the second part of the thesis, this problem was approached by studying a well-defined system involving monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) binding their cognate epitope sequences to understand the molecular recognition properties associated with protein-protein interactions. This approach used a neural network model to derive a comprehensive and quantitative relationship between an amino acid sequence and its function by using sparse measurements of mAb binding to peptides on a high density peptide microarray. The resulting model can be used to predict the function of any peptide in the possible combinatorial sequence space. The results demonstrated that by training the model on just ~105 peptides out of the total combinatorial space of ~1010, the target sequences of the mAbs (cognate epitopes) can be predicted with high statistical accuracy. Furthermore, the biological relevance of the algorithm’s predictive ability has also been demonstrated.
ContributorsSingh, Akanksha (Author) / Woodbury, Neal (Thesis advisor) / Liu, Yan (Committee member) / Gould, Ian (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description

Swinging arms are a key functional component of multistep catalytic transformations in many naturally occurring multi-enzyme complexes. This arm is typically a prosthetic chemical group that is covalently attached to the enzyme complex via a flexible linker, allowing the direct transfer of substrate molecules between multiple active sites within the

Swinging arms are a key functional component of multistep catalytic transformations in many naturally occurring multi-enzyme complexes. This arm is typically a prosthetic chemical group that is covalently attached to the enzyme complex via a flexible linker, allowing the direct transfer of substrate molecules between multiple active sites within the complex. Mimicking this method of substrate channelling outside the cellular environment requires precise control over the spatial parameters of the individual components within the assembled complex. DNA nanostructures can be used to organize functional molecules with nanoscale precision and can also provide nanomechanical control. Until now, protein–DNA assemblies have been used to organize cascades of enzymatic reactions by controlling the relative distance and orientation of enzymatic components or by facilitating the interface between enzymes/cofactors and electrode surfaces. Here, we show that a DNA nanostructure can be used to create a multi-enzyme complex in which an artificial swinging arm facilitates hydride transfer between two coupled dehydrogenases. By exploiting the programmability of DNA nanostructures, key parameters including position, stoichiometry and inter-enzyme distance can be manipulated for optimal activity.

ContributorsFu, Jinglin (Author) / Yang, Yuhe (Author) / Johnson-Buck, Alexander (Author) / Liu, Minghui (Author) / Liu, Yan (Author) / Walter, Nils G. (Author) / Woodbury, Neal (Author) / Yan, Hao (Author) / Biodesign Institute (Contributor)
Created2014-07-01
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Description

Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) is a transitional stage between normal aging and dementia and people with MCI are at high risk of progression to dementia. MCI is attracting increasing attention, as it offers an opportunity to target the disease process during an early symptomatic stage. Structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)

Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) is a transitional stage between normal aging and dementia and people with MCI are at high risk of progression to dementia. MCI is attracting increasing attention, as it offers an opportunity to target the disease process during an early symptomatic stage. Structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) measures have been the mainstay of Alzheimer's disease (AD) imaging research, however, ventricular morphometry analysis remains challenging because of its complicated topological structure. Here we describe a novel ventricular morphometry system based on the hyperbolic Ricci flow method and tensor-based morphometry (TBM) statistics. Unlike prior ventricular surface parameterization methods, hyperbolic conformal parameterization is angle-preserving and does not have any singularities. Our system generates a one-to-one diffeomorphic mapping between ventricular surfaces with consistent boundary matching conditions. The TBM statistics encode a great deal of surface deformation information that could be inaccessible or overlooked by other methods. We applied our system to the baseline MRI scans of a set of MCI subjects from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI: 71 MCI converters vs. 62 MCI stable). Although the combined ventricular area and volume features did not differ between the two groups, our fine-grained surface analysis revealed significant differences in the ventricular regions close to the temporal lobe and posterior cingulate, structures that are affected early in AD. Significant correlations were also detected between ventricular morphometry, neuropsychological measures, and a previously described imaging index based on fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) scans. This novel ventricular morphometry method may offer a new and more sensitive approach to study preclinical and early symptomatic stage AD.

ContributorsShi, Jie (Author) / Stonnington, Cynthia M. (Author) / Thompson, Paul M. (Author) / Chen, Kewei (Author) / Gutman, Boris (Author) / Reschke, Cole (Author) / Baxter, Leslie C. (Author) / Reiman, Eric M. (Author) / Caselli, Richard J. (Author) / Wang, Yalin (Author) / Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering (Contributor)
Created2015-01-01
Description

A structurally and compositionally well-defined and spectrally tunable artificial light-harvesting system has been constructed in which multiple organic dyes attached to a three-arm-DNA nanostructure serve as an antenna conjugated to a photosynthetic reaction center isolated from Rhodobacter sphaeroides 2.4.1. The light energy absorbed by the dye molecules is transferred to

A structurally and compositionally well-defined and spectrally tunable artificial light-harvesting system has been constructed in which multiple organic dyes attached to a three-arm-DNA nanostructure serve as an antenna conjugated to a photosynthetic reaction center isolated from Rhodobacter sphaeroides 2.4.1. The light energy absorbed by the dye molecules is transferred to the reaction center, where charge separation takes place. The average number of DNA three-arm junctions per reaction center was tuned from 0.75 to 2.35. This DNA-templated multichromophore system serves as a modular light-harvesting antenna that is capable of being optimized for its spectral properties, energy transfer efficiency, and photostability, allowing one to adjust both the size and spectrum of the resulting structures. This may serve as a useful test bed for developing nanostructured photonic systems.

ContributorsDutta, Palash (Author) / Levenberg, Symon (Author) / Loskutov, Andrey (Author) / Jun, Daniel (Author) / Saer, Rafael (Author) / Beatty, J. Thomas (Author) / Lin, Su (Author) / Liu, Yan (Author) / Woodbury, Neal (Author) / Yan, Hao (Author) / Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry (Contributor)
Created2014-11-26
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Description

Background: Carriers of the APOE ε4 allele are at increased risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease (AD), and have been shown to have reduced cerebral metabolic rate of glucose (CMRgl) in the same brain areas frequently affected in AD. These individuals also exhibit reduced plasma levels of apolipoprotein E (apoE) attributed to

Background: Carriers of the APOE ε4 allele are at increased risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease (AD), and have been shown to have reduced cerebral metabolic rate of glucose (CMRgl) in the same brain areas frequently affected in AD. These individuals also exhibit reduced plasma levels of apolipoprotein E (apoE) attributed to a specific decrease in the apoE4 isoform as determined by quantification of individual apoE isoforms in APOE ε4 heterozygotes. Whether low plasma apoE levels are associated with structural and functional brain measurements and cognitive performance remains to be investigated.

Methods: Using quantitative mass spectrometry we quantified the plasma levels of total apoE and the individual apoE3 and apoE4 isoforms in 128 cognitively normal APOE ε3/ε4 individuals included in the Arizona APOE cohort. All included individuals had undergone extensive neuropsychological testing and 25 had in addition undergone FDG-PET and MRI to determine CMRgl and regional gray matter volume (GMV).

Results: Our results demonstrated higher apoE4 levels in females versus males and an age-dependent increase in the apoE3 isoform levels in females only. Importantly, a higher relative ratio of apoE4 over apoE3 was associated with GMV loss in the right posterior cingulate and with reduced CMRgl bilaterally in the anterior cingulate and in the right hippocampal area. Additional exploratory analysis revealed several negative associations between total plasma apoE, individual apoE isoform levels, GMV and CMRgl predominantly in the frontal, occipital and temporal areas. Finally, our results indicated only weak associations between apoE plasma levels and cognitive performance which further appear to be affected by sex.

Conclusions: Our study proposes a sex-dependent and age-dependent variation in plasma apoE isoform levels and concludes that peripheral apoE levels are associated with GMV, CMRgl and possibly cognitive performance in cognitively healthy individuals with a genetic predisposition to AD.

ContributorsNielsen, Henrietta M. (Author) / Chen, Kewei (Author) / Lee, Wendy (Author) / Chen, Yinghua (Author) / Bauer, Robert (Author) / Reiman, Eric (Author) / Caselli, Richard (Author) / Bu, Guojun (Author) / College of Liberal Arts and Sciences (Contributor)
Created2016-12-21
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Description

Background: We introduced a hypometabolic convergence index (HCI) to characterize in a single measurement the extent to which a person’s fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomogram (FDG PET) corresponds to that in Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Apolipoprotein E ε4 (APOE ε4) gene dose is associated with three levels of risk for late-onset AD. We

Background: We introduced a hypometabolic convergence index (HCI) to characterize in a single measurement the extent to which a person’s fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomogram (FDG PET) corresponds to that in Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Apolipoprotein E ε4 (APOE ε4) gene dose is associated with three levels of risk for late-onset AD. We explored the association between gene dose and HCI in cognitively normal ε4 homozygotes, heterozygotes, and non-carriers.

Methods: An algorithm was used to characterize and compare AD-related HCIs in cognitively normal individuals, including 36 ε4 homozygotes, 46 heterozygotes, and 78 non-carriers.

Results: These three groups differed significantly in their HCIs (ANOVA, p = 0.004), and there was a significant association between HCIs and gene dose (linear trend, p = 0.001).

Conclusions: The HCI is associated with three levels of genetic risk for late-onset AD. This supports the possibility of using a single FDG PET measurement to help in the preclinical detection and tracking of AD.

ContributorsSchraml, Frank (Author) / Chen, Kewei (Author) / Ayutyanont, Napatkamon (Author) / Auttawut, Roontiva (Author) / Langbaum, Jessica B. S. (Author) / Lee, Wendy (Author) / Liu, Xiaofen (Author) / Bandy, Dan (Author) / Reeder, Stephanie Q. (Author) / Alexander, Gene E. (Author) / Caselli, Richard J. (Author) / Fleisher, Adam S. (Author) / Reiman, Eric M. (Author) / Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (Project) (Contributor)
Created2013-06-26
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Description

Purpose: PET (positron emission tomography) imaging researches of functional metabolism using fluorodeoxyglucose ([superscript 18]F-FDG) of animal brain are important in neuroscience studies. FDG-PET imaging studies are often performed on groups of rats, so it is desirable to establish an objective voxel-based statistical methodology for group data analysis.

Material and Methods: This study establishes

Purpose: PET (positron emission tomography) imaging researches of functional metabolism using fluorodeoxyglucose ([superscript 18]F-FDG) of animal brain are important in neuroscience studies. FDG-PET imaging studies are often performed on groups of rats, so it is desirable to establish an objective voxel-based statistical methodology for group data analysis.

Material and Methods: This study establishes a statistical parametric mapping (SPM) toolbox (plug-ins) named spmratIHEP for voxel-wise analysis of FDG-PET images of rat brain, in which an FDG-PET template and an intracranial mask image of rat brain in Paxinos & Watson space were constructed, and the default settings were modified according to features of rat brain. Compared to previous studies, our constructed rat brain template comprises not only the cerebrum and cerebellum, but also the whole olfactory bulb which made the later cognitive studies much more exhaustive. And with an intracranial mask image in the template space, the brain tissues of individuals could be extracted automatically. Moreover, an atlas space is used for anatomically labeling the functional findings in the Paxinos & Watson space. In order to standardize the template image with the atlas accurately, a synthetic FDG-PET image with six main anatomy structures is constructed from the atlas, which performs as a target image in the co-registration.

Results: The spatial normalization procedure is evaluated, by which the individual rat brain images could be standardized into the Paxinos & Watson space successfully and the intracranial tissues could also be extracted accurately. The practical usability of this toolbox is evaluated using FDG-PET functional images from rats with left side middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) in comparison to normal control rats. And the two-sample t-test statistical result is almost related to the left side MCA.

Conclusion: We established a toolbox of SPM8 named spmratIHEP for voxel-wise analysis of FDG-PET images of rat brain.

ContributorsNie, Binbin (Author) / Liu, Hua (Author) / Chen, Kewei (Author) / Jiang, Xiaofeng (Author) / Shan, Baoci (Author) / College of Liberal Arts and Sciences (Contributor)
Created2014-09-26
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Description

We present a novel paradigm to identify shared and unique brain regions underlying non-semantic, non-phonological, abstract, audio-visual (AV) memory vs. naming using a longitudinal functional magnetic resonance imaging experiment. Participants were trained to associate novel AV stimulus pairs containing hidden linguistic content. Half of the stimulus pairs were distorted images

We present a novel paradigm to identify shared and unique brain regions underlying non-semantic, non-phonological, abstract, audio-visual (AV) memory vs. naming using a longitudinal functional magnetic resonance imaging experiment. Participants were trained to associate novel AV stimulus pairs containing hidden linguistic content. Half of the stimulus pairs were distorted images of animals and sine-wave speech versions of the animal's name. Images and sounds were distorted in such a way as to make their linguistic content easily recognizable only after being made aware of its existence. Memory for the pairings was tested by presenting an AV pair and asking participants to verify if the two stimuli formed a learned pairing. After memory testing, the hidden linguistic content was revealed and participants were tested again on their recollection of the pairings in this linguistically informed state. Once informed, the AV verification task could be performed by naming the picture. There was substantial overlap between the regions involved in recognition of non-linguistic sensory memory and naming, suggesting a strong relation between them. Contrasts between sessions identified left angular gyrus and middle temporal gyrus as key additional players in the naming network. Left inferior frontal regions participated in both naming and non-linguistic AV memory suggesting the region is responsible for AV memory independent of phonological content contrary to previous proposals. Functional connectivity between angular gyrus and left inferior frontal gyrus and left middle temporal gyrus increased when performing the AV task as naming. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that, at the spatial resolution of fMRI, the regions that facilitate non-linguistic AV associations are a subset of those that facilitate naming though reorganized into distinct networks.

ContributorsSmith, Jason F. (Author) / Braun, Allen R. (Author) / Alexander, Gene E. (Author) / Chen, Kewei (Author) / Horwitz, Barry (Author) / College of Liberal Arts and Sciences (Contributor)
Created2013-10-11
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Description

There is an increasing awareness that health care must move from post-symptomatic treatment to presymptomatic intervention. An ideal system would allow regular inexpensive monitoring of health status using circulating antibodies to report on health fluctuations. Recently, we demonstrated that peptide microarrays can do this through antibody signatures (immunosignatures). Unfortunately, printed

There is an increasing awareness that health care must move from post-symptomatic treatment to presymptomatic intervention. An ideal system would allow regular inexpensive monitoring of health status using circulating antibodies to report on health fluctuations. Recently, we demonstrated that peptide microarrays can do this through antibody signatures (immunosignatures). Unfortunately, printed microarrays are not scalable. Here we demonstrate a platform based on fabricating microarrays (~10 M peptides per slide, 330,000 peptides per assay) on silicon wafers using equipment common to semiconductor manufacturing. The potential of these microarrays for comprehensive health monitoring is verified through the simultaneous detection and classification of six different infectious diseases and six different cancers. Besides diagnostics, these high-density peptide chips have numerous other applications both in health care and elsewhere.

ContributorsLegutki, Joseph Barten (Author) / Zhao, Zhan-Gong (Author) / Greving, Matt (Author) / Woodbury, Neal (Author) / Johnston, Stephen (Author) / Stafford, Phillip (Author) / Biodesign Institute (Contributor)
Created2014-09-03